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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections and Impressions, by
+Octavius Brooks Frothingham
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Recollections and Impressions
+ 1822-1890
+
+Author: Octavius Brooks Frothingham
+
+Release Date: October 13, 2011 [EBook #37744]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Miller, tallforasmurf and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
+
+
+This etext differs from the original in the following ways. Three minor
+typographical errors have been corrected that did not affect the sense
+of the text. The oe character is shown as [oe].
+
+
+
+
+ RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS
+
+ 1822-1890
+
+
+ OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM
+
+ AUTHOR OF "BOSTON UNITARIANISM, 1820-1850, A STUDY OF THE LIFE
+ AND WORK OF NATHANIEL LANGDON FROTHINGHAM,"
+ "THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY," ETC., ETC.
+
+ G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+ NEW YORK LONDON
+
+ 27 WEST TWENTY-THIRD ST. 27 KING WILLIAM ST., STRAND
+
+ The Knickerbocker Press
+
+ 1891
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1891 BY
+ OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM
+
+ The Knickerbocker Press, New York
+
+ Electrotyped, Printed, and Bound by G. P. Putnam's Sons
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ I PARENTAGE 1
+ II EDUCATION 19
+ III DIVINITY SCHOOL 25
+ IV SALEM 35
+ V THE CRISIS IN BELIEF 53
+ VI JERSEY CITY 65
+ VII NEW YORK 76
+ VIII WAR 104
+ IX THE FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION 115
+ X THE PROGRESS OF RELIGIOUS THOUGHT IN AMERICA 133
+ XI THE CLERICAL PROFESSION 146
+ XII MY TEACHERS 165
+ XIII MY COMPANIONS 190
+ XIV MY FRIENDS 225
+ XV THE PRESENT SITUATION 248
+ XVI THE RELIGIOUS FUTURE OF AMERICA 272
+ XVII CONFESSIONS 289
+ INDEX 303
+
+
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS.
+
+
+I. PARENTAGE.
+
+
+My father was, as I have said elsewhere, a clergyman in Boston,
+Massachusetts, a Unitarian minister to the First Church, standing in a
+long line of men, of whom the earliest was severely orthodox, while he
+abhorred orthodoxy. Yet he was ordained without hesitation, was more
+than acceptable to the best minds through a service of thirty-five
+years, and continued more and more unorthodox to the end; so gradually
+and insensibly did the Puritan tenets disappear one by one until the
+shadow of them only remained. We are assured that by 1780 nearly all the
+congregational pulpits were filled by Arminians. In 1815, the year of my
+father's ordination, they were well domesticated in New England,
+Calvinism having lost its hold on the minds of thinking people, and none
+but keen-eyed watchers on the tower seeing what course opinion was
+taking. How far the tendency towards the moral and practical view of
+religion as distinct from the speculative view had gone, is well
+illustrated in my father's case. He was a man of excellent education,
+one of the best scholars in a distinguished class at Harvard, an
+enthusiast for intellectual cultivation, singularly refined in
+perception, an acute critic, a careful, precise, elegant writer. His
+tastes were pre-eminently literary. This is said in full view of the
+fact that he was a learned theologian, a pungent disputant, a zealous
+student of biblical researches, a faithful pastor.
+
+He was essentially a man of letters. His passion was for the Latin
+classics. The best edition of Cicero was on his shelves; the finest copy
+of Horace graced his book-case. His knowledge of the Greek literature
+and language was fair. He was fond of poetry of a stately and romantic
+description; was, himself, a poet of a gentle, meditative, spiritual
+cast, especially eminent as a composer of hymns written for church
+occasions, the dedication of meeting-houses, the consecration of
+ministers, many of them of permanent and general value, as both
+"liberal" and "orthodox" collections attest; while he has done as much
+as any man in his generation to elevate, purify, and console delicate
+and serious natures.
+
+His library of about three thousand volumes was exceedingly
+miscellaneous, illustrating the breadth of his interests and the
+activity of his mind. There were Bibles of choice editions and in every
+tongue. There were biblical commentaries, dictionaries, grammars. The
+Church Fathers were well represented. Church history was presented by
+its best narrators. But the bulk of the collection was secular. It
+contained copies of Addison, Johnson, Bayle, Carlyle, Milton, Bacon,
+Dante, Dickens, Emerson, Grote, Shakespeare, Goethe, Schiller, Hugo,
+Heeren, Hume, Iriarte, Michelet, Lessing, Kingsley, Macaulay,
+Longfellow, Plutarch, Pindar, Pope, Scott, Rousseau, Racine, Rückert,
+Rabelais, Tasso, George Sand, Thucydides, Theocritus, Virgil, Voltaire,
+Wieland, Pliny, Wordsworth, Wilkinson, Zschokke, Walt Whitman. They were
+very various. They commanded all extremes: Augustine and Anacreon;
+Aratus and _Annual Register_; Æschylus and Molière; Aristotle and
+Herrick; Seneca and Horace; Antoninus and Almanacs; Burton and
+Boccaccio. There was no pure metaphysics--a compendium or two of
+philosophy, a bit of Spinoza, of Kant, of Cousin, of Jouffroy, of
+Malebranche, the "Dialogues" of Plato--nothing of Schelling or Hegel. I
+find Proclus, and Jamblicus, and Böhme, and dramatic literature in
+Greek, Latin, French, German. Here is Burlamaqui on Law, and Erasmus
+Darwin, and Godwin's "Memoirs of Mary Wollstonecraft," and the
+Hitopadesa, and the "Hymns" of Orpheus, and Palæphatus, together with
+many a forgotten book.
+
+The favorite language next to English was German, then came French,
+then Latin, which was pretty well represented in its literature. Dr.
+Frothingham was a wide reader, but his finest gift was a power of
+penetrating to the heart of an author, a power that was akin to genius.
+He called himself a _taster_. But every taster must take into his mouth
+some things that are unpleasant, and he did. He nibbled at Heine, but
+Heine's philosophy disgusted him. He nibbled at Browning, but Browning's
+lack of sensuous music did not satisfy his idea of poetry. His mind,
+trained in the old school, could not adapt itself to the new style of
+expression.
+
+He gladly turned his back on doctrines he did not like. He was
+spiritually minded, but soberly so, as if to be spiritually minded
+belonged to a special temperament; a Christian theist in all respects,
+though indifferent to many details of Christian doctrine; an optimist on
+principle as well as from instinct, inclined to put the most cheerful
+construction on the ways of divine Providence, and to look patiently on
+the moral conditions of human life; an unquestioning believer in Christ,
+immortality, the need of revelation, the supremacy of the religious and
+moral nature, the demand for the steady influence of the spiritual world
+to enlighten mankind on the truths of conscience no less than on the
+mysteries of faith. He was no seer, gazing on things unseen with the
+penetrating, inward eye; no prophet possessed by an overwhelming
+conviction of the absolute law; no regenerator believing that men must
+be lifted up from the earth by an interior renewal of soul; no reformer
+bent on changing the circumstances of society. He was an apostle of air,
+sunshine, and the mild, enticing summer shower which covered the wintry
+ground with the smiling grass and the sweet-smelling flowers. Reformers,
+of whatever school, were not to his taste, partly because their methods
+seemed to him violent, but partly also because their primary assumption
+that the world was out of joint did not command his sympathy. He could
+not think that the established institutions of the age ought to be
+subverted, even though they might be improved under enlightened
+teaching. Socially he was conservative, although by no means
+reactionary; disposed to see the soul of good in things evil, though not
+always as studious as one must needs be to "search it out." Rather he
+took it for granted, and was often impatient with those who felt keenly
+the evil but could not discover the good.
+
+High-minded he was rather than deep-souled; devout in sentiment,
+chivalrously moral in principle and in practice; ideal, poetic, delicate
+of sensibility, but not soaring of spirit; certainly not a spiritual
+enthusiast, as little a prosaic plodder; no mystic but no disciple of
+"common-sense." For the dignity, decency, purity, propriety of the
+clerical profession he had great regard, but as much on account of its
+social position as on account of its sanctity. It indicated the highest
+type of gentlemanliness, the finest style of personal character, a kind
+of exquisite courtliness of manhood, humanity of a finished stamp of
+elegance; and he resented everything like an admixture of ordinary
+philanthropy. It was in his view a descent to enter the arena of strife
+even for the purpose of removing an evil. Thence his dislike of
+Channing; his disapproval of Pierpont, otherwise a particular favorite
+of his; his disagreement with Parker, of whom he was fond. When the
+"Miscellanies" were published the writer sent a copy to his friend, who
+acknowledged the volume by a letter in which expressions of personal
+affection were curiously blended with antipathy towards the class of
+speculations with which Mr. Parker was identified. George Ripley and
+R. W. Emerson won and held his attachment to the end, but he never
+visited Brook Farm, and was deaf to solicitations to join the
+Transcendental Club.
+
+His friends were many and various--Emerson, Ripley, Francis, Hedge,
+Bartol, Stetson, Parkman, Longfellow, Felton, Hillard,--the list is
+long, for the sunny temper of the man drew all hearts to him and his
+warm affectionateness of disposition made him tenacious of good-will. He
+was interested in men as individuals not as members of a clique or
+party, and was not repelled by differences of opinion where his heart
+was engaged. On the whole, his sympathies were with conservatives like
+George Ticknor and W. H. Prescott, and the literary spirit mainly kept
+him in association with those. Where this spirit was wanting and there
+was divergence of sentiment there was no attempt at intimacy.
+
+Of interest in the denomination, the sect, the party name, he was
+absolutely devoid. He never attended the conventions or conferences of
+the Unitarian body or spoke in their deliberations. On anniversary week
+it was for many years his custom to visit New York, where no
+professional responsibility rested upon him, and where he could find
+recreations of a purely social kind. But at the "Boston Association"
+where he met friends one by one, and could talk half confidentially,
+with perfect freedom, in a conversational tone, he delighted to be
+present.
+
+For the rest, he was a man universally respected, admired, and beloved,
+mirthful and sportive, more than tolerant of gaiety, as a rule in
+excellent spirits, though subject, as such temperaments usually are, to
+moods of depression. Without private ambition and utterly destitute of
+vanity, his uneventful days were spent among his friends and his books.
+The round of clerical duties was even and monotonous; his calling had
+few excitements; even poverty had limits, and social iniquity was
+manageable in those times when relations were simple. The routine of
+parochial service was such as a friendly man of quick sympathies and
+ready speech could easily discharge in a few hours of each week, nor was
+the transition violent from it to the quiet library, the companionship
+of Cicero, Shakespeare, Milton, Walter Scott, Herder, Rückert. The love
+of art, society, literature, was not inconsistent with a love of the
+Saviour; and though as a matter of taste he would not have spoken of a
+sonata of Beethoven in a sermon, there was nothing in his philosophy to
+render secular allusions improper.
+
+His literary predilections were somewhat at the mercy of his sense of
+beauty, as if he had an eye to artistic effect quite as much as to
+intellectual justice, as if the firm lines of logical discernment were
+blurred by the passion for poetic or scenic grace. Of the two famous
+German writers about whom opinions were divided, he greatly preferred
+Schiller to Goethe, probably because the former was glorious, ardent,
+declamatory. Of the two eminent English novelists whom all the world was
+reading, Dickens was his choice far above Thackeray, perhaps for the
+reason that Dickens had color and warmth of sentiment, while Thackeray
+seemed to him cold, skeptical, and cynical. The flow of eloquence, the
+charm of dramatic style made him relish authors as radically unlike as
+Carlyle, Ruskin, and Macaulay, rendering him unmindful of qualities in
+their cast of thought which he might have disapproved of if less
+seductively presented. When a lady objected to Macaulay on the score of
+his material ethics, Dr. Frothingham was too much captivated by
+Macaulay's manner to criticise his philosophy, and he let the philosophy
+go. It sometimes looked as if the way in which things were said was of
+more importance in his view than the things themselves; but it was not
+so, for he could respond to ideal sentiments when they offered
+themselves fairly to his mind, and his moral indignation against an act
+of flagrant turpitude was quick and hot.
+
+With politics, whether speculative or practical, he gave himself small
+concern, for in his day politics were hardly an honorable calling. He
+belonged to the Whig party, as it was then called, because it comprised
+the greater number of educated men--scholars, divines, lawyers,
+physicians, judges, and people of consideration from their position in
+society. The Republican party in Massachusetts was not formed till his
+public life was nearly ended, and we may doubt whether he would in any
+case have connected himself with it, for its aims and purposes were
+hardly such as he could have gone along with. The well-known sentiment,
+ascribed to Wendell Phillips, "Peace if possible, Truth at any rate," he
+would in all probability have reversed so as to read, "Truth if
+possible, Peace at any rate"; not because the search for truth was
+difficult, and peace furnished the most promising conditions for finding
+it, but because peace was preferable in itself as being stable and
+quiet. He was not a fighter; he disliked the noise of battle; his horror
+of anti-slavery agitation, as of all other, was constitutional; and even
+if he had been convinced of the slave's degradation, no mode of redress
+that was proposed commended itself to his gentle, apprehensive mind. To
+him the chief interest of society was enlightenment associated with
+refinement; the needed influence was that of education. He was a
+delicately organized, sensitive man, fond of repose, happy in his
+temperament, in his tastes, in his occupation, in his social position,
+in his relationships, in his home. He had his disappointments and
+sorrows like other men, but he did not repine. His latter years were
+afflicted with total blindness, accompanied by constant distress and
+steadily increasing pain; but his friends never failed to find him
+cheerful; the companion who ministered to his daily necessities and
+culled from books and periodicals the materials for his entertainment,
+seldom had reason to complain of his petulance; the visitor could with
+difficulty be brought to believe that the man was living in the presence
+of death, and was exposed to frightful phantoms due to a slowly
+decomposing brain.
+
+His æsthetic tastes were active, as may be supposed, and would have
+been keen if there had been opportunity for cultivating them, and
+leisure to pursue them. The pictures that adorned his parlor walls were
+not distinguished as works of art, but they were pure in sentiment, they
+showed a love of color, and of the highest truth. There was not much
+fine painting at that time in America, and what there was required for
+its fair appreciation more training and experience than was possessed by
+one immersed in the cares of an exacting profession and interested also
+in literary pursuits. Mr. Frothingham's artistic taste was, besides, so
+much controlled by moral feeling that he could not be critical of form.
+Of art for its own sake he had no conception, and could have none, for
+that cry which voices the demands of technical execution had not been
+raised; but even if it had been he would have felt no sympathy with any
+kind of excellence that was not directly associated with the moral
+sentiment.
+
+His taste in music was much like his taste in painting,--that is to say,
+it was uneducated and unscientific. To the great music,--that of the
+intellect and the soul,--the compositions of the masters, of Bach,
+Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, he was indifferent; but the music of the
+heart, of feeling, emotion, elevated passion,--the Scotch songs, the
+Irish melodies, the English lays, madrigals, glees, was his delight. He
+was especially fond of religious airs. The oratorios of "The Creation"
+and "The Messiah" he was never tired of hearing. His voice was
+melodious, and he was fond of using it. His organist taught him the
+principles of his own art, and hours were spent at a parlor-organ in
+playing favorite hymn-tunes, the melody of which he sang as he played.
+He amused his children by trilling nursery ditties, and joined his boys
+as they performed glees from the "Orphean Lyre," sometimes singing with
+the heart quite as much as with the understanding. His joyous nature
+expressed itself instinctively in song. His whole nervous system
+responded to it. He was transported out of himself by sweet strains, and
+fairly trembled under the influence of divine harmonies.
+
+Mr. Frothingham's love of dramatic art amounted to a passion, but the
+art must be high as well as pure. Tragedy he did not like. All of the
+Shakespearian plays he was critically familiar with, but he loved "The
+Tempest" best, as uniting poetry with cheerfulness in fullest measure.
+The lines he wrote on the restoration of the Federal Street Theatre
+expressed the depth of his interest. A religious society, afterwards the
+"Central Church" in Winter Street, was gathered here. Of this kind of
+enterprise the poet says:
+
+ More reverence than befits us here to tell,
+ We yield to courts where sacred honors dwell.
+ But have not they their places? Have not we?
+ Has not each liberal province leave to be?
+
+The "Lecture-Room" he had little respect for, none at all for the
+"Variety Show." To every device he wishes a cordial farewell,
+exclaiming:
+
+ Restored! Restored! Well known so long a time,
+ These buried glories rise as in their prime.
+ Our tastes may change as fickle fashions-fly,
+ But art is safe: the Drama cannot die.
+ More than restored! Whate'er the pen since wrought
+ Of loftiest, sprightliest, here that wealth has brought.
+ Whate'er the progress of the age has lent
+ Of purer taste and comelier ornament,--
+ To this our temple it transfers its store,
+ And makes each point shine lovelier than before.
+
+But the drama must be clean:
+
+ But more yet,--and how much! We claim a praise
+ The Playhouse knew not in the ancient days.
+ Own us, ye hearts with moral purpose warm!
+ Our word Renewal adds the word Reform.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Come, friends of Virtue! Share the feast we spread.
+ It loads no spirits, and it heats no head.
+ But rouses forth each power of mind and soul
+ With food ambrosial and its fairy bowl.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Hearts are improved by Feeling's play and strife;
+ Refined amusement humanizes life.
+ So wrote the Sages, whom the world admired;
+ So sang the Poets, who the world inspired;
+ Why in New England's Athens is decried
+ What old Athenian culture thought its pride?
+
+Thus Righteousness and Peace are made to kiss each other. Art and
+Virtue walk hand in hand. The sole condition is that art shall be
+virtuous and that virtue shall be artistic. There was a singular
+blending in his mind of the sacred and the secular. Perhaps Matthew
+Arnold's definition of religion as "morality touched with emotion" comes
+as near expressing Dr. Frothingham's conception as any. There must be
+morality; that is cardinal; that lies at the foundation of all systems;
+that must be strict and high. But emotion is indispensable also. This
+runs into praise, the love of goodness, the worship of the highest. This
+imparts warmth, glow, passion, the upward lift that inspires. Morality
+alone is cold, emotion alone is apt to be visionary. But the two united
+propel the ship, one serving as ballast to keep it steady, and one as
+sails to catch the winds of heaven.
+
+My mother was an example of pure character. She laid no claim whatever
+to literary talent. Indeed she had none. I cannot associate her with
+books of any special description, but I can always associate her with
+goodness, with humility, sincerity, duty, kindness, pity, and
+simplicity. Truthfulness was her great virtue, and was saved from
+bluntness only by her delicate feeling for others and her inborn
+politeness. The severest rebuke I ever received from her was on account
+of a sharp arraignment of merchants in a youthful sermon, which to her
+seemed presumptuous. Her household cares, the nurture of her children
+(she had seven, five sons and two daughters, all of whom she trained
+most carefully like a devoted mother), the family visitings, the parish
+calls, missions among the poor, occupied the day. She would sit for
+hours knitting or sewing, or in an armchair before the coal fire
+silently musing. She was quiet, reserved, old-fashioned in her
+sentiments, but with a great fund of inward strength, which came out on
+emergencies. I shall always remember her ceaseless solicitude for an
+unfortunate elder brother of mine who had for years been an anxiety and
+a trouble. When he died in early manhood, after nursing him tenderly,
+she softly closed his eyes, and preserved the memory of him in her
+heart. Her chamber window in the country looked upon his distant grave,
+the little white stone over which kept him before her eye who was always
+in her thoughts.
+
+She accepted the existing order of things because it was established,
+disliking experiments, however humane, for the reason that they had not
+been tested; and if she had misgivings, she kept them to herself not
+daring to set up her private feelings in opposition to the will of the
+Supreme, the question whether the existing order expressed the will of
+the Supreme never being raised by her.
+
+She was Unitarian, having so been taught, but speculative matters were
+out of her reach as well as uncongenial with her sphere. Her faith was
+of the heart, and all the reason for it she had to give was an uplifted
+life, "unspotted from the world." Of creeds she knew nothing, not that
+she was deficient in mind, but because they seemed to her to be affairs
+of criticism, with which she had nothing to do. Her concern was with
+practical things, and conduct was, with her, more than seven eighths of
+life. Even the very mild decoction of theology that was administered
+from Sunday to Sunday in Chauncy Place was sometimes too much for her.
+She was a practical Christian, if there ever was one.
+
+Her love of nature was genuine. As a young woman she could distinguish
+the colors of a flying bird. When she had a house of her own in the
+country, she preferred a spot remote from the world of society; went
+there as early as possible in the spring, and stayed as late in the
+autumn as she could. She delighted in the place; loved the air, the
+trees, the smell of the ground. She enjoyed her garden; liked to see
+plants grow. Every morning after breakfast she went out to inspect the
+grounds, and came back laden with modest flowers; in the fall with pine
+cones, the flame of which she enjoyed. On her last evening, quite
+unaware of her coming end, she sat on the piazza, and looked at the
+sunset, wrapped in shawls, though it was midsummer, for she was weak and
+emaciated but patiently tranquil.
+
+Her habits were simple, not from parsimony but from taste. She cared
+nothing for decoration or display. She spent no more than was necessary
+on dress or furniture. She was fond of old-fashioned, solid things. In
+the midst of abundance, her appetite was for plain food, yet she was no
+ascetic or prude, but a largehearted, sensible woman, sober and serious
+but genial too.
+
+Browning makes Paracelsus say:
+
+ 'T is only when they spring to heaven that angels
+ Reveal themselves to you; they sit all day
+ Beside you, and lie down at night by you,--
+ Who care not for their presence,--muse or sleep,
+ And all at once they leave you and you know them.
+
+This is in a measure true. Death is a great revealer. Unfortunately it
+is a great deceiver also, putting wings on very earthly bodies. But in
+this instance, the qualities were all there in the living form, and all
+clearly visible to those who sat all day beside my mother. Death did but
+brush away a little film that hung before distant eyes.
+
+Until near middle life I had the example and advice of these dear
+spirits. It is my privilege to have their blood in my veins. That was my
+best endowment, and kept me always hopeful of a better future in the
+time to come. The dream of a nobler age for literature, art, science,
+humanity, came directly from my father. The desire to do something to
+make the dream an actual fact, to prove myself as of some service in the
+world, came from my mother. His was the love of intellectual liberty.
+Hers was the passion for practical accomplishments. He was a scholar.
+She was a worker.
+
+Both had thoughts deeper than they could express. Both were utterly
+sincere in their calling, and the limitations of their age alone
+confined their advance. The times were quiet then; the world was small
+and disconnected; Boston was a little place and shut off even from
+American cities by difficulties of travel and by exorbitant rates of
+postage. Thus responsibility was mainly confined to individuals. There
+were no wearing duties; no perplexing cares; even railroad disturbances
+did not worry, for there was no railroad speculation, and no railroad
+system. Hours were early, dinner was at two or half-past, tea at six or
+seven, the evening ended at ten, and was spent with books, melodious
+music, or playful games of amusement, not of instruction. There were few
+social gatherings; balls were very rare, seldom lasting later than
+eleven o'clock. There was an occasional concert, and here and there a
+theatre, but there were no great dinner parties. Social problems were
+exceedingly simple; the classes were divided by lines that nobody
+attempted to pass over. Socialism was unborn, and labor agitations were
+unknown. In a word, there was such a thing as leisure, and this was used
+chiefly for the cultivation of the mind.
+
+My father was greatly interested in the education of his boys; watched
+all their attainments; taught them French; encouraged their learning how
+to box, and fence, and swim; while my mother shed an atmosphere of peace
+over the whole household. She made one joke only, as far as my memory
+serves me,--and I mention it here lest any one should suppose there was
+a lack of sunshine in her nature. My father was very fond of "vöslauer,"
+an Austrian red wine. When the last bottle was produced my mother, said
+archly, "your _face_ will _lower_ when it is all drunk up." It was not
+much of a joke, but a small jest will show the spirit of fun quite as
+well as a large one.
+
+There was a singular combination of aspiration with peace at that time.
+Probably there is as much aspiration now as there was then, perhaps
+more; but it is associated with social reform rather than with personal
+perfection; there is peace, too, at the present day, but it is harder to
+get at and needs to be sought most often in private homes; the inward
+peace is found in all periods.
+
+How the principles then formed would bear the strain of a later age or
+a larger sphere remained to be proved. Fifty years ago the modern era
+with its complications and perplexities could not even be suspected. The
+foundations alone could then be laid.
+
+
+
+
+II. EDUCATION.
+
+
+Of the primary schools it is unnecessary to speak. They were of the same
+kind that were established in Boston at that period. Indeed I can
+recollect but two, one, a child's school of boys and girls, kept by a
+Miss Scott, at the corner of Mt. Vernon Street and Hancock; the other a
+boys' school kept by a Mr. Capen, a poor hump-backed cripple who could
+not get out of his chair, but wheeled himself about the room, and kept
+on his table a cowhide, which was pretty generously exercised. The
+school was on Bedford Street behind the "Church of Church Green." A
+little alley-way ran along in the rear of the church through which I
+used to go to the school-house.
+
+The Latin School was an old institution brought hither by Rev. John
+Cotton, who remembered the Free Grammar School founded in Lincolnshire,
+England, by Queen Mary, in which Latin and Greek were taught. It was
+established here, in 1635, five years after the landing of Winthrop, two
+or three years before Harvard College. When I was there, it stood on
+School Street, opposite the Franklin statue. It had a granite front and
+a cupola. The head-master was Charles K. Dillaway, an excellent scholar,
+a faithful teacher, an agreeable man. He had to resign in consequence of
+ill-health. The tutors were Henry W. Torrey and Francis Gardner, who
+afterwards became head-master. Both were pupils of the school. Mr.
+Frederick P. Leverett, author of the Latin Lexicon, was chosen to
+succeed Mr. Dillaway, but died before assuming the office. The next
+head-master, during my course, was Epes Sargent Dixwell, a most
+accomplished man, an elegant scholar, a gentleman of the world, very
+much interested, as I remember, in the plastic art of Greece. He is
+still living, and amuses himself by writing Greek. Mr. Dixwell held
+office till 1851, when he established a private school. The discipline
+of the Latin School was strict but mild. Corporal punishment was the
+unquestioned rule, but it was never harshly administered, though the
+knowledge that it might be undoubtedly did a good deal toward
+stimulating the ambition of the scholars. Here and there no doubt a boy
+exasperated the teacher by idleness or disorder; possibly at moments the
+teacher was nervous and irritable. I recollect a single instance in
+which he was over-sensitive, too prone to take offence, which fastened
+suspiciously upon some individual scholar; but injustice was a very rare
+occurrence. We learned Greek and Latin, the rudiments of algebra,
+writing and declamation; but the best part of the education I received
+in those days was an atmosphere of elegant literature, derived from
+friends of my father. I used to see William H. Prescott taking his walk
+on Beacon Street, in the sun, and have often sat in his study in his
+tranquil hours, and heard him talk. The beautiful library of George
+Ticknor, at the head of Park Street, was open to me, and I can see his
+form now as he walked on the Common. George S. Hillard, the elegant man
+of letters, was a familiar figure on the street. Charles Sumner, then a
+young law student, strode vigorously along, his manner even then
+suggesting the advent of a new era.
+
+In 1846, I listened to his oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of
+Harvard University on the Scholar [Pickering]; the Jurist [Story]; the
+Artist [Allston]; the Philanthropist [Channing]; and his bold
+declamation was strangely in contrast with the academical gown that he
+wore. Daniel Webster used to stalk by our house, the embodiment of the
+Constitution, the incarnation of law, the black locomotive of the train
+of civilization. Ralph Waldo Emerson often sat at my father's table
+diffusing the radiance of serene ideas, and heralding the diviner age
+that was to come.
+
+From the Latin School to Harvard College was an easy transition. There
+existed an impression that Latin-School boys might take their ease for
+the first year at Cambridge, because they were so well prepared, but I
+found enough to do; there was the great library, there were the advanced
+studies, there was the more perfect training. The President was Josiah
+Quincy, the elder. Henry W. Longfellow was professor of modern
+languages; Cornelius C. Felton, the ardent philhellene, taught Greek;
+Charles Beck, a German, taught Latin; Benjamin Peirce was professor of
+mathematics; James Walker was an instructor in intellectual and moral
+philosophy; Joseph Lovering, teacher in chemistry. Among the tutors were
+Bernard Roelker, in German; Pietro Bachi, in Italian; Francisco Sales,
+in Spanish.
+
+The new buildings now in the college yard were not erected; Holworthy
+(1812), Stoughton (1804-1805), Hollis (1763), Harvard (1766), Holden
+(1734), Massachusetts Hall (1720), University Hall (1812-1813) were in
+existence. There were no athletics; there was no gymnasium; there was no
+boating; there was little base-ball. There were few literary societies;
+so that we were driven back mainly upon intellectual labor. The
+professors' houses were always open, and there was choice society in the
+town. I recollect particularly well going to the house of John White
+Webster, who was executed later for the murder of Dr. Parkman. He was
+very fond of music and had a daughter who sang finely, besides being
+handsome. She afterwards married Mr. Dabney, of Fayal. The Doctor was a
+nervous man, high strung, but good-natured and polite. His fatal
+encounter with Dr. Parkman I always attributed to a sudden outbreak of
+passion.
+
+Within the grounds of the college we were quite studious, companionable
+among ourselves. There was no rioting, no excess of any kind. Walking
+and swimming in the river Charles were our chief recreations. Connection
+with Boston was infrequent and difficult, as there was no railroad. The
+Sundays could be passed in the city if the student brought a certificate
+that he went regularly to church; otherwise it was expected that the
+First Church, or one of the others, should be frequented. The
+instruction was of a cordial, friendly, courteous, and humane kind; the
+professors were enthusiastic students in their departments. I well
+recollect Professor Longfellow's kindness; Professor Felton's ardor (I
+visited Pompeii with him in 1853). Charles Beck was a burning patriot in
+the war. Pietro Bachi's great eyes lighted up and glowed as he talked
+about Dante. Bernard Roelker afterwards became a lawyer in New York.
+Charles Wheeler and Robert Bartlett, tutors, both rare spirits, died
+young. On the whole, life at Harvard College was exceedingly pleasant,
+and a real love of learning was implanted in young men's bosoms.
+
+The corner-stone of Gore Hall was laid in 1813. The books were moved
+into the library in the summer vacation of 1814. There were forty-one
+thousand volumes at that time.
+
+In the early part of my career, I took my meals in Commons, at an
+expense of two dollars and a quarter a week, the highest price then
+paid. Commons was abolished for a time in 1849, it being found difficult
+to satisfy the students, who for some years had boarded in the houses in
+the neighborhood.
+
+There were excitements too. Though there was no gymnasium, or boating,
+and little foot-ball, base-ball, or cricket (these games were all very
+simple and rudimentary), there were the clubs, the "[Greek: Alpha Delta
+Phi]," still a secret society, and occupying a back upper room, to which
+we mounted by stealth,--the same room serving for initiations and
+sociables,--was exceedingly interesting in a literary point of view.
+There were papers on Scott, Byron, Wordsworth, delightful conversations,
+anecdotes, songs.
+
+The "Institute of 1770" taught us elocution, and readiness in debate;
+the "[Greek: Phi Beta Kappa]," no longer a secret society, and no longer
+actively literary, hung over us like a star, stimulating ambition and
+inciting us to excellence in scholarship.
+
+Altogether it was a delightful life; a life between boyhood and
+manhood; of purely literary ambition, of natural friendship. There was
+no distinction of persons, no affected pride. We found our own level,
+and kept our own place. Money did not distinguish or family, only
+brains. There was no care but for intellectual work; there was no excess
+save in study. Expenses were small, indulgences were few and simple. The
+education was more suited to those times than to these, when culture
+must be so much broader, and social expectations demand such varied
+accomplishments.
+
+
+
+
+III. DIVINITY SCHOOL.
+
+
+To enter at once the Divinity School was to start on a predestined
+career. From childhood I was marked out for a clergyman. This was taken
+for granted in all places and conversations, and my own thoughts fell
+habitually into that groove. There was nothing unattractive in the
+professional career as illustrated by my father. I was the only one of a
+large family of brothers who pursued the full course of studies at
+Cambridge, or who showed a taste for the scholastic life. An appetite
+for books rather than for affairs pointed first of all to a literary
+calling, while a fondness for speculative questions, a leaning towards
+ideal subjects, and a serious turn of mind naturally suggested at that
+time the pulpit. An inward "experience of religion," which in some other
+communions was regarded as essential to the character of a minister of
+the gospel, was not demanded. Religion was rather moral and intellectual
+than spiritual, a matter of mental conviction more than of emotional
+feeling. The clerical profession stood very high, higher than any of the
+three "learned professions," by reason of its requiring in larger
+measure a tendency towards abstract thought, an interest in theological
+discussions, and a steady belief in doctrines that concerned the soul.
+Literature was not at that period a profession; there was no Art to
+speak of except for genius of the first order like that of Allston or
+Greenough. Men of the highest intellectual rank, whatever they may have
+become afterwards, tried the ministry at the start. The traditions of
+New England favored the ministerial calling. The great names, with here
+and there an exception, were names of divines. The great books were on
+subjects of religion; the popular interest centred in theological
+controversy; the general enthusiasm was aroused by preachers; the
+current talk was about sermons. The clergy was a privileged class,
+aristocratic, exalted.
+
+Divinity Hall had been dedicated in August, 1826. It was situated on an
+avenue about a quarter of a mile from the college yard. It contained,
+besides thirty-seven chambers for the accommodation of students, a
+chapel, a library, a lecture-room, and a reading-room; it stood opposite
+the Zoölogical Museum. Before it was a vacant space used for games.
+Behind it was meadow land reaching all the way to Mr. Norton's. Just
+beyond it was Dr. Palfrey's residence. George Rapall Noyes, D.D., was
+elected in May, 1840, with the title of "Hancock Professor of Hebrew and
+Oriental Languages, and Dexter Lecturer on Biblical Literature." He had
+already translated the poetical books of the Old Testament, and it was
+his eminence as a translator which had won him fame while a minister at
+Petersham. It was his duty also to explain the New Testament, and in
+addition to give lectures in systematic theology. Besides all this he
+was to preach in the college chapel a fourth of the year. He steadily
+grew in the respect and attachment of the young men; his authority in
+the lecture-room was very great; his opinions were carefully formed and
+precisely delivered; and his shrewd, practical wisdom was long
+remembered by his pupils. Convers Francis, D.D., appointed to the
+"Parkman Professorship," after the resignation of Henry Ware, Jr., was
+his associate. The branches assigned to him were ecclesiastical history,
+natural theology, ethics, the composition of sermons, and instruction in
+the duties of a pastor; besides all this he was to preach half of the
+time in the college chapel. Dr. Francis was an accomplished scholar and
+a faithful teacher. The best man, too, for his position, at a time when
+in an unsectarian school it was exceedingly desirable that the
+professors should harmonize all tendencies; for with a strong sympathy
+with "transcendentalism," as it was then called, he had been a most
+successful parish minister, a very acceptable preacher, and a man in
+whom all the churches had confidence.
+
+At Cambridge, owing to the influence of Buckminster, Ware, and Norton,
+Unitarian opinion prevailed, though the controversial period had passed
+by when I was there. The clouds of warfare no longer discharged
+lightning; there was no roll of thunder; only a faint muttering betrayed
+the former excitement; and the memory of old conflicts hovered round the
+spots where the fights had been hottest. Marks of strife were still
+visible on texts, and chapters were scarred with wounds. Comment still
+lingered near the passages where polemics had raged, and the blood
+burned as we read the tracts or studied the essays of the champions we
+admired.
+
+It was impossible to forget the interpretations that had been given to
+words or phrases. A strictly scientific study, either of the Bible or
+the creed, was therefore out of the question. But the course of
+exercises was broad, generous, inclusive, as far as this was feasible.
+The bias was decidedly unorthodox, yet without the bitter temper of
+opposition. The old system was rather set aside than attacked. It was
+assumed to have been vanquished in the fair field. The professors were
+liberal in their views. A small but serviceable library furnished the
+students with a certain amount of needed material, the college library
+was freely opened to them, and the collections of the professors were
+gladly placed at their disposal. The days were fully occupied with
+lectures, recitations, discussions, exercises in writing out and taking
+of notes. Once a week there was a debate on some general theme not
+connected with the topics of the class-room; and at the latter part of
+the course there was special training in the composition and delivery of
+sermons, accompanied by a brief experience of extemporaneous speaking.
+The Unitarian ministry was alone contemplated; no wide divergence from
+it was encouraged, and the conservative methods of interpretation were
+the ones recommended. Some knowledge of Greek and Latin being
+presupposed, the study of Hebrew was made the one study of language, and
+this was pursued with the best available helps. Biblical criticism
+naturally took a prominent place in the current curriculum, under the
+guidance of the most distinguished authorities; books of every school
+were recommended, whether old or new, Catholic or Protestant,
+"conservative" or "liberal," Horne, Tholuck, De Wette being consulted in
+turn. The New Testament and "Historical Christianity" were taken for
+granted; and these meant belief in miracles, which were defended against
+rising objections of the Strauss and Paulus schools, the former holding
+by the "mythical" theory, the latter favoring the notion of a natural
+explanation of some sort. The hostility towards rationalism was decided.
+This was forty years ago, before the "historical method," as it was
+called, instituted by Baur, Schwegler, Zeller, Sneckenburger, and the
+_Theologische Jahrbücher_, had any expositor in this country, long
+before the Dutch school, the later French school--Kuenen, Reville,
+Reuss, Nicolas, Renan,--came out. The great issue was the credibility of
+the miracles of the Old and New Testaments. The half-monastic life we
+led at Divinity Hall cut us off a good deal from social amenities,
+reform agitations, attempts to change institutions, and even from the
+deeper currents of religious sentiment. None but the very observant took
+note of Brook Farm, or heeded the movements in behalf of Association
+that were going on in other communities. Whatever was outside of the
+"Christian" ministry concerned us but little. The professors did not
+direct our eyes to the mountain tops or call attention to the bringers
+of good tidings from other quarters than the Christian Revelation, as
+explained by its scholars and writers. Even such a phenomenon as Emerson
+did not make a profound impression on the average mind.
+
+A tone of old-fashioned piety pervaded the establishment. A weekly
+prayer-meeting, always attended by one of the professors, though
+officially rather than as a stimulator, was much in the manner and
+spirit of similar exercises at Andover. The students were cautioned
+against excessive intellectualism. Several of them spent their Sundays
+in teaching classes of the young in the neighboring towns, in
+ministering to the sick in hospitals, or in carrying the monitions of
+conscience to the criminals in the prison at Charlestown. The aims of a
+practical ministry were thus kept in view as well as the circumstances
+of the time permitted. Of course the school could not be a philanthropic
+institution any more than it could be independent or scientific. It was
+committed to a special purpose, which was the supply of Christian
+pulpits with instructed, earnest, devoted men. That they should be
+Unitarians was expected; that they should be Christians in belief was
+demanded. There were two ever-present spectres, "orthodoxy" and
+"rationalism," the one represented by Andover, the other by Germany.
+Audacity of speculation when unaccompanied by practical piety was
+discountenanced, and in flagrant instances rebuked.
+
+The literal form of the orthodox creed, it need hardly be said, was made
+more prominent than its imaginative aspect. This was inevitable, for the
+object was to assail it rather than to understand it. To be perfectly
+fair to all sides was, under the circumstances, not to be expected at a
+period so near the era of controversy. An earnest, ingenuous youth could
+find at Cambridge all the courage and impulse he needed, for the
+atmosphere of the place was neither chilling nor depressing. The less
+emotional, more intellectual scholar was left to pursue his studies
+undisturbed, the wind of spiritual feeling not being strong enough to
+carry him away.
+
+In a word, the institution was all that could have been looked for in a
+time when ecclesiastical and doctrinal traditions were fatally though
+not confessedly broken, and naked individualism was not avowedly
+adopted. The task of the professors, conscientious, hard working,
+utterly faithful men, was laborious, difficult, and thankless. The
+Unitarian public, fearing a tendency to unbelief, gave them a grudging
+confidence; the students, I am afraid, were not considerate of
+them,--the zealous finding them lukewarm, the cold-blooded blaming them
+for stopping short of the last consequences of their own theory. It is
+wonderful that the school went on at all. The single-minded devotion of
+the teachers alone preserved it. Looking thoughtfully back across a wide
+gulf of years, the writer of these pages feels that he owes this tribute
+to Convers Francis and George R. Noyes. How often he has wished he could
+take them by the hand and ask their forgiveness for his frequent
+misjudgment of them, misjudgment the remembrance of which makes his
+heart bleed the more as he can only think of their generous forbearance.
+Their influence was emancipating and stimulating. They were friendly to
+thought. Under their ministration the mind took a leap forward towards
+the confines of the Christian system of faith. What the divinity school
+of the future may be able to accomplish it would be hazardous to
+conjecture. It could hardly then have done more than it did.
+
+The study of comparative religions, so zealously prosecuted within a
+few years, together with a desire to do perfect justice to orthodox
+doctrines, may render practical a scientific review of theological
+systems, but in this event a predilection in favor of a separate
+"Christian" ministry can be no longer characteristic of a divinity
+school which proposes to prepare young men for the clerical calling.
+
+The three years of secluded life passed quickly away. The trial sermon
+in the village church was delivered and criticised. The President of the
+college then was Edward Everett, my uncle. The next morning I went to
+his office; he spoke warmly of my sermon, but advised me henceforth to
+commit sermons to memory as he did. This I tried two or three times, but
+the effort to write the sermons so fatigued me that the task of
+committing them to memory was too great, and for years I wrote my
+discourses, until for convenience' sake I learned to preach without
+notes. The diploma was bestowed, the actual ministry was begun. The term
+of preaching as a candidate did not last long. By the advice of friends
+an invitation was accepted to an old established conservative parish in
+Salem, Mass. Ordination and marriage soon followed, and public life was
+inaugurated under the most promising conditions. I had the best wishes
+of the conservative portion of the community to which I was, properly,
+supposed to belong, and the hopes of the radical portion who anticipated
+a change of view as time went on, and I was brought into sharper
+collision with prevailing habits of thought than was possible at
+Cambridge, where the student was in a great measure cut off from
+intercourse with the world.
+
+At the "Divinity School" I was known as a young man with conservative
+ideas. I remember now discussions, essays, criticisms, in which the
+opinions in vogue among old-fashioned Unitarians were defended somewhat
+passionately against the more daring convictions of my companions. In
+especial my faith was in direct opposition to the spiritual philosophy;
+Strauss was a horror; Parker was a bugbear; Furness seemed an innovator;
+Emerson was a "Transcendentalist," a term of immeasurable reproach. All
+this was soon to pass away, and I was to go a great deal beyond even
+Parker. The word "Transcendentalist" ceased to be a synonym for
+"enthusiast." The philosophy of intuition was first literally adopted,
+then dismissed, and I came out where I least expected. But I well
+remember, one evening as I was walking out from Boston, presenting to
+myself distinctly the alternative between the adoption of the old and
+the new. I am afraid that the old commended itself by its venerableness,
+the solidity of its traditions, and the authority of its great names,
+while the new was still vague and formless. I then and there decided to
+follow in the footsteps of my fathers, a course more in sympathy with
+the prevailing temper of the age and with the current of thought at
+Divinity Hall, though Emerson had delivered his address some years
+before, and the New Jerusalem was even then coming down from heaven.
+
+
+
+
+IV. SALEM.
+
+
+Old Salem was a city of the imagination. History does it no justice.
+The "Essex Institute," founded in 1848, by the union of the "Essex
+County Historical Society" and the "Essex County Natural History
+Society," has a very fine collection of books, pamphlets, manuscripts,
+an invaluable museum, relics, pictures, so that in no locality in the
+country has so much been accomplished in exhuming the treasures of
+municipal and civil history, and in bringing to light antiquities.
+Hurd's "History of Essex County," published in 1888, with its monographs
+on commerce, religion, literature, newspapers, etc., written by
+thoroughly competent men, throws a flood of light on the past of the
+place. Mr. Upham's "Memoir of Francis Peabody," published in 1868, gives
+an admirable account of the literary eminence of the old town. Colonel
+Higginson's article in _Harper's Monthly_ on "Old Salem's Sea Captains,"
+published in September, 1886, gives something of its romantic character.
+But best of all as illustrating this feature are the articles written by
+"Eleanor Putnam" (Mrs. Arlo Bates), and republished after her death
+under the title of "Old Salem," in 1887. She was about thirty years old
+when she died; but if she had lived she would have presented the old
+city in its quaintest aspect. Her love of antiquarian research, her
+taste, her devotion to Salem qualified her in an eminent degree for her
+self-appointed task.
+
+There can hardly be a doubt that the origins of the town were
+religious; that a religious purpose, deep though undefined and
+undeclared, animated the emigrants before Winthrop. The very name,
+Salem, the Hebrew for peacefulness, instead of "Naumkeag" (the old
+Indian name), adopted in 1628, to commemorate the reconciliation between
+the company of Roger Conant and that of John Endicott, was already
+suggestive of spiritual qualities. Eminent forms loom up in the
+distance: Francis Higginson, the first minister of Massachusetts Bay;
+Roger Williams, whose name is identified with "soul freedom"; Hugh
+Peters, his opponent. John Endicott was a most imposing figure; hasty,
+rash, choleric (as was shown by his striking a man in early life),
+imperious, but brave and bold. He was a stern Puritan, hating popery so
+much that he cut out the image of the king from the English banner,
+because it was an image, while at the same time he persecuted the
+Quakers, because they advocated obedience to the "inner light" and were
+disturbers of the established peace. But he had sweeter
+qualities--gentleness, generosity, and kindness. An old scripture
+(Ecclesiasticus xi., 28) says: "Judge none blessed before his death; for
+a man shall be known in his children." The descendants of John Endicott
+are graceful, elegant, refined people, lovely in manners, gentle in
+disposition. The root of these qualities must have been in the
+forefather two centuries and a half ago. The intellectual history of the
+city is very illustrious and began early. A strong intellectual bent
+characterized the early settlers, who were persons of inquisitive minds,
+addicted to experiments and enterprises, exceedingly ingenious. Near the
+middle of the last century there was in existence in Salem a social
+evening club, composed of eminent cultivated and accomplished citizens.
+On the evening of Monday, March 31, 1760, a meeting was held at the
+Tavern House of a Mrs. Pratt for the purpose of "founding in the town of
+Salem a handsome library of valuable books, apprehending the same may be
+of considerable use and benefit under proper regulations." The books
+imported, given, or bought, amounted to four hundred and fifteen
+volumes. This society, which may be regarded as the foundation of all
+the institutions and agencies established in this place to promote
+intellectual culture, was incorporated in 1797. In 1766, the famous
+Count Rumford was an apprentice here. In 1781, Richard Kirwan, LL.D., of
+Dublin, an eminent philosopher of the period, had a valuable library in
+a vessel which was captured by an American private armed ship and
+brought into Beverly as a prize. The books were given by Dr. Kirwan, who
+would accept no gratuity and was delighted that his volumes were put to
+so good a use. The books were sold to an association of gentlemen in
+Salem and its neighborhood, and formed the "Philosophical Library." This
+and the "Social Library" were afterwards consolidated into the "Salem
+Athenæum," which was incorporated in March, 1810.
+
+Among the distinguished men were William H. Prescott, Benjamin Peirce,
+Nathaniel Hawthorne, John Lewis Russell, Charles Grafton Page, and Jones
+Very. Here lived Edward Augustus Holyoke, president of the Massachusetts
+Medical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Timothy
+Pickering, Rev. John Prince, Rev. William Bentley, Nathaniel Bowditch,
+author of the "Practical Navigator" and translator of the "Mecanique
+Celeste"; John Pickering, Joseph Story, of the Supreme Bench; Daniel
+Appleton White, Leverett Saltonstall, Benjamin Merrill, and many another
+man of accomplishments and learning. Even the uneducated, and those
+engaged in the common occupations of everyday life, gratified their love
+of knowledge, and followed up, for their private enjoyment, researches
+in intellectual and philosophical spheres; apothecaries and retail
+shopkeepers distinguished themselves as writers; one of them--Isaac
+Newhall by name--was reputed the author of the famous "Junius Letters,"
+thus enjoying companionship with Burke, Gibbon, Grattan, Camden,
+Chatham, Chesterfield, and other distinguished writers.
+
+Its commercial history was exceedingly brilliant. In its palmy days it
+had more trade with the East Indies than all the other American ports
+put together. Its situation by the sea encouraged maritime adventure.
+From its very infancy its inhabitants sent vessels across the Atlantic
+of forty to sixty tons, and followed up the trade with Spain, France,
+Italy, and the West India Islands. In the war of the Revolution it sent
+out one hundred and fifty-eight armed ships, mounting at least two
+thousand guns, and carrying not less than six thousand men. In 1785,
+Salem sent out the first vessel to the Isle of France, Calcutta, and
+China; she began also the trade to the other ports of the East Indies
+and Japan; to Madagascar and Zanzibar, Brazil and Africa. In the south
+seas, Salem ships first visited the Fiji Islands; they first opened up
+to our commerce New Holland and New Zealand. In the war of 1812 she had
+two hundred and fifty privateers. When the war was over, these vessels
+were engaged in the merchant service. Mr. E. H. Derby, one of the great
+merchants, said to be the richest man in America, sent out thirty-seven
+vessels in fourteen years, making a hundred and twenty voyages. The
+names of the great merchants, E. H. Derby, N. Silsbee, William Gray,
+Peabody, Crowningshield, Pickman, Cleveland, Cabot, Higginson, are of
+universal celebrity. Then Derby Street was alive with sea-captains, the
+custom-house was active, the tall warehouses were full of treasures, the
+great East Indiamen fairly made the air fragrant as they unloaded their
+merchandise. To quote the language of "Eleanor Putnam": "There was
+poetry in the names of the vessels--the ship _Lotus_, the _Black
+Warrior_, the brig _Persia_, the _Light Horse_, the _Three Friends_, and
+the great _Grand Turk_. There was, too, a charm about the cargoes. They
+were no common-place bales of merchandise, but were suggestive in their
+very names of the sweet, strange odors of the East, from which they
+came. There was food for the imagination in the mention of those
+ship-loads of gum copal from Madagascar and Zanzibar; of hemp and iron
+from Russia; of Bombay cotton; of ginger, pepper, coffee, and sugar from
+India; of teas, silks, and nankeens from China; salt from Cadiz; and
+fruits from the ports of the Mediterranean."
+
+Miss Putnam speaks of the gorgeous fans, the carved ivory, the blue
+Canton china, the generous tea-cups, the tureens, the heavy tankards,
+the Delft jars, the ancient candle-sticks, the heavy punch bowls, the
+strange beads, suggestive of the Hindoo rites, Nautch dances, and women
+with dusky throats. Then the very air was weighty with romantic
+adventures. We read with awe of cashmere shawls hanging on clothes
+lines, of jars full of silver coin, of the gilded fishes on the side of
+each stair, of the grand staircase in the front hall of Mr. Pickman's
+house on Essex Street, of logs of sandal-wood. The museum of the East
+India Marine Society contains sceptres from the Fiji Islands; a musical
+instrument from New South Wales, another from Borneo; a carved statue of
+a rich Persian merchant of Bombay; an alabaster figure of a Chinese Jos;
+a copper idol from Java; a mirror from Japan; fans from Maraba, the
+Marquesas Islands, Calcutta; cloth from Otaheite; an earthen patera from
+Herculaneum; two dresses of women from the Pelew Islands; sandal-wood
+from the Sandwich Islands; a parasol from Calcutta; nutmegs from
+Cayenne; thirty-six specimens of Italian marble; cement from the palace
+of the Cæsars at Rome; white marble from Carthage; porphyry from Italy;
+beads worn by the Pundits and Fakirs in India; a glass cup from Owyhee;
+Verde Antico from Sicily; sandal-wood tapers from China; wood images of
+mummies from Thebes; a silver box from Soo-Soo; porphyry from
+Madagascar; a piece of mosaic from ancient Carthage; silk cocoons from
+India; marble from the temple of Minerva at Athens; piece of pavement
+from the site of ancient Troy; and polished jasper from Siberia.
+
+When I was in Salem, from 1847 to 1855, this splendor had departed.
+Derby Street was deserted, the great warehouses were tenements for
+laborers. Hawthorne has described the custom-house in his famous preface
+to the "Scarlet Letter." The sailors had disappeared; the commerce,
+owing mainly to the shallowness of the water in the harbor, had gone to
+Boston and New York. But traces of the old glory still lingered. Here
+and there a great merchant was seen on the streets. Some of the old
+houses remained: the Pickering House on Broad Street, built in 1651; the
+Turner House; Roger Williams' house, at the corner of Essex and North
+Streets, built before 1634; and Mr. Forrester's house.
+
+As the chairman of the Salem Lyceum, it was my privilege to entertain
+such men as R. W. Emerson, George W. Curtis and others. Thomas Starr
+King, when he lectured in Danvers, drove over to my house, and spent the
+rest of the evening. Nathaniel Hawthorne I used to meet frequently on
+the street. I often saw Mrs. Hawthorne leading her children by the hand.
+Mr. Hawthorne, who was in Salem from 1846 to 1849, was remarkable for
+his shyness. His favorite companions were some Democratic politicians,
+who met weekly at the office of one of them, where he occupied himself
+in listening to their talk, but he avoided cultivated people. On one
+occasion a friend of mine asked us to meet him at dinner; twice he went
+to remind his guest of the engagement. The hour arrived, the dinner was
+kept waiting half an hour for Mr. Hawthorne to come. He said but little
+during the dinner, and immediately afterward got up and went away; his
+reluctance to meet people overcoming his sense of propriety.
+
+My church, the "North Church," as it was called, was a handsome
+building on the main street, a stone structure with a tower, and a green
+before it. It was founded in 1772 by people who had left the First
+Parish by reason of great dissatisfaction. The first minister, called in
+1773, was Thomas Barnard. He was a broad-minded, liberal man, and left
+the church substantially Unitarian. His successor was J. E. Abbot,
+called in 1815, whose ministry, from ill-health, was very short. My
+predecessor, John Brazer, a cultivated, scholarly, sensitive man, a good
+preacher, an excellent pastor, was settled in 1820. My ministry there
+was exceedingly pleasant and tranquil for several years. There were long
+hours for studying; the parish work was not hard; the people were
+honest, quiet, sober, some of them exceedingly refined and gentle; it
+was as if the old Puritan spirit, modified by time, still lingered about
+the old town. Family life was beautiful to see; the homes were charming;
+there was luxury enough; there was great intelligence, singular activity
+of mind; and I remember well the bright conversations, the
+entertainments, the teas, the dinners, the receptions, the social
+meetings. The women, especially, were distinguished for interest in
+literary matters. Many interesting people still lived in the town,
+Daniel Appleton White, for instance, Dr. Treadwell, Benjamin Merrill,
+Thomas Cole; some of these were my parishioners and all were my friends.
+But the life was almost too quiet for me, as circumstances presently
+proved.
+
+At the same time, as if to render impossible my further ministration in
+this first place of service, the anti-slavery agitation was at its
+height, dividing churches, breaking up sects, setting the members of
+families against each other, detaching ministers from their
+congregations, and arraying society in hostile camps. The noise of the
+conflict filled the air. It was impossible to evade the issue. Those who
+had fixed positions in the community, were of a tranquil temperament, or
+of an easy conscience, might survey the battle calmly, or be vexed only
+by the confusion in the social world; but they who had the future still
+before them could not but feel the necessity of taking sides in the
+quarrel. When Garrison, the incarnate conscience, was enunciating the
+moral law and illustrating it by flaming texts from the Old Testament;
+when the intrepid Phillips was throwing the light of history on
+politics, and putting statesmanship in the face of humanity, judging all
+men by the maxims of ethical philosophy; when Parker was proclaiming the
+absolute justice, and Clarke was applying the truths of the eternal
+love; and many others, men and women, were thundering forth the divine
+vengeance on iniquity; when facts were set out for everybody's reading,
+and tongues were unloosed, and fiery messages proceeded from all mouths,
+and conviction was deep, and eloquence was stirring, it was impossible
+to be still.
+
+Now the situation is changed; the evil is removed; the wound has
+healed; the surgeon's knife has been put up in its case. A new
+philosophy is disposed to blame the action of the anti-slavery
+champions. Some critics have doubted whether the conduct of the
+abolitionists was wise; whether their primary assumption of the
+political equality of all men was correct; whether a race that had never
+founded a government or contributed to the advance of civilization could
+add any weight to the cause of liberty. But then such misgivings could
+not be raised. The abolitionists seemed to have on their side the
+precepts of the New Testament, the teachings of the Sermon on the Mount,
+the character and example of Jesus, the burning language of prophecy,
+the inspiring traditions of primitive Christianity, the humane instincts
+of the heart, the moral sentiments of equity, pity, compassion, all
+reinforced by the growing democratic opinion of the age, and by the
+tenets of the intuitive philosophy then coming to the front. The glowing
+passages from Isaiah and from Matthew: "Let the oppressed go free; break
+every yoke"; "Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the least of these, ye
+did it unto me," shone in our eyes. To the anti-slavery people belonged
+the heroic virtues, courage, faithfulness, and sacrifice. Theirs was the
+martyr spirit; the readiness to surrender ease, position, and success
+for an idea. It would have been strange if, at such a time, a young man,
+a clergyman, too, had been a champion of vested interests. The doctrine
+of a higher law than that of the State commended itself to his idealism,
+and pledged him to oppose what he regarded as legalized wrong. The
+doctrine of legal rights for all men made him a firm enemy of organized
+inhumanity. It was a period of passionate war. In every department of
+the Church and State the irrepressible conflict went on. It was no time
+for the calm voice of the loving spirit of wisdom to be heard. It was no
+time to propose that the local laws respecting slavery should be
+remodelled, and the relation between whites and blacks readjusted on
+more equitable principles. The science of anthropology had no weight in
+America or anywhere else. No exhaustive study of race peculiarities
+could be entered on. The combatants had the whole field, and between the
+combatants there seemed to be no room for choice by a minister of the
+Gospel, an enthusiastic friend of humanity, a democrat, and a
+transcendentalist.
+
+On one occasion, after a brutal scene in Boston attending the return of
+a slave to his master, feeling that the larger part of his congregation
+were in sympathy with the government, and approved of the act of
+surrender, the excited minister declined to give the ordinance of
+communion, thinking it would be a mockery. This action brought the
+growing disaffection to a head. The feeling of the parish was divided.
+Bitter words were exchanged. The situation on both sides became
+uncomfortable, and he accepted an invitation to another city, where he
+could exercise his independence without check or limit.
+
+The position in regard to slavery which was taken thirty years ago
+there is no room to regret. It was taken with perfect sincerity, and
+under an uncontrollable pressure of conviction. The part performed by
+the abolitionists was predestined. The conduct of their opponents looks
+now as irrational as it did then. American slavery was so atrocious a
+system, so hideous a blot, that no terms were to be kept with it.
+Probably nothing but the surgeon's knife would have availed in dealing
+with such a cancerous mass. The cord had become so fatally twisted that
+the knot, too closely drawn to be untied, must be cut with the sword.
+The abolition of slavery was inevitable; it came about through a great
+elemental upheaval. The situation had become intolerable and was past
+reforming. Long before the war, it had become impossible to get along
+with the slaveholders, except on the most ignoble principles of trade or
+fashion. All manly acquiescence was out of the question. The Unitarians,
+as such, were indifferent or lukewarm; the leading classes were opposed
+to the agitation. Dr. Channing stood almost alone in lending countenance
+to the reform, though his hesitation between the dictates of natural
+feeling and Christian charity towards the masters hampered his action,
+and rendered him obnoxious to both parties,--the radicals finding fault
+with him for not going further, the conservatives blaming him because he
+went so far. The transcendentalists were quite universally
+abolitionists, for their philosophy pointed directly towards the
+exaltation of every natural power. Wherever they touched the earth--as
+they did not always, some of them soaring away beyond terrestrial
+things--flowers of hope sprang up in their path. In France, Germany, and
+England, they were friends of intellectual and social progress, of the
+ideal democracy. The spiritual philosophy was in the air; its ideas were
+unconsciously absorbed by the enthusiastic spirits. They constituted the
+life of the period; they were a light to such as dwelt in darkness or
+sat under the shadow of death.
+
+In this country Mr. Emerson led the dance of the hours. He was our
+poet, our philosopher, our sage, our priest. He was the eternal man. If
+we could not go where he went, it was because we were weak and unworthy
+to follow the steps of such an emancipator. His singular genius, his
+wonderful serenity of disposition inherited from an exceptional ancestry
+and seldom ruffled by the ordinary passions of men, his curious felicity
+of speech, his wit, his practical wisdom, raised him above all his
+contemporaries. His infrequent contact with the world of affairs, his
+seclusion in the country, his apparitions from time to time on lecture
+platforms or in convention halls, gave a far-off sound to his voice as
+if it fell from the clouds. Some among his friends found fault with him
+for being bloodless and ethereal, but this added to the effect of his
+presence and his word. The mixture of Theism and Pantheism in his
+thoughts, of the personal and the impersonal, of the mystical and the
+practical, fascinated the sentiment of the generation, while the lofty
+moral strain of his teaching awakened to increased energy the wills of
+men. His speech and example stimulated every desire for reform, turning
+all eyes that were opened to the land of promise that seemed fully in
+sight. How much the anti-slavery conviction of the time, along with
+every other movement for the purification of society, owed to him we
+have always been fond of saying with that indefiniteness of
+specification which communicates so much more than it tells. This must
+be said, that, in the exhilaration of the period, they that worked
+hardest felt no exhaustion, and they that sacrificed most were conscious
+of no self-abnegation, and they that threw their lives into this cause
+had no sentiment but one of overflowing gratitude and joy. The
+anti-slavery agitation was felt to be something more than an attempt to
+apply the Beatitudes and the Parables to a flagrant case of
+inhumanity--it was regarded as a new interpreter of religion, a fresh
+declaration of the meaning of the Gospel, a living sign of the purely
+human character of a divine faith, an education in brotherly love and
+sacrifice; it was a common saying that now, for the first time in many
+generations, the essence of belief was made visible and palpable to all
+men; that Providence was teaching us in a most convincing way, and none
+but deaf ears could fail to understand the message.
+
+It was, indeed, a most suggestive and inspiring time. Never shall I
+forget, never shall I cease to be grateful for, the communion with noble
+minds that was brought about, the moral earnestness that was engendered,
+the moral insight that was quickened. Then, if ever, we ascended the
+Mount of Vision. I was brought into close communion with living men, the
+most living of the time, the most under the influence of stimulating
+thoughts; and if they were intemperate in their speech, extravagant in
+their opinions, absolute in their moral judgments, that must be taken as
+proof of the depth of their conviction. They loved much, and therefore
+could be forgiven, if forgiveness was necessary. They sacrificed a good
+deal, too, some of them everything in the shape of worldly honor, and
+this brought them apparently into line with the confessors and saints.
+They made real the precepts of the New Testament. Their clients were the
+poor, the lowly, the disfranchised, the unprivileged, against whom the
+grandeurs of the world lifted a heavy hand. They were champions of those
+who sorrowed and prayed, and this was enough to win sympathy and disarm
+criticism. It was a great experience; not only was religion brought face
+to face with ethics, but it was identified with ethics. It became a
+religion of the heart: pity, sympathy, humanity, and brotherhood were
+its essential principles. At the anti-slavery fairs all sorts and
+conditions of men met together, without distinction of color or race or
+sex. There was really an education in the broadest faith, in which
+dogma, creed, form, and rite were secondary to love; and love was not
+only universal, but was warm.
+
+Salem was the home of story and legend. There Puritanism showed its best
+and worst sides, for there Roger Williams preached, and there the
+witches were persecuted. The house where they were tried and the hill
+where they were executed were objects of curiosity. There were the wild
+pastures and the romantic shores, and broad streets shaded by elm trees,
+and gardens and greenhouses. There were spacious mansions and beautiful
+country-seats and pleasant walks. There was beauty and grace and
+accomplishment and wit. There were quaint old buildings, and ways once
+trodden by pious and heroic feet. On the whole, this was the most
+idyllic period in my ministry. Thither came Emanuel Vitalis Scherb, the
+native of Basel, an exile for opinion's sake, a man full of genius,
+learning, enthusiasm. Young, handsome, hopeful, his lectures on German
+literature and poetry attracted notice in Boston, whence he came to
+Salem to talk and be entertained. The best houses were open to him; the
+best people went to hear him. Alas, poor Scherb! His day of popularity
+was short. He sank from one stage of poverty to another; he was indebted
+to friends for aid, among the rest to H. W. Longfellow, who clung to him
+till the last, and finally died from disease in a military hospital
+early in our Civil War.
+
+I remember, in connection with Samuel Johnson, collecting an audience
+for Mr. A. B. Alcott, the most adroit soliloquizer I ever listened to,
+who delivered in a vestry-room a series of those remarkable
+"conversations"--versations with the _con_ left out--for which he was
+celebrated. It was, in many respects, a happy time.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE CRISIS IN BELIEF.
+
+
+I was in Salem when this came. It happened in the following way: A woman
+in my choir, a melancholy, tearful, forlorn woman, asked me one day if I
+knew Theodore Parker. I said I did not, but then, seeing her
+disappointment, I asked her why she put that question. She replied that
+her husband had abandoned her some months before and with another woman
+had gone to Maine. There he had left the woman and was living in Boston,
+and was a member of Mr. Parker's Society; and she thought that if I knew
+Mr. Parker I might find out something about him, and perhaps induce him
+to come back to Salem. I told her I was going to Boston in a day or two,
+and would see Mr. Parker.
+
+My visit, again and again repeated, resulted in an intimacy with that
+extraordinary man which had a lasting effect on my career. His personal
+sympathy, his profound humanity, his quickness of feeling, his
+sincerity, his courage, his absolute fidelity of service, even more than
+his astonishing vigor of intellect and his earnestness in pursuit of
+truth, made a deep impression on my mind. To be in his society was to be
+impelled in the direction of all nobleness. He talked with me, lent me
+books, stimulated the thirst for knowledge, opened new visions of
+usefulness. As I recall it now, his influence was mainly personal, the
+power that comes from a great character. He communicated a moral
+impetus. Faith in man, love of liberty in thought, institution, law,
+breathed in all his words and works. His theological ideas were somewhat
+mixed, as was inevitable then. His gift of spiritual vision, especially
+as shown in his interpretation of the Old-Testament narratives, may have
+been imperfect; his moral perspective may have been incomplete; his
+learning was copious, rather than discerning. But his single-mindedness
+was perfect, and his devotion to his fellow-men was almost superhuman.
+It was a privilege to know such a man, so simple-hearted and brave. The
+slight disposition to put himself on his omniscience, to strike an
+attitude, was not strange considering his enormous force, his
+consciousness of power, his singular influence over men, and his
+conviction (in large measure forced on him by his advocates) that he was
+a religious reformer, a second Luther, the inaugurator of a new
+Protestantism. His three doctrines, to which he constantly appealed, and
+in proof of which he adduced the testimony of the human soul,--the
+existence of a personal God, the immortality of the individual, and the
+absoluteness of the "moral law" might have been untenable in the
+presence of modern knowledge under the form in which he stated them. His
+vast collection of materials in attestation of Theism may have been
+valuable chiefly as a curiosity; but the man himself was all of one
+piece, genuine through and through. The mingling of fire and moderation
+in him was very remarkable, the blending of consuming radicalism with
+saving conservatism puzzled his more vehement disciples; but his
+character interested everybody; his firmness was visible from afar, and
+his warmth of heart was felt through stone walls. There were no two
+ministers in Boston who did as much for the inmates of hospitals and
+prisons as he did. His ministry ceased a quarter of a century ago, but
+the effect is vital yet, and will last for years to come. At this
+distance the heart leaps up to meet him. His chief work was done, for it
+consisted mainly in the adoption of a type of character, and length of
+days is not needed for this, while it is apt to be impaired by the
+infirmities of age. His long, wearisome illness, full of weakness and
+pain, tested the strength of his fortitude, patience, hopefulness, and
+trust, and was interesting as showing the passive, acquiescent side of
+heroism, all the more impressive in view of his love of life, his desire
+to finish his course, his sense of accountability (stronger in him than
+in anybody I ever met), and his wish to serve his kind. It was my
+happiness, more than ten years after he went away from men, to dwell for
+months in his atmosphere, while writing his biography, and all my old
+impressions of him were confirmed. And five years later, reviewing his
+life in the _Index_, I was again struck by his greatness. I may be
+excused for quoting the closing passage from the _Index_, of July 5,
+1877, in which I stated the claims of Theodore Parker to the honor of
+posterity. The paragraph sums up the qualities that have been ascribed
+to him--integrity, catholicity, outspokenness; to these might have been
+added warmth of heart, but this last attribute lay on the surface, and
+could be easily appreciated by ordinary observers--in fact, was seen and
+acknowledged by his enemies, and by those who knew him least.
+
+ On the whole, then, I should say that _manliness_ was Theodore
+ Parker's crowning quality and supreme claim to distinction. That he
+ had other most remarkable gifts is conceded as a matter of course.
+ Everybody knows that he had. But this was his prime characteristic.
+ The other gifts he had in spite of himself--his thirst for
+ knowledge, his love of books, his all-devouring industry, his
+ unfailing memory, his natural eloquence or power of affluent
+ expression; but character men regard as less a gift than an
+ acquisition,--the fruit of aspiration, resolve, fidelity,--the
+ product of daily, nay, of hourly, endeavor. Hence it is that
+ intellectual greatness does not impress the multitude; even genius
+ has but a limited sway over the masses of mankind. But character
+ goes to the roots of life. In fact, Theodore Parker's eminence as a
+ man of thought and expression in words has concealed from the world
+ at large the intrinsic quality of the person. His reputation as
+ theologian, preacher, controversialist, has concealed the real
+ greatness which comes to light as the dust of controversy subsides.
+ The very causes in which the heroism of his manliness was
+ displayed--as, for example, the anti-slavery cause, to which he
+ devoted so much of his time and vitality--rendered inconspicuous
+ the contribution he made to the treasury of humane feeling. Now
+ that that great conflict is over, now that its agitations have
+ ceased and its heats have cooled, the character of which this
+ conflict revealed but a portion, the career in which this long
+ agony was but an episode, loom up into distinctness. The greatest
+ of all human achievements is a manly character--guileless, sincere,
+ and brave; that he by all admission possessed. He earned it; he
+ prayed for it; meditated for it; worked for it;--how hard, his
+ private journals show. And for this he will not be forgotten. For
+ this he will be remembered as one of the benefactors, one of the
+ emancipators, of his kind.
+
+From a shelf in his library, I took Schwegler's "Nachapostolische
+Zeitalter," a work which threw a flood of light on the problems of
+New-Testament criticism. This led to a study of the writings of F. C.
+Baur, the founder of the so-called "Tübingen School." A complete set of
+the _Theologische Jahrbücher_, the organ of his ideas, was imported from
+Germany, and carefully perused. These volumes contained full and minute
+studies on all the books of the New Testament--Gospels, Epistles, the
+writing termed "The Acts of the Apostles," with incidental glances at
+the "Apocalypse." The calm, consistent strength of these expositions
+commended them to my mind. The author was a university professor, a man
+of practical piety, a Lutheran preacher of high repute, simple,
+affectionate, faithful to his duties, quite unconscious that he was
+undermining anybody's faith, so deeply rooted was the old Lutheran
+freedom of criticism in regard to the Bible. In the German mind,
+religion and literature, Christianity and the Scriptures, were entirely
+distinct things. The scholar could sit in his library in one mood and
+could enter his pulpit in another, preserving in both the
+single-mindedness that became a Christian and a student.
+
+Other theories have arisen since, but none that have taken hold of such
+eminent minds have appeared. Theodore Parker accepted it; James
+Martineau adopted its main proposition in several remarkable papers
+written at various times, last in the Unitarian magazine _Old and New_.
+In the brilliant lectures delivered in London, during the spring of
+1880, on the Hibbert Foundation, Ernest Renan's striking account of
+early Christianity owed its force to the assumption of the fundamental
+postulate of the Tübingen School. In the latter years of his life, Baur
+summed up the results of his criticism in a pamphlet that was designed
+to meet objections; and in 1875-1877 his son-in-law, the learned Edward
+Zeller, one of his ablest disciples, an eminent professor of history at
+Berlin, published an earnest, carefully considered, masterly report of
+the writings of the now famous teacher, in the course of which he paid a
+merited tribute to his character, vindicated his views from the charge
+of haste and partisanship, and predicted for them a triumphant
+future.[*]
+
+ [*] "Vorträge und Abhandlungen," von E. Zeller, 2 vols., Leipzig.
+
+The adoption of these opinions, so opposed to the views current in the
+community, compelled the adoption of a new basis for religious
+conviction. Christianity, in so far as it depended on the New Testament
+or the doctrines of the early Church, was discarded. The cardinal tenets
+of the Creed--the Deity of the Christ, the atonement, everlasting
+perdition--had been dismissed already, and I was virtually beyond the
+limits of the Confession. But Theism remained, and the spiritual nature
+of man with its craving for religious truth. Without going so far as
+Theodore Parker did, who maintained that the three primary beliefs of
+religion--the existence of God, the assurance of individual immortality,
+the reality of a moral law--were permanent, universal, and definite
+facts of human nature, found wherever man was found; without going so
+far as this, I contended that man had a spiritual nature; that this
+nature, on coming to consciousness of its powers and needs, gave
+expression to exalted beliefs, clothing them with authority, building
+them into temples, ordaining them in the form of ceremonies and
+priesthoods. In support of this opinion, appeal was made to the great
+religions of the world, to the substantial agreement of all sacred
+books, to the spontaneous homage paid, in all ages, to saints and
+prophets; to the essential accord of moral precepts all over the globe,
+to the example of Jesus, to the Beatitudes and Parables, to the respect
+given by rude people to the noblest persons, to the credences that
+inspire multitudes, to the teachings of Schleiermacher, Fichte,
+Constant, Cousin, Carlyle, Goethe, Emerson, in fact, to every leading
+writer of the last generation. All this was so beautiful, so consistent
+and convincing, so full of promise, so broad, plain, and inspiring that,
+with a fresh but miscalculated enthusiasm, over-sanguine, thoughtless,
+the young minister undertook to carry his congregation with him, but
+without success; so he went elsewhere. This action proceeded from the
+faith that Parker instilled. Parker was pre-eminently, to those who
+comprehended him, a believer.
+
+In the words of D. A. Wasson, his successor in Music Hall:
+
+ Theodore Parker was one of the most energetic and religious
+ believers these later centuries have known. This was the prime
+ characteristic of the man. He did not agree in the details of his
+ unbelieving with the majority of those around him, because it was
+ part of his religion to think freely, part of their religion to
+ forbear thinking freely on the highest matters. But he was not only
+ a powerful believer in his own soul, but was the believing Hercules
+ who went forth in the name of divine law to cleanse the Augean
+ stables of the world.... This, I repeat, and can not repeat with
+ too much emphasis, was the characteristic of the man--sinewy,
+ stalwart, prophetic, fervid, aggressive, believing.... The Hercules
+ rather than the Apollo of belief, it was not his to charm rocks and
+ trees with immortal music, but to smite the hydra of publicity,
+ iniquity, and consecrated falsehood with the club or mace of
+ belief; if this might not suffice, then to burn out its foul life
+ with the fire of his sarcasms.
+
+To quote my own words, written in 1873 (see "Life." p. 566):
+
+ With him the religious sentiment was supreme. It had no roots in his
+ being wholly distinct from its mental or sensible forms of
+ expression. Never evaporating in mystical dreams nor entangled in
+ the meshes of cunning speculation, it preserved its freshness and
+ bloom and fragance in every passage of his life. His sense of the
+ reality of divine things was as strong as was ever felt by a man of
+ such clear intelligence. His feeling never lost its glow, never was
+ damped by misgiving, dimmed by doubt, or clouded by sorrow. Far from
+ dreading to submit his faith to test, he courted tests; was as eager
+ to hear the arguments against his belief as for it; was as fair in
+ weighing evidence on the opponent's side as on his own. "Oh, that
+ mine enemy had written a book!" he was ready to cry, not that he
+ might demolish it, but that he might read it. He knew the writings
+ of Moleschott, and talked with him personally; the books of Carl
+ Vogt were not strange to him. The philosophy of Ludwig Büchner, if
+ philosophy it can be called, was as familiar to him as to any of
+ Büchner's disciples. He was intimate with the thoughts of Feuerbach.
+ He drew into discussion every atheist and materialist he met, talked
+ with them closely and confidentially, and rose from the interview
+ more confident in the strength of his own positions than ever.
+ Science he counted his best friend; relied on it for confirmation of
+ his faith, and was only impatient because it moved no faster. All
+ the materialists in and out of Christendom had no power to shake his
+ conviction of the Infinite God and the immortal existence, nor would
+ have had had he lived till he was a century old, for, in his view,
+ the convictions were planted deep in human nature, and were demanded
+ by the exigencies of human life. Moleschott respected Parker; Dessor
+ was his confidential friend; Feuerbach would have taken him by the
+ hand as a brother.
+
+There can be no greater mistake than to call Theodore Parker a Deist;
+than to class Theodore Parker with the Deists. He was utterly unlike
+Chubb or Shaftesbury, Herbert of Cherbury or Bolingbroke. Even the most
+philosophical of them had nothing in common with him. Hume and Voltaire,
+for instance, were utterly unlike him. They, it is true, believed in _a_
+God, the "First Cause," the "Author of Nature," the "Supreme Being," and
+in a future life. But their belief was merely logical and mechanical,
+his was vital; he believed in the real, living, immanent Deity. They
+thought that religion was an imposition, a policy of the priests, who
+played upon the fears of mankind; he believed that religion was a
+working power in the world, the origin of the highest achievement, the
+soul of all aspiration. They had no faith in the direct communication of
+the "Supreme Mind" with the soul of man; he believed in the infinite
+genius of man, and in the direct communication of the absolute
+intelligence. They thought of justice as a contrivance for securing
+happiness; he thought of it as the law of life. One of Mr. Parker's
+friends ascribed to him a gorgeous imagination; if he had it, it is a
+surprise that it should have been so completely suppressed as it was,
+for his taste in pictures and in poetry was very questionable. His want
+of speculative talent probably helped him with the people. Whether he
+formulated his thoughts is uncertain. Such was not his genius. He was a
+constructive, not a destructive. It was his faith that he criticised the
+Bible in order that he might release its piety and righteousness; that
+he tore in pieces the creeds in order to emancipate the secrets of
+divinity.
+
+It is useless to conjecture what Parker might have been had he lived.
+That he would have held to his primary convictions is almost certain; it
+is quite certain that he would have loved mental liberty. He would have
+been a great power in our Civil War; he would probably have been a
+leader in the free religious movement. Parker, when I first knew him,
+was in full life and vigor. He had gone to Boston a short time before my
+ordination in 1847, and had before him a long future of usefulness. All
+the exigencies in which he might have been conspicuous were distant.
+That the effect of such a man on me and my connections was exceedingly
+great is not strange. It would have been strange had it been otherwise.
+In sermon, prayer, private conversations my convictions came out. That
+the people were disappointed may be assumed, but they were kind,
+generous, and patient. The congregations did not fall off; there was
+little violence or even vehement expostulation. But the position was not
+comfortable, and when an invitation came from Jersey City to found a new
+Society, I accepted it at once. It had been a dream of Dr. Bellows to
+establish a Society at that place, and, learning that I was in search of
+another sphere of activity, he asked me to undertake the work. This was
+seconded by a cordial representation from Jersey City itself, on the
+part of some who were Dr. Bellows' own parishioners. The uprooting was
+not easy, for Salem had become endeared to me as the first scene of my
+ministry, a place where I could be useful in many ways, and which
+contained a delightful society; an established, well-furnished town,
+with historic associations; a country centre, an agreeable situation.
+But the waters were getting still there, and the sentiment of the past
+was getting to over-weigh the promises of the future.
+
+
+
+
+VI. JERSEY CITY.
+
+
+Jersey City, to which I went directly from Salem, was a very different
+place from what it is now; smaller and perhaps pleasanter. Where now is
+a large city, a few years ago was but a village. Now it is a
+manufacturing place, with great establishments, foundries,
+machine-shops, banks, insurance companies, newspapers, more than forty
+schools, and more than sixty churches. Then it was a large town, though
+it was nominally a city (incorporated in 1820), with a population of
+about twenty thousand, the increase being chiefly due to the annexation
+of suburbs, not to its own vital growth. It was substantially rural in
+character, with extensive meadows, broad avenues; a place of residence
+largely, the gentlemen living there and doing business in New York.
+There were a few Unitarians, a few Universalists, but there was no
+organized Unitarian society before I went there. A great many cultivated
+people resided in this place. There was wealth, culture, and interest in
+social matters. A meeting-house was built for me and dedicated to a
+large, rational faith.
+
+The chief peculiarity of my ministry there was the disuse of the
+communion service. This rite I had thought a great deal about in Salem.
+There had been, then, a well-meant proposal on the part of the pastor to
+make an alteration in the form of administering the communion service.
+The custom had been (quite an incidental one, for the usage was by no
+means the same in all the churches of the denomination) to thrust the
+rite in once a month, between the morning worship and dinner time, and
+to offer it then to none but the church-members, who composed but a
+small part of the congregation. As a consequence of this arrangement,
+the observance became formal, dry, short, and tiresome. To the majority
+of the Society it seemed a mystical ceremony with which they had no
+concern, while those who stayed to take part in it, wearied already by
+the preceding exercises, and hungry for their mid-day meal, gave to it
+but half-hearted attention. The observance was thus worse than thrown
+away; for, in addition to the loss of an opportunity for spiritual
+impression, a dangerous kind of self-righteousness was encouraged in the
+few church-members, who regarded themselves as in some way set apart
+from their fellow-sinners, either as having made confession of faith or
+as being subjects of a peculiar experience. To impart freshness to the
+rite, and at the same time to extend its usefulness as a "means of
+grace," the minister proposed to celebrate it less frequently (once in
+two or three months), to substitute it in place of the usual afternoon
+meeting, to make special preparation for it by the co-operation of the
+choir, and to throw it open to as many as might choose to come, be they
+church members or not. The suggestion met with feeble response, and that
+chiefly from young people who had hitherto stayed away out of a laudable
+feeling of modesty, not wishing to remain when their elders and betters
+went out, and not thinking themselves good enough to partake of a
+special privilege. The "communicants," as a rule, set their faces
+against the innovation, perhaps because they were secretly persuaded
+that the change portended the secularizing of Christianity by a removal
+of the barrier that divided the church from the world, possibly because
+they wished to retain an exclusive prerogative which had always marked
+the "elect."
+
+The matter was not pressed; the routine went on as before; the
+minister did his best to render the service impressive and interesting.
+But his studies and meditations led him to the conclusion that the
+observance had no place in the Unitarian system; that it was a mere
+formality, without an excuse for being; that it contained no idea or
+sentiment that was not expressed in the ordinary worship; that it was a
+remnant of an otherwise discarded form of Christianity, where it had a
+peculiar significance; that it was the last attenuation of the Roman
+sacrament of transubstantiation; that it ought to be dropped from every
+scheme of liberal faith as an illogical adjunct, a harmful excrescence,
+a hindrance, in short. No whisper of these doubts was breathed at the
+time, but the pastor's silence allowed the scepticism to strike the
+deeper root in his mind. Mr. Emerson's departure from his parish, on the
+ground that he could no longer administer the communion rite according
+to the usage of the sect, had occurred many years before this, but was
+still remembered in discussion and talk. Theodore Parker had no
+communion; but he was an established leader of heresy, and did not
+furnish an example. Many, agreeing with Emerson's reasoning, disapproved
+of his course in resigning his pulpit rather than continue to administer
+the bread and wine. He himself advised others to hold on to the
+observance, if they could, hoping for the time when it might be
+universally vivified by faith. Some might do it as it was. The
+congregations would, it is likely, without exception, have decided as
+his did, to lose their minister sooner than their "Supper." Some years
+later, on passing through Boston on my way to another scene of labor, I
+called on a distinguished clergyman who had taken a part in my
+ordination, and was asked by him what I intended to do in my new parish
+with regard to the communion. I replied that it was not my purpose to
+have it, "You cannot give it up," he said; "it is stronger than any of
+us. I should drop it if I dared, for there is nothing real in it that is
+not in the general service, but I am afraid to try. I shall watch your
+experiment with interest, but without expectation of its success." "Very
+well," I replied, "we shall see." The experiment was tried and
+succeeded. For four years I had no communion, and not a word was said
+about it. On leaving for New York, several of my friends, who had been
+accustomed to the ceremony all their lives, were asked if they did not
+think it would be wise to reinstate the rite. To my surprise, they with
+one voice said that there was no need of it, that the Society got along
+perfectly well without it. It is needless to say that in New York the
+observance was never celebrated.
+
+The ceremony was justified among Unitarians by various reasons which,
+in the end, seemed apologies. With the old-fashioned, semi-orthodox
+members of the congregations it was a precious heirloom, prized for its
+antiquity; a link that still held them in the bond of fellowship with
+the universal church; a last relic of the supernaturalism to which they
+clung without knowing why; the pledge of a mystical union with their
+Christ. Any change in the administration of it was regarded as a
+desecration; the suggestion of its complete discontinuance could, they
+thought, arise in no mind that was not fatally poisoned by infidelity.
+It was not, in their opinion, a symbol of doctrine, but a channel of
+divine influence, which no intellectual doubts could touch, which
+spiritual deadness alone could dispense with. Tenets might be abandoned,
+forms of belief might be discredited, but this citadel of faith must not
+be assailed or approached by irreverent feet. Mr. Emerson's example was
+not followed by his contemporaries. His fellows did not so soon reach
+his point of conviction. Even radicals, like George Ripley, did not. In
+my own case it was the growth of time. At the moment there was no
+disposition to abandon the observance, simply a desire to reanimate it.
+It was not perceived till much later that the changes proposed implied a
+virtual abandonment of the rite itself; that the communion is regarded
+as a sacrament, that as a sacrament it might be presumed to be
+supernaturally instituted for the communication of the divine life;
+that, when faith in the supernatural declines, the sacrament no longer
+has a function as a medium, and must be omitted; that no attempts to
+revive it as a sentimental practice could be justified to reason; that
+all endeavors to awaken interest in it by assuming some occult efficacy
+must be futile because groundless. The "memorial service" can in no
+proper sense be called a sacrament. It may be a pleasing expression of
+sentiment, somewhat over-strained and fanciful, but capable of being
+made attractive. The task of reproducing the emotions of the early
+disciples as they sat at supper with their Master, nearly two thousand
+years ago, is too severe for the ordinary imagination, and when
+persisted in from a sense of duty may become a dull, creaking
+performance, against which the sensitive rebel and the witty are tempted
+to launch the shafts of their sarcasm. The only way of saving it from
+gibes is to ascribe to it some mystical efficacy for which there is no
+logical excuse. The Roman Catholic doctrine of Transubstantiation had a
+foundation in the philosophy of the Church. The Lutheran doctrine of
+Consubstantiation, which recognized the presence of Christ on the
+occasion, but not the literal change of the substance of his flesh, was
+legitimate. But the Sabellian theory, which the Unitarians inherited,
+was in no respect justified, save as a tradition.
+
+The sole alternative at that time for me, when the Communion service
+was made a test question between the "conservative" and the "radical,"
+was to drop it. At present the situation is altered. It is no longer a
+ceremony or a tradition, but a means of spiritual cultivation. It stands
+for fellowship and aspiration, not for a communion of saints, but of all
+those who desire to share the saintly mind, of all who aim at
+perfection. The rite is one in which all may unite who wish, however
+fitfully, for goodness; _all_, whether Romanist or Protestant, and
+Protestant of whatever name; _all_, in every religion under the sun,
+Eastern or Western, Northern or Southern, old or new, every dividing
+line being erased. I once attended the Communion service of a Broad
+Churchman. The invitation was large and inclusive, comprehending
+everybody who, though far off, looked towards the light, everybody who
+had the least glimmer of the divine radiance; and none but an absolute
+infidel was shut out. There was a recognition of a divine nature in
+men,--
+
+ Like plants in mines which never saw the sun,
+ But dream of him, and guess where he may be,
+ And do their best to climb and get to him.
+
+The idea of spiritual communion is a grand one. It is universal too; it
+is human in the best sense. The symbols were ancient when Jesus used
+them, the Bread signifying Truth, the Wine signifying Life. Originally
+the symbols referred to the wealth of nature, as is evident from an
+ancient prayer. It was the custom for the master of the Jewish feast to
+repeat this form of words: "Blessed be Thou, O Lord, our God, who givest
+us the fruits of the vine," and then he gave the cup to all.
+
+Leaving out the personal application which is purely incidental, and
+discarding the sacramental idea which is a corruption, throwing the
+service open to the whole congregation as an opportunity, a great deal
+may be accomplished in the way of spiritual advancement. True, the
+ceremony contains no thought or sentiment that is not expressed in the
+sermon or the prayer, but it puts these in poetic form, it addresses
+them directly to the imagination, it associates them with the holier
+souls in their holiest hours, and brings people face to face with their
+better selves in the tenderest and most touching manner, teaching
+charity, love, endeavor after the religious life. The rite is full of
+beauty when confined within the bounds of Christianity, but when
+extended to the principles of other faiths, it is rich in meaning, and
+may be used with effect by those who wish to educate the people in the
+highest form of idealism, who desire comprehensiveness. A symbol often
+goes further than an argument, and a symbol so ancient and so
+consecrated ought to be preserved. A friend of mine included all
+religious teachers in his commemoration. This was a step in the right
+direction, but if the people are not ready for this yet, they may
+welcome an extension of the reign of spiritual love among the disciples
+whom theological hatred has kept apart. But this was not suspected then.
+
+It will be remarked that my reasons were not those of Emerson. His
+argument was solid and sound, but his real reason was personal. He said
+in his sermon: "If I believed it was enjoined by Jesus and his disciples
+that he even contemplated making permanent this mode of commemoration,
+every way agreeable to an Eastern mind, and yet on trial it was
+disagreeable to my own feelings, I should not adopt it.... It is my
+desire in the office of a Christian minister to do nothing which I
+cannot do with my whole heart. Having said this I have said all.... That
+is the end of my opposition, that I am not interested in it." My ground
+was different; I had no objection to the symbol, none to an Oriental
+symbol, and the mere fact that I was not interested in it seemed to me
+not pertinent to the case. My objection was that it divided those who
+ought to be united; that it encouraged a form of self-righteousness;
+that it implied a "grace" that did not exist. For the rest, my form of
+religion was of sentiment. It was scarcely Unitarian, not even Christian
+in a technical sense or in any other but a broad moral signification. It
+was Theism founded on the Transcendental philosophy, a substitute for
+the authority of Romanism and of Protestantism. This was an admirable
+counterfeit of Inspiration, having the fire, the glow, the beauty of it.
+It most successfully tided over the gulf between Protestantism and
+Rationalism. Parker used it with great effect. It was the life of
+Emerson's teaching. It animated Thomas Carlyle. It was the fundamental
+assumption of the Abolitionists, and of all social reformers.
+
+I had perfect freedom of speech in Jersey City; there was no
+opposition to the doctrine announced. The Society there was large and
+flourishing, and its influence in the town was on the increase. But
+Jersey City was, after all, a suburb only of New York. Some of my most
+devoted hearers came from New York, and urged me to go there. Dr.
+Bellows was anxious to found a third Society in the great city, and
+added his word to their solicitations, so that in the spring of 1859 I
+went thither. My church in Jersey City was continued for a short time,
+but I had no settled successor; the congregation did not grow; some of
+my most earnest supporters had either died or left the town. The war
+broke out and was fatal to institutions that had not a deep root. The
+building was sold soon after, for business purposes I think, and the
+society was never renewed. This may appear singular considering that
+there are Unitarian churches elsewhere in New Jersey, at Camden, Orange,
+Plainfield, Vineland, and Woodbury. The changed condition of the town
+may have had something to do with the failure to revive, after the war,
+the Unitarian Society. The Catholic, Presbyterian, Orthodox
+Congregationalist communions were more suited to the new population than
+the Unitarian was. Possibly, too, the "radical" complexion of the parish
+had something to do with the disrepute that fell upon it. However this
+may have been, the cause did not seem to prosper. Mr. Job Male, who died
+recently at Plainfield, was one of my most zealous supporters and
+exerted himself to keep the enterprise alive, but in vain. It is
+understood that the flourishing Unitarian church in Plainfield was
+largely due to his efforts.
+
+
+
+
+VII. NEW YORK.
+
+
+For the first year in New York I lived with Dr. Bellows at his
+parsonage. Mrs. Bellows and the children were at Eagleswood, New Jersey,
+the children being at school with Mr. Weld. And this is the place to say
+something about Henry Whitney Bellows. He was a very remarkable man,
+most extraordinary in his way; an original man, a peculiar individual;
+of mercurial temper, various, quick, sympathetic, brave, whole-hearted,
+generous, but all in his own fashion. More Celtic than Saxon, more
+French than English, prone to generalize, something of a _doctrinaire_,
+indifferent to personalities, but of warm affections where he was
+interested; loyal, as knights always are, where his honor was concerned,
+but impatient of dictation, restless, nervous, impetuous, dashing from
+side to side, always consistent with himself, yet rarely consistent with
+ordinary rules of conventional society. Such a man is best described in
+detail.
+
+Dr. Bellows, as we called him, had a singular gift of _expression_.
+This was the soul of him, his most prominent feature, the trait that
+explains every other. His appearance indicated as much. He had a mobile
+mouth, flexible features, a ringing voice, a cordial manner. He was fond
+of talking, brilliant in conversation, attractive in social intercourse,
+a charming companion, full of wit, rapid in repartee, ready with
+anecdote, illustration, allusion. He was a great favorite at the
+dinner-table, at friendly gatherings, at the club, where a circle always
+collected round him and were delighted with the endless versatility of
+his discourse. In fact, he was a man of society rather than a clergyman,
+though he occupied a pulpit from the beginning, and was faithful to all
+the duties of his profession. Still they were not altogether to his
+taste, and he got away from them whenever he conscientiously could. His
+best deliverances were half-secular addresses on some theme of immediate
+popular interest, speeches, orations, ethical talks, ever on a high
+plane of sentiment, but looking towards the urgent preoccupations of the
+time. He was not a student in any direction; not a deep, patient,
+exhaustive thinker; not a scholar in any school, but an immense reader
+of current literature, of magazines, papers, memoirs, and an eloquent
+reproducer of thoughts as he found them lying on the surface of the
+intellectual world. His brain was exceedingly active, and reached forth
+in all directions; his pen was fluent, facile, and busy; language exuded
+from all his pores. As a preacher he was conventional, restrained, and,
+it must be confessed, not engaging as a rule, but as a talker he was
+delightful, copious, entertaining, kindling, attractive to old and
+young, and crowds thronged the house when he spoke about what he had
+seen or felt, while his pulpit discourses did not fill the pews. Like
+many men of remarkable talents, he imagined his strong points to be
+those in which he was most deficient, not being gifted with much power
+of self-knowledge, and perhaps aspiring after accomplishments he did not
+possess. He prided himself more than he should have done on his insight
+as a theologian, his depth as a philosopher, his skill as an
+administrator, his practical success as an organizer; whereas his
+consummate ability consisted in exposition, not in original discovery.
+He was not a theologian, not a philosopher, not a builder, but a most
+persuasive advocate, perhaps the most adroit I ever met with. His range
+was wide, his exuberance infinite, his sway over his listeners absolute.
+It is no marvel that such a man was persuaded that he could achieve all
+things.
+
+He was the only speaker I ever knew who could talk himself into ideas.
+Many, by dint of talking, can work themselves into an implicit faith in
+doctrines they were indifferent about at starting; but this man had the
+dangerous gift of being able, not merely to think on his feet, but to
+set his faculties in motion by the action of his tongue. Again and again
+he has gone to a public meeting, at which he was expected to speak, with
+no preparation at all, or none but a very general one, depending upon
+some impulse of the moment to set him a-going. A word dropped by a
+previous speaker, the mere presence of the audience, a suggestion
+awakened in his mind as he sat awaiting his turn, would excite him
+sufficiently; and when he stood up one idea started another, an
+illustration opened a new field of thought, till the torrent, growing
+deeper and more tumultuous as it flowed, carried the hearers away in
+ecstasy. One who did not know him found it hard to believe that he had
+not meditated his address beforehand. He has gone into the pulpit with a
+written sermon, and being struck by a sentence in the Scripture he was
+reading, has laid his manuscript aside and delivered an extemporaneous
+discourse on an entirely different theme.
+
+The reason why he did not preach habitually without notes was that this
+fatal facility of speech excited him too much, carried him too far,
+rendered him discursive, led him on to inordinate length, and wearied
+his congregation. He needed the restraint of the paper, the calm dignity
+of the closet meditation; he needed also to spread his thoughts over a
+larger expanse of time, and thus to secure quiet for his brain. At the
+risk, therefore, of being dull, he spared himself, as well as his
+parishioners, the stimulating fervor of the extemporaneous address. He
+may have felt, too, that his was not the quality of mind for this
+method. It required a less fluent talent, a less ready loquacity, a less
+mercurial temperament, a more reserved habit. There are those whose
+constitutional reticence preserves them from aberration; who can see the
+end from the beginning; can cling closely to the matter in hand; can
+walk a thin plank; and have too few ready ideas to be in any peril of
+going astray. Such are the most successful extemporaneous preachers. Dr.
+Bellows' genius was better adapted to an address, therefore, than to a
+sermon.
+
+The secular view of things was more attractive to him than the
+spiritual. His defence of the drama in 1857 (an oration delivered in the
+Academy of Music, and which was very bold for that time); his vigorous
+conduct of the _Christian Inquirer_, a Unitarian paper, which he managed
+and for which he wrote constantly for four years, advocating an unwonted
+liberality of sympathy, maintaining, for example, the substantial
+identity of the Unitarian and the Universalist confessions; his interest
+in questions of social and philanthropic concern; his lectures before
+the Lowell Institute in 1857,--all attest his desire to effect a
+reconciliation between science and religion, between this world and the
+next. His oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard, in 1853,
+is an admirable specimen of his treatment of similar themes. The subject
+of the oration was "The Ledger and the Lexicon, or Business and
+Literature in Account with American Education"; and its purpose was to
+assert the claims of popular life against those of scholarship,--to
+state the case of natural instincts and practical intelligence as the
+controlling force of our destiny. He says, most truly, at the outset,
+"Speaking purely as a scholar, I should unaffectedly feel that I had
+nothing to offer worthy this audience or occasion," and then he goes on
+with a full, earnest, eloquent plea for the intellectual character of
+our political and commercial activity. Here is an extract:
+
+ What History asks from us is not Literature and Art. The world is
+ full of what can never grow old in either. _American_ Literature,
+ _American_ Art! Heaven save us from them! Let us freely use what is
+ so much better than anything one nation can make, the Literature
+ and Art of the whole past and the whole world. History implores us,
+ first of all, to be true to humanity. She begs to see the
+ education, the taste, the sensibility of this great people turned
+ to the serious, vital, universal interest of thoroughly vindicating
+ _Man_ from the scorn of _men;_ of establishing man on his throne as
+ man,--free because man, happy because man, noble and religious
+ because man! Literature and Art will take care of themselves; high
+ education and scholarship will come in their own time; and so,
+ thank God, will everything humanity needs. But for ourselves and
+ the immediate generation, there is no work so worthy as confirming
+ the faith of our people in their own principles; encouraging
+ devotion to Liberty as the supreme interest of Man;--of man sacred
+ in his own eyes, with duties, rights, aims, that are bounded
+ neither by color, nationality, nor law. The love of the race, the
+ liberation of humanity from complexional, material, political, and
+ moral disfranchisements; the elevation of the individual and of
+ every individual; the prostration of all partition-walls that
+ separate our kind; the tumbling of the artificial pedestals that
+ elevate the few, into the unnatural pits that bury the rest; the
+ affiliation of the foreigner, and the emancipation of the slave;
+ the subjugation of rebellious matter and reluctant wealth to the
+ wants and desires of man; the establishment of beautiful and
+ independent homes, of high and free and noble lives;--this is
+ American scholarship, this American art. A country that sacrifices
+ even its nationality, that proudest of all prejudices, to its
+ humanity, will be the first to pay that tribute to man, which
+ Christ waits to welcome as the final triumph of his kingdom. And,
+ finally, here in America, where for the first time universal
+ comfort and general abundance reign, the race looks to us to
+ pronounce the banns between the spiritual and material interests
+ and pursuits of man,--his worldly well-being, and his heavenly
+ prosperity,--a union that shall not be a miserable compromise of
+ which both shall be ashamed and which neither shall keep, but an
+ honorable, hearty, and intelligible alliance, on the highest
+ grounds.
+
+This is very fine and brave, and similar in tone was all he said
+about American life and destiny. He tried to exalt common things, and in
+this way he more than made amends for his lack of scholastic equipment.
+His mission was to encourage and fortify and console actual men and
+women, not to solve deep problems of fate. A good but commonplace man
+spoke to me with tears in his eyes of his endless gratitude to Dr.
+Bellows because on one New Year's Day he preached a doctrine of promise,
+and said that men did their best, and that the world was as good as
+could be expected; not an extraordinary doctrine certainly, but one that
+is seldom announced with so much cordial, human sympathy. This same
+ardor he threw into his ordinary lectures, carrying audiences away with
+a flood of conviction. When our Civil War broke out and it became
+evident, as it soon did, that the conflict would be a long one,
+necessitating large armies in a region of country unused to military
+needs and ignorant of military exigencies, Dr. Bellows' attention was
+drawn to the questions involved in the maintenance of a vast number of
+men in the field, their protection, discipline, and comfort; the proper
+supply of food, clothing, medicine; the best kind of tent, the best kind
+of hospital, the duty of keeping up the home associations by means of
+correspondence and missives. He talked over the situation with a few
+friends; societies were formed, organizations instituted, the means of
+relief set in motion. Out of this grew the Sanitary Commission, of which
+he was the mouthpiece and the inspiring soul. The work was immense, but
+the task of awakening the country to the necessity of endeavor was,
+beyond all ordinary power of conception, arduous. Such was the blind
+faith in the government,--a government inexperienced in similar
+matters,--such was the indifference of multitudes who were far removed
+from actual danger, such the unconsciousness of the magnitude of the
+peril, such the insensibility to the demands of the hour, the serene
+confidence that all was going well, the jaunty sense of complacency in
+having raised the regiments, that nothing less than a trumpet call was
+required to rouse the country to a feeling of obligation. Afterwards
+when the magnitude of the strife was self-evident, when the dangers of
+camp-life were understood, and the temptations to infidelity of many
+kinds were painfully apparent, other forces came in to carry forward the
+work; but at first prescience was needed, and zeal, and faith in
+principles, and a sense of the gravity of the situation. It is hardly
+too much to say that but for the energy shown by the Sanitary Commission
+in the early part of the war, the issue might have been indefinitely
+postponed. That the Commission itself flourished to the end was due in
+the main to Henry Bellows. Of course he did not do everything, but he
+did his part. The labor of organization was discharged by other orders
+of genius. The duties of treasurer devolved upon men differently
+constituted still; there were many hands employed, many heads busy with
+planning. But his was the potent voice. He sounded the clarion; East,
+West, North, and as far South as he could go, he argued, remonstrated,
+pleaded, exhorted, interpreted, inspired, and wherever he was heard he
+filled veins with patriotic fire. He was never daunted, never
+disheartened, never depressed. His tones always rang out clear, strong,
+decisive. The bugle never gave an uncertain sound. In Washington he
+addressed the highest authorities and was so urgent, not to say so
+imperious, that President Lincoln asked him which of the two ran the
+machine of government. He possessed in a singular degree the power of
+making people work, and work gladly,--all sorts of people, men and
+women, the sensible and the enthusiastic, the practical and the
+sentimental, the low-toned and the high-strung; and they toiled day
+after day at scraping lint, packing garments, raising money, organizing
+fairs. In the meantime he travelled to and fro, lecturing, addressing
+crowds in the meeting-houses, halls, theatres; writing letters to
+committees, visiting men of influence, inspecting hospitals and camps,
+making himself acquainted with the newest methods of dealing with
+sanitary problems, and imparting ideas as fast as they came to him. His
+activity was prodigious. He was one of the most conspicuous figures in
+the country. He brought the Commission into universal repute. Under his
+spell it lost its local character and became a national concern. He was
+a Unitarian preacher; his immediate co-operators were Unitarians; yet so
+broad and mundane was he that no savor of sectarianism mingled with his
+zeal, nor could it be suspected, except for his aims, that he was a
+clergyman. As long as the war lasted this energy continued, the
+enthusiasm did not abate, the outpouring did not slacken. It was not
+till the struggle was over that the over-tasked brain craved repose.
+Then the reaction was purely nervous, not in the least moral or
+intellectual. He sprang up again and threw himself into new enterprises
+with the old fervor and the old brilliancy of speech, striving to awaken
+a desire for religious unity, as he had promoted national concord. The
+establishment of the National Conference of Liberal Churches, which was
+to supplement the more local Unitarian Associations, was his suggestion.
+The scheme did not entirely meet his expectations, but this shows how
+large his expectations were, and how comprehensive were his purposes of
+good. As has been intimated already, his desires were in advance of his
+practical ability. He was a man of wishes rather than of expedients. His
+plans often failed, but his aspirations were always pure and lofty, and
+it was characteristic of him to impute the failure of the special plan
+to some stubbornness in the materials he attempted to manipulate, rather
+than to any deficiency in his own faculty. Thus his confidence in
+himself was sustained, and he went on trying experiments and believing
+in his talent to set anything, even communities and States, on their
+feet.
+
+People used to say that his advocacy was very uncertain; that it was
+impossible to tell in advance whether he would take a liberal or a
+conservative view of a party or dogma; in short, he had the reputation
+of being somewhat of a chameleon, of catching his line from the last
+person he talked with. One of his parishioners remarked, jestingly, that
+the hearers of Dr. Bellows were taught in perfection one lesson,--that
+of self-reliance. This was probably true, as it was a general
+impression; and it illustrates the warmth of his sympathy, the
+impressionableness of his temperament, the readiness of his adaptation,
+the facility of his discourse, as well as the want of depth in his
+speculative intellect and his lack of hold on fundamental principles. He
+was an advocate by nature, not a theologian, a philosopher, or a critic;
+an adept in speech, not a subtle or profound thinker. He saw the
+effective points in either doctrine, and chose the one that was most
+captivating at the time. His eclecticism was simply ease of
+transference, not a keen perception of the grounds of identity. His
+logic was the skilful accommodation to circumstances, not absolute
+fidelity to the laws of reason. His affluence of diction and his
+profusion of thoughts covered up his essential poverty of insight, and
+persuaded some that he looked farther than he did; but still it remains
+true that he was not a sure guide in matters of opinion. He was a most
+adroit, subtle, engaging talker, and as such was of incalculable value;
+a fountain of entertainment, and a source of influence. A decided vein
+of Bohemianism ran through his character. He was light-hearted, gay,
+versatile, fond of fun, restless, addicted to society, abhorrent of
+solitude, darkness, confinement; a friend of artists, musicians, wits; a
+club-man; could smoke a cigar, and drink a glass of wine, and tell a
+merry story; a man of quick emotions, volatile some would call him,
+though of unquestioned and unquestionable loyalty when any principle was
+at stake, or any person he loved and trusted was in trouble. Otherwise
+he forgot unpleasant things and went to something else, dropping the
+individual, but holding fast to the elements of charity. This faculty of
+changing rapidly from one interest to another saved him from a vast deal
+of fatigue, and enabled him to pursue his almost incredible labors with
+less wear and tear than would have been possible under other
+circumstances. The formation of roots, and the necessity of pulling them
+up frequently with a feeling of loss and pain, is sadly weakening and
+disabling. This fosters a disposition to stay at home, to form few ties,
+to remain quietly where one is placed by destiny, to expose one's self
+to no more disruptions than are appointed, to hide one's self in a
+corner of existence, to avoid the wind. The scholar hugs his library,
+reads books, meditates, cultivates his mind, appears in public only when
+he is prepared. The man of society dashes out and deems the time wasted
+that is passed in the house. Dr. Bellows once expressed his wonder that
+a friend should have no desire to go abroad, but should be content in
+his study.
+
+He was a knight-errant, a Norman gentleman, ever ready to succor the
+oppressed, but satisfied when he had unhorsed the oppressor, though the
+victim lay helpless on the ground. He derived his name from "Belles
+Eaux." He was not a democrat as implying one that had affinities with
+the people. On the contrary, he was at bottom an aristocrat, looking
+down on the people; but he was humane in idea, holding it to be the part
+of a gentleman to relieve the unfortunate. The motto, "_Noblesse
+oblige_" applied to him exactly, with the understanding that he belonged
+to the _Noblesse_, and was privileged to patronize. This tendency was
+prominent in him. He would not allow a companion to pay his car fare,
+because he would not borrow so small a sum, but he confronted the man to
+whom he had lent fifty dollars, and who had forgotten the payment, as
+people often do. Meeting the defaulter in the street, he reminded him of
+the transaction, taxed him with infidelity to his engagements, and had
+the satisfaction of receiving his money and relieving his mind at the
+same time. Magnanimous he was by nature. I will give a single instance
+of it, out of several I could detail if personalities did not forbid.
+When I first came to New York to found a parish, there was a woman in my
+congregation,--an angular, brusque woman, not sunny or agreeable,--whose
+husband, being unfortunate, had, to repair his fortune, gone to San
+Francisco; she stayed in New York and kept school, for the purpose of
+educating her children, and of eking out the family expenses. One day,
+complaining to me of her lot and labor, she spoke of certain prejudices
+against her as interfering with her success, and accused Dr. Bellows of
+being one of her enemies. Having satisfied myself of the injustice of
+the impression about her, and of her worthy deserving, I took occasion
+at once to speak to Dr. Bellows on the subject. Reminding him of the
+circumstances in which the woman was placed, I asked him if he did not
+think she ought to be helped instead of being hindered. He acknowledged
+that he knew her, that he did not like her, that he had spoken harshly
+of her under the impression that she was not deserving of moral support.
+On my presentation of her case, and conviction that he was wrong, he,
+being persuaded of his heedlessness, offered to do everything in his
+power to repair any mischief he might have caused. In my excitement, I
+became audacious and suggested the drawing up and signing of a
+paper,--about the most disagreeable thing that could be proposed. But he
+assented, prepared the paper, affixed his signature, and from that hour
+did his utmost to befriend the woman whom he took no pleasure in
+thinking of. This was noble, even great. He could put his personal
+tastes aside when a principle was involved.
+
+It used to be urged against him that he dropped people when he had done
+with them, and felt no scruple in sacrificing them to his views of
+policy. But it cannot be proved that he was false to anybody, and his
+notion of the absolute unfitness of the individual for his place, or of
+the man's unreliability, was probably the real cause of his opposition.
+Probably, in each instance of his withdrawal of confidence, there were
+excellent reasons for his conduct, though it was natural that those who
+were suddenly neglected or displaced should feel indignant and
+aggrieved. Dr. Bellows was not one to act on a private prejudice or a
+personal pique. His affections were strong and would have led him to
+make any concession that was consistent with what he regarded as his
+public duty. No doubt he was somewhat imperious in judging what his duty
+was; he lacked the useful faculty of remaining in the background; he was
+impetuous and forward; but he never was or could be insincere, and he
+always had a sufficient explanation of the course he pursued,--an
+explanation perfectly satisfactory to one who bore his temperament in
+mind and considered what he could do and what he could not.
+
+A most lovable, cordial, faithful man I always found him,--a man to be
+depended on in difficult and trying times, high-minded, courageous,
+daring, ready to enter the breach, happiest when leading a forlorn hope,
+straight-forward, inspiring, easily lifted beyond himself, and imparting
+nervous vigor to his followers. Followers he must have, for he was not
+content to obey any behest; but then his leadership was so hearty and
+wholesome, so free from superciliousness, so abundant in expressions of
+loyalty, that it was a joy to go with him. He was more than willing to
+do his share of hard work, and to indulge his servants. If one could
+forbear to cross him, he was friendliness itself; a warm advocate of
+liberty, only insisting that liberty and progress should march hand in
+hand; that private idiosyncrasies should not stand in the way of
+practical advance. He was a very different man from Dr. Dewey, yet he
+loved Dr. Dewey devotedly while life lasted. He was an entirely
+different man from me in temperament and in gifts,--quite opposite in
+fact,--yet he was one of the best of my friends as long as he lived,
+seldom resenting my radicalism, never impatient of my slowness, but
+warm, sunny, helpful to the end, the man to whom I instinctively
+resorted for sympathy in the most painful passages of my career.
+
+In a word, the foundation of his character was impulse. He was a man of
+fiery zeal, of moral passion, of vast enthusiasm, and when a storm of
+spiritual power came sweeping down from some unseen height, he was
+easily carried away. This impulsive character explains his chivalry of
+disposition, his magnanimity, his self-abnegation; for though he was
+self-asserting, he could at once forget himself, and sink his own
+individuality entirely when some cause he had at heart strongly appealed
+to him. This impulsiveness explains, too, his theological inconsistency,
+for when the popular feeling struck him, he was carried away in a
+different direction from what he had first proposed. For instance,
+once--I think it was at Buffalo--he gave a most eloquent plea for
+individualism, having determined to speak in favor of institutions; and
+in Boston when he had been expected to uphold a creed, he was so borne
+away by the opposite sentiment that, when he ended, a creed seemed
+absolutely impossible.
+
+A very different person from the foregoing was Dr. Samuel Osgood, the
+successor of Dr. Dewey in the Church of the Messiah on Broadway, and the
+close associate of the pastor of "All Souls," which name he suggested
+when the new edifice on the corner of Fourth Avenue and Twentieth Street
+was christened. He was a lover of ecclesiasticism, of forms, usages,
+ceremonials, though he was not unmindful of the ideas that lay beneath
+them, and too good a New Englander, too good a Unitarian, too staunch a
+friend of free thought to be anything but a liberal Protestant; a man of
+names and dates, and instituted observances, not "electric," "magnetic,"
+or a leader either of thought or action; not a man of deep emotions, or
+moving eloquence in or out of the pulpit; not a man of long reach or
+wide influence, but conspicuous in his way, unique, worth studying as a
+figure in his generation.
+
+He was devoted to books, of which he read and produced many, and might
+have been called learned, yet he was not a closet man, not a recluse; on
+the contrary, he knew about public affairs, talked about what was going
+on in the world, attended political, social, and literary meetings, was
+a member of the prominent clubs, like the "Century" and the "Union
+League," was for years the Corresponding Secretary of the "Historical
+Society," rather prided himself, in fact, on the number and intimacy of
+his outside relations. With all this, he was a diligent pastor, an
+excellent denominationalist, a dependence on all church occasions within
+his sect, a speaker at conventions, a worker of the ecclesiastical
+machinery, a man much relied on for denominational work.
+
+His writings were numerous. In fact he always seemed to have the pen
+in his hand. Besides the books which are known,--"Studies in Christian
+Biography," "The Hearthstone," "God with Men," "Milestones in Our Life
+Journey," "Student Life,"--all popular once,--he contributed frequently
+to the _Christian Examiner_, the _North American Review_, the
+_Bibliotheca Sacra_, and other important magazines; delivered orations,
+printed theological discourses, especially a famous one before the
+theological school at Meadville, Pennsylvania, on "The Coming Church and
+its Clergy," and for several months, during Mr. Curtis' illness,
+prepared the essays in the "Easy Chair" for _Harper's Monthly Magazine_.
+His interest in matters of education and literature was incessant,
+active, and useful. He made speeches, served on committees, prepared
+reports, in every way tried to serve the cause of rational knowledge.
+Yet with all his industry and all his ability--for he possessed ability
+of no mean order,--he had a mind singularly destitute of vitality. His
+ingenuity, his pleasantry, his sententiousness, his versatility, could
+not conceal this lack of organic power. His vivacity did not exhilarate,
+his happy expressions did not create the sense of life in the mind, but
+were like artificial flowers that had no perfume, and reminded one more
+of the perfection of art than of the involuntary sweetness of nature. He
+was destitute of genius to inspire. It is the more wonderful that he
+could persevere, as he did, without the popular recognition that his
+talents merited, or the applause his endeavors deserved. He had praise,
+to be sure, but it was not hearty or effusive, and they who rendered it
+probably wondered why they could not put more soul into their laudation.
+The address was brilliant, but not warming. One must come within arm's
+length of him to feel the beating of his heart, to be sensible of his
+force. He was unable to project himself far, and relied upon incidental
+advantages of occasion for effects which he could not produce by genius.
+
+He was a most affectionate man, dependent, clinging, always ready to
+serve, obliging, docile, patient, without hardness and without guile. He
+was devoted to his family, faithful to his friends, never allowing
+differences of opinion to interfere with his duty towards those who
+might expect support from him, but fulfilling disagreeable offices when
+he felt that loyalty made perfect truthfulness incumbent. There was
+something touching in his fidelity towards men who gave him nothing but
+outside recognition, and who were willing to abandon him when he could
+no longer be useful. There was something plaintive in his readiness to
+work for men who accepted his labor as a matter of course, and allowed
+him to throw away his love. He, for his part, asked no reward, but was
+quite satisfied if his service was accepted kindly by those to whom he
+rendered it. Not that he did not like recognition; he did, and the more
+public it was the better he liked it. For he was fond of notoriety, had
+a craving for publicity, and was happiest when a multitude applauded.
+This may have grown out of his affectionateness, for he reached forth
+his arms as widely as possible, and wanted to hear the sound of many
+approving voices, needing sympathy and the assurance that he was
+conferring pleasure, the noise of plaudits reassuring his heart. Still
+he could do without this, if he was certain of the attachment of a
+single warm friend. Recognition of some sort was essential to his peace,
+for he did not possess independence enough to stand alone, and he cared
+too much for individuals to be easy if they were displeased. He gave
+himself a great deal of pain, worried, took infinite trouble about
+imaginary sorrows, not being able to feel or to affect indifference, and
+being destitute of the robustness of character necessary to throw off
+unpleasant things; for his ambition, not springing from vitality of
+mind, was no guard against griefs of the spirit. He that cannot lose
+himself in his studies fails to derive from them their best
+satisfaction,--that of consolation and refuge. He stands naked to the
+wind, and, if his skin is tender, suffers acutely.
+
+Dr. Osgood was intensely self-conscious, self-regarding,
+self-referring. Not vain in the ordinary sense, though he seemed so from
+his countenance, attitude, manner, for all of which, I am persuaded,
+nature was more responsible than disposition, his physical formation
+producing a certain carriage that suggested superciliousness and
+conceit. If he were forth-putting, it was, in most instances at least,
+because he lacked self-reliance, and wished to be _seen_, knowing that
+he could not be _felt_. In reality he was a modest, timid, shrinking
+man, with an inordinate desire for distinction, which impelled him
+continually to make a demonstration in public. Mere vanity--the love of
+appearances--he was destitute of, for he was too tender-hearted and too
+conscientious to make victims. One must be self-centred to be vain, as
+he was not. I recollect his coming one day into the office of the
+_Christian Inquirer_, with his head up as usual, and calling out in a
+loud voice: "Where do you think I went on my way down town?" Of course
+none of us knew or could guess. "Well," he went on to say, with an air
+of complacency, "I stopped at Fowler & Wells' and had my head examined."
+"Ah!" exclaimed one of the impudent, "did they find anything, Sam?"
+"What they did _not_ find," he said, "will interest you more. They
+declared that I was deficient in self-respect, and it is true." And it
+_was_ true. Samuel Osgood assumed a brave air, for the reason that he
+could not trust himself in the open field. He needed the protection of a
+rampart. He wore a showy uniform, because he was not valiant. He had too
+much self-esteem to forget himself, and too little courage to assert
+himself; the consequence was that he said and did numerous things that
+looked vainglorious and were absurd, but which were intended to conceal
+his impuissance. It was an innocent kind of bravado, like poor Oliver
+Proudfute's, in Scott's romance, "The Fair Maid of Perth." Nobody was
+hurt by it, though to him the passion for notoriety was fatal. He liked
+to see his name in a newspaper, coveting the kind of reputation that
+came in that way, and comforting his heart with the thought of lying on
+the broad bosom of the community. His restless desire for public notice
+brought ridicule on him, for ordinary people ascribed it to his conceit,
+whereas it rather indicated an absence of self-confidence. It was a
+cloak to hide his depreciation at the same time that it made him look
+larger in the general eye. It was, therefore, more touching than
+despicable, and if it excited mirth there was nothing bitter in the
+smile which could not break into laughter. Selfish he could not be
+called, for he was always serving others, and disinterestedly too; but
+on a charge of complacency he could hardly be acquitted. This was the
+manner in which he took his reward, and, as I said, it cost nothing to
+anybody, while the public received a great deal of service very
+ungrudgingly bestowed.
+
+The change from Unitarianism to Episcopacy is very easily explained.
+His craving for sympathy was boundless. He was necessarily isolated in
+New York, nor had he the solace of a great popular success. In fact his
+following was small; his church was dwindling; his reputation was
+certainly not increasing; and he became persuaded, I think without
+sufficient reason, that he was the victim of adverse influences. In
+London, he was charmed with the blended freedom and sanctity of the
+"Broad Church" represented by Stanley, Kingsley, Jowett, and a host of
+cultivated men; by its unity amid diversity; its sympathy and fellowship
+and large scholarship. Here was a church indeed; wide, holy, liberal,
+devout, with articles admitting of various interpretations, sacraments
+tender and elastic, forms that did not constrain, and usages that did
+not bind, an unlimited range of speculation, and a spirit of reverence
+that kept the most widely separated together. Here was something very
+different from the sectarianism he had, all his life, been accustomed
+to, and, all his life, had loathed. He joined this Communion not so much
+on account of its _creed_ as of its _creedlessness;_ not as another form
+of denominationalism, but as an escape from denominationalism; a real,
+living, comprehensive church, where there was room for all Christian
+souls, whatever their special mode of belief; a Protestant church with a
+truly catholic temper, cordial, humane, courteous; with a respect for
+literature, and a love for knowledge; with no jealousy or ill-will, or
+fear of thought. His heart was warmed, his fancy fired. Shortly after
+his return, as he sat in my study, I asked him if he had materially
+changed his theology. He replied that he had not, he had simply altered
+the _emphasis;_ as much as to say that in substance it remained what it
+was before, essentially Unitarian, as he understood that designation. In
+fact, his sermons were to all intents and purposes the same; they never
+abounded in doctrine, they did not now; they were always "sentimental,"
+in the sense of dealing with sentiment, they were so still. He was not a
+prime favorite with Episcopalians in America. He was not narrow or
+strict enough for the orthodox; he was not "sensational" enough for the
+liberals; he was too ecclesiastical for the Low Churchmen; too
+rationalistic for the High Churchmen; and his failure to communicate
+warmth was not favorable to his attractiveness. There were not many
+Broad Church ministers in New York, so that his circle of fellowship was
+small; and on the whole the reception was a disappointment. He longed
+for recognition, which he found among many of his old associates, as he
+did not find it among his new friends. He was always a churchman when he
+was a Unitarian; he was no more of a churchman now, and the sympathy he
+sought he might have found in his former connection. Probably had he
+lived elsewhere than in New York, where the competition was sharp, and
+where individuality alone without distinguished power counted for
+nothing, he would have continued Unitarian, and been happy, but he was
+ambitious of eminence; he wanted to live in a great city, to be minister
+of a metropolitan parish, to be a Doctor of Divinity, and for all this
+he lacked the force. There was a perpetual conflict between his
+aspirations and his vigor. He joined the Episcopal fraternity, hoping
+for what none but those born into it attain without energy of an exalted
+kind. His ancient comrades fell away, as was natural; he could not win
+other comrades, and his later years became lonely. He cared more for
+Christian fellowship than for any other; and he had not the power to
+secure this. Thus his affectionateness was against him. He was a loyal
+man, true to his convictions, faithful to the bent of his mind. He could
+not be a deceiver or a renegade, and his heart was not strong enough or
+wide enough to push him forward.
+
+Some thought him deficient in common-sense, and this is, in a sense,
+true. He had not the force to carry projects through, nor had he the
+hearty accord with the people of his generation that would give him an
+instinctive insight into their wishes and enable him to strike into the
+current of their designs. His self-reference always stood in the way of
+his sympathy with other men; yet he often took practical views of
+speculative questions, and curbed a propensity to moral enthusiasm on
+the part of some of his associates. This, however, was due to his
+timidity, to his absence of vigor, to his want of vital conviction,
+rather than to any clearness of perception. He had no humor, no sense of
+the incongruous, the incompatible, or the absurd. He named rocks,
+groves, arbors, on his summer estate, after the famous poets, and used
+to sit in turn on the seats he had thus immortalized. He said things
+that no man of taste would have uttered, and did things that no man of
+judgment would have been guilty of. But all this was owing to the
+absence of sensible qualities rather than to the presence of visionary
+ones. He was not perverse, stubborn, or wrong-headed, did not outrage
+common opinion, or fly in the face of established prejudice. His want of
+good sense was negative, not positive; innocent, not harmful.
+
+Such men have their uses and their place, and neither is small or low.
+His love of learning, his devotion to duty, his friendliness, his
+fidelity, his kindliness, were rare gifts, particularly rare in
+communities like ours. His child-like conceit, very different from the
+aggressive vanity that offends the sensitive soul, was not offensive or
+noxious, and was a source of harmless amusement. His guilelessness was
+more than touching; it was admirable as an example and as a lesson, in
+an age that honors knowledge of the world beyond its deserts; and his
+simplicity of nature, his trustingness, his ingenuousness, rendered him
+a confiding friend, dear to those whose hearts were sore. Few men living
+have so small a number of enemies. He did not provoke the hostility he
+received. It was possible to be sorry for him; it was impossible to bear
+him malice.
+
+As I think of him, the vision arises of a complacent man, with a loud
+greeting, a metallic voice, an outstretched hand, a consequential
+manner. All this is dust and ashes, but his singleness of intention is
+not dead. When everything else is forgotten, his faithfulness will be
+remembered.
+
+Both these men gave me a warm welcome; in fact, my relations were most
+friendly among the other Unitarian ministers in the neighborhood. It was
+anticipated, no doubt, that I would establish a third Unitarian Society
+"up town," of a liberal type; but a wide departure from the existing
+order was not suspected. The expectation was that the usual doctrines
+were to be proclaimed; that the sacraments were to be administered; that
+the regular order was to be observed. Perhaps my willingness to
+undertake such an enterprise was regarded as a sign of concession on my
+part; perhaps it was supposed that the conservative tone of the city,
+together with the attitude of the other churches, would repress the
+radical tendencies of the young clergyman; perhaps the trials incident
+to a new society and the confusions of the time concealed somewhat the
+real bearing of the undertaking. However this may be, there was no
+opposition, no criticism, no dictation, no proscription of radical
+leanings. My congregations were composed of all sorts of people. There
+were Unitarians, Universalists, "come-outers," spiritualists,
+unbelievers of all kinds, anti-slavery people, reformers generally. But
+this, as being incidental to the formation of every liberal society, was
+not objected to. It need not have been; for if there had been no
+interruption, no check, everything might have gone smoothly, as in
+similar societies since.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. WAR.
+
+
+Hardly had I got warm in my place when the mutterings of war were in
+the air. During the autumn of 1859, on the 16th of October, John Brown
+planned his attack on Harper's Ferry. His was a portentous figure. His
+position in history--greater than his achievements would warrant--was
+due partly to his position as herald of the coming strife, but mainly to
+his personal qualities. These were colossal; however much one may
+criticise his particular deeds, or the details of his motive, these
+qualities can not be exalted too highly. His courage, heroism, patience,
+fortitude, were most extraordinary. Even Governor Wise, the man whose
+duty it was to see him tried and executed as a felon, said of him; "They
+are mistaken who take Brown to be a madman. He is a bundle of the best
+nerves I ever saw; cut and thrust and bleeding and in bonds. He is a man
+of clear head, of courage, fortitude, and simple ingenuousness. He is
+cool, collected, indomitable; and it is but just to him to say that he
+was humane to his prisoners, and he inspired me with great trust in his
+integrity as a man of truth." Colonel Washington, another Virginia
+witness, testified to the extraordinary coolness with which Brown felt
+the pulse of his dying son, while he held his own rifle in the other
+hand, and cheered on his men. His character made his prison cell a
+shrine. On the day of his execution, December 2, 1859, he stood under
+the gallows with the noose round his neck for full ten minutes while
+military evolutions were performed; he never wavered a moment, and died
+with nerves still subject to his iron will. He was a Calvinistic
+believer in predestination; a real Covenanter, more like the Scotch
+Covenanters of two centuries ago than anything we know of to-day. He was
+an Old-Testament man, and like all fanatics was indifferent to death,
+either that of other men or his own. His anti-slavery zeal began in his
+youth. He early took an oath to make war against slavery, and, it is
+said, called his older sons together on one occasion and made them
+pledge themselves, kneeling in prayer, to the anti-slavery crusade. This
+purpose he always bore in mind, whatever else he was doing; he even
+chose the spot for his attempt--the mountains which Washington had
+selected as a final retreat should he be defeated by the English. Nearly
+nine years before his own death, he exhorted the members of the "League
+of Gileadites" to stand by one another and by their friends as long as a
+drop of blood remained and be hanged, if they must, but to tell no tales
+out of school.
+
+Then came the war. Though its physical aspect,--the loss of treasure and
+of blood--was most affecting, I cannot but think that its mental and
+moral aspect has been underrated. Its whole justification lay in its
+moral character, and I must believe that full justice has never been
+done to those who were obliged to stay at home and uphold this feature.
+The preacher of the Gospel of Peace had as much as he could do to
+overcome the horrors of war; and the preacher of Righteousness was
+engaged all the time in promoting the cause of justice. They who went to
+the front had the excitement of battle, the pleasures of camp-life, the
+assistance of comradeship, the comfort of sympathy. The preacher had
+none of these. Every day rumors were reaching his ears; "extras" were
+flying about in the silence; he had to comfort people under defeat, to
+humble them in hours of victory; to interpret the conflict in accordance
+with the principles of equity; to keep alive the moral issues of the
+struggle. This was an incessant weariness and anxiety; to fight foes one
+could not see, and to uphold a cause that was discredited, fell to his
+portion; it is no wonder that when the war was over he was spent and
+aged.
+
+An illustration of a part of what he had to contend with is found in
+the riot of the summer of 1863. This was an anti-abolitionist riot, a
+fierce protest against the conscription, and at the same time an
+uprising against the government, which was supposed to maintain a war of
+the blacks against the whites. The riot was directed against the negroes
+and the abolitionists, and was pitiless and ferocious in the extreme. It
+was my lot to be in New York in that dreadful week in July. I was
+visiting friends in the upper part of the town when the uproar began. As
+I walked home down Madison Avenue a group of rough men met me; one of
+them snatched at my watch chain, and I should have been maltreated had
+not more attractive game in the shape of people in a buggy drawn away
+the attention of my assailants. I reached my home in safety. The next
+morning, as I walked about the city, there were groups of men standing
+idle, or armed with missiles, in almost every street. Had the mob been
+organized then it might have done more mischief than it did, for the
+inhabitants of the city were unprepared and unprotected. As I stood at
+night on my roof, I could see the fires in different parts of the town,
+and hear the shots. An arsenal stood on Seventh Avenue, near my house,
+full of arms and ammunition which the insurgents wanted. When the United
+States troops arrived, they defended this arsenal. Cannons were pointed
+up and down the street, guards were posted, officers with their clanking
+swords marched up and down before my door. The riot lasted three
+days,--from the 13th to the 16th. On the following Sunday a sermon was
+preached which gives expression to the better thoughts of the wisest
+people, and from which accordingly extracts are made:
+
+ Of all the dreadful and melancholy passages in the history of human
+ progress, none, to a thoughtful man, are more dreadful or
+ melancholy than those which tell how men have resisted, pushed
+ away, reviled, cursed, beaten, mobbed, crucified their benefactors.
+ It does seem, as we read them, as if the most dreaded thing on
+ earth had been the personal, the domestic, the social welfare; as
+ if the deepest anxiety on the part of men of all sorts was an
+ anxiety to escape from their health and salvation; as if the
+ profoundest dread was a dread of mending their estates, and their
+ utmost horror was a horror of heaven! It does seem, as we read, as
+ if happiness, prosperity, success, were the pet aversion of
+ mankind; as if the signs that were looked for with the most
+ agonized apprehension were the signs that the kingdom of heaven was
+ at hand.... We saw this conspicuously and dismally exemplified in
+ the events of the past week. The one man who, before and above all
+ others, was a mark for the rage of the populace, the one man whose
+ name was loud in the rabble's mouth, and always coupled with a
+ malediction, the one man who was hunted for his blood as by wolves,
+ who would have been torn in pieces had the opportunity been
+ afforded, and on whose account the dwelling of a friend was
+ literally torn in pieces, was a man who had been the steadfast
+ friend of these very people who hungered for his blood; their most
+ constant, uncompromising, and public friend; thinking for them,
+ speaking for them, writing for them; pleading their cause through
+ the press, in the legislature, from the platform; excusing their
+ mistakes and follies, asserting and reasserting their substantial
+ worth and honesty and rectitude, advocating their claims as working
+ people, vindicating their rights as men; proposing schemes for the
+ safety of their persons, the healthfulness of their houses, the
+ saving and increase of their earnings, the education of their
+ children, the exemption of their homesteads from seizure in cases
+ of debt, the enlargement of their sphere of labor, the transferring
+ of their families from the crowded city, where they could do little
+ more than keep themselves alive by arduous toil, to the fruitful
+ lands of the West, where they could become noble and
+ self-respecting men and women. This was the man whose blood was
+ hungered for. I need not speak his name,--you know whom I mean,
+ Horace Greeley,--a man whom some call visionary, but whose visions
+ are all of the redemption of the people; whom some call "fool," but
+ who, if he seem a fool, is foolish that the people may be wise;
+ whom some call "radical," but whose radicalism is simply a
+ determination that the popular existence shall have a sound, sure,
+ and deep root in natural law and moral principle; at all events, a
+ man who has lived for the people and suffered for the people, and
+ been laughed at when he suffered and because he suffered. _This_
+ was the man whose blood was hungered for. And yet the most
+ moderate, kind, considerate of all the papers, the last week, was
+ his paper. And I believe he, even had he fallen into the hands of
+ his enemies, would have said, "Forgive them, they know not what
+ they do."
+
+ Indulge me in one more personality. I said that the dwelling of a
+ friend was pillaged by the mob, under the impression that Mr.
+ Greeley lived there. What was this dwelling? Who was this friend?
+ The dwelling was one the like of which is rare in any city, a
+ dwelling of happiness and peace, a home of the tenderest domestic
+ affections, a house of large friendliness and hospitality, a refuge
+ and abiding-place for the unfortunate and the outcast. There was no
+ display of wealth there--there was no wealth to display; yet the
+ house was full of things which no wealth could buy. It was crowded
+ with mementos. The pieces of furniture in the rooms had family
+ histories connected with them; chairs and tables were precious from
+ association with noble and rare people who had gone. Pictures on
+ the walls, busts in the parlor, engravings, photographs, books,
+ spoke of the gratitude or love of some dear giver. One room was
+ sacred to the memory of a noble boy, an only son, who had died some
+ years before. There was his bust in marble, there were his books,
+ there were the prints he liked, the little bits of art he was fond
+ of, and all the dear things that seemed to bring him back. The
+ whole house was a shrine and a sanctuary.
+
+ And who were the inmates? The master, a man whose sympathies were
+ always and completely with the working-people, a man of steady and
+ boundless humanity; the mistress, a woman whose name is familiar to
+ all doers of good deeds in the city of New York, and dear to
+ hundreds of the objects of good deeds. To the orphan and friendless
+ and poor, a mother; to the unfortunate, a sister; to the wretched,
+ the depraved, the sinful, more than a friend. In the city prison
+ her presence was the presence of an angel of pitying love; at
+ Blackwell's Island she was welcome as a spirit of peace and hope.
+ The boys at Randall's Island looked into her face as the face of an
+ angel. Again and again had she rescued from the life of shame the
+ countrywoman, and possibly the kindred of these very people who
+ plundered her house. For the better part of a year and more she has
+ been in camp and city hospitals, nursing their brothers and sons,
+ performing every menial office. At this moment she is at Point
+ Lookout, doing that work, amid discomforts and discouragements that
+ would daunt a less resolute humanity than hers, giving all she has
+ and is to the _people_, to the wounded, crippled, bleeding, and
+ broken people; giving it for the sake of the people--giving it that
+ the people may be raised to a higher social level! And she,
+ forsooth, must be selected to have her house pillaged! She must be
+ stabbed to her heart of hearts, stabbed through and through, in
+ every one of her affections, by these people for whom her life had
+ been a perpetual process of dying! Why, if they had but known this
+ that I have been telling you, or but a tenth part of it, those men
+ would have defended with their bodies every thread of carpet she
+ trod on. But so it was, and so it must be! Only the best names are
+ ever taken in vain on human lips, and they are so taken because
+ they are the best, and best is worst to those who cannot understand
+ it. Theodore Winthrop was shot by a negro. Did he know what he
+ did?... In thinking of it one's bosom is torn with distracting
+ emotions, and between feeling for the persecuted and feeling for
+ the persecutors, one almost loses the power of feeling. Could
+ anything be more pitiful? Yes, one thing more pitiful there
+ was--the savage hunting down and persecution of the negroes, as if
+ they, too, were the enemies of these working-people. The poor,
+ inoffensive negroes, most innocent part of the whole population!
+ Most quiet, harmless, docile people, who could not stand in the way
+ of the white people if they would, and who never thought of
+ anything but of keeping out of their way! These the enemies of
+ white labor! As if they had not, for these very white people, borne
+ the burden and heat of the tropical day, raising the cotton by
+ which we are clothed, and the rice by which we are fed! As if to
+ these and the like of these, the white people did not owe a large
+ share of the manufacturing towns where they get their bread! As if
+ the lowest foundation stones of this very New York of ours were not
+ cemented by their bloody sweat! As if there were too many of them
+ in the country now for the country's needs, supposing the country
+ ever to fall into a settled and civilized condition again! As if
+ all there are might not by and by be _required_ to do the work
+ which white labor can not for a long time, if it can ever, safely
+ undertake! Strange complications of things! Strange cross-purposes
+ of human nature! The Southern people would revive the slave trade,
+ because they have not black laborers enough, and their allies among
+ ourselves would banish or kill all the black people, because they
+ interfere with white labor! A mutual stabbing at each other's
+ hearts! And on each side a stabbing to its own heart!... It is a
+ very mysterious thing in history, this alliance between the most
+ turbulent and the most tyrannical, the most depraved and the most
+ despotic portions of society. The most undisciplined, barbarous,
+ savage members of a community are ever in a league with the most
+ overbearing, insolent, imperious, and domineering members of it.
+ They who are under the least self-control bow most deferentially
+ before those who rule others with the most cruel rod. The people
+ who were proudest of having turned out to a man, in London, for the
+ maintenance of law and order, on the day of the great Chartist
+ demonstration there, were the most immoral class in the
+ city--proved by the criminal returns to be nine times as dishonest,
+ five times as drunken, and nine times as savage as the rest of the
+ community. (See Spencer's "Social Statics," p. 424.)
+
+ In Boston, on the occasion of the rendition of Anthony Burns, all
+ the thieves, burglars, cut-throats, swarmed from their dens and
+ volunteered with alacrity to enforce the fugitive-slave law. And
+ now the leaders of the Southern Confederacy count, and count
+ securely, on the Northern populace. The fiercest allies of the only
+ absolutely despotic class in the country are the outlaws of
+ society. The men who are fighting for the privileges of the
+ extremest tyranny, the privileges not of ruling merely, but
+ literally of owning the laboring class, these men have the
+ implicit, unquestioning, fanatical loyalty of the people who are at
+ the opposite end of the social scale--the people who own nothing
+ either of fortune, position, influence, or character, and whose
+ sole relation towards the despots they worship is that of mad,
+ savage slaves.
+
+ In Europe this alliance between the despotic and the lawless may
+ be fortunate for the peace of the community. In our Southern States
+ it is eminently conducive to the tranquillity they desire. But when
+ the lawless are here and the despotic are there, when the barbarism
+ is in New York and the tyranny in Richmond, when the elements of
+ discord and turbulence in our Northern cities fly to support their
+ iron-handed rulers in the seceded States, there ensues a state of
+ things, especially in time of war, that is calculated to shake
+ society to its foundations, and fill every loyal heart with dread.
+ The unruly, as if they felt instinctively their lack of
+ self-control, seek a ruler--fly to the strongest to save them from
+ themselves, worship the sternest, the most high-handed, the
+ cruellest, and by that natural sympathy with brutality are
+ maintained in subjection to law.
+
+ Heaven speed the time when these heedless, reckless, licentious
+ children of humanity may feel sensible of the weight of power
+ without its brutality, may reverence authority when it is neither
+ beastly nor cruel, may yield obedience to Order, whose symbol is
+ not the sword, and to Law, whose badge is not the bayonet. But till
+ that time comes, we, with thoughtful minds and sad hearts and sober
+ consciences, and souls full as we can make them of human charity
+ and good-will, must hold in our hands those terrible symbols, and
+ in the Christian spirit do the ruler's part.
+
+The insurrection did not last long. As soon as the United States troops
+appeared the trouble was over and order was restored. There was
+fighting; there was pillage; but how many lives were lost and how much
+property was destroyed was never exactly known. On the whole, the riot
+strengthened the hands of the government, increased pity for the victims
+of outrage, and excited sympathy for the negroes and the abolitionists.
+The priests, as I well remember, helped in the work of pacification. On
+the second day of the uprising, as I was visiting a friend in his studio
+on Fifth Avenue, the mob came along, shouting, yelling, brandishing
+clubs, on their way to the archbishop's palace, to hear an address by
+him. The prelate appeared on the balcony dressed in full canonicals, in
+order to impress the people, and delivered a most ingenious and
+persuasive address. Beginning "Men of New York," he flattered their
+self-esteem, paid a tribute to their sense of power and exalted
+influence, and advised them against cruelty and anarchy. The effect of
+this speech was surprising in soothing and quieting the crowd. They had
+come there in a mood of tumult--they separated peacefully and went to
+their own homes, satisfied. From that hour the soul of the riot was
+broken.
+
+The incidents of the war cannot be detailed here. The story has been
+told too often, and is altogether too long for my space. And after all
+the moral issues of the war were the most interesting though not the
+most pathetic. The sentiment of union, the establishment of the national
+supremacy, the authority of the reign of law, the emancipation of a
+degraded race, the new inspiration imparted to a great people, and the
+advent of a universal republicanism were most significant. It is quite
+likely that the modern uprising of labor and the urgent claims of women
+for recognition and civil power were aided, if not suggested, by this
+overwhelming triumph of order and enlightenment. It is more than likely
+that the position of the United States, as a power among the nations of
+the earth, was due mainly to the victory that was achieved by the powers
+of liberty.
+
+
+
+
+IX. THE FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION.
+
+
+The happy ending of the war stimulated, as has been said, the
+sentiment of Unity. The success of the government in putting down the
+rebellion filled the air with the spirit of union. The restoration of
+political harmony suggested a deeper harmony, when divisions should
+cease. At this moment, in April, 1865, the indefatigable Dr. Bellows,
+who had been the soul of the Sanitary Commission, summoned all Christian
+believers of the liberal persuasions to a convention in his church for a
+more complete organization. The invitation was most generously
+interpreted, and was hailed by some who could be called Christians only
+under the most elastic definition of the term. A prominent layman of the
+Unitarian body brought an elaborate creed which he wished the convention
+to adopt; and a distinguished minister of the West was of the opinion
+that the work of perfect organization could best be done by the adoption
+of stringent articles of faith. But the minimum of belief was imposed.
+The preamble of the constitution, the work of reconciling minds, reads
+thus: "Whereas the great opportunities and demands for Christian labor
+and consecration, at this time, increase our sense of the obligations of
+all disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ to prove their faith by
+self-denial and by the devotion of their lives and possessions to the
+service of God, and the building up of the kingdom of his son,
+Therefore." Then follow the articles. It was this phrase, "Lord Jesus
+Christ," that provoked discussion. The struggle was renewed at Syracuse
+on October 8th of the next year, 1866, and an attempt was made to
+explain away the force of the declaration by announcing that while the
+preamble and articles of the constitution represented the opinions of
+the majority, yet they were not to be considered an authoritative test
+of Unitarianism, or to exclude from fellowship any who though differing
+in belief "are in general sympathy with our purpose and practical aims."
+But this was not considered by the radicals as satisfactory. For in the
+first place the title of "Lord" seemed to contain by implication a
+doctrine which could not be subscribed to, as the "Lordship" of Jesus
+was supposed to be supernatural. Here seemed to be a fundamental
+difference between those who held to the old world's idea of a spiritual
+kingdom, and those who proclaimed the new world's idea of a spiritual
+democracy. In fact, one of the leaders--Dr. Bellows--plainly said if
+there was to be any change it must be made in the other direction; "we
+are to consider not only the few on the one side, who may or may not
+care to unite with us, but the great body of Christians of all
+denominations, the Universal Church of Christ; I demand liberality to
+them, the liberality which acknowledges their Lord and Leader, and
+welcomes them to a household whose hearth glows with faith in and
+loyalty to the personal Saviour." It was plainly declared by him that
+Unitarians assumed the name of liberal Christians, because they allowed
+liberality of inquiry and opinion _within the pale of Christian
+discipleship_. This of itself was enough to create a palpable division,
+but it was felt besides that freedom of interpretation did not imply
+freedom of rejection. The phrase _Lordship of Jesus_, although as little
+of a creed as could be devised, was hostile to freedom, besides not
+being altogether true, as Jesus never claimed to be infallible. The
+radicals, under the lead of Francis E. Abbot, attempted to introduce a
+substitute for the original preamble, inculcating unity of spirit and of
+work as the basis of the "National Conference of Unitarian and
+Independent Churches." This substitute was not carried, and a final
+breach between the Independents and the Unitarians was thus established.
+This was inevitable twenty-five years ago; it could not happen to-day,
+when both wings are united in one body.
+
+For my part I did not go to Syracuse, having foreseen what eventually
+occurred, namely, the intended solidification of the Unitarian body by
+the strengthening of the bonds of organization. My own personal
+experience, which other radicals knew nothing of, led me to this
+conclusion. My church edifice on 40th Street was begun in the spring of
+1863. The two ministers in New York were present at the informal service
+of laying the corner-stone. The walls were going up during the summer;
+on the week of the riot the mob called the workmen off, threatening to
+destroy what was built if the masons did not leave. The building was
+finished in the winter, and dedicated on Christmas Day. To the warm
+personal invitation which was sent to all the Unitarian clergy in New
+York and Brooklyn--there were but three then--no response was returned;
+and when my father and I went to the church there were no ministers on
+the platform. We went through the service, my father offering the prayer
+and I preaching the sermon. No remark was made at the time beyond an
+expression of surprise at the non-appearance of the "brethren." The next
+day my father, who had come from Boston on purpose to attend the
+dedication, and whose blindness was approaching fast, went to make a
+friendly visit on Dr. Bellows. On his return, when asked if any reason
+was assigned for the failure to participate in the proceedings of the
+day before, he said that the duties of Christmas were alleged as the
+cause. I was sure there was another explanation behind; and as soon as I
+had put my father in the train for home wrote to Dr. Bellows, taxing him
+among the rest with discourtesy. It was evident that such a charge was
+anticipated and prepared for; that the ministers had met and had agreed
+on a course to be pursued in my case. For at once there came a reply to
+my note, accusing me of studiously neglecting all the usual observances
+of the denomination. My invitation had not been official; there was no
+"church"; there had never been any sacrament; the allegiance to
+fundamental doctrines of the sect had been slack. All this was true, and
+no attempt at exculpation was made, but it was felt that a breach
+existed. The excitements of the war overshadowed everything else at this
+period, and nothing more was said. My Society was duly represented at
+the first conference; but as soon as our side was argued,--as it was by
+D. A. Wasson,--it was plain that the spirit of organization prevailed
+and was against us. A division was inevitable. The "Independents" must
+form a separate party.
+
+This virtual exclusion occasioned the formation of the Free Religious
+Association. A meeting was held on the 5th of February, 1867, at
+Dr. C. A. Bartol's, in Boston, to consider a plan for creating a new
+association on the basis of free thought. Very strong words were spoken
+on that occasion. One man, I recollect, spoke of all churches, all
+ministers, and all religion as being outgrown. But the majority were of
+the opinion that religion was an eternal necessity, and the
+administration of it an absolute demand. Dr. Bartol himself was always a
+warm friend of the Association, appearing on the platform, speaking
+always hopefully, one of the most welcome of its supporters. The
+Association was formed in the spring of that same year. In the plan of
+organization it was distinctly announced that the aim of the Association
+was to "promote the interest of pure religion, to encourage the
+scientific study of theology, and to increase fellowship in the spirit;
+and to this end all persons interested in these objects are cordially
+invited to its membership." Thus the object of the Association was
+exceedingly broad. It proposed to remove all dividing lines and to unite
+all religious men in bonds of pure spirituality, each one being
+responsible for his own opinion alone, and in no degree affected in his
+relations with other associations. If the movement had been in the hands
+of orthodox and well-reputed people, it would have seemed not only large
+but noble and beneficent. Being, as it was, in the hands of a few
+radical clergymen and laymen, it was supposed to be "infidel" in its
+character; and was misrepresented and abused accordingly.
+
+At first, the dissensions of the sects were rebuked. Afterwards, the
+scope of the idea was extended; all the religions of the world being put
+on an equality of origin and purpose. The spiritual nature of man was
+assumed; the universality of religious feeling; the inherent tendency to
+worship, aspiration, prayer, being taken for granted as an element in
+the best minds; all churches and confessions of faith being looked upon
+as achievements of the soul; Jesus being classed among the leaders of
+humanity; the Bible being accepted as a record of spiritual and moral
+truth; and the church being regarded as an organization to diffuse
+belief. The foundation, therefore, was a pure Theism, and the effort
+contemplated the elevation of all mankind to the dignity of children of
+the Highest. That this aim was always borne in mind is not pretended.
+The negative side was made too conspicuous. Now and then there was a
+lurch in the direction of denial. There was too much criticism, and it
+was not always just. There was too much speculation, and it was not
+always wise. The plan of letting each sect tell its own story was a
+little confusing at the start. Still, on the whole, the object was
+pretty faithfully kept in view. Lucretia Mott suggested that the word
+"religion" should be substituted for the word "theology," but the word
+"religion" was too vague to afford ground for discussion, and it was
+felt that the phrase "scientific" sufficiently explained, through the
+substitution of the scientific for the theological method, the purpose
+of the association. Moreover, the purpose was to remove _theological_
+differences, the only differences that existed.
+
+There were names of distinguished men and women on our list of
+officers, members, speakers, and friends--Ralph Waldo Emerson, Amos
+Bronson Alcott, Gerrit Smith, George William Curtis, Edward L. Youmans,
+Nathaniel Holmes, William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, Rowland G.
+Hazard, Lucretia Mott, Lydia Maria Child, Ednah D. Cheney. Thomas W.
+Higginson was one of our most effective speakers; John Weiss read on our
+platform his most brilliant paper on "Science and Religion"; David
+Atwood Wasson lent us the light of his countenance.
+
+Our greatest want was the want of a leader,--a man not only of competent
+learning and spiritual enthusiasm, but of natural impulse and vigor; a
+man of the people, a man of rugged speech, a man of vivacity and humor.
+If Theodore Parker had been alive he might have taken this position, and
+distinguished himself as a leader in this movement; as it was, there was
+no one who could take his place, and the enterprise flagged accordingly,
+lacking the popular zeal which would give it currency. The speculative
+character of the association was always against it and rendered it
+somewhat dry; but this under the circumstances was inevitable, because
+we were forced to deal with technicalities of credence, and had not
+power enough to get beyond them into the universalities of faith.
+
+There was an expectation in many quarters that the association would
+devote itself to beneficent projects; and this was natural, because it
+seemed as if those who gave up the bond of belief must adopt the bond of
+work. Mr. Emerson seems to have had a similar desire. "I wish," he said,
+"that the various beneficent institutions which are springing up like
+joyful plants of wholesomeness all over this country, should all be
+remembered as within the sphere of this committee,--almost all of them
+are represented here,--and that within this little band that has
+gathered here to-day should grow friendship." But in the first place,
+ours was not a philanthropic institution; its aim was religious
+entirely, as it attempted to substitute the universality of religion for
+the one faith of Christendom. The chief workers in several forms of
+charity presented their schemes for our consideration, and at one time
+it looked as if we must be borne away into some philanthropic
+enterprise. The current, however, which carried us towards "religious"
+unity was too strong.
+
+And then, at that time there was little scientific philanthropy. The
+word _charity_ was more or less associated with patronage and pity, the
+very things that we wanted to avoid; they who were bent on wiping out
+distinctions could not countenance these, and it was safer not to let
+our hearts get the better of our reason. But even if there had been a
+scientific treatment of humane questions, we were afraid of the danger
+of becoming too much absorbed in this kind of work, and so of losing
+sight of our chief end.
+
+At present the idea of our Association is pretty well domesticated in
+Christendom. It was not, after all, entirely new. In 1845 and 1846
+Frederick Denison Maurice, lecturing on the Boyle Foundation in London
+on "The Religions of the World and their Relations to Christianity,"
+attempted to do justice to the ancient faiths of India, Persia, Egypt,
+Greece, and Rome. In 1882, in Edinburgh, eminent men discussed the same
+problems under the title of "The Faiths of the World." In 1871 James
+Freeman Clarke published his "Ten Great Religions." The study of
+comparative religion has been going on for many years. When Mozoomdar
+came to this country a few years ago, there was such a rush for him
+among American orthodox Christians that the Free Religious Association
+could not get at him at all, though it had tried in vain to get a real
+Brahmin on its platform. True, there were differences of opinion among
+the orthodox students of the old-world systems. Some regarded the
+ancient religions as effete; some denied that Christianity touched them
+at more than one or two points; some treated them simply as preparations
+for the crowning faith of Christ. Still, whatever their differences, all
+agreed that the religious instinct was universal; that there was a
+ground for revelation in the human heart; since Carlyle's famous lecture
+in "Heroes," delivered in 1840, it was impossible to regard Mahomet as
+an impostor, or to look upon religion as a fabrication of the priests,
+as an attempt to practise upon human ignorance and fear.
+
+Among the Unitarians our conception is familiar. At the convention that
+was held in Philadelphia, in October, 1889, both parties, the most
+conservative and the most radical, sat side by side. A manager of the
+Free Religious Association delivered one of the addresses, and said: "I
+never believed one tithe as much as I believe to-night. Never did I have
+such faith in God; never did I so believe in man; never did I see such a
+glorious outlook for the Church; never did I hold such a glad theory of
+human hope for the future." The secretary of the American Unitarian
+Association was full of joy. The secretary of the Western Unitarian
+Conference quoted the opinion of the Western churches, assembled at
+Chicago in May, 1887, and declared "our fellowship to be conditioned on
+no doctrinal tests, and welcomes all who wish to join us to help
+establish truth and righteousness and love in the world." A prominent
+leader of Unitarianism in Illinois uttered himself thus: "Whatever its
+traditions, whatever its present positions, or its prospects, this
+spiritual commonwealth is extra-Unitarian, extra-American,
+extra-Christian; it is human, and on that account it is universal, and
+it is divine." Another speaker at this convention declared that "the
+hand that shall hold this master key is Christ, as the modern mind
+conceives him,--Christ healing the sick, raising the dead, cleansing the
+leper, casting out devils from society and business, from politics and
+religion; Christ, the friend of Lazarus and of Mary Magdalen; Christ
+robed in absolute justice and also in transcendant love, and embracing
+the whole world."
+
+It is not claimed that this extraordinary change in ecclesiastical
+fellowship and sympathy is due to the Free Religious Association. That
+was one of the signs of the times, and is an effect rather than a cause;
+but it is a sign of the grander unity. When the portrait of Theodore
+Parker is hanging on the walls of Channing Hall; when a cordial welcome
+is extended to all seekers for the light; when the East and West are
+ready to embrace in a fellowship of aspiration; when the young men are
+all alight with fresh hope and fresh endeavor, we may with confidence
+anticipate the time when there shall be but one fold, and the aim of the
+Free Religious Association be met.
+
+The emancipation from denominational trammels was of great service to
+the young minister. It is true that he was still in a "church" which
+kept him within ecclesiastical associations; but these fetters were not
+heavy, and they were soon to be thrown off. For in the spring of 1869,
+the church was sold to another congregation. This was done partly
+because the acoustic properties of the building were not favorable, and
+partly because the place was not suited to the genius of the new
+society. "There was no room in the inn," was the subject of the last
+sermon preached in that building. Lyric Hall, to which we removed, is
+situated on Sixth Avenue, between 40th and 41st streets. It is a large
+room fifty by one hundred feet. During the week it was used as a dancing
+hall, but on Sundays it was arranged for a religious service. A small
+organ was placed there, a platform was built, and seats were brought up
+from the cellar below. The first sermon preached there was on "Secular
+Religion," and it indicated the whole character of the services. The
+most remarkable thing, as regards myself, that happened in Lyric Hall,
+was the adoption of the habit of speaking without notes. The light from
+the avenue was too far off for reading, and the speaker was therefore
+obliged to dispense with a manuscript altogether. A theme was first
+chosen that admitted of subdivisions, so that as fast as the speaker
+exhausted one he could fall back on another. The habit soon became so
+familiar that no difficulty was experienced in handling the most
+complicated subject. Here we remained until the spring of 1875, when we
+removed to Masonic Temple, on Sixth Avenue and 23d Street.
+
+This building, which was very large and handsome, had just been erected
+by the Masons, who designed it for their own accommodation. The
+structure having cost, however, more than was anticipated, the owners
+were obliged, reluctantly, to let the large hall, which they did for
+literary and religious purposes only. We were the first to occupy it.
+The hall was spacious and stately, with fixed seats for about a thousand
+people. A fine organ stood at one end of the platform; at the other end
+there was a large reception room. The first sermon there was on
+"Reasonable Religion." The audience was never large--never more than
+eight or nine hundred, usually six or seven hundred. The form of service
+much resembled the form common in Unitarian churches, with the exception
+that Mr. Conway's "Sacred Anthology" was substituted for the Bible, and
+the other exercises were more universal in their character. It had long
+ceased to be a Unitarian congregation. There were people of Catholic
+training, many of Protestant training, some of no religious training
+whatever, materialists, atheists, secularists, positivists--always
+thinking people, with their minds uppermost. It was a church of the
+unchurched. George Ripley, the journalist, was always there; E. C.
+Stedman, the man of letters; Calvert Vaux, the architect; Sanford R.
+Gifford, the painter; Henry Peters Gray, the artist, was there until he
+died; C. P. Cranch, the poet, was a member of the Society as long as he
+was in the city. In the Lyric-Hall days, Judge Geo. C. Barrett had a
+seat in the audience. The secular character was always prominent. When
+we had a church on 40th Street, the large basement was used for music,
+dramatic performances, readings, festivities, social gatherings. In
+Lyric Hall, these were continued as far as they could be.
+
+The "Fraternity Club" was organized in 1869 by a devoted member of the
+Society for the entertainment and improvement of its members; and drew
+together very brilliant minds both within and without the immediate
+fellowship. The meetings were held once in two weeks, when an essay was
+read, a debate carried on, and a paper presented; all the performers
+being nominated in advance by the President. The work was mainly done by
+a few young men, who have since become eminent in various fields--as
+teachers, lawyers, literary critics, publishers,--and by witty women not
+a few. There were about seventy members, each one standing for some
+peculiar accomplishment. The subjects of the essays were such as these,
+illustrating the breadth of the intellectual interest: On "Taste"; on
+"Expressions"; on "The Coming Man"; on "Wordsworth"; on "The Tree of
+Life"; on "Spencer's Britomart as the Type of Woman"; on "Light and
+Laughter"; on "Successful People"; on "Culture"; on "The Cultivation of
+the Masses." The subjects for debate were equally varied: "Ought the
+sexes to be educated apart?"; "Does a house burn up or burn down?"; "Is
+the highest musical culture compatible with the highest intellectual
+development?"; "Is there a distinctly American literature as contrasted
+with that of England?"; "Should matrimonial union be contracted early or
+late?"; "Ought we to cultivate most those faculties in which we
+naturally excel, or those in which we are naturally deficient?"; "Does
+increase of culture involve decrease of amusement?"; "Is the existence
+of a 'Mute inglorious Milton' possible?"; "Will giving the franchise to
+women exert a beneficial influence on society?"; "Had you rather be more
+stupid than you seem, or seem more stupid than you are?"
+
+The "papers," of which there are some nine volumes existing, were
+receptacles for the fancy, imagination, sentiment, and humor of the
+editors or their co-editors; there were verses, stories, criticisms,
+jokes, illustrations, in them; each had its name: "The Bubble," "The
+Venture," "Bric-a-Brac," "Stuff," "The Rag-Bag." The club ceased soon
+after the Society disbanded, in 1880.
+
+The root idea of the Society, apart from its independence, was the
+mingling of the spiritual and the natural; the domestication of faith.
+With a view of making the idea more prevailing and complete, a
+children's service in the afternoon was substituted for the regular
+Sunday-school. A book was prepared, "The Child's Book of Religion," by
+the pastor, for this express purpose. There were responsive readings,
+recitations in unison, songs, and an address, simple and anecdotical, by
+the minister.
+
+The Society was never fashionable, or even popular. At one period--that
+of the Richardson-McFarland matter--there was a vast deal of
+misrepresentation, criticism, and abuse, but all this had no effect on
+the constituency of the parish. There was the same loyalty, the same
+interest, the same determination to sustain a thoroughly liberal
+ministry, by which every form of conviction was made conducive to a
+purely spiritual faith.
+
+It was never pretended that the Society was anything more than a
+beginning. A small and feeble beginning, but of something that was to
+grow and spread; the beginning of a faith that is as rational as it is
+wide. Its influence was more diffusive than concrete as an instituted
+thing. It is the pride and consolation of those who began it that they
+removed some of the barriers that divided the great brotherhood of
+believing men.
+
+My ministry in New York ended in the spring of 1879. Its close was due
+entirely to my ill-health. A year before the doctors had warned me not
+to continue longer than was necessary my rate of speed. They urged me to
+go slower, to "take in sail," and to withdraw as far as I could from all
+public demonstrations. Measures were taken against every emergency, and
+I sailed away in the French steamer, with the hope that in six months I
+might regain my nervous power, and return. There was first the
+exhilarating sea voyage; then the beautiful city hall of Rouen, the
+churches and famous buildings, the square where Joan of Arc suffered;
+then came Paris with its enchantments; after that Basel showed its great
+Holbeins, and its lovely promenade overlooking the river; this led to
+the celebrated baths at Ragatz in Switzerland, the placid waters of
+Pfeffers', the gorge, the hotel gardens, and the lovely walks; after
+this came the pass of the Splügen, the Via Mala, the hotel at the summit
+of the pass among the snows, the pastures, the wild goats; then came
+Lake Como in Italy, Bellagio, the charming Villa Serbeloni, looking down
+upon the two lakes, Como and Lecco, the vineyards ripening in the sun,
+the terraces, looking across upon the mountains; then Milan opened its
+great cathedral, the gallery of the Brera, the ancient church of Saint
+Ambrose. Afterwards came Florence and its heavenly environs, its
+pictures and statues and public buildings, its groves and stately drives
+and lovely villas; Florence was followed by Siena, and there I saw the
+great cathedral, walked on the esplanade, enjoyed the public square, the
+palaces, the pictures of Sodoma. From there I went to Rome, in December.
+
+It was all in vain; I became satisfied that the complaint was not of a
+temporary nature, not owing to overwork or over-excitement, not easily
+cured--if curable at all,--but nervous and hereditary. Thereupon, I
+wrote a letter to my trustees absolutely resigning my office and
+declining to be a clergyman any longer, as I could not attempt to renew
+the same kind of labor. An attempt was made to secure a successor;
+several names were mentioned, and among men greatly my superiors in
+learning and eloquence, but none, it was thought, represented the
+precise form of speculation, the exact view of religion which my friends
+desired. The Society therefore was disbanded, and no attempt has been
+made since to reorganize it. The members were scattered, some among
+other churches, some among other cities, while some never joined any
+religious society whatever. Thus a thriving and growing organization is
+now simply a memory.
+
+
+
+
+X. THE PROGRESS OF RELIGIOUS THOUGHT IN AMERICA.
+
+
+An article in the _North American Review_ for April, 1885, on "Free
+Thought in America," is chiefly significant as showing how gradual and
+tentative the progress of thought in religion was. The comments on
+individuals are often wide of the mark, but the general drift is quite
+correct. The course was shadowy, but the main point was unmistakable. At
+this day, the wholesale abuse of religion is harmless, and can exert no
+wide influence. The friends of liberal thought are against it; and those
+who seek the old grim conclusion do so in another way, striving to
+substitute a new faith in nature for the old faith in divine
+inspiration, and to prove the latter to have been a growth rather than
+an imposition. The study of comparative religions has put a new face on
+the question, and the concern is now to discover the source of faith in
+the supernatural and not to make it appear a creation of priestcraft. No
+sooner had serious investigations into antiquity become known, than the
+method pursued by Voltaire and Dupuis was abandoned, and each generation
+since has confirmed the facts of historic development.
+
+That my own immediate predecessors were Emerson and Parker is most true.
+With the writings of the former I was familiar; the latter was my
+intimate friend. Perhaps my theological views are due to him more than
+to any other man, though the circumstances of his generation were
+peculiar, and determined, in a much greater degree than in my own case
+was possible, the cast of his thought. The Unitarian controversy, in
+which he played so prominent a part, and by stress whereof he was driven
+into some of his positions, is over. The anti-slavery struggle, into
+which he threw himself and as a result of which his religious
+antagonisms were sharpened, was ended many years ago.
+
+Poe said in the preface to "Eureka," that perfect beauty was a guaranty
+of perfect truth; so I felt--felt rather than reasoned--that a great
+character was sufficient proof of the truth of doctrine, and I accepted
+the teaching on the strength of the nobleness which was before my eyes.
+Later researches confirmed my opinions, but while I was under Parker's
+influence, his theological views were accepted without much
+consideration; his unique style of personality laying my heart as it
+were under a spell.
+
+Emerson was a man of colder temperament, thinner of blood, more spare
+in frame; of finer intellectual fibre, of more commanding intellectual
+supremacy; not a combatant on any field; a sweet, gracious, shadowy
+personality; calm, lucid, imperturbable; pursuing knowledge along the
+spiritual path of pure thought, although he was also a student of books;
+a regenerator of mind rather than a reformer of customs; a prophet,
+distinguished for penetration rather than for will. His ideas were
+substantially the same as Parker's, but he did not arrive at them in the
+same way, or hold them in the same spirit, or apply them with the same
+directness. He carried them out further, not being hindered, as his
+contemporary was, by the immediate necessities of the hour. In short, he
+was another sort of man entirely. Both were transcendentalists, but
+Parker shaped his philosophy to the working exigencies of his
+generation, while Emerson let his stream freely in the air. The writer
+of the article in question accuses Emerson of want of pathos, and
+declares that this was the lack of the transcendentalists, as a school.
+But he could hardly charge this on Parker, who was an ardent
+transcendentalist, but whose very language was vascular, who affected
+multitudes of men and women, and who held audiences by the heartstrings.
+Did Hopkins or Bellamy or Edwards melt people? Were the preachers of
+Calvinism priests of sorrow? This is a matter of temperament and not of
+creed. Extreme rationalists leave their congregations in tears, and
+extreme churchmen dismiss theirs unmoved, the humors of the men deciding
+the issues of their ministrations. The closer to the ground, the more
+abundant the sympathy. The question is whether one is more mundane or
+more ethereal by native gift and endowment.
+
+That transcendentalism was mainly speculative may be doubted, but if it
+was so this may be accounted an incidental circumstance to be explained
+by the prevailing theological temper of the age, and the duty imposed on
+it of transferring the body of doctrine to an ideal realm; a task which
+demands an intellectual effort of no common magnitude. And when with
+this task was joined the endeavor to sift out the purely spiritual ideas
+from the mass of dogmatical and ecclesiastical error, it is no wonder
+that it should have been speculative in its tendency. Certainly, Brook
+Farm was concrete enough, and the transcendentalists were, as a rule,
+interested in social reconstruction, though not in a way to touch
+popular emotion. One cannot, even at this distance, think of the
+quickening radiance shed by the transcendentalists over the whole region
+of religious belief and duty, without gratitude. The hymns, the sermons,
+the music, the Sunday-schools, the prayers, the charities, the social
+ministrations, breathed forth a fresh spirit. If there were fewer tears
+of woe, there was more weeping for joy. There was too much gladness for
+crying. Life was made sunny. Human nature was interpreted cheerfully.
+There was an unlimited future for misery, ignorance, turpitude. Sin was
+remanded to the position of crudity, and was banished from the heavenly
+courts. Violence was protested against in laws, customs, manners,
+speech. Harsh doctrines were criticised. Austere views were discarded.
+Intellectual barriers were removed. Spiritual channels were deepened and
+widened. Light was let into dark places. The brightest aspects of
+divinity were presented. Immortality was rendered native to the soul.
+The life below was regarded as the portal to the life above.
+
+In my own case, whatever of enthusiasm I may have had, whatever
+transports of feeling, whatever glow of hope for mankind, whatever ardor
+of anticipation for the future, whatever exhilaration of mind towards
+God, whatever elation in the presence of disbelief in the popular
+theology, may be fairly ascribed to this form of the ideal philosophy.
+It was like a revelation of glory. Every good thought was encouraged.
+Every noble impulse was heightened. It was balm and elixir to me. If
+transcendentalism did not appear as a sun illuminating the entire mental
+universe it was the fault of my exposition alone. Absolute faith in that
+form of philosophy grew weak and passed away many years since, and the
+assurance it gave was shaken; but the sunset flush continued a long time
+after the orb of day had disappeared and lighted up the earth. Gradually
+the splendor faded, to be succeeded by a softer and more tranquil gleam,
+less stimulating but not less beautiful or glorious. The world looks
+larger under the light of stars. I always loved Blanco White's
+magnificent sonnet to Night, but never appreciated its full significance
+until the scientific view had succeeded to the transcendental, and I
+began to walk by knowledge, steadily and surely, but not buoyantly any
+more. It would be a mistake to suppose that anything like pain, sadness,
+or sterility accompanies the departure of an old faith, when a new one
+takes its place and soon opens fresh prospects of good. The universe but
+grows larger: other methods are adopted, other hopes are entertained,
+other consolations are presented, and soon the mind adjusts itself to
+the altered conditions. The downcast mood of George Eliot, of the author
+of "Physicus," and of many another less distinguished unbeliever, may be
+due in part to temperament, in part to the first feeling of chill that
+ensues upon a transitional period, which brings in a different climate;
+but the allegation of lasting coldness, gloom, discontent, is wholly
+groundless. The old fable says that quails drop from the clouds, that
+even rocks quench the traveller's thirst. There is, in short, no
+wilderness.
+
+That the creed was "filmy," the foothold "unsteady," is altogether
+likely, for the ancient supports were removed, the pillars that replaced
+them were shaking, and tradition alone remained to hold by. But religion
+was still the Poetry of Life, and kept its place among the interests
+singly represented by art, music, literature, philosophy, those fine
+intimations of a higher state, those splendid foreshadowings of the
+future, those noble efforts to solve problems that must be forever
+insoluble. My creed did not pretend to be final or even definite. It was
+simply a study, a preliminary sketch, an essay towards truth. A claim to
+completeness, to logical consistency, would have been fatal. Still less,
+if possible, did it pretend to meet popular wants. It resolutely turned
+in the opposite direction, and took up positions which, it was
+understood, the general public could not occupy without abandoning all
+its works and retiring to other ground. No effort was made to commend it
+to common opinion; on the contrary, everything like concession was
+shunned, and the slightest signal of agreement with current beliefs was
+regarded as a warning against a compromise of principle. Nothing was
+assumed except the validity of the human faculties, including, of
+course, the higher reason, the insight of genius, and such feelings as
+were parts of the rational constitution, together with perfect liberty
+in their exercise. Every theological system was repudiated; even the
+doctrines of a conscious Deity and the individual immortality of the
+soul were left open to discussion, the atheist and the materialist being
+listened to with as much deference as any. These doctrines were
+accepted, yet not on the ground of authority or tradition, but simply
+considered as faiths, hopes, sentiments of the spiritual being; the
+existence of living mind, coupled with the demand for unity, seeming to
+guarantee the first, the fact of individual persistency appearing to
+demonstrate the second. But all definition was carefully avoided,
+conviction being confined to the main idea, and being purely spiritual
+in its character, not in the least dogmatical, or exclusive of
+knowledge. Of doctrine in the usual sense there was none. There was
+merely thought. The very teaching was more of the nature of suggestion
+than of final conclusion. For this reason no account of the "credo" can
+be given, all fixed expressions of views being discountenanced as
+premature, and therefore irrational. This should be distinctly
+understood by those interested in coming at the truth on this subject.
+The object was to disintegrate, to pulverize, to enable mind to float
+freely in the air of intellect, to the end that it might crystallize
+about natural centres. All dogmatism, that of the infidel as well as
+that of the believer, of the man of science as well as of the
+theologian, of the sensualist as well as of the spiritualist, was
+obnoxious. There was no sympathy with those who regarded the case as
+closed, either as the anti-Christian assailant or as the apologist did;
+either with the school of Paine or with the school of Calvin. Hereafter
+there may be articles of belief, at present there can be none. This, it
+may be said, was a temporary, incidental position, quite indeterminate
+and unsatisfactory. No doubt it was. That was all it pretended to be.
+The sooner it disappeared and was succeeded by a more stable one, so it
+was reasonable, the better, for that would indicate an advance in
+rational judgment.
+
+This task--the complete emancipation of the human mind from every form
+of thraldom--will occupy liberal teachers for a long time to come. All
+that can be said in defence of instituted religion, and all that can be
+urged on the other side, had been put forward again and again, but in a
+sectarian--that is, in a partisan--spirit. Now an even temper is
+demanded. Unfortunately, impartiality is apt to degenerate into
+indifference. Breadth of view is, as a rule, inconsistent with rapidity
+of motion. The fact that the Free Religious Association had a small
+constituency as compared with many an orthodox society is no evidence
+whatever that the orthodox society is nearer the truth. The former was
+broad enough to admit all religions, the latter shut out all save the
+Christians, thus making them a special community saved by their belief.
+The problem is to preserve and, if possible, deepen intellectual
+enthusiasm while opposing fanatical adherence to dogmas; to associate
+breadth with force, to unite freedom with earnestness, and to render the
+love of truth more intense in proportion as the horizon recedes and
+ideas multiply. Such ought to be the result of free thinking, and such
+it is when _thinking_ goes hand in hand with _freedom_.
+
+Critical studies must keep an even pace with philosophy, and both must
+conspire to push back the lines of credence as far as faith in the
+spiritual sentiment will permit. The latest investigations have
+substantiated liberal conclusions and carried them into regions which
+were inaccessible to the authorities of an early day. A certain amount
+of denial was necessary of course, but this was made in view of a larger
+affirmation which had to be brought forward, and was, moreover, confined
+to matters incidental, not directed at the substance of faith. The
+assumption of a spiritual nature in man guaranteed the inherent
+genuineness of all aspiration.
+
+No doubt the assumption of a creative religious nature in man lent aid
+to the endeavor to glorify the pagan faiths, and predisposed the mind to
+accept criticisms on Christianity; but scientific investigation of the
+world's bibles went on quite independently of this assumption. It was
+promoted by Catholics and Protestants, by Lutherans and Unitarians, by
+Germans, French, English, Americans. Certainly the alleged antiquity of
+a system is not in its favor; for ignorance, credulity, superstition,
+are much older than this; older than the ancient books, than the ancient
+thinkers. The oldest things are errors, delusions, falsities. The
+allegiance of great minds simply proves the limitations of intellect.
+Sir Thomas More believed in transubstantiation, and Samuel Johnson
+believed in ghosts. The wide reverence for the Scriptures is an
+impressive fact, until it is seen that no writings have been so guarded,
+nor have such pains been taken in regard to any other literature to
+create for it a habit of docile veneration. Fidelity is praiseworthy,
+but it is no pledge of wisdom. On the contrary it draws attention to the
+merits or demerits of the creed to which it is consecrated. Is
+witchcraft respectable? Yet it had its martyrs. Is demoniacal possession
+credible? Yet saints attested it. The fury of the fighter cannot vouch
+for the worthiness of the cause. If it could, the narrowest credence
+would be the truest as the world goes, and they who adhere to the
+"Christian" tradition would be consigned to the darkest cells of it. The
+newest thing is knowledge. This never paralyzes, and never is fanatical.
+Its heat is stimulating yet gracious. Its zeal does not scorch or
+consume. It awakens every faculty, keeps inquiry on the stretch, excites
+the noblest ambition, and at the same time rebukes the partisan temper
+in all its manifestations. Its reign is beneficent; its coming is full
+of hope. It is ever looking forward with sanguine anticipation, and if
+it is at times impatient, petulant, or imperious, it is because it is
+fretted by stubborn obstacles that prevent the full realization of its
+purpose to discover the truth. For a long time to come there will be
+controversy, but its violence will disappear, its acrimony will
+gradually cease, the passion for victory will yield to the love of
+knowledge, and all genuine seekers will unite in the search after light.
+
+In the last generation the progress of intelligent examination into
+nature's secrets has been exceedingly rapid. During my active ministry I
+was hardly aware of it, for though an assailant of the popular religion,
+a champion of the freest thought, I was a defender of the current
+religious ideas; since leaving the profession, the significance of the
+mental revolution that is taking place, has been more fully revealed to
+me. The advance has approached very near to the heart of the citadel.
+The questions under discussion are fundamental ones, the existence of a
+self-conscious deity, the fact of personal continuance beyond the grave,
+the line of distinction between "material" and "spiritual" things. The
+dispute hangs on invisible threads of logic. The conservatives occupy
+positions which radicals of thirty years back could not assume.
+
+The next step in the development of free thought must be toward the
+realization of all the ideal supports of mankind, the spiritualizing of
+the secular, the lifting into heavenly places of this world's activity,
+the transfiguration of our common life. If by religion is understood the
+striving after perfection in intellectual things by the untrammelled
+pursuit of knowledge, in social concerns by the exercise of fraternal
+kindness, in the spiritual world by aspiration towards a complete
+surrender to natural law, every free thinker will encourage that and
+will do what he can to promote it. That there is no final truth
+discoverable must be admitted, but such a confession need not trouble
+those who look manfully forward to a future of new discoveries, and gird
+themselves to remove all obstacles to the knowledge of the world they
+live in.
+
+Robert Browning in his "Paracelsus," published in 1835, anticipates the
+doctrine of evolution.
+
+ Thus He dwells in all,
+ From life's minute beginnings, up at last
+ To man--the consummation of this scheme
+ Of being--the completion of this sphere
+ Of life; whose attributes had here and there
+ Been scattered o'er the visible world before,
+ Asking to be combined.
+
+In 1836, Emerson in his "Nature," reiterated this grand prophecy:
+
+ A subtle chain of countless rings,
+ The next unto the farthest brings,
+ The eye reads omens where it goes,
+ And speaks all languages, the rose;
+ And striving to be man, the worm
+ Mounts through all the spires of form.
+
+In 1867, science had gone so far that it could announce the Unity of
+Creation; the absolute Order and Law; one continuous Force; Progress as
+the end of life. The eternal beauty existed for those who had eyes to
+see. On this foundation the human heart, with its qualities of mercy,
+pity, peace, and love, its sentiments of justice and equity, its hunger
+for advance, its idea of goodness, built up a very noble and benignant
+conception of deity and the sure hope of moral perfection.
+
+
+
+
+XI. THE CLERICAL PROFESSION.
+
+
+It is natural that the clerical profession should be an order by
+itself. Every other calling is--the lawyer's, the physician's, the
+artist's and the merchant's. There is an absurd notion that the clerical
+profession stands alone; that it has a supernatural origin, which takes
+it out of the circle of ordinary employments; that it is not to be
+compared with other institutions of society. But the real dignity of the
+profession consists in its filling its place among human arrangements. A
+certain temperament too, seems to belong to all employments. There is
+the legal temperament, the artistic, the dramatic, the mercantile. It is
+no disadvantage that one prefers solitude, likes abstract thoughts, has
+no taste for business enterprise, is fond of books and study. Indeed,
+this is an advantage for one whose office it is to amass learning, to
+weigh opinions in fine scales, to follow the spiritual laws, and to peer
+into the mystery that surrounds human life. The very misunderstandings,
+illusions, superstitions that gather around the calling may be
+recommendations, inasmuch as they prevent the intrusion of rude minds,
+and draw their attention towards subjects they would not otherwise be
+interested in.
+
+A certain amount of positiveness is necessary to ensure the worth of the
+profession. The Catholic priest has no doubt whatever of the
+providential establishment of the church in which he is a servant. This
+must be beyond question or misgiving. This is taken for granted by
+clergy and laity. All learning must be made to confirm it, all
+observation is compelled to favor it. The laws of society must have
+nothing to do with the kingdom of God; for society is to be redeemed,
+nature is to be supplanted by grace, secular life must therefore be
+excluded. The priest, such is the theory, dwells out of the world, and
+is encouraged to do so. He is poor, celibate, homeless, has no
+attachments, no affections, no terrestrial occupations. He must be to
+all intents and purposes dead to mortal affairs. One may find fault with
+earthly institutions; one is bound to find fault with them, but the
+church must be beyond criticism and must be accepted as a gift from
+heaven.
+
+The Protestant clergyman holds fast by his doctrine of faith as by
+divine appointment. His chief tenets must not be submitted to doubt.
+Whatever he may reject, there remains something he is not tempted to
+resign--namely, the presence of the Holy Spirit in his creed. Reason may
+carry the outworks--ceremonies, ordinances, incidental points of
+belief,--but the citadel is removed from assault. The world-spirit may
+hover around him, envious, expectant, watchful, applauding his boldness,
+cheering his progress towards negations, glad to see the gulf betwixt
+him and the age gradually diminishing, and pressing into every vacant
+position; society may claim interest in him more and more; but there are
+points he must not yield, and which he merely wishes to bring into
+prominence in surrendering others which he regards as secondary. So much
+may be necessary, but religion must practically take its place among the
+ideal pursuits of men and be exposed, as they are, to the full
+examination of the mind before any fair account of it can be given. And
+this cannot be so long as a region, however small, is shut off from
+investigation by supernatural powers.
+
+Moreover, it is the common impression that the office of the ministry
+is detrimental to the best interest of humanity, because it establishes
+another caste and thus destroys the unity that is so important in the
+integrity of the world. By it the priest is a person set apart, hedged
+about by the laws, held in peculiar reverence, habited in special
+garments. Some kinds of entertainments, such as dancing, the drama, are
+commonly forbidden to him. His presence on festive occasions used to be
+regarded as a gracious intrusion. He was not expected to take part in
+gayeties or to have any share in frivolities, which were much more
+hilarious when he was absent and the restraint of his presence was
+removed. He was thought to be somehow at war with nature, and his
+looking on at merrymaking was regarded by the polite as a piece of
+condescension on his part, an evidence of unusual liberality of
+sentiment. It was but the other day that a young physician, belonging to
+a Unitarian family, and himself an enthusiastic student of science,
+praised a minister for excusing his continual absence from church on the
+ground of his being so well employed. This was regarded as a long step
+in the direction of indulgence towards natural inclination. Even among
+rationalists, a symptom of the old idea appears in an expression of the
+face, the manner of address, the walk, or the general bearing. It is
+thought a great stretch of charity if he is kind to the atheist, the
+materialist, the infidel; and to take in the tempted child of nature,
+the drunkard, the victim of lust, avarice, is extreme good-will,
+benevolence amounting to saintliness. To abolish from it the pretension
+of superiority in the form of pity, as the high look upon the low, the
+good upon the bad, the moral upon the immoral, the virtuous upon the
+vicious, is, it is presumed, to overlook all recognized distinctions, to
+enthrone nature, to accept instinct as a safe guide, to renounce
+religion altogether and reject the saying that "the Christian church is
+immortal because its fundamental dogma involves a doctrine of God in
+nature so ample and clear as to satisfy every profoundest want of the
+heart and every urgent demand of the head towards God forever."
+
+There are distinctions enough among men at any rate, and to obliterate
+them as far as possible is the office of true religion and all real
+humanity; to increase love, to multiply the bonds of fraternity, to
+bring mankind to a social equality, to annihilate all that keeps mortals
+apart. Of course the safety of society must be preserved by laws,
+customs, prejudices, but care should be taken to make these simply
+protective in their function, and in no event should it be assumed that
+such distinctions, however radical, have any absolute value or go beyond
+the limits of this outward world. Save men, if you can, from
+intemperance, violence, covetousness, lasciviousness, cowardice,
+gluttony, laziness, from every vice that brutalizes them, renders them
+objects of hate, fear, suspicion, or jealousy; make their circumstances
+wholesome, their condition in life invigorating, but do it in the name
+of enlightenment, do it as members of the human brotherhood, not as
+members of a divine organization. Many ministers make great efforts to
+exorcise this demon of exclusiveness, but the effort is too severe for
+any but the few, and the success of it is of doubtful accomplishment.
+
+The Christian minister is a representative of humanity, pure and
+simple, without recognition of its division into classes. He is neither
+rich nor poor, high nor low, in society nor out of it, elevated nor
+obscure. He is democratic, the friend of everybody, the servant of all,
+on terms of charity and sincerity with all men. Sectarianism, with its
+manifold evils of violence, malignity, hatred, misrepresentation, is a
+standing evidence of the harm done to society by a priesthood, whether
+Catholic or Protestant, and ministers who have labored to overthrow its
+influence as being fatal to charity have been obliged to fight against
+the spirit of party, and to rely more upon their natural disposition
+than upon their professional training. In this respect the laity have
+been in advance of their so-called leaders. The people have always been
+opposed to dogmatical exclusiveness, and have welcomed every sign of
+generosity towards unbelievers. They have followed their instinct of
+sympathy, they have read the New Testament by the light of their human
+feeling, and setting common-sense against doctrinal narrowness, have
+rejoiced at every victory gained over intolerance. They have been
+friends of brotherhood; they have adopted the cause of liberty; and I
+must own with grief, the foes they have had to contend with have been,
+in too many instances, the ministers who would not see that charity was
+before faith.
+
+Everybody must have observed the unanimity and the persistency with
+which ministers of all denominations and of all ages have devoted
+themselves to the rich. In fact the devotion is so conspicuous that it
+is one of the commonplace criticisms on the profession. People in
+general assume that this kind of adulation, amounting often to toadyism,
+is characteristic of the clerical calling, so inseparable from it indeed
+that the majority of men are incredulous as to any departure from it,
+and look with unfeigned admiration, when there are no reasons for
+distrust, on the minister who knows no distinction of persons or
+conditions, but has regard to intellectual or spiritual considerations
+alone. Such a man is viewed as a wonder, an exception to all rules,
+singularly constituted, either extraordinarily humane or extraordinarily
+obtuse, either more or less than a man. The worship of wealth is so
+common that some explanation of it must be given. The sufferings,
+mishaps, troubles of the rich are reputed to be more serious than they
+are in the ordinary run of cases; their disappointments are more
+pitiable, their crosses heavier, their losses severer, their sorrows a
+graver imputation on Providence. They are looked on as the favorites of
+heaven, and the cotton-wool in which they are wrapped is spoken of as
+the provision that is made for them expressly by the Lord.
+
+This may be accounted for on grounds of material convenience. They who
+have money are of great importance, and that they should be interested
+in church affairs is of immense moment to all concerned, not to the
+ministers alone, but to the entire congregation, nay, to the whole
+community of believing men. There is always need of money, to build
+churches, pay officials, hire singers, furnish ornaments, support
+charities, maintain organizations for various ecclesiastical purposes;
+and it is much easier to get this in larger sums and with little
+trouble, than to obtain it in little driblets, with much pain, great
+expenditure of time, and constant vexation of spirit. The minister, from
+the nature of the case, is chargeable with this concern, which obliges
+him to visit frequently the wealthier members of his sect. To this end
+he must keep on good terms with them, must sit at their tables, eat
+their dinners, drink their wine, praise their pictures, compliment their
+tastes, commend their performances, flatter their self-esteem, admire
+their surroundings, take their side in controversy; and all such conduct
+is set down by kindly, thoughtful people, to the account of prudence
+which is more than pardonable in one situated as he is.
+
+This is quite true, but it is not the whole truth. By implication
+already, the duty of cultivating the rich as donors involves the
+qualities of manhood to an indefinite extent. The line of necessary
+courtesy is not decisively drawn; cannot be drawn by the rules of
+etiquette. This must be the result of a trained experience, of a
+delicacy and sensitiveness, of a pride of selfhood, of a loftiness or
+dignity of mind that are hardly to be looked for in any large class of
+human beings, however free from special temptation or particular
+seductions that may be. The influence of luxury, ease, comfort,
+elegance, is very insidious, so that even an unusual zeal for truth, an
+extraordinary passion for excellence, yields to the power of moral
+indifference, of intellectual superficialness, which is characteristic
+of those who do not do battle with circumstances. It is so much easier
+to do nothing than it is to do something; it is so charming to be
+deferred to, to be looked up to, to be flattered, to have one's opinion
+sought without being involved in discussion, or vexed by opposition, or
+confronted with scepticism; it is so delightful to the natural man to
+sit in an easy cushioned chair, and be treated with delicate courtesy
+and dainty refinement as an authority on matters theological,
+philosophical, literary, instead of being put on the defensive by keen
+questioners who submit awkward problems for immediate solution; it is so
+gratifying to one's self-esteem to be received as a superior being, that
+ordinary human nature generally succumbs to the temptation and finds
+ready excuse for acquiescence in the necessity of being on good terms
+with one's wealthier parishioners, and so securing their all important
+good-will. In short, a fastidious kind of flunkeyism is engendered that
+is quite inconsistent with the spiritual life. The rich become a refuge
+as well as a resource, and the inner man is weakened while the outer man
+is confirmed. A species of lethargy creeps over mind and conscience.
+Even the moral purpose faints and languishes, and charity ceases to be
+athletic, as elegance of form is substituted for pith of resolution. The
+prophet is induced to say smooth things, to announce easy principles, to
+gloze over hard interpretations, to keep out of sight unwelcomed truths;
+and extraordinary courage is required of those who would resist this
+tendency to complaisance. The rich are, from the nature of the case,
+easily persuaded of the excellence of existing institutions, ideas,
+observances. I had been in the pulpit five years before I saw Henry
+James' remarkable lecture on "Property as a Symbol," and learned for the
+first time that "Property symbolizes the perfect sovereignty which man
+is destined to exercise over nature"; that "Property as an institution
+of human society expresses or grows out of this instinct of sovereignty
+in man. While this instinct is as yet misunderstood or unrecognized by
+the individual, while its full issues are as yet unimagined by him,
+society lends all her force to educate it under this form of an
+aspiration after property, or a desire to appropriate to one's self,
+land, houses, money, precious stones, and whatsoever else evidences
+one's power over nature.... Thus the moral law is nothing more or less
+than an affirmation of the sacredness of private property. It virtually
+asserts an individuality in man superior to that conferred by his
+nature.... Such is the temper of mind which God begets in him, to subdue
+the whole realm of the outward and finite to himself, to the service of
+his proper individuality, and so vindicate the truth of his infinite
+origin.... The sole ground of our sovereignty over nature is inward,
+consisting in a God-inspired selfhood, instinct with infinite power."
+
+It would be comforting to believe that a felt consciousness of this
+infinitude, however dim, animates the attachment of the clergyman to the
+opulent of any congregation; but I, for one, must make the confession
+that the fact of property was taken literally, that the ideal,
+symbolical character of it was concealed, that the instinct of
+sovereignty was unrecognized and unimaginable, and that the divine
+intent was unsought for, the institution being held quite sufficient to
+itself and needing no authentication beyond its existence. And such, I
+apprehend, is the prevailing view among the clergy, whose worship of it
+is not identical with the adoration of the Infinite.
+
+One cannot undertake to speak with knowledge on a subject so complicated
+as this is with private motives, personal temperaments, social
+circumstances; but, as far as my memory goes, the clergy, as a class,
+have been too much engaged with matters ecclesiastical to be deeply
+interested in any cause of reform, and too timid to take the initiative
+in any matter involving disagreeable relations with controlling powers.
+
+While towards the rich the attitude of the clergy is one of allegiance,
+towards the poor it has been one of patronage. This is a danger. "The
+poor ye have always with you, and whenever ye will ye can do them good,"
+expresses their doctrine of charity. As if the poor were created in
+order that others might exercise beneficence; as if poverty was a
+providential institution, maintained in the interest of religion! It is
+hard in a so-called "Christian" community to get away from this view.
+The modern scientific theory and the "Christian" theory are thus at war;
+the former being intent on the well-being of society, the latter having
+in mind the cultivation of the individual in tenderness of sympathy; the
+former educating intelligence, the latter educating feeling. Still there
+was charity.
+
+The Catholic Church, to say nothing here of any ecclesiastical purpose
+in keeping masses of men and women out of the world, gathered those who
+could not help themselves into great buildings and took care of them. In
+the Protestant Church the care of the poor has been held to be a
+religious duty, and a large part of the efforts of Christian ministers
+is directed to the fostering of pity and generosity in the hearts of the
+wealthy. To give to those who had nothing was reckoned the chief of
+graces, and "charity"--interpreted as love for those in want--was placed
+above "faith" and "hope," even when money alone was given. Not long ago
+a Unitarian minister exhorted his congregation to set apart for the uses
+of the poor one tenth part of their annual income, and doubtless he had
+the consciences of nearly all his hearers with him, for the monstrous
+proposition has been so often asserted as to seem by this time a
+commonplace. Probably no man living does that or ever did, and the
+practice of it on a large scale would pauperize the community. Think of
+it! Five thousand dollars a year is not a great income, yet if every one
+who had as much bestowed a tenth part of it on charitable objects what a
+fund for human demoralization would be raised! And when the income is
+ten thousand, fifteen thousand, twenty thousand, the amount of
+imbecility created would be indescribable; inertia would be frightfully
+increased, and multitudes would sit with folded hands who otherwise
+would have lifted them to do some honest work. A moral lethargy would
+fall on the toiling masses; wealth-producing labor would shrink to
+narrower and narrower limits, and a paralysis of energy would steal over
+the will of those whose need of resolution is the sorest. Wealth would
+consequently decrease, and the number of the givers get smaller and
+smaller until accumulation, which is the life of the modern world as
+distinguished from the ancient, would be blighted. The industrial
+classes would be reduced to servitude, enormous fortunes would be
+gathered by fraud, speculation, cruelty, and progressive society would
+relapse into sterility. Fortunately the minister could not persuade
+people to adopt this fatal policy. Fortunately, in this particular,
+niggardliness went hand in hand with common-sense.
+
+That the churches, under the lead of the ministers, have done a vast
+deal in the direction of charity, so far from being denied or disputed,
+is cordially allowed and even maintained. Indeed, this has been their
+chief function, and they have discharged it with immense zeal and
+astonishing results.
+
+But that it was an "ideal" profession is, as I said, a recommendation
+to the ministry. It is a broad foundation for spiritual-mindedness, for
+unworldliness. True, the habit of dealing with abstract topics, of
+holding commerce with purely speculative themes, of entertaining mere
+theories which cannot be verified, of going back to what are called
+"first principles," imparts a curiously vague, dreamy, impersonal,
+impalpable character to the minister's intellect, rendering it unfit to
+treat concrete questions of life or morals; for this reason he is not
+often successful as a man of business, a practical politician, a manager
+of affairs, his cast of mind disqualifying him for close consideration
+of details.
+
+The duty of answering unanswerable questions, too, of solving problems
+that are insoluble, of replying positively to what, from the nature of
+things, he cannot know, gives him a kind of ingenuity which is not
+genuine insight, but consists in subtle turnings, windings, in making
+fine distinctions and splitting hairs, and inventing ingenious
+interpretations, rather than in keen insight or straightforward
+analysis. He must seek ways of escape from his pursuers, and, when no
+other offers, hide in the thicket of mystery or run up the tree of
+faith. He must, if possible, have an explanation ready, and, if he has
+none, he must fall back on authority, and be impressive, addressing the
+sentiment of awe which is usually alive in every bosom, or, in the last
+resort, asseverating the truth of revelation, and thus silencing the
+debate he cannot continue. If neither conscience is satisfied, his own
+or his interlocutor's, there is no remedy save in submission. He makes
+no attempt to clear up his conceptions, or, if he does, ends at last in
+vacuity or discontent. His neighbor, unconvinced, concludes that this is
+a clerical subterfuge, and so far loses confidence in a profession he
+cannot understand. Probably he does not do it justice, but the effect is
+the same,--a rooted depreciation such as would not be felt towards a
+layman who simply said that he had no answer.
+
+The minister, also, is generally committed to a conception of the
+universe as a product of the Supreme Will which, makes him an apologist.
+He is, after a fashion, in the secret of God. He is supposed to deliver
+messages and to utter oracles. His is the wisdom of the Eternal. His is
+the Bible. His are the testimonies. He must follow the ways of the
+Spirit and defend the divine economy in the constitution of the world.
+But in each case, every allowance being made for indefiniteness, for
+largeness of statement and broadness of exposition, the minister must be
+a champion of the Infinite Wisdom and Goodness, pledged to maintain it
+against all opponents; and however cordially he may choose that part,
+the consciousness of being bound may act as a fretting annoyance, not to
+say a galling restraint.
+
+A singular dogmatism often accompanies this claim to speak in the name
+of the Almighty; the minister must enunciate truths, not deliver
+opinions. An authoritative tone gets into his voice, pervades his
+manner, affects his whole expression of face, is conveyed by his gait
+and walk, so that he is known at once from afar. Men hush their voices
+in his presence, ventilate thoughts not natural to them, conceal their
+actual sentiments, from a feeling that he is to be deferred to, not
+argued with like another man. The tone of the pulpit animates his
+conversation and works into the very structure of his thought. He is
+always a preacher. The atmosphere of Sunday hangs about him. He carries
+the New Testament into the parlor; unconsciously to himself he uses the
+language of authority, and finds to his mortification that he is angered
+by dispute.
+
+The duty of administering consolation to the afflicted adds to this
+visionary frame of mind. Frequent intercourse with the suffering, sad,
+and bereaved, intimate commerce with sick-beds and graves, besides
+creating ghostly dispositions, deepens his cast of thought. To comfort
+people under disappointments, to smooth the rugged path, to quiet the
+perturbed heart, is a business to discharge which all the resources of
+faith are called into requisition, and any means that will accomplish
+the end in view are considered as justifiable. In the effort to find
+comfortable things to say, the temptation to say pleasant things, easy
+things, amiable things, to present the kindly aspect of Providence, and
+to indulge happy fancies in regard to human allotments and destiny, is
+exceedingly strong; so that one may come at last to believe himself what
+gives so much contentment to others in the severe crises of existence.
+The loving heart is in perilous proximity to the thinking head. All the
+sweetest feelings of our nature, the wish to console people, to make
+them patient, trusting, resigned, cheerful, are brought in to reinforce
+the faith in a benignant purpose on the part of the Creator, and an
+unquestioning disposition is encouraged in the spiritual physician as
+well as in the stricken patient.
+
+Mr. Henry James says ("Substance and Shadow," p. 214): "Protestant men
+and women, those who have any official or social consequence in the
+church, are apt to exhibit a high-flown religious pride, a spiritual
+flatulence and sourness of stomach which you do not find under the
+Catholic administration." This is strong language, but not too strong
+considering the author's abhorrence of exclusiveness, separation,
+Pharisaism, and his identification of this with official religion.
+
+If humility is the base of all the virtues, as it is commonly reported,
+then a profession that directly favors pride is not productive of the
+highest type of character. And if love,--kindness, brotherhood,
+fellowship,--is the fulfilment of the law, then a calling that puts
+desire in conflict with duty is not conducive to unity or peace, whether
+in the private mind or in the collective household. Character, as
+_naturally_ interpreted, consists of an innate superiority to one's
+fellow-men in the qualities that glorify humanity, purity,
+heavenly-mindedness, patience, earnestness, truthfulness, sincerity.
+Character, as _spiritually_ interpreted, consists of the cordial
+affiliation with one's fellow-men in the qualities that unite the atoms
+of humanity in love, compassion, humility, forgiveness, sympathy. But
+the higher view has not prevailed in my experience; let me repeat, in
+the most emphatic language at my command, my conviction that ministers
+as a body do not succumb to the temptations thus apparently incident to
+their profession.
+
+It is commonly supposed that the intellectual part of the minister's
+labor--the making of the sermons--is most severe. It is imagined that
+the task of addressing the same audience every Sunday must be
+exceedingly arduous. This is a mistake. There is a facility of work in
+every profession. The mind becomes accustomed to running in certain
+grooves, to going through the same process of thinking, to applying the
+same rules to many details of practice. The longer one's continuance in
+the ministry, the easier this becomes. Experience accumulates. Themes
+multiply. Novel suggestions occur. New thoughts arise. Fresh books are
+written. Singular questions are proposed. Problems present fresh
+aspects. The old interests remain in all their force. Men never tire
+hearing about God, Immortality, Destiny. In truth, the intellectual
+difficulties become less and less appalling until at last they
+disappear. The real effort is to keep alive the feelings of humanity; to
+overcome the inclination towards separation into classes; to avoid
+distinguishing between persons; to keep love glowing; to maintain the
+supremacy of soul; to identify spirituality with custom. The preaching
+is subordinate not to the private practice alone, but to the religious
+attitude towards mankind, which is conditioned on charity and the
+recognition of human worth and sonship. The most beautiful trait in the
+pastor is his universality, his simple, unaffected manhood.
+
+But enough of criticism. It is a privilege to belong to a profession
+occupied with things ethereal; to be interested in the grandest themes;
+to hold intercourse with the loftiest minds; to live aloof from the
+world; to put the happiest constructions on the events of human life; to
+interpret Providence beneficently. And it is my firm persuasion that in
+proportion as the profession throws off the thraldom of ecclesiasticism
+and dogmatism, it increases in power and is sure to recover its ancient
+superiority.
+
+
+
+
+XII. MY TEACHERS.
+
+
+Among Englishmen, I owe the most to James Martineau, at the time of my
+ordination (1847), a Unitarian clergyman in Liverpool. His lectures in
+the Unitarian controversy (1839) on "Christianity without Priest and
+without Ritual," on "The Christian View of Moral Evil," on "The Bible:
+What It Is and What It is Not"; his articles on "Distinctive Types of
+Christianity," on "Creeds and Heresies of Early Christianity," on "The
+Ethics of Christendom," on "The Creed of Christendom," on "St. Paul and
+His Modern Students," made a profound impression on my mind. One passage
+in particular, at the close of the essay on "The Ethics of Christendom,"
+still lingers in my memory:
+
+ The old antagonism between the world that now is and any other
+ that has been or is to come, has been modified, or has entirely
+ ceased.... _Here_ is the spot, _now_ is the time for the most
+ devoted service of God. No strains of heaven will wake man into
+ prayer, if the common music of humanity stirs him not. The
+ saintly company of spirits will throng around him in vain if he
+ finds no angels of duty and affection in his children, neighbors,
+ and friends. If no heavenly voices wander around him in the
+ present, the future will be but the dumb change of the shadow on
+ the dial. In short, higher stages of existence are not the refuge
+ of this, but the complement to it; and it is the proper wisdom of
+ the affections not to escape the one in order to seek the other,
+ but to flow forth in purifying copiousness on both.
+
+Martineau's intellectual fidelity, accurate learning, earnestness of
+feeling, were exceedingly fascinating.
+
+In this country Ralph Waldo Emerson was the great teacher. He gave an
+atmosphere rather than a dogma. He was air and light. He is best
+described, not as a philosopher, a man of letters, a poet, but as a
+seer. His gift was that of insight. This he tried to render
+comprehensive, searching, intelligent, accurate, by reading, study,
+meditation, the acquaintance of distinguished men; but he was never
+beguiled into thinking that learning, eloquence, wit, constituted his
+peculiarity. He had a penetrating, eager, questioning look. His head was
+thrust out as if in quest of knowledge. His gaze was steady and intense.
+His speech was laconic and to the purpose. His direct manner suggested a
+wish for closer acquaintance with the mind. His very courtesy, which was
+invariable and exquisite in its way, had an air of inquiry about it.
+There was no varnish, no studied grace of motion or demeanor, no
+manifest desire to please, but a kind of wistfulness as of one who took
+you at your best and wanted to draw it out. He accosted the soul, and
+with the winning persuasiveness which befits friendliness on human
+terms. There was a certain shyness which indicated the modesty which is
+born of the spirit.
+
+But a commanding doer he certainly was not; that is, he was no man of
+expedients, of practical resources, of merely executive will. He
+appreciated this kind of ability, as his lecture on Napoleon shows, but
+he possessed little of it, his Yankee ingenuity being more confined in
+its range. The moral courage belonged to him, the earnestness, the
+faith, but his ethereal qualities lacked driving force. His principles
+made him interested in every movement of reform, for he had a boundless
+hope which led him sometimes into extravagant anticipations of truth and
+benefit. Every sign of life, intellectual, moral, spiritual, caught his
+eye, and so long as it promised new developments of power his eager
+sympathy went with it, but when the creative period ceased he turned
+away. He early enlisted in the anti-slavery cause, not because he had
+entire confidence in the negro, or specially liked the abolitionists,
+but because he demanded the utmost liberty for all men in order that
+substantial advantages might be widely shared; but he was not prominent
+among the workers of that reform. His name stood foremost in the list of
+those who claimed the emancipation of woman from social or political
+disability, not that he was a worker in the woman's-rights phalanx, not
+that he looked for any immediate benefit from that agitation, or felt
+any particular interest in the leaders or in the success of that
+individual crusade, but that he was in favor of the largest opportunity
+for all human beings, and wished every particle of power to be used.
+From the first he welcomed the Free Religious Association as giving
+promise of original light, greater breadth, fresh vigor, new revelations
+of knowledge in that most ideal, but most deplorably limited, of all
+spheres; but when in his view that promise was unfulfilled, though his
+name still stood with those of its vice-presidents, he ceased to take
+any part in its proceedings or to feel any personal concern in its
+affairs. There was something theoretical, speculative, in his attitude
+as a reformer. His philosophy pledged him to the utmost individualism,
+and this called for the utmost liberty, that each might receive all he
+could of the divine fulness and be as much as his nature required. Hence
+his own limited expectation; hence his enthusiasm in behalf of
+individuals like Walt Whitman, John Brown, Henry Thoreau; hence the
+light that came into his eyes when he sat in some reform convention
+where high thoughts were spoken. His word was given, and it was always
+inspiring, emancipating, uplifting, heard in the valleys from the
+dizziest heights of vision; but force was not his to give. Such words
+were more than "half battles," to be sure, so invigorating were they to
+all the champions of good causes, but they were _words_ still, and
+seemed to proceed from some upper region of impersonal mind. They
+expressed convictions, feelings, desires, but there was lack of blood in
+them. They seemed made of air; there was soul behind them, but not as
+much body as many wished. In a word, all the ideal elements were
+present. He was a man who believed, felt, hoped, had vast resources of
+faith, but was a thinker more than an actor. Thinking is indeed doing,
+yet not in the same sphere of achievement.
+
+Emerson recognized the limitations of genius. "Life is a scale of
+degrees," he says in the lecture on the "Uses of Great Men."
+
+ Between rank and rank of our great men are wide intervals. Mankind
+ have in all ages attached themselves to a few persons who, either
+ by the quality of that idea they embodied, or by the largeness of
+ their reception, were entitled to the position of leaders and
+ lawgivers.... With each new mind a new secret of nature transpires;
+ nor can the Bible be closed until the last great man is born.... We
+ cloy of the honey of each peculiar greatness. Every hero becomes a
+ bore at last.... We balance one man with his opposite, and the
+ health of the state depends on the see-saw.
+
+Emerson looks forward to the time when all souls shall lie open to the
+heavenly influx, and he regards greatness as an earnest of that
+possibility. What disappointments he must have felt as he was forced to
+turn away from people who should have been saints and heroes, but were
+none! What bitter moments he must have known when he stretched out his
+arms to welcome a goddess and embraced only a cloud! But his
+expectations continued eager; no feature betrayed evidence that these
+practical refutations of his theory had effect on his heart.
+
+Whether Emerson's constant belief in the Over-soul, his stubborn theism,
+his persuasion of an immanent God, was an advantage or a disadvantage to
+his philosophical view of the universe may be doubted. On the one hand,
+we cannot question the fact that he owed to it his enthusiastic faith in
+the substantial unity of creation, his optimism, his assurance of future
+progress, his confidence in man, his moral earnestness, his elevation of
+soul, his buoyancy of spirit, his forwardness in all endeavors after
+reform. On the other hand, it can hardly be denied that it led him to
+take some things for granted, diverted his mind from the unprejudiced
+observation of phenomena, prevented his rendering full justice to the
+scientific method, was the cause of wide aberrations in his estimates of
+human character, and of a curious onesidedness in his judgments on human
+condition.
+
+Emerson was always profoundly religious, at heart a supernaturalist. The
+blood of centuries of pious ancestors was in his veins. His soul was
+uppermost, not his intellect nor his heart. He was a closet man, a
+minister at the altar. True, he rejected every form of the religious
+sentiment, and moved with entire freedom among dogmas however expressed
+in word or in rite. Every attempt at giving voice to spiritual emotion
+was disagreeable to him.
+
+ I like a church; I like a cowl;
+ I like a prophet of the soul;
+ And on my heart monastic aisles
+ Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles;
+ Yet not for all his faith can see
+ Would I that cowled churchman be.
+
+Theology had fallen from him like a shroud. He would not venture any
+definition of the spiritual laws. Doctrine had become faith; prayer was
+changed into aspiration; the speechless utterance was the only one he
+cordially listened to. But faith he held fast; aspiration he cherished;
+the inarticulate language of the eternal was ever in his ears.
+
+Ever and anon would come a burst of conviction. "Oh, my brothers, God
+exists!" he cries in an ecstasy of emotion. Some years ago Emerson
+seemed fascinated by the inductive method, so that some of his admirers
+thought he would become a convert to physical science. But the bent of
+his nature asserted itself, and he pursued the deductive system as
+before. His passion for "First Truths," as they were called, was
+irresistible. He could not abandon the philosophy of intuition, and all
+his studies--comprehensive, profound, and original as they were,--his
+insatiable thirst for knowledge, his inordinate appetite for details of
+fact, incidents, anecdotes, gleanings from literature of every kind,
+were subservient to this.
+
+Emerson's serenity is often spoken of as evidence of the power of his
+religious faith. It may allow of this construction, but it may be
+accounted for on other and different grounds which lie nearer at hand
+and proceed immediately from more obvious sources. How far may a long
+ancestral experience in devout meditations, practices, longings, worked
+into the system and producing a sedate, calm, interior temperament, go
+in explaining that almost imperturbable tranquillity? The piety of his
+forefathers was so genuine that it drove him from the church of his
+adoption, and rendered another calling sacred. Their descendant
+exhibited the same saintliness which they possessed but in a different
+fashion. And he was probably saintlier than they were, because he was
+their child. His brothers had the same characteristic of equanimity by
+virtue of the same parentage. His brother William, whom I knew
+intimately in New York, showed in his daily life a similar dignity, and
+tradition reports the same of Charles. It was the perfect fruitage of
+centuries of heavenly-minded men, not the peculiarity of an individual
+soul.
+
+This predisposition to inwardness was favored by the long seclusion of
+Concord, which kept Emerson aloof from the world and prevented the
+friction which is so damaging to serenity. He saw those only who
+respected, loved, honored, and revered him. He came into collision with
+none. Men of thought, unambitious men, students, farmers, were his
+fellow-townsmen. Several hours in each day he was alone with his books
+or his mind. When he visited the city it was for an intellectual or
+social purpose, as one who had dropped from a star and was soon to
+vanish. His contact was with men of letters, clergymen, publishers,
+friends, gentlemen interested in mental pursuits who had left their
+business in order to disport themselves in the fields of thought. These
+added to his stores of wisdom, and sent him home replenished rather than
+drained. The gains of his day were not dissipated either by business
+occupation or pleasure.
+
+Then, whether from disposition or philosophy we cannot tell, this man
+avoided everything dark, evil, unwholesome, unpleasant. Sickness of all
+kinds, complaint, depression, melancholy, was an abomination to him. He
+turned away from ugly sights and sounds, thus evading conflict. He never
+argued, never discussed, but said his word as well as he could, and
+encouraged others to say theirs, in this way hoping to get at the truth.
+By this course he escaped the usual provocations to ill-temper, and was
+forced upon an undisturbed equipoise of mind. Nothing helps serenity so
+much as avoidance of contest, and when one can thoroughly convince
+himself that there is no rooted evil in the world to be fought against,
+an even condition of soul is not hard to maintain; optimism is
+proverbially cheerful, but an optimism that is grounded in principle
+must be unconquerable by any force that circumstances can bring against
+it.
+
+It must be remembered that Emerson was not a man of warm temperament,
+not tropical in color or in heat; more like the morning, cool and
+breezy, than like the sultry noon-day, or the glowing evening; more like
+the dewy spring, than the effulgent summer or the fruit-bearing autumn;
+not a child of the sun, rather suggesting the still, white, imaginative
+moonlight. There was an air of remoteness about him. His remark to the
+inn-keeper,--"heat me red-hot," tells the story. Simple habits kept his
+frame wiry, and a New England nurture saved his mind from luxuriant
+uncleanness. By nature he was passionless. The beautiful "Threnody" on
+the death of his boy, reveals the sorrow of a soaring mind rather than
+the grief of a crushed heart. To command one's self enough for such an
+effort evinces a rare power of rising above mortal conditions. Such a
+constitution finds solitude congenial and is calm by force of
+inclination. Friendship seems an emotion better suited than love to that
+ethereal soul, which was always radiant but seldom burning, benignant,
+seldom craving, always gracious in imparting, seldom hungry for
+receiving. One might walk in his illumination, but one could hardly bask
+in his heat, or lie on his bosom, or nestle near his heart. They that
+knew him at home may speak more warmly of him, but thus he appeared to
+people outside; thus he appeared to many who had admired him as I did
+and tried to get close to him.
+
+The love of wild, untrimmed nature, the want of interest in cultivated
+gardens, was part of his theory of the universe as the expression of
+God; the richer, the less it was interfered with. He would approach as
+near to the Creator as possible, listening for the divine voice, which
+was most clearly heard in the wilderness. To the same source must be
+ascribed his partiality for wild, untrained men,--foresters, hunters,
+pioneers, trappers, back-woodsmen. He sought everywhere after
+originality, freshness, power, in individuals and in groups. He hailed a
+genius, however rough. Unconventionality excited his enthusiasm to such
+a degree that he could scarcely contain himself, but said the most
+extravagant things in the ecstasy of his hope. Men of polished outside
+he did not care for; mechanical men, however successful, politicians,
+however popular and adroit, were his aversion. Accomplishments, however
+great, scholarship however finished, he did not respect. He wanted the
+rough, uncut gem. Genius of whatever description, in whatever class,
+whatever its order or grade, was his joy. In him the love of truth
+predominated. He submitted to the inconvenience of imperfect opinion,
+but respected the highest law of his being. He believed in the eternal
+laws of mind, in the self-existence of right, in purity, veracity,
+goodness. He was one of the most honest of men, one of the cleanest, and
+he did his utmost to bring his life into correspondence with his best
+thought. That all created things must be imperfect was part of his
+creed; that this imperfection ran through human character he was as much
+convinced as any man; and his efforts were unceasing to turn men's eyes
+towards the beauty "ancient but ever new," which he in his moments of
+insight beheld. No one lives up to his most exalted faith. No one ever
+endeavored to do so more sincerely and humbly than Ralph Waldo Emerson.
+
+In my early ministry, the discourses of Dr. Orville Dewey on "Human
+Nature," "Human Life," "The Nature of Religion," seemed all-sufficing. I
+read them over and over again with increasing admiration, and his
+solutions of spiritual problems were accepted as final.
+
+Miss Mary Dewey, in the admirable memoir of her father, lays great
+stress on his affectionate qualities. These cannot be too emphatically
+asserted; yet they probably had more scope than even she suspected.
+Indeed, unless I am much mistaken, they formed the basis of his
+character. He was a most deep-feeling man. He loved his friends in and
+out of the profession, with a loyal, hearty, obliging, warm, and even
+tender emotion, expressing itself in word and deed. It was overflowing,
+not in any sentimental manner, but in a manly, sincere way. He was a man
+of infinite good-will, of a quite boundless kindness. His voice, his
+expression of face, his smile, the grasp of his hand,--all gave sign of
+it. He felt things keenly; his sensibilities were most acute; even his
+thoughts were suffused with emotion. He could not discuss speculative
+themes as if they were cold or dry. Nothing was arid to his mind. In
+prayer it was not unusual for his audience to discern tears rolling down
+his cheeks. One day, in his study, on speaking about the intellectual
+implications of the "Philosophie Positive," he dropped his head and
+seemed for a moment lost in reverie largely made up of devotion. In him,
+heart was uppermost; intellect, conscience, were of subordinate value
+when taken alone; in fact, they were incomplete by themselves, and
+wanted their proper substance. He said once that his skin was so
+delicate that the least soil on his hands was felt all through his
+system and prevented him from working. This excessive sensibility, which
+could not be understood by the world at large, was at the bottom of his
+likes and dislikes, of his personal fears and hopes. Excitement drained
+off his strength. He exhausted himself physically, and fell into
+ill-health by exertions that would not have taxed an ordinary
+constitution. It cost him a great deal to write sermons, to visit the
+sick or sorrowing, to conduct public services. At the same time, he was
+disqualified, by a certain want of steel in his blood, for any but the
+clerical profession, where qualities like his are of inestimable value,
+and of the rarest kind. He was a minister from the beginning, always
+profoundly interested in questions of the interior life, and though he
+early left the orthodox communion and became a preacher of Unitarian
+Christianity, making it his work to apply religious ideas to all the
+concerns of the natural world and the secular life, he retained all the
+fervor of spirit that charaterized the most devout believer. A vein of
+passionate feeling ran through all his discourses, and while his themes
+were taken from daily existence, his thoughts were fixed on eternity. He
+was absorbed in the destiny of the human soul, of the _individual_ soul,
+bringing all discussions to that point, and trying to make lasting
+impressions on the spiritual natures of men and women.
+
+When I first knew him he had the reputation of being a self-indulgent
+man. This was a great mistake. His way of life was exceedingly simple,
+and his habits were almost abstemious. In fact, neither his physical nor
+his mental constitution allowed of any indulgence in eating or drinking.
+Still the impression was a natural one, for a certain amount of ease,
+exemption from care, gayety, was necessary to him. The society of
+elegant, accomplished people was indispensable to his recreation and
+rest. His motive for seeking such was not the love of luxury so much as
+a demand for recreation and a craving for repose. He was not, in any
+sense, an earthy man or one who loved sensual delights. On the contrary,
+he was always mindful of his calling, always intent on high subjects,
+always ready to lead intercourse upwards, always, to the extent of his
+power, interested in the moral aspect of current discussions;
+over-anxious, if anything, to approach speculative themes. He possessed
+an eager, unresting, questioning mind. He was always thinking, and on
+great subjects of theology or philosophy, and he put into them an amount
+of feeling that is extraordinary with intellectual men.
+
+That he should have been so sensitive as he was to the words and
+suspicions of anti-slavery men who charged him with being an advocate of
+a fugitive-slave law, an apologist for slavery, a ready tool of the
+inhuman, reactionary party of the country, is not surprising. His dread
+of pain, his hatred of falsehood, his horror of injustice, his love of
+fair play, will sufficiently account for this; while the impossibility
+of explaining himself kept the wound open. That for thirty years the
+sore should have bled, shows the delicacy of his temperament and the
+shrinking nature of his will. To speak of him as a friend of slavery is
+absurd. No one can read his sermon on "The Slavery Question," preached
+shortly after the annexation of Texas and at a moment of great
+excitement at the North in regard to the advances of the slave-power,
+and not perceive that he was deeply moved.
+
+"_Are these people_ MEN?" he said; "that is the question. If they
+are _men_, it will not do to make them instruments for mere
+convenience,--for the mere tillage of the soil;--if they are _men_, it
+is not enough to say that they have a sort of animal freedom from care,
+and joyance of spirits. If they are _men_, they are to be cultivated;
+their faculties are to be regarded as precious; they are to be
+improved.... If he is a _man_, then he is not only improvable and ought
+to be improved, but he _will improve_ in spite of all we can do." And a
+great deal more to the same effect. He indignantly protested against
+treating "an intelligent creature, a fellow-being, a brother-man, a
+being capable of indefinite expansion and immortal progress," as one
+would treat a tree, a flower, an ox, or a horse. "Grant that the African
+of the present generation cannot be raised to our stature; yet if in the
+course of ages he may be, and if it is our policy systematically to
+arrest or to retard his growth, does the case materially differ from
+what I have supposed?" Namely that of a child. Dr. Dewey visited
+slave-States and talked with slave-holders in order to make himself
+fully acquainted with the condition of opinion and of feeling about the
+case, and he took occasion everywhere to argue the Northern side. This
+ought to be enough in the way of vindication of his personal sentiments.
+
+At the same time, he was a Unionist of the Webster school. His
+attachment to the Union was intense. Disunion in his judgment meant
+ceaseless discord, the end of republican institutions, the arrest of
+civilization, the indefinite postponement of progress, the hopelessness
+of education and uplifting for the slave, the withdrawal of Northern
+influence, the final overthrow of government by moral powers. A long
+reign of anarchy, in the course of which the lovers of the race must see
+their visions of good disappear, would supervene, and this he could not
+contemplate with equanimity.
+
+Then he was an old-fashioned enemy of war, especially of civil war. He
+was a sincere lover of peace, and a believer in the arts of peace, in
+industry, education, the diffusion of intelligence, the weaving of the
+ties of fraternity; and though he acknowledged the heroic mission of
+strife, he recoiled instinctively from it. War, in his estimation, was
+an inevitable necessity in the order of the world, but it was an awful
+element in the "world problem"; "a fearful scourge," a condition to be
+outgrown along with vice, passion, injustice, selfishness, ambition, a
+sign that is destined to disappear as intelligence and Christianity come
+in. It must be submitted to as an ordination of Providence, but it
+should never be precipitated by men, least of all should it be brought
+on hastily, by unreasonableness, malignity, or hate. The evils of war
+were precisely such as appealed most directly to his imagination; they
+were so personal, they were so domestic, they were so pitiable, they
+were so full of tears. He shrank from violence, from rage, from party
+ambition, from curses and cries. He loved his countrymen, and, so long
+as any reason remained, he could not bear to think of fighting. So long
+as any oil was left in the can, the troubled waters were not to be
+abandoned by the peace-makers. It was much for him to have patience with
+those who used angry words, even in a cause of righteousness. He, for
+his part, could not scold or overstate, or do anything in a harsh
+temper.
+
+Dr. Dewey believed in colonization; not necessarily in Africa, but in a
+separation between the white and black races, in the civilization of the
+negro. In the tenth lecture of the course on "The Problem of Human
+Destiny" (1864), he takes occasion to welcome "the great hope" that thus
+was opened "for purging our American soil from the stain of slavery.
+Many of us have long been asking how this is to be done. Look at Africa,
+surrounded by a wall of darkness, and filled with cruelty and blood,
+with no civilizing influence in herself, as the story of ages has
+proved; what now do we see? Britain sends to her borders the
+man-stealer, to tear her children from her bosom and transport them to
+the American colonies. It was a deed of unmingled atrocity, compared
+with which capture in war was generous and honorable; the African King
+of Dahomey grows white by the side of the Saxon slave-trader. But what
+follows? The African people in this country improve, and are now far
+advanced beyond their kindred at home. And now they begin to return;
+they are building a state on their native borders which promises to stop
+the slave trade with Africa and to spread light and civilization through
+her dark solitudes." At the close of his discourse on the slavery
+question, he said:
+
+ If I were to propose a plan to meet the duties and perils of this
+ tremendous emergency that presses upon us, I would engage the whole
+ power of this nation, the willing co-operation of the North and the
+ South, if it were possible, to prepare this people for freedom; and
+ then I would give them a country beyond the mountains,--say the
+ Californias,--where they might be a nation by themselves. Ah! if
+ the millions upon millions spent upon a Mexican war could be
+ devoted to this purpose,--if all the energies of this country could
+ be employed for such an end,--what a noble spectacle were it for
+ all the world to behold, of help and redemption to an enslaved
+ people! What a purifying and ennobling ministration for ourselves!
+
+The intimacy with Dr. Charming re-inforced the conclusions which were
+native to Dr. Dewey's temperament. The moderate view, the dread of
+overstatement, the fear of fanaticism, the faith in reason, the love of
+tranquillity, the desire after truth, were rooted in his mind. His
+constitutional conservatism was confirmed. Then he was a Unitarian, and
+therefore rational in his methods, inclined to judge by arguments, to
+sift opinions by the understanding. The abolitionists were, for the most
+part, either Calvinists or transcendentalists, people who followed an
+inward voice, who placed interior conviction before ratiocination, and
+encouraged moral sentiment to take the lead in action, blowing coals
+into a flame, and not content unless they saw a blaze. The Unitarians,
+as a class, were not ardent disciples of any moral cause, and took pride
+in being reasoners, believers in education, and in general social
+influence, in the progress of knowledge, and the uplifting of humanity
+by means of ideas. The habit of discountenancing passion may have been
+fostered in a school like this. Perhaps if young Dewey had continued in
+his old belief he would have been a more vehement reformer than he was.
+His natural glow was softened down into a mild effulgence, communicating
+warmth to his convictions, but not producing a burning zeal for any
+substance of doctrine.
+
+His power of emotion made him a powerful preacher but prevented his
+being a great philosopher. Dr. Bellows, who was his close friend for
+many years, described him as a man of "massive intellectual power," and
+then went on to impute to him the gifts that belong to the pulpit
+orator: "poetic imagination," a "rare dramatic faculty of
+representation." Perhaps by "massive" Dr. Bellows meant the power to
+throw thoughts in a mass, with cumulative effect. This power Dr. Dewey
+certainly possessed in an extraordinary degree. But of philosophical
+talent he had little. Indeed, he seemed to be conscious of this himself.
+At the end of his first lecture before the Lowell Institute he said:
+
+ I am not sorry that the place and occasion require me to make this
+ a popular theme. I am not to speak for philosophers, but for the
+ people. I wish to meet the questions which arise in all minds that
+ have awaked to any degree of reflection upon their nature and
+ being, and upon the collective being of their race. I have hoped
+ that I should escape the charge of presumption by the humbleness of
+ my attempt--the attempt, that is to say, to popularize a theme
+ which has hitherto been the domain of scholars.
+
+The lecture assumes the existence of a Personal God, the reality of a
+conscious soul, the freedom of the human will, the fact of a moral
+purpose in creation, the perfectibility of man, the idea of progress,
+the evidence of design in the universe attesting a divine intelligence.
+The treatment nowhere shows metaphysical acumen or speculative insight.
+On every page is brilliancy, eloquence, skilful manipulation of
+arguments, fervent appeal to conscience. Nowhere is subtilty or depth of
+intuition. Take for example the discourse on "The Problem of Evil," the
+most intellectually exacting of all subjects. It ends thus after a
+series of pictures:
+
+ Give me freedom, give me knowledge, give me breadth of experience;
+ I would have it all. No memory is so hallowed, no memory is so
+ dear, as that of temptation nobly withstood, or of suffering nobly
+ endured. What is it that we gather and garner up from the solemn
+ story of the world, like its struggles, its sorrows, its
+ martyrdoms? Come to the great battle, thou wrestling, glorious,
+ marred nature! strong nature! weak nature! Come to the great
+ battle, and in this mortal strife strike for immortal victory! The
+ highest Son of God, the best beloved of Heaven that ever stood upon
+ earth, was "made perfect through suffering." And sweeter shall be
+ the cup of immortal joy, for that it once was dashed with bitter
+ drops of pain and sorrow; and brighter shall roll the everlasting
+ ages, for the dark shadows that clouded the birth-time of our
+ being.
+
+This is not argument, but preaching--- very fine, stimulating, powerful
+preaching, but preaching nevertheless; quite different from James
+Martineau's treatment of the same theme, in the course of the Liverpool
+lectures (delivered in 1839). Mr. Martineau, too, addressed a popular
+assembly, and closed his discourse in a strain of exhortation. Still,
+the grave tone of the previous discussion sobered the rhetoric, and the
+background of the ancient debate made the moral lessons solemn.
+Philosophy yielded to the necessities of ethics, much as the "Kritik der
+Reinen Vernunft" gave place to the "Kritik der Practischen Vernunft" of
+Kant--the preacher and the reasoner standing indeed on different ground,
+but the moral instruction being tempered by the philosophical.
+
+Orville Dewey was a great preacher, perhaps the greatest that the
+Unitarian communion has produced; greater as a preacher than Dr.
+Channing, because more various and more sympathetic, nearer to the
+popular heart, less inspired by grand ideas, and for that reason more
+moving. He was imbued with Channing's fundamental thought--the "Dignity
+of Human Nature,"--and illustrated it with a wealth of imagination,
+enforced it by an urgency of appeal, quickened it by an affluence of
+dramatic representation all his own. His function was to apply this
+doctrine to every incident of life, to politics, business, art,
+literature, society, amusement, and he did this with a boldness, a
+freedom, a frankness unusual at any time, but without example when he
+was in the ministry. I shall never forget, in one of his sermons, an
+allusion to a symphony of Beethoven which gave me a new conception of
+the essential humanity of the pulpit's office, of the close association
+that there was between religion and art. His conversational style,
+impassioned but not stilted and never turgid, was exceedingly
+impressive, while his constant employment of the forms of reasoning
+added weight to his sentences. The discourse was plain, and yet from its
+copiousness it was ornate; and the affectionate tone assumed an air of
+grave remonstrance which was deepened in effect by the appearance of
+formal logic. The hearer seemed to be admitted to the secrets of a
+living, earnest mind, and to be listening to something more than the
+usual enunciations of ethical principle. At the same time his own will
+was consulted, he was taken into partnership with the orator and
+introduced to the processes of conviction. His state of feeling was
+considered, his objections were met, his scruples answered, his
+arguments confronted. He was, in short, treated like a rational being,
+to be reasoned with, not to be looked down upon.
+
+Dr. Dewey was always a friend of liberal thought. There are no more
+significant pages in his daughter's memoir of him than those which
+contain his correspondence with Mr. Chadwick, one of the most radical of
+Unitarian divines. He was himself a student of divinity at Andover,
+early converted to Unitarianism, became an assistant and warm friend of
+Dr. Channing, but instead of remaining stationary in dogmatic faith,
+took a rational view of all religious questions, favored the largest
+liberality, and welcomed every effort to adapt spiritual ideas to actual
+knowledge. He had no dogmatic prepossessions, and no professional fears.
+What he asked for was sincerity coupled with earnestness. This being
+given, conclusions, within certain limits, of course, were of little
+moment. Theodore Parker used to sadden and irritate him, but less on
+account of his opinions than on account of his pugnacious manner in
+expressing them. Parker rather despised him for what he regarded as his
+time-serving disposition, and could not understand his mental delicacy;
+but men who thought as Parker did were even then on the best terms with
+Dr. Dewey, whose mellowness, on the whole, increased instead of
+diminishing with age, and was greatest in his declining years.
+
+He was a man fond of personalities; even in his addresses on the
+greatest themes, he would if possible narrow the subject down to the
+measure of individual application. Thus when lecturing on "The Problem
+of Evil," after submitting various considerations, he adds:
+
+ Broad and vast and immense as that problem may appear, it is after
+ all, in actual experience, purely individual.... The truth is,
+ nobody has experienced more of it than you or I have, or might
+ have, experienced. With regard to all the intrinsic difficulties of
+ the case, it is as if one life had been lived in the world; and
+ since no man has lived another's life, or any life but his own,
+ there _has been_ to actual individual consciousness _but one life_
+ of thirty, seventy, or a hundred years lived on earth. The problem
+ really comes within that compass.... If I can solve the problem of
+ existence for myself, I have solved it for everybody; I have solved
+ it for the human race.... Do you and I find anything in this our
+ life that makes us prize it, anything that makes us feel that we
+ had rather have it than have it not? Doubtless we do and other men
+ do; all men do.
+
+This passage illustrates well the tendency to personal reference that
+distinguished the man. In a discourse on war delivered before the Peace
+Society he resolves its miseries into those of the individual, as if
+mass--affecting, as it does, nations, civilizations, humanity
+itself--counted for nothing. This tendency explains his fondness for his
+friends, his strength of sympathy, his tenacity of attachment, his love
+for people. It does not betoken a broad, deep, philosophic mind, but it
+does betoken a warm, clinging, affectionate nature.
+
+It made him too a charming feature in society, a delightful talker, an
+easy, graceful, delectable companion, an interested adviser and
+counsellor, a beloved person in his family, an excellent townsman.
+
+We should be grateful for this, that one has lived to irradiate a
+somewhat sad profession, to warm the bleak spaces of mortal existence,
+to throw a gleam of gladness upon the sunless problems of human destiny.
+It is a great deal to be assured that a living heart has walked with us,
+and that a living voice has proclaimed the heart-side of man's lot.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. MY COMPANIONS.
+
+
+These were many, but most of them are living and cannot, therefore, be
+spoken of. There is an advantage in writing about the dead, for they
+cannot protest against the handsome things you say, and they cannot
+remonstrate against the unhandsome things. I shall on this account
+choose but two, with whom I was very intimate, and who are very near to
+my heart. I shall give sketches of John Weiss and Samuel Johnson, and
+first of John Weiss.[*]
+
+ [*] Reprinted from the _Unitarian Review_ of May, 1888.
+
+This man was a flame of fire. He was genius unalloyed by terrestrial
+considerations; a spirit lamp always burning. He had an overflow of
+nervous vitality, an excess of spiritual life that could not find vents
+enough for its discharge. As his figure comes before me it seems that of
+one who is more than half transfigured. His large head; his ample brow;
+his great, dark eyes; his "sable-silvered" beard and full moustache; his
+gray hair, thick and close on top, with the strange line of black
+beneath it, like a fillet of jet; his thin, piping, penetrating, tenuous
+voice, that trembled as it conveyed the torrent of thought; the rapid,
+sudden manner, suggesting sometimes the lark and sometimes the eagle;
+the small but sinewy body; the delicate hands and feet; the sensitive
+touch, feeling impalpable vibrations and detecting movements of
+intelligence within the folds of organization (they say he could tell
+the character of a great writer by holding a sealed letter from his
+hand),--all indicated a half-disembodied soul. His spoken addresses and
+written discourses confirm the impression.
+
+I first met him at the meetings of the "Hook-and-Ladder,"[*] a
+ministerial club of which we both were members. At the house of Thomas
+Starr King, in Boston, he read a sermon on the supremacy of the
+spiritual element in character, which impressed me as few pulpit
+utterances ever did, so fine was it, so subtle, yet so massive in
+conviction. Illustrations that he used stay by me now, after the lapse
+of more than forty years. I next heard him in New Bedford, at the
+installation of Charles Lowe, when, in ill-health and feeble, he gave,
+in substance, the discourse on Materialism, afterwards published in the
+volume on "Immortal Life." It struck me then as exceedingly able; and it
+derived force from the intense earnestness of its delivery, as by one
+who could look into the invisible world, and could speak no light word
+or consult transient effects. Many years later, I listened, in New York,
+to his lectures on Greek ideas, the keenest interpretation of the
+ancient myths, the most profound, luminous, sympathetic, I have met
+with. He had the faculty of reading between the lines, of apprehending
+the hidden meaning, of setting the old stories in the light of universal
+ideas, of lighting up allusions. The lecture on Prometheus I remember as
+especially radiant and inspiring; but they were all remarkable for
+positive suggestions of a very noble kind.
+
+ [*] We copy from a private letter the following account of the
+ origin of this club and of its grotesque name, which has lost, alas!
+ its significance to the younger generation. "In the year 1844 (I
+ think it was) a few of us young ministers formed a club, including
+ Charles Brigham, Edward Hale, John Weiss, with one or two elders, as
+ Dr. Hedge and, later, O. B. Frothingham, Starr King, W. R. Alger,
+ William B. Greene, and others. We went long without a name, in spite
+ of my urgent appeals as Secretary, till one fine day, at George R.
+ Russell's house in West Roxbury, in an after-dinner frolic, Weiss
+ turned the garden-engine hose upon a fellow-member and drenched him
+ from head to foot; upon which escapade it was unanimously agreed to
+ call ourselves the 'Hook-and-Ladder,' by which name the memory of it
+ is fondly kept among us to this day. A similar older fraternity had
+ gone by the name of the 'Railroad Association,' and, in imitation,
+ when it was proposed to borrow a title from some like line of
+ industry we, on this sudden whim, chose the fire-department."
+
+His genius was eminently religious. Not, indeed, in any customary
+fashion, nor after any usual way. He belonged to the Rationalists, was a
+Protestant of an extreme type, an avowed adherent of the most "advanced"
+views, a speaker on the Free Religious platform, a writer for the
+_Massachusetts Quarterly_, and for the _Radical_. His was a purely
+natural, scientific, spiritual faith, unorthodox to the last
+degree,--logically, historically, critically, sentimentally so,--so on
+principle and with fixed purpose. The accepted theory of religion
+excited his indignation, his scorn, his amazement, and his mirth. He
+could brook no dogmatic limitations, even of the most liberal sect, but
+went on and on, past all barriers, facing all adversaries, confronting
+every difficulty, and resting only when there was nothing more to
+discover. He had an agonized impatience to know whatever was to be
+known, to get at the ultimate data of assurance. Nothing less would
+satisfy him. His cup of joy was not full till he could touch the bottom.
+Then it overflowed, and there was glee as of a strong swimmer who is
+sure of his tide. His exultation is almost painful, as he welcomes fact
+after fact, feeling more and more positive, with each new demonstration
+of science, that the advent of certainty was by so much nearer. Evidence
+that to most minds seemed fatal to belief was, in his sight,
+confirmatory of it, as rendering its need more clear and more imperious.
+"We need be afraid of nothing in heaven or earth, whether dreamt of or
+not in our philosophy." "The position of theistic naturalism entitles it
+not to be afraid of all the scientific facts that can be produced."
+"There is dignity in dust that reaches any form, because it eventually
+betrays a forming power, and ceases to be dust by sharing it." "It is a
+wonder to me that scholars and clergymen are so skittish about
+scientific facts." "We owe a debt to the scientific man who can show how
+many moral customs result from local and ethnic experiences, and how the
+conscience is everywhere capable of inheritance and education. He cannot
+bring us too many facts of this description, because we have one fact
+too much for him; namely, a latent tendency of conscience to repudiate
+inheritance and every experience of utility, to fly in its face with a
+forecast of a transcendental utility that supplies the world with its
+redeemers, and continually drags it out of the snug and accurate
+adjustment of selfishness to which it arrives." There is a great deal to
+the same purpose. In fact, Mr. Weiss cannot say enough on this head. He
+accepts the doctrine of evolution in its whole length and breadth. "Of
+what consequence is it whence the living matter is derived? We are not
+appalled at the possibility that organic matter may be made out of
+non-living, or, more properly, inorganic matter. We are nerved for such
+a result, whether it occur in the laboratory or in nature, by the
+conviction that the spiritual functions are no more imperilled by using
+matter in any way, than that the Creator hazarded his existence by
+originating matter in some way to be used by himself and by us."
+"Science does me this inestimable benefit of providing a universe to
+support my personal identity, my moral sense, and my feeling that these
+two functions of mind cannot be killed. Its denials, no less than its
+affirmations, set free all the facts I need to make my body an
+expression of mental independence. Hand-in-hand with science I go, by
+the steps of development back to the dawn of creation; and, when there,
+we review all the forces and their combinations that have helped us to
+arrive, and both of us together break into a confession of a force of
+forces."
+
+This cordial sympathy with science, this absence of all savor of a
+polemical spirit, this hearty welcoming of every fact of anatomy and
+chemistry, is very noble and inspiring. It is very wise, too, though the
+noble, hearty side was alone attractive to him. He had in view no other,
+being a single-minded lover of truth. But, nevertheless, he could not
+have adopted a more politic course. For thus he propitiated the
+scepticism of the age, struck in with the prevailing current, disarmed
+opposition, and erected his own principles on the eminence which
+scientific men have raised and which they cannot build too high for his
+purposes. He doubles on his pursuers, and fairly flanks his foes. This
+throws the labor of refuting him on the idealists, who may not care to
+become responsible for his positions, and may demur to conclusions he
+arrives at, while they cannot but applaud his general aims, and wish
+they could give positive assent to all his specific doctrines. There was
+always this discrepancy between his sentiment and his logic; but it came
+out most conspicuously in his elaborate arguments.
+
+The burden of his exposition was the existence of an ideal sphere,
+quite distinct from visible phenomena; facts of consciousness attesting
+personality, a moral law, an intelligent cause, an active conscience, a
+living heart; order, beauty, harmony, humanity, self-forgetfulness,
+self-denial. As he states it:
+
+ I claim, against a strictly logical empirical method, three classes
+ of facts: first, the authentic facts of the Moral Sense, whenever
+ it appears as the transcender of the ripest average utility;
+ second, the facts of the Imagination, as the anticipator of mental
+ methods by pervading everything with personalty, by imputing life
+ to objects, or by occasional direct suggestion; third, the facts of
+ the Harmonic Sense, as the reconciler of discrete and apparently
+ sundered objects, as the prophet and artist of number and
+ mathematical ratio, as the unifier of all the contents of the soul
+ into the acclaim which rises when the law of unity fills the scene.
+ Upon these facts, I chiefly sustain myself against the theory
+ which, when it is consistently explained, derives all possible
+ mental functions from the impacts of objectivity.
+
+If Mr. Weiss had stopped with this general thesis, he would
+probably have carried most Rationalists, certainly the mass of
+Transcendentalists, with him. They would have been only too glad to
+welcome so clear and brilliant a champion. But he insisted on gathering
+up these conceptions into two points of doctrine--God and Immortality.
+On these points his arguments become strained, and too subtle for
+ordinary minds. Indeed, many will be inclined to suspect his whole
+exposition, which would be a misfortune of a very grave character. Mr.
+Emerson avoided all definite assertion of personality carried beyond the
+limits of individuality in the present state of existence. Mr. Weiss is
+more daring, and proclaims a God who arranges creation _as it is_, and
+an immortality that drops what to most people constitutes their highly
+valued possessions--namely, their "animalities" of various kinds. What
+will most men think of a God who "takes his chances," who "in
+planet-scenery and animal life is at his play," who puts up in his
+divine laboratory "curare and strychnine," and cannot "recognize the
+word _disaster_," though he makes the thing? To how many will an
+immortality be conceivable that can "belong only to immutable ideas,"
+that only "springs from the vital necessity of their own souls," that is
+a clinging "to the breast of everlasting law"?
+
+To tell the truth, the arguments themselves for this rather questionable
+result of idealism are somewhat unconvincing, not to say fanciful. They
+are chiefly of a dogmatic kind, that may be met with counter
+affirmations, equally valid. Many of them are stated in a symbolical or
+poetical or illustrative manner, the most dangerous of all methods.
+Examples of this might be multiplied indefinitely. I had marked several
+for confirmation, but they were too long for quotation. One instance of
+his mode of reasoning may be given[*]:
+
+ It is objected that no thought and feeling have ever yet been
+ displayed independently of cerebral condition; they must have
+ brain, either to originate or to announce them. If brain be source
+ or instrument of human consciousness, what preserves it when the
+ brain is dead? But there would have been no universe on such terms
+ as that. What supplied infinite mind with its preliminary _sine qua
+ non_ of brain matter?
+
+ [*] It occurs in "American Religion," p. 149.
+
+But, surely, if this is an argument at all, if it does not beg the very
+question in debate--namely, whether there is an infinite mind,--is it
+not an argument for atheism? For either the existing universe fully
+expresses Deity, in which case Deity is something less than infinite; or
+Deity must be conceived as very imperfect, and a progressive, tentative
+Divinity is no better than none.
+
+To be sure, he says: "We attribute Personality to the divine Being,
+because we cannot otherwise refer to any source the phenomena that show
+Will and Intellect." That is to say, we yield to a logical necessity. To
+argue that materialism "reeks with immortality" because "the baldest
+negation is not merely a verbal contradiction of an affirmation, but a
+contribution to its probability,--for it testifies that there was
+something previously taken for granted,"--is really a play upon words,
+inasmuch as the denial is simply an affirmation of certain facts, and by
+no means a categorical declaration involving all the facts at issue. By
+claiming none but relative knowledge, the antithesis is removed.
+
+One is conscious of a suspicion that the author's tremendous overflow
+of nervous vitality had much to do with the vehemence of his
+persuasions. He himself countenances such a suspicion. "I confess," he
+declares, "to an all-pervading instinct of personal continuance, coupled
+with a latent, haunting feeling that there is a point somewhere in human
+existence, as there has been in the past, where animality controls the
+fate of men. Where is that point? We recoil from every effort to draw
+the line." He had a very strong sense of personality, with its
+inevitable reference of persistency. "To us, perhaps," he cries, in a
+kind of anguish, "no thought could be so dreadful, no surmise so
+harrowing, as that we might slip into nonentity. We impetuously repel
+the haunting doubt. We shut the eyes, and cower before the goblin in
+abject dread until it is gone. With the beauty-loving and full-blooded
+Claudio, we cry,--
+
+ Oh, but to die, and go we know not where."
+
+and he quotes the rest of the famous passage in "Measure for Measure,"
+adding for himself: "Put us anywhere, but only let us live; and we could
+feel with Lear, when he says to Cordelia,--
+
+ Come, let's away to prison.
+ We two alone will sing like birds i' the cage."
+
+ Then, too, there come to us the tender and overpowering moments
+ when we can no longer put up with being separated from beloved
+ objects, who tore at the grain of our life when they went away
+ elsewhere, with portions of it clinging to them. We must have them
+ again. Shall life be stabbed and no justice compensate these
+ sickening drippings of the soul in her secret faintness? The old
+ familiar faces have registered in our hearts a contempt for graves
+ and burials. Not so cheaply can we be taken in, when the lost life
+ lies quick in memory still, and cries against the insults which
+ mortality wreaks on love.
+
+Is not this an exclamation of temperament?
+
+John Weiss was essentially a poet. His pages are saturated with poetry.
+His very arguments are expressed in poetic imagery. To take two or three
+examples:
+
+ One who rides from South-west Harbor to Bar Harbor in Mt. Desert
+ will see a grove in which the pines stand so close that all the
+ branches have withered two-thirds of the way up the trunks, and are
+ nothing but dead sticks, broken and dangling. But every tree bears
+ close, each to each, its evergreen crown; and they seem to make a
+ floor for the day to walk on. This pavement for the feet of heaven,
+ more precious than the fancied one of the New Jerusalem, stretches
+ all round the world, above the thickets of our spiny egotism, where
+ people run up into the only coherence upon which it is safe for
+ Deity to tread.
+
+Or this about the poet's inspired hour:
+
+ Through flat and unprofitable moments, a poet is waiting for the
+ next consent of his imagination. The bed of every gift, that lately
+ sparkled or thundered as the freshet of the hills sent its
+ surprises down, lies empty, waiting for the master passion to open
+ the sluice when it hears the steps of coming waves. The poet's
+ nature strains against the dumb gates of his body and his mood.
+ With power and longing he hears them open, and is brim full again
+ with the rhythm that collects from the whole face of Nature,--the
+ hillside, the ravine, the drifting cloud, the vapors just arrived
+ from the ocean, the drops that flowers nod with to flavor the
+ stream, the human smiles that colonize both banks of it. All
+ passions, all delights hurry to possess his thought, crowd into the
+ precincts of his person, pain him with the tumult in which they
+ offer him obedience, remind him of his last joy in their
+ companionship, and will not let him go till he ennobles them by
+ bursting into expression. Relief flows down with every perfect
+ word; the congested soul bleeds into the lyric and the canto; the
+ poet's burden becomes light-hearted, and the supreme moment of his
+ travail, when it breaks in showers of his emotion, cools and
+ comforts him; he must die or express himself. All the blood in the
+ earth's arteries is running through his heart; all the stars in the
+ sky are set in his brain's dome. This light and life must be
+ discharged into a word, and the poet restored to health and peace
+ again.
+
+Or the following rhapsody about health:
+
+ What a religious ecstasy is health! Its free step claims every
+ meadow that is glad with flowers; its bubbling spirits fill the cup
+ of wide horizons and drip down their brims; its thankfulness is the
+ prayer that takes possession of the sun by day and the stars by
+ night. Every dancing member of the body whirls off the soul to
+ tread the measures of great feelings, and God hears people saying:
+ "How precious also are thy thoughts, how great is the sum of them!
+ When I awake, I am still with thee." Yes,--when I awake, but not
+ before; not while the brain is saturated with nervous blood, till
+ it falls into comatose doctrines, and goes maundering with its
+ attack of mediatorial piety and grace; not while a stomach depraved
+ by fried food, apothecary's drugs, and iron-clad pastry (that
+ target impenetrable by digestion) supplies the constitution with
+ its vale of tears, ruin of mankind, and better luck hereafter. When
+ all my veins flow unobstructed, and lift to the level of my eyes
+ the daily gladness that finds a gate at every pore; when the
+ roaming gifts come home from Nature to turn the brain into a hive
+ of cells full of yellow sunshine, the spoil of all the chalices of
+ the earth beneath and the heavens above,--then I am the subject of
+ a Revival of Religion.
+
+Or these passages about music, of which he was always a devoted lover,
+a passionate admirer, an excellent critic. My first extract is used to
+illustrate the doctrine of evolution, and suggests Browning's poem of
+"Abt Vogler." It should be said, by the way, that Weiss was a great
+student of Browning, whose lines in "Paracelsus," prophetic of the
+evolution doctrine, was often on his lips. He even understood
+"Sordello."
+
+ The divine composer, summoning instrument after instrument into his
+ harmony, climbed with his theme from those which offered but a
+ single note to those that exhaust the complexity of thought and
+ feeling, to combine them into expression, kindling through hints,
+ phrases, sudden concords, mustering consents of many wills,
+ releases of each one's felicity into comradeship, till the sweet
+ tumult becomes his champion, and bursts into an acclaim of a whole
+ world. "I ought--so then I will." The toppling instruments concur,
+ become the wave that touches that high moment, lifts the whole
+ deep, and holds it there.
+
+ When perfect music drives its golden scythe-chariot up the fine
+ nerves, across the bridge of association, through the stern
+ portcullis of care, and alights in the heart of man, there is
+ adoration, whether he faints with excess of recognition of one long
+ absent, and lies prostrate in the arms of rhythm, feeling that he
+ is not worthy it should come under his roof, or whether he mounts
+ the seat and grasps the thrilling reins; God's unity is riding
+ through his distraction, brought by that team of all the
+ instruments which shake their manes across the pavement of his
+ bosom, and strike out the sparks of longing.
+
+In calling Mr. Weiss essentially a poet, I am far from implying that
+he was not a thinker. Perhaps he was more subtle and more brilliant a
+thinker for being also a poet--that is, for seeing truth through the
+medium of the imagination, for following the path of analogy. At any
+rate, his being a poet did not in the least interfere with the acuteness
+or the precision of his thinking, as any one can see who reads his
+chapters--those, for example, which compose the volume entitled
+"American Religion." I had marked for citation so many passages that it
+would be necessary to quote half the book to illustrate my thesis. When
+I first knew him, he was a strict Transcendentalist. Dr. Orestes
+Brownson, no mean judge on such matters, spoke of him as the most
+promising philosophical mind in the country. To a native talent for
+metaphysics, his early studies at Heidelberg probably contributed
+congenial training. His knowledge of German philosophy may well have
+been stimulated and matured by his residence in that centre of active
+thought; while his intimacy, on his return, with the keenest intellects
+in this country may well have sharpened his original predilection for
+abstract speculation. However this may have been, the tendency of his
+genius was decidedly toward metaphysical problems and the interpretation
+of the human consciousness. This he erected as a barrier against
+materialism; and this he probed with a depth and a fearlessness which
+were truly extraordinary, and would have been remarkable in any disciple
+of the school to which he belonged. No one that I can think of was so
+fine, so profound, so analytical. His volume on "American Religion" was
+full of nice discriminations; so was his volume on the "Immortal Life";
+so were his articles and lectures. His "Life of Theodore Parker"
+abounded in curious learning as well as in vigorous thinking. He could
+follow, step by step, the great leader of reformatory ideas, and went
+far beyond him in subtlety and accuracy of mental delineation. He could
+not rest in sentiment, must have demonstration, and never stopped till
+he reached the ultimate ground of truth as he regarded it. Ideas, when
+he found them, were usually, not always, expressed in symbolical forms.
+His alert fancy detected likenesses that would have been concealed from
+common eyes; and often the splendor of the exposition hid the keenness
+of the logical temper, as a sword wreathed with roses lies unperceived.
+But the tempered steel was there and they who examined closely felt its
+edge.
+
+He was a man of undaunted courage, being an idealist who lived out of
+the world, and a living soul animated by overwhelming convictions, which
+he was anxious to convey to others as of immense importance. He
+believed, with all his heart, in the doctrines he had arrived at, and,
+like a soldier in battle, was unconscious of the danger he incurred or
+of the wounds he received, being unaware of his own daring or fortitude.
+He was an anti-slavery man from the beginning. At a large meeting held
+in Waltham in 1845, to protest against the admission of Texas as a slave
+State, Mr. Weiss, then a minister at Watertown, Mass., delivered a
+speech in which he said: "Our Northern apathy heated the iron, forged
+the manacles, and built the pillory," declared that man was more than
+constitutions (borrowing a phrase from James Russell Lowell), and that
+Christ was greater than Hancock and Adams. To his unflinching devotion
+to free thought in religion, he owed something of his unpopularity with
+the masses of the people, who were orthodox in opinion, though his
+failure to touch the general mind was probably due to other causes. The
+class of disbelievers was pretty large in his day and very
+self-asserting. Boldness never fails to attract; and brilliancy, if it
+be on the plane of ordinary vision, draws the eyes of the multitude, who
+are on the watch for a sensation.
+
+The chief trouble was that his brilliancy was not on the plane of
+ordinary vision, but was recondite, ingenious, fanciful. He was too
+learned, too fond of allusions--literary, scientific, historical,--too
+swift in his mental processes. His addresses were delivered to an
+audience of his friends, not to a miscellaneous company. They were of
+the nature of soliloquies spoken out of his own mind, instead of being
+speeches intended to meet the needs of others. His lectures and sermons
+were not easy to follow, even if the listener was more than usually
+cultivated. Shall it be added that his sincerity of speech, running into
+brusqueness, startled a good many? He was theological and philosophical,
+and he could not keep his hands off when what he considered as errors in
+theology or philosophy came into view. His wit was sharper than he
+thought, while the laugh it raised was frequently overbalanced by the
+sting it left behind in some breasts. It was too often a "wicked wit,"
+barbed and poisoned, which one must be in league with to enjoy. They who
+were in sympathy with the speaker were delighted with it, but they who
+were not went off aggrieved. No doubt this attested the earnestness of
+the man, who scorned to cloak his convictions; but it wounded the
+self-love of such as were in search of pleasure or instruction, and
+interfered with his general acceptableness. A broad, genial,
+good-natured, truculent style of ventilating even heresies may not be
+repulsive to people of a conventional, believing turn; in fact, it is
+not, as we know. But the thrusts of a rapier, especially when
+unexpected, are not forgiven. Mr. Weiss drew larger audiences as a
+preacher on religious themes than he did as a lecturer on secular
+subjects, where one hardly knew what to look for, because he was known
+to be outspoken and capable of introducing heresies on the platform.
+
+Then he was in all respects unconventional. His spontaneous exuberance
+of animal spirits, which led him to roll on the grass, join in
+frolicsome games, play all sorts of antics, indulge in jokes, mimicry,
+boisterous mirthfulness, was inconsistent with the staid, proper
+demeanor required by social usage. How he kept himself within limits as
+he did was a surprise to his friends. Ordinary natures can form no
+conception of the weight such a man must have put upon his temperament
+to press it down to the level of common experience. Temptations to which
+he was liable every day do not visit average minds in their whole
+lifetime, and cannot by such minds be comprehended. The stiff, upright,
+careful old man cannot understand the jocund pliability of the boy, who,
+nevertheless, simply expends the superfluity of his natural vigor, and
+relieves his excess of nervous excitability. On thinking it all over,
+remembering his appetite for life, his joy in existence, his nervous
+exhilaration, his love of beauty, his passionate ardor of temperament, I
+am surprised that he preserved, as he did, so much dignity and soberness
+of character. I have seen him in his wildest mood, yet I never saw him
+thrown off his balance. With as much brilliancy as Sydney Smith, he had,
+as Sydney Smith had not, a breadth of knowledge, a depth of feeling, a
+soaring energy of soul that kept him above vulgar seductions, and did
+for him, in a nobler way, what ambition, love of place, conventional
+associations did for the famous Englishman.
+
+The difficulty was that he was too far removed from the common ground
+of sympathy. He could not endure routine, or behave as other people
+behaved, and as it was generally fancied he should. If Sydney Smith's
+jocularity interfered with his promotion, how much more did he have to
+contend with who to the jocularity added an enthusiastic devotion to
+heresy, a partiality for metaphysical speculation, and a poetic glow
+that removed him from ordinary comprehension! With an unworldliness
+worthy of all praise, but fatal to the provision of daily bread, he left
+the ministry, a fixed income, a confirmed social position, ample leisure
+for study and for literary pursuits, and launched forth on the uncertain
+career of lecturer. He was not the first who failed in attempting to
+harness Pegasus to a cart, in the hope of making him useful in mundane
+ways. Neither discharged his full function. The cart would not run
+smoothly, and the steed was not happy. The old profession has this
+advantage: that to all practical purposes, the wagon goes over the
+celestial pavement where there is no mud nor clangor, and Pegasus can
+seem to be harnessed to a chariot of the sun.
+
+Weiss simply disappeared from view. His books were scattered; his
+lectures and sermons were worked over and over, the best of them being
+published in his several volumes. A few relics of the author remain in
+the hands of his widow, who is grateful for any recognition of his
+genius, any help to diffuse his writings, and tribute to his memory.
+They who knew him can never forget him. Perhaps the very vividness of
+their recollection makes them indifferent to the possession of visible
+memorials of their friend.
+
+Samuel Johnson should be known as the apostle of individualism. The
+apostle I say, for this with him was a religion, and the preaching of
+individualism was a gospel message. He would not belong to any church,
+or subscribe to any creed, or connect himself with any sect, or be a
+member of any organization whatever, however wide or elastic, however
+consonant with convictions that he held, with beliefs that he
+entertained, with purposes that he cherished, with plans that were dear
+to him. He never joined the "Anti-Slavery Society," though he was an
+Abolitionist; or the "Free Religious Association," though its aims were
+essentially his own, and he spoke on its platform. He made it a
+principle to act alone, herein being a true disciple of Emerson, whose
+mission was to individual minds. He wrote a long letter to me on the
+occasion of establishing the "Free Religious Association," of which I
+wished him to become a member, that recalls the letter written by Mr.
+Emerson in reply to George Ripley when asked to join the community of
+Brook Farm, and whereof the following is an extract:
+
+ My feeling is that the community is not good for me, that it has
+ little to offer me which with resolution I cannot procure for
+ myself.... It seems to me a circuitous and operose way of relieving
+ myself to put upon your community the emancipation which I ought to
+ take on myself. I must assume my own vows.... I ought to say that I
+ do not put much trust in any arrangements or combinations, only in
+ the spirit which dictates them. Is that benevolent and divine, they
+ will answer their end. Is there any alloy in that, it will
+ certainly appear in the result.... Nor can I insist with any heat
+ on new methods when I am at work in my study on any literary
+ composition.... The result of our secretest attempts will certainly
+ have as much renown as shall be due to it.
+
+Johnson ended by discarding the church entirely. In 1881 he wrote:
+
+ For my part, every day I live the name _Christian_ seems less and
+ less to express my thought and tendency. I suspect it will be so
+ with the Free-thinking world generally.
+
+In a sermon, "Living by Faith," he says:
+
+ There is no irony so great as to call this "flight out of nature"
+ and the creeds that come of it, "faith." The purity of heart that
+ really sees God will have a mighty idealization of humanity at the
+ very basis of its creed, and act on it in all its treatment of the
+ vicious, the morally incapable and diseased. It is time Christendom
+ was on the search for it.
+
+In the paper on "Transcendentalism," he says:
+
+ Christianity inherited the monarchical idea of a God separate from
+ man, and a contempt for natural law and human faculty which
+ crippled its faith in the spiritual and moral ideal. It became more
+ and more a materialism of miracle, Bible, church. Even its essay to
+ realize immanent Deity yielded a more or less exclusive,
+ mediatorial God-man; and it treated personality as the mere
+ consequence of one prescriptive, historical force, just as
+ philosophical materialism treats it as mere product of sensations.
+
+Mr. Johnson abhorred the monarchical principle. It was his endeavor to
+track it from its origin, through all its forms of institution,
+ceremonial, dogma, symbol, from the earliest times to the latest,
+through the whole East to the farthest West. This was the burden of his
+studies in Oriental religions, the sum of his criticism, the aim of his
+public teaching. He was profoundly, intensely, absorbingly religious,
+but the form of his religion was not "Christian" in any recognized
+sense, Romanist, Protestant, or Unitarian. The most radical thought did
+not altogether please him. His was a worship of Law, Order, Cause,
+Harmony, impersonal, living, natural; a recognition of mind as the
+supreme power in the universe; a cosmic, eternal, absolute faith in
+intellectual principles as the substance and soul of the world. God was,
+to him, a spiritual being, alive, vital, flowing in every mode.
+
+ All power of growth and service depends, know it or not as we may,
+ on an ideal faith in somewhat all-sufficient, unerring, infinitely
+ wise and tender, inseparable from the inmost of life, bent on our
+ good as we are not, set against our failures as we cannot be. It
+ means that there can in fact be no philosophy of life, no law of
+ good, no belief in duty, no aspiration, but must have such
+ in-dwelling perfection, as being alone reliable to guarantee its
+ word. This only is my God; infinite ground of all finite being;
+ essence of reason and good.... When you see a function of memory,
+ or a law of perfection, let your natural piety recognize it as wise
+ and just and good and fair. Be loyal to the moral authority that
+ affirms it ought to be, and somehow must be. Let your _soul_ bring
+ in the leap of your mind to grasp it. Then, if you cannot see God
+ in perfect, absolute essence, you will know the Infinite and
+ Eternal in their relation to real and positive existence; feel
+ their freedom in your own; know their inseparableness from every
+ movement of your spiritual being.... The love we feel, the truth we
+ pursue, the honor we cherish, the moral beauty we revere, blend in
+ with the eternity of the principles they flow from, and then, glad
+ as in the baptism of a harvest morning, expanding towards human
+ need and the universal life of man, our souls walk free, breathing
+ immortal air. That is God,--not an object but an experience. Words
+ are but symbols, they do not define. We say "Him," "It" were as
+ well, if thereby we mean life, wisdom, love.... Must we bind our
+ communion with the just, the good, the true, the humanly adequate
+ and becoming to some personal life, some special body of social
+ circumstances, some individual's work in human progress and upon
+ human idealism? How should that be, when the principles into which
+ the moral sense flowers out in its maturity as spiritual liberty,
+ essentially involve a freely advancing ideal at every new stage
+ revealing more of God, whom nothing but such universal energy can
+ adequately reveal?... If then, we cannot see the eternal substance
+ and life of the universe, it is not because Deity is too far, but
+ because it is too near. We can measure a statue or a star, and look
+ round and beyond it; but the Life, Light, Liberty, Love, Peace,
+ whereby we live and know, and are helpful and calm and free, which
+ measures and surrounds and even animates us, is itself the very
+ mystery of our being, and known only as felt and lived. God stands
+ in all ideal thought, conviction, aim, which ever reach into the
+ infinite; and thence, as if an angel should stand in the sun, come
+ attractions that draw forth the divine capabilities within us, as
+ the sun the life and beauty of the earth. God is the inmost motive,
+ the common path, the infinite import of all work we respect, honor,
+ purely rejoice in, and fulfil; of art, science, philosophy,
+ intercourse,--whatsoever function befits the soul and the day.
+
+These quotations, which might be multiplied indefinitely, in fact,
+which it is difficult not to multiply, are probably enough to satisfy
+any who really wish to know that here was a truly religious man, a
+really devout man, the possessor of a living faith; one who held fast to
+more Deity than the multitude cherished, and welcomed him in a much more
+cordial, comprehensive, natural manner; one who fairly drenched the
+world and man with a divine spirit, but who was all the more spiritual
+on this account, as a man attests his vigor by his ability to lay aside
+his crutches, and put the medicine-chest, bottles, and boxes on the
+shelf, to walk in cold weather without an overcoat, or lie naked on the
+ice and melt it through.
+
+Of course, the only justification of a pretension of this kind is the
+actual vitality necessary for such a feat, the sanity demanded by one
+who would stand or go alone. In Samuel Johnson's case there was no
+question of this. Spiritually, he was a whole man, self-poised,
+self-contained, strong, clear, alert, a hero and a saint. His
+conversation, his bearing, conduct, entire attitude and manner indicated
+the most jubilant faith. He never faltered in his confidence, never
+wavered in his conviction, never abated a jot of hope that in the order
+of Providence all good things would come. There was something staggering
+to the ordinary mind, in his assurance of the divine wisdom and love.
+There was something altogether admirable in the elevation of his
+character above the trials and vexations that are incident to the human
+lot, and that seemed heaped upon him. For his own was not a smooth or
+fortunate life, as men estimate felicity. His health was far from
+satisfactory. He was not rich or famous or popular or sought after. He
+lived a life of labor, in some respects, of denial and sacrifice. Not
+until after his death was the full amount of his renunciation apparent
+even to those who thought they knew him well.
+
+He was a Transcendentalist--that is to say, he believed in the intuitive
+powers of the mind; he was sure that all primary truths, such ideas as
+those of unity, universe, law, cause, substance, will, duty, obligation,
+permanence, were perceived directly, and are not to be accounted for by
+any data of observation or inference, but must be ascribed at once to an
+organic or constitutional relation of the mind with truth.
+
+ That the name "Transcendentalism" was given, a century ago, to a
+ method in philosophy opposed to the theory of Locke--that all
+ knowledge comes from the senses,--is more widely known than the
+ fact that what this method affirmed or involved is of profound
+ import for all generations. It emphasized Mind as a formative force
+ behind all definable contents or acts of consciousness--as that
+ which makes it possible to speak of anything as _known_. It
+ recognized, as primal condition of knowing, the transmutation of
+ sense-impressions by original laws of mind, whose constructive
+ power is not to be explained or measured by the data of sensation;
+ just as they use the eye or ear to transform unknown spatial
+ notions into the obviously human conceptions which we call color
+ and sound. All this the Lockian system overlooked--a very serious
+ omission, as regards both science and common-sense.
+
+And again, in the same article--that on "Transcendentalism," first
+printed in the _Radical Review_ for November, 1877, and afterwards
+included in the volume of "Lectures, Sermons, and Essays":
+
+ What we conceive these schools to have misprized is the living
+ substance and function of mind itself, conscious of its own energy,
+ productive of its own processes, active even in receiving, giving
+ its own construction to its incomes from the unknown through sense,
+ thus involved in those very contents of time and space which, as
+ historical antecedents, _appear_ to create it; mind is obviously
+ the exponent of forces more spontaneous and original than any
+ special product of its own experience. Behind all these products
+ must be that substance in and through which they are produced.
+
+And again, for we cannot be too explicit on this point:
+
+ It is certain that knowledge involves not only a sense of union
+ with the nature of that which we know, but a real participation of
+ the knowing faculty therein. When, therefore, I have learned to
+ conceive truths, principles, ideas, or aims which transcend
+ life-times and own no physical limits to their endurance, the
+ aforesaid law of mind associates me with their immortal nature. And
+ this is the indubitable perception or intuition of permanent mind
+ which no experience of impermanence can nullify and no Nirvana
+ excludes.
+
+It will be observed that Mr. Johnson does not make himself answerable
+for specific articles of belief on God or immortality, but confines his
+faith to the persuasion of indwelling mind, sovereign, eternal,
+imperial. "Immortality," he says, "is immeasurable chance for all. In
+its light, all strong, blameless, heroic lives--divine plants by the
+wayside--tell for the nature they express. God has made no blunder in
+our spiritual constitution. Power is in faith." This intense belief in
+the soul, in all the native capacities of our spiritual constitution, in
+the supremacy of organic feelings, ideas, expectations over merely
+private desires, this burning confidence in divinely implanted
+instincts, this absolute certainty that every promise made by God will
+be fulfilled, explains the tone of exulting hope in which he writes to
+bereaved friends.
+
+ I wish I could tell you how firmly I believe that feelings like
+ these (that the absent one cannot be dead), so often treated as
+ illusion, are _true_, are of God's own tender giving; that in them
+ is the very heart of his teaching through the mystery that we call
+ death. Our affections are _forbidden by their maker_ to doubt their
+ own immortality.... Immortal years, beside which our little lives
+ are but an hour--what possibilities of full satisfaction they open!
+ And we sit in patience, knowing that they must bring us back our
+ holiest possessions--those which have ever stood under the shield
+ of our noblest love and conscience and so are under God's blessing
+ forever.
+
+How far such a declaration as this comports with the demand for general
+immortality made in behalf of those who are conscious of no noble love,
+who have attained to no conscience, and have no holy possessions, we are
+not told. Perhaps Mr. Johnson would seize on the faintest intimations of
+mind as evidencing the presence of moral being, as Mr. Weiss does. But
+he did not dwell on that side of the problem. Plainly he ascribed little
+value to mere personality, viewed abstractly and apart from its
+spiritual development. He wrote to those whom he knew and loved, to
+remarkable people.
+
+Yet it would not be fair to conclude that immortality was denied to the
+basest. If immortality is "opportunity," a "chance for all," it is for
+those who can profit by it or enjoy it. If any are debarred, the cause
+must be their own incompetence. They simply decease. There is no torment
+in store for them; no hell is possible.
+
+Samuel Johnson was an enthusiastic evolutionist, but of mind itself, not
+of matter as ripening into mind. The ordinary conception of
+evolution,--that the higher came from the lower,--was exceedingly
+repugnant to him. Every kind of materialism he abhorred as illogical and
+irrational. The theories of Comte,--that "mind is cerebration;" of
+Haeckel,--that it is a "function of brain and nerve;" of Strauss,--that
+"one's self is his body;" of Taine,--that a man is "a series of
+sensations," were to him as absurd, in science or philosophy, as they
+were fatal to aspiration and progress.
+
+ The crude definition of evolution as production of the highest by
+ inherent force of the lowest is here supplanted by one which
+ recognizes material parentage as itself involving, even in its
+ lowest stages, the entire cosmic _consensus_, of whose unknown
+ force mind is the highest known exponent.
+
+He is alluding to Tyndall's statement that mind is evolved from the
+universe as a whole, not from inorganic matter. For himself, he says:
+
+ Ideas were not demonstrated, are not demonstrable. No data of
+ observation can express their universal meaning.... What else can
+ we say of ideas than that they are wondrous intimacies of the soul
+ with the Infinite and Eternal, its contacts with universal forces,
+ its prophetic ventures and master steps beyond any past!... The
+ grand words, "I ought" refuse to be explained by dissolving the
+ notion of right into individual calculation of consequences, or by
+ expounding the sense of duty as the cumulative product of observed
+ relation of succession.... How explain as a "greater happiness
+ principle," or an inherited product of observed consequences, that
+ sovereign and eternal law of mind whose imperial edict lifts all
+ calculations and measures into functions of an infinite meaning?
+ And how vain to accredit or ascribe to revelation, institution, or
+ redemption, this necessary allegiance to the law of our being,
+ which is liberty and loyalty in one?
+
+This is absolute enough. It is plain that to this writer the notion of
+extracting intellect from form is ridiculous.
+
+At the same time the method of evolution is the one adopted by the
+supreme Mind in its endeavor to awaken in man religious ideas. The
+exposition of the original faiths--Indian, Chinese, Persian--is a long
+and eloquent argument for this thesis. All criticism, all thinking, all
+analysis, all study of history, all investigation of phenomena, point in
+this direction. This is the rule of creation; this is the solution of
+the problem of the universe. The successive degrees of this divine
+ascent, he maintains, are distinctly traceable in the records left for
+our reading. The threads are fine, of course, but what have we eyes for?
+It is not necessary that everybody should see them, and the few who can
+are amply rewarded for the trouble they take in putting their fingers
+upon the very lines of the heavenly procedure. His peculiar strain of
+genius admirably qualified him for this delicate task. It was serious,
+critical, earnest, and aspiring. At one period of his life he was a
+mystic, wholly absorbed in God, and he always had that tendency towards
+the more passionate forms of idealism which led him to mystical
+speculations. The search for God was ever the animating purpose of his
+endeavor. The law of the blessed life was never absent from his thought.
+He, all the time, lived by faith, and was naturally disposed to see the
+gain in all losses. His mind had that penetrating quality which loved to
+follow hidden trails, and appreciated the subtlest kinds of influence.
+In a striking passage he speaks of the
+
+ great mystery in these influences which thoughtless people little
+ dream of, and which common-sense, so called, cares nothing about.
+ In the wonderful manner in which, through books, the spirits of
+ other men, long since dead, enter into and inspire ours; in the
+ eloquent language of eye and lip which without words, merely by
+ expression, conveys deepest feelings; in the presence in our souls
+ of strange presentiments, intuitions of higher knowledge than
+ science or learning can give, voices which seem the presence of
+ other spirits in ours, which make us feel often that death, so far
+ from removing our dear friends from us, brings them nearer to our
+ souls so that they _cannot_ be lost;--in all these wonderful ways
+ we see dimly the unveiling of holy mysteries which the future is to
+ fully open to us, mysteries which we can even now, in our sublimer
+ and holier secret moments, feel trying to disclose themselves to
+ us.
+
+This was written in a letter to his sister, on the occasion of a visit
+to the menagerie to see Herr Driesbach, the horse-tamer. A man who could
+spring into the empyrean from such ground may be trusted to behold Deity
+where others behold nothing but dirt; and they who submit to his
+guidance are pretty certain to come out full believers in the spiritual
+powers.
+
+Johnson absolutely subordinated dogma to practice, holding fast to the
+idea involved in the declaration that he who doeth the will shall know
+the doctrine. He began with the ethics of the individual, the family,
+the social circle, seeing every principle incarnated there. How faithful
+he was in all domestic relations the world will never know, for there
+are details that cannot be divulged. But in all public affairs his
+constancy was perfect. Dr. Furness of Philadelphia used to say that the
+anti-slavery struggle in this country taught him more about the
+essential nature of the Gospel than he had learned in any other way.
+Samuel Johnson had the same conviction. In a private letter written in
+1857 he says:
+
+ Everything in this crisis of American growth centres in the great
+ conflict about this gigantic sin of slavery. That is the
+ battle-field on which the questions are all to be fought out, of
+ moral and spiritual and intellectual Freedom against the Absolutism
+ of sect and party; of Love against Mammon; of Conscience against
+ the State; of Man against Majorities; of Truth against Policy; of
+ God against the Devil. It is really astonishing how everything that
+ happens with us works directly into this fermenting conflict.
+
+They who remember his addresses during the war will not need any
+confirmation of this announcement, and they who heard or have read his
+sermon on the character and services of Charles Sumner will have the
+fullest assurance of the cordial appreciation with which every phase of
+the struggle was entered into.
+
+But though so ardent a follower of the doctrine that ideas lead the
+world, Johnson was not induced to go all lengths with the
+sentimentalists. While warmly espousing the cause of the workingman his
+papers on "Labor Reform" show how keenly critical he could be of
+measures proposed for his benefit. No one will accuse him of
+indifference to the claims of woman, but he spoke of "Woman's
+Opportunity" rather than of "Woman's Rights"; is inclined to think that
+it is not true that she is left out of political life from the present
+wish to do her injustice; that "on the whole, the feeling, if it were
+analyzed, would be found to be rather that of defending her right of
+exemption, relieving her from tasks she does not desire.... Among
+intelligent men at least, actual delay to wipe out the anomaly of the
+voting rule is not so much owing to a spirit of domination or contempt
+as is too apt to be assumed, as it is to a respect for what woman has
+made of the functions she has hitherto filled, and the belief that she
+holds herself entitled to be left free to work through them alone." He
+has nothing to say regarding the superiority of woman's nature; ventures
+no definition of her sphere; is not unconscious of feminine infirmities;
+doubts the efficacy of the ballot; confesses that the level of womanhood
+would be, at least temporarily, depressed by the larger area of
+practical diffusion; is by no means certain that women would necessarily
+act for their own good, and is deeply persuaded of the inferiority of
+outward to inward influence. This is the one thing he is sure of; this
+and the principle that "liberty knows--like faith and charity--neither
+male nor female." In the war between Russia and Turkey he took the part
+of Turkey, not only because he respected the rights of individual genius
+and resented invasion, but for the reason that he distrusted the
+civilizing tendencies of Russia, and thought the interests of Europe
+might be trusted to the Ottoman as confidently as to the Russian. In a
+discourse entitled "A Ministry in Free Religion," delivered on the
+occasion of his resigning the relation of pastor to the "Free Church at
+Lynn," June 26, 1870, he said:
+
+ The pulpit has no function more essential than an independent
+ criticism of well-meaning people in the light of larger justice and
+ remoter consequences than most popular measures recognize. The
+ truest service is, perhaps, to help correct the blunders and the
+ intolerances of blind good-will and narrow zeal for a good cause;
+ to speak in the interest of an idea where popular or organized
+ impulse threatens to swamp its higher morality in passionate
+ instincts and absolute masterships, to maintain that freedom of
+ private judgment which cannot be outraged, even in the best moral
+ intent, without mischievous reaction on the good cause itself.
+
+In this connection he speaks of temperance, the amelioration of the
+condition of the "perishing" or "dangerous" classes, the various schemes
+for benefiting the laboring men, plans for adjusting the relations of
+labor and capital, arrangements for diffusing the profits of
+production,--causes which he had at heart, but which should be discussed
+in view of the principle of individual freedom, which must be upheld at
+all hazards. He was a close reasoner as well as a warm feeler, and would
+not allow his sympathies to get the upper hand of his ideas. He hoped
+for the best; he had faith in the highest; he anticipated the brightest;
+but he tried to see things as they were. He was a student, not a
+sentimentalist, and while he was ready to follow the most advanced in
+the direction of spiritual progress, he was not prepared to take for
+granted issues that still hung in the balance of debate, or to prejudge
+questions that had not been answered, and could not be as yet.
+
+Such moderation and patience are not common with reformers, and few are
+independent enough to confess misgivings which are more familiar to
+their opponents than to their friends. Candor like this shows a genuine
+unconsciousness of fear, a sincere love of truth, an earnest
+postponement of personal tastes, ambitions, and connections to the
+axioms of universal wisdom and goodness; a loyalty to conviction that is
+very rare, that never can exist among the indifferent, because they do
+not care, and which is usually put aside by those who _do_ care as an
+impediment if not as a snare. In courage of this noble kind, Johnson
+excelled all men I ever knew, for they who had it, as some did, had not
+his genius, and were spared the necessity of curbing ardor by so much as
+their temperament was more passive and their eagerness less importunate.
+Of course of the lower sort,--the courage to bear pain, loss, the
+misunderstanding of the vulgar, to face danger, to encounter peril, none
+who knew him can question his possession. In fact, he did not seem to
+suffer at all, so jocund was he, so much in the habit of keeping his
+deprivations from the outside world; even his intimates could but
+suspect his sorrows of heart.
+
+Samuel Johnson was an extraordinary person to look at. He had large
+dark eyes; black, straight, long hair; an Oriental complexion, sallow,
+olive-colored; an impetuous manner; a beaming expression. His voice was
+rich, deep, musical; his gait eager, rapid, swinging; his style of
+address glowing; his aspect in public speech that of one inspired. He
+was fond of natural beauty, of art, literature, music; full of fun,
+witty, mirthful, social. He was attractive to young people, delightful
+in conversation, ready to enter into innocent amusements. His eye for
+scenery was fine and quick, his interest in practical science sincere
+and hearty, his concern for whatever advanced humanity cordial, and his
+freshness of spirit increased if anything with years.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. MY FRIENDS.
+
+
+It is impossible to mention them all, and to single out a few from a
+multitude must not be done. I should like to commemorate those who came
+nearest to me by their earnest work and faithful allegiance, but these
+cannot be spoken of, and I prefer to enumerate some of those with whom I
+was less intimate.
+
+Alice and Ph[oe]be Cary came to New York in 1852, and were prominent
+when I was there; their famous Sunday evenings, which were frequented by
+the brightest minds and were sought by a large class of people, being
+then well established. These were altogether informal and gave but
+little satisfaction to the merely fashionable folks who now and then
+attended them. The sisters were in striking contrast. Ph[oe]be, the
+younger, was a jocund, hearty, vivacious, witty, merry young woman,
+short and round; her older sister, Alice, was taller and more slender,
+with large, dark eyes; she was meditative, thoughtful, pensive, and
+rather grave in temperament; but the two were most heartily in sympathy
+in every opinion and in all their literary and social aims. Horace
+Greeley, one of their earliest and warmest friends, was a frequent
+visitor at their house. There I met Robert Dale Owen, Oliver Johnson,
+Dr. E. H. Chapin, Rev. Charles F. Deems, Justin McCarthy and his wife,
+Mrs. Mary E. Dodge, Madame Le Vert, and several others.
+
+Among my friends was President Barnard, of Columbia College, the only
+man I ever knew whose long ear-trumpet was never an annoyance; Ogden N.
+Rood, the Professor of Physics at Columbia, a man of real genius, whose
+studies in light and color were a great assistance to artists, himself
+an artist of no mean order and an ardent student of photography; Charles
+Joy, Professor of Chemistry, a most active-minded man, who received
+honors at Goettingen and at Paris, and contributed largely to the
+scientific journals; a man greatly interested in the union of charitable
+societies in New York; Robert Carter, then a co-worker in the making of
+Appleton's Cyclopedia; Bayard Taylor, novelist, poet, translator of
+Goethe, traveller; Richard Grant White, the Shakesperian scholar;
+Charles L. Brace, the philanthropist; E. L. Youmans a man fairly
+tingling with ideas, and peculiarly gifted in making popular, as a
+lecturer, the most abstruse scientific discoveries. The breadth of my
+range of acquaintances is illustrated by such men as Roswell D.
+Hitchcock, of Union Seminary, the learned student, the impressive
+speaker; Isaac T. Hecker, the founder of the Congregation of the
+Paulists; Dr. Washburn, the model churchman of "Calvary"; Henry M.
+Field, editor of the _Evangelist_, a most warm-hearted man, so large in
+his sympathies that he could say to Robert G. Ingersoll, "I am glad that
+I know you, even though some of my brethren look upon you as a monster
+because of your unbelief," and welcomed as an example of "constructive
+thought," Dr. Charles A. Briggs' Inaugural Address as Professor of
+Biblical Theology at Union College; John G. Holland (Timothy Titcomb), a
+copious author. The _Tribune_ company was most distinguished: There was,
+first of all, the founder, Horace Greeley, a unique personality, simple,
+unaffected, earnest, an immense believer in American institutions, a
+stanch friend of the working-man, and a brave lover of impartial
+justice; Whitelaw Reid, who was, according to George Ripley, the ablest
+newspaper manager he ever saw; and Mrs. Lucia Calhoun (afterward Mrs.
+Runkle), one of the most brilliant contributors to the _Tribune_. Of
+George Ripley I may speak more at length, as he was my parishioner and
+close friend. In my biography of him, written for the "American Men of
+Letters" series, I spoke of him as a "remarkable" man. One of my critics
+found fault with the appellation, and said it was not justified by
+anything in the book, as perhaps it was not, though intellectual vigor,
+range, and taste like his must be called "remarkable"; such industry is
+"remarkable"; no common man could have instituted "Brook Farm" and
+administered it for six or seven years; could have maintained its
+dignity through ridicule, misunderstanding, and fanaticism; could have
+cleared off its liabilities; could have turned his face away from it on
+its failure, with such patience, or in his later age, could have alluded
+to it so sweetly; no ordinary person could have adopted a new and
+despised career so bravely as he did. No journalist has raised
+literature to so high a distinction, or derived such large rewards for
+that mental labor. He deserves to be called "remarkable," who can do all
+this or but a part of it, and, all the time, preserve the sunny serenity
+of his disposition. If the biography failed to present these traits it
+was, indeed, unsuccessful. Yes, Mr. Ripley was an extraordinary man. It
+is seldom that one carries such qualities to such a degree of
+perfection, and it may be worth while to look more closely at his
+character.
+
+George Ripley had a passion for literary excellence. From his boyhood
+he possessed a singularly bright intelligence, a clear appreciation of
+the rational aspect of questions. He was not an ardent, passionate,
+enthusiastic man, of warm convictions, vehement emotions, burning ideas.
+His feelings, though amiable and correct, were of an intellectual cast.
+They sprang from a naturally affectionate heart, rather than from a
+deeply stirred conscience, or an enchanted soul. If he had been less
+healthy, eupeptic, he would scarcely have been so gay; a vehement
+reformer he was not; a leader of men he could not be. He had not the
+stuff in him for either. The element of giving was not strong in him. He
+was not an originator in the sphere of thought; not a discoverer of
+theories or facts; not an innovator on established customs. But mentally
+he was so quick, eager, receptive, that he seemed a pioneer, an
+enthusiast, a saint; his quickness passing for insight, his eagerness
+for a passionate love of progress, his receptivity for charitableness.
+He appeared to be more of an image-breaker than he really was. In fact,
+the propensity to iconoclasm was not part of his constitution. But his
+mind was wonderfully alert. He had his antipathies, and they were strong
+ones, his likes and dislikes, his tastes and distastes, but these were
+instinctive rather than the expression of rational principle or a
+deliberate conclusion of his judgment. In one instance that I know of,
+he threw off a man with whom he had been associated for many years, and
+in connection with whom he labored daily for a time, a very accomplished
+and agreeable person to whom he was indebted for some services, because
+he thought that the individual in question had been unjust to some of
+his friends; but that this was not entirely a matter of conscience would
+seem to be indicated by the fact that he sent a message of affection to
+this man, as he neared the grave. In the main, so far as he was under
+control, intellectual considerations determined his course. He was
+prevailingly under the influence of mind; he acted in view, a large
+view, of all the circumstances; as one who takes in the whole situation,
+and has himself under command. This is not said in the least tone of
+disparagement, but entirely in his praise, for the supremacy of reason
+is more steady, even, reliable than the supremacy of feeling however
+exalted in its mood. He that is under the control of mind is at all
+times _under control_, which cannot be said of one who is borne along by
+the sway of even devout emotion. I have in memory cases where passion
+might have betrayed Mr. Ripley into conduct he would have regretted, had
+it not been for the restraining power of purely rational considerations.
+His early religious training may have produced some effect on his
+character, but this is more likely to have operated at first than at the
+later stages of his career. The love of old hymns, the habit of
+attending sacred services, the fondness for Watts' poems, a copy of
+whose holy songs always lay on his table, showed a lingering attachment
+to this kind of sentiment up to the end of his life; but it existed in
+an attenuated form, and at no period after his youth exerted much sway
+over him. His predominating bent was intellectual, and this caused a
+certain delicacy, fastidiousness, aloofness, which kept him in the
+atmosphere of love as well as of light.
+
+From his youth this was his leading characteristic. As a boy he was
+ambitious of making a dictionary, a sign of his carefulness in the use
+of words, and an omen of the value he was to set on definitions and on
+exactness in the employment of language. At school he was an excellent
+scholar, at college he stood second, but was graduated first owing to
+the "suspension" of a brilliant classmate who might have excelled him
+but for the mishap of a college "riot" in which he took part. In the
+languages and in literature he was unusually proficient, while in
+mathematics,--that most abstract, severe, precise of pursuits,--his
+success was distinguished. In later-life his devotion to philosophy
+marked the man of speculative tastes. His early letters to his father,
+mother, sister, reveal a consciousness of his own peculiarities. Here
+are extracts:
+
+ The course of studies adopted here [Cambridge], in the opinion of
+ competent judges, is singularly calculated to form scholars, and
+ moreover, correct and accurate scholars; to inure the mind to
+ profound thought and habits of investigation and reasoning.
+
+ The prospect of devoting my days to the acquisition and
+ communication of knowledge is bright and cheering. This employment
+ I would not exchange for the most elevated situation of wealth or
+ power. One of the happiest steps, I think, that I have ever taken
+ was the commencement of a course of study, and it is my wish and
+ effort that my future progress may give substantial evidence of it.
+
+ I know that my peculiar habits of mind, imperfect as they are,
+ strongly impel me to the path of active intellectual effort; and if
+ I am to be at any time of any use to society, or a satisfaction to
+ myself or my friends, it will be in the way of some retired
+ literary situation, where a fondness for study and a knowledge of
+ books will be more requisite than the busy, calculating mind of a
+ man in the business part of the community. I do not mean by this
+ that any profession is desired but the one to which I have been
+ long looking. My wish is only to enter that profession with all the
+ enlargement of mind and extent of information which the best
+ institutions can afford.
+
+These quotations are enough to show what was the prevailing impulse of
+the man. An intellectual nature like this, calm, studious, accomplished,
+eager, is subject to few surprises and experiences rarely, if ever,
+marked by crises, cataclysms, eruptions, in passing from one condition
+of thought to another at the opposite extreme of the spiritual universe.
+A process of growth, gradual, easy, motionless, takes the place of
+commotion and violent uproar such as passionate temperaments are exposed
+to. In 1821 he writes to his sister from Harvard College: "We are now
+studying Locke, an author who has done more to form the mind to habits
+of accurate reasoning and sound thought than almost any other." On the
+19th of September, 1836, the first meeting of the Transcendental Club
+was held at his house in Boston. In 1838 he replied to Andrews Norton's
+criticism of Mr. Emerson's Address before the Alumni of the Cambridge
+Divinity School. In 1840 he said to his congregation in Purchase Street:
+
+ There is a faculty in all--the most degraded, the most ignorant,
+ the most obscure--to perceive spiritual truth when distinctly
+ presented; and the ultimate appeal on all moral questions is not to
+ a jury of scholars, a conclave of divines, or the prescriptions of
+ a creed, but to the common-sense of the human race.
+
+But this substitution of the intuitive for the sensational philosophy--a
+change which affected all the processes of his thought and actually
+caused a revolution in his mind--was made silently, quietly, without
+agitation, without triumph, in a sober, conservative manner, very
+different from that of his friend Theodore Parker, who carried the same
+doctrines a good deal further, and advocated them with more heat like
+the burly reformer he was.
+
+In religion, Mr. Ripley's position was the same that it was in
+philosophy. In fact the intellectual side of religion interested him
+more than the spiritual or experimental side. It was mainly a
+speculative matter, where it was not speculative it was practical; in
+each event it concerned the head rather than the heart, as being an
+opinion rather than a feeling. He was instructed in the school of
+orthodoxy, and, as a youth, was strict in his allegiance to the old
+system of belief; but he became a disciple of Dr. Channing, and later a
+rationalist of the order of Theodore Parker, a friend of Emerson, an
+adherent of what was newest in theology. Yet, in this extreme departure
+from the views of his early years, he betrayed no sign of agitation, no
+trace of internal suffering. He wished to go to Yale instead of Harvard,
+because "the temptations incident to a college, we have reason to think,
+are less at Yale than at Cambridge." He preferred Andover to Cambridge,
+being "convinced that the opportunities for close investigation of the
+Scriptures are superior to those at Cambridge, and the spirit of the
+place, much relaxed from its former severe and gloomy bigotry is more
+favorable to a tone of decided piety." Still, he goes to Cambridge, is
+"much disappointed in what he had learned of the religious character of
+the school," and, on more intimate acquaintance is impressed by "the
+depth and purity of their religious feeling and the holy simplicity of
+their lives"; "enough to humble and shame those who had been long
+professors of Christianity, and had pretended to superior sanctity." In
+1824 a bold article in the _Christian Disciple_, a Unitarian journal,
+the precursor of the _Christian Examiner_, excited a good deal of
+comment, not to say apprehension. He writes to his sister about it as
+follows:
+
+ You asked me to say something about the article in the _Disciple_.
+ For myself, I freely confess that I think it a useful thing and
+ correct. The vigor of my orthodoxy, which is commonly pretty
+ susceptible, was not offended. Now, if you have any objections
+ which you can accurately and definitely state, no doubt there is
+ something in it which had escaped my notice. If your dislike is
+ only a misty, uncertain feeling about something, you know not what,
+ it were well to get fairly rid of it by the best means.
+
+The same year he writes to his mother:
+
+ I am no partisan of any sect, but I must rejoice in seeing any
+ progress towards the conviction that Christianity is indeed "_glad
+ tidings of great joy_," and that in its original purity it was a
+ very different thing from the system that is popularly preached,
+ and which is still received as reasonable and scriptural by men and
+ women, who in other respects are sensible and correct in their
+ judgments. When shall we learn that without the spirit of Christ we
+ are none of us His? I trust I am not becoming a partisan or a
+ bigot. I have suffered enough, and too much, in sustaining those
+ characters, in earlier, more inexperienced, and more ignorant
+ years; but I have no prospects of earthly happiness more inviting
+ than that of preaching the truth, with the humble hope of
+ impressing it on the mind with greater force, purity, and effect
+ than I could do with any other than my present conviction.
+
+In 1840 the ministry was abandoned forever, for more secular pursuits.
+After 1849 his activities were wholly literary; he had no connection
+with theology, and none who did not know his past suspected that he had
+once been a clergyman.
+
+The same cast of thought, not "pale" in his case, suffused his action
+at Brook Farm and made a Utopia quiet, calm, dignified, pervaded by the
+radiance of mind, the gentle enthusiasm of the intellect. The heat came
+in the main from other sources. He was receptive rather than original,
+inflammable rather than fiery, brilliant rather than warm. The heat was
+supplied by those near him, by those he trusted, and by those he loved.
+Not that he was deficient in concern for society; far from it; but his
+interest was more philosophical than philanthropic. The subject of an
+association that should combine intellectual and mechanical labor and
+should diminish the distance between the tiller of the ground and the
+educator was agitated among the thinkers he was intimate with. Dr.
+Channing had such a project at heart. Mrs. Ripley burned with humane
+anticipations. Plans for social regeneration were in the air. It was
+impossible for one who lived in the midst of ardent spirits, or was
+sensitive to fine impressions, or was cultivated in an ideal wisdom that
+was not of this world, to escape the contagion of this kind of optimism;
+Emerson was saved by his belief in individual growth; Parker by his
+steady common-sense; others were protected by their conservatism of
+temperament or of association, by their want of courage, or their want
+of faith; but men and women of ideal propensities, like Nathaniel
+Hawthorne, W. H. Channing, J. S. Dwight, joined the community, which
+promised a new era for Humanity. Mr. Ripley would probably have left the
+ministry at any rate, for it had become distasteful to him, but it is
+not likely that he would have undertaken the management of Brook Farm
+unless he had been assured of its success; for he was a New England
+youth by birth and by disposition, prudent, careful, thrifty; his very
+enthusiasm was of the New England type, the product of theological
+ideas, a creation of the gospels, a desire to introduce the "Kingdom of
+Heaven," a continuance of the prophetic calling. New England is as noted
+for its fanaticism as it is for its theology. Its fanaticism is the
+offspring of its theology, and in proportion as its theology disappears
+its fanaticism decreases. In Mr. Ripley's case the theology had reached
+very near to its last attenuation and the fanaticism had tapered off
+into a gentle enthusiasm. He undertook to establish a kingdom of heaven
+on earth because he had given up the expectation of a kingdom of heaven
+in the skies; and he undertook to establish a kingdom of heaven on earth
+by rational, economic means, not by religious interventions. He was
+subject to that peculiar kind of excitement that comes to a few people
+in connection with the keen exercise of their intellectual powers, when
+they have laid hold of what seems to them a principle--an excitement
+that is easily mistaken for moral earnestness even by one who is under
+its influence, which, indeed, lies so close to moral earnestness as to
+feel quickly the effect of moral earnestness in others, notwithstanding
+the checks applied by practical wisdom. Mr. Ripley had struck on a
+theory of society, which at that time was passing from the phase of
+feeling into the phase of philosophy. The theory was in the air; the
+most susceptible spirits were full of it; all noble impulses were in its
+favor, it belonged to the order of thought he had attained; it was
+native to the aspirations that inflamed the men and women with whom he
+was most intimate; their feelings awoke his intellect, and he was
+carried away by a stream whereof he appeared to himself to be a
+tributary and whereof he appeared to others as the main current, on
+account of his impetuosity, and the vigor with which he proceeded to put
+the idea into practice. In his own mind he was realizing the dream of
+the New Testament, but, in fact, he was testing a principle of which the
+New Testament was quite unconscious, the modern principle of the equal
+destinies of all men. He had abandoned the New Testament ground of
+allegiance to Jehovah, and had adopted the human ground of fidelity to
+social law. He was still under the spell of religious emotions, but they
+had become merged in the abstractions of rationalism and merely lent an
+added glow to his ideas, so that he could readily imagine that he was
+actuated by spiritual convictions when, in fact, he was doing duty as a
+disciple of socialist philosophers. His own interest in Brook Farm was
+in the main speculative, though through his personal sympathies he was
+moved toward an enterprise that had moral ends in view.
+
+Once embarked in it, he gave his whole mind to its
+accomplishment,--all his industry, all his organizing talent, all his
+high sense of duty. He worked day and night; he wrote letters; he
+answered inquiries; he mastered the science of agriculture; he did the
+labor of a practical farmer; he maintained the supervision of the
+strange family that gathered about him. Very remarkable was his success
+in keeping the intellectual side uppermost, in keeping clear of the
+temptations to give way to instinctive leanings. His associations were
+with books and study and bright people. He brought the most brilliant
+men and women of the day to the place. He awakened the interest of the
+general community. He diffused an atmosphere of cheerful hope around the
+experiment. It is easy to make sport of Brook Farm; to laugh at the odd
+folks who came there; to ridicule their motives and actions; to repeat
+stories of extravagant conduct; to tell of the eccentric behavior of men
+and maidens who were right-minded but impulsive; to follow
+spontaneousness to its results; to trace the course of unrestricted
+liberty. But it is not fair to remember these things as peculiarities of
+Brook Farm, as incidents of its conception, or as incidents that were
+agreeable to Mr. Ripley. He exerted the whole weight of his character
+against them. He watched and guarded. We do not hear of him in
+connection with the scandals, the laxities, or the frolics. His efforts
+were directed to the supremacy of ideas over instinct, the idea of a
+regenerated society, something very different from joyousness, or
+merriment, or the fun of having a good time. He, too, was gay; he felt
+the delight of freedom; but his gayety was born of happy confidence in
+the principle at stake, his delight was connected with the advent of a
+new method of intercourse among men. I remember hearing him once deliver
+a speech in Boston. In it he spoke of the "foolishness of preaching,"
+and avowed his willingness to be a pioneer in the task of breaking out a
+new future for humanity, a ditcher and delver in the work of
+constructing the new building of God. He had the coming time continually
+in view. Others might enjoy themselves, others might grow tired of
+waiting, but he held smiling on his way, determined to carry out the
+idea to the end. There was something grand in the steady intellectual
+force with which he did his best to carry through a principle that
+commanded more and more the assent of his reason. When the demonstration
+of Charles Fourier was laid before him, no argument was required to
+persuade him to adopt it. He took it up with all his energy; his
+enthusiasm rose to a higher pitch than ever; the rationale of the
+movement was revealed to him, and apparently he saw for the first time
+the full significance of the scheme he had been conducting. The
+impelling power of an intellectual conviction was never more splendidly
+illustrated. Nobody discerned so clearly as he did the financial
+hopelessness of the experiment. Nobody felt the burden of responsibility
+as he felt it. Yet he did not flinch for a moment, and his patient
+assumption of the indebtedness at last had the stamp of real heroism
+upon it. His renewal of the most painful traditions of "Grub Street"
+until the liabilities of Brook Farm were cleared off is one of the noble
+histories, a history that cannot be told in detail because of the
+modesty which has left no record of toil undergone or duty done. The old
+simile of the sun struggling with clouds, and gradually clearing itself
+as the day wears on, best illustrates my view of this man's
+accomplishment. There were the clouds of orthodoxy which were burned
+away at Cambridge. Then came the clouds of Unitarian divinity, which
+were dispelled by the transcendental philosophy. These were succeeded by
+the dark vapors of the ministry, and these by the sentimental
+philanthropy of New England rationalism. At length his intellect broke
+through these obscurations and showed what it truly was.
+
+On the failure of Brook Farm and the final dismissal of all plans for
+creating society anew, Mr. Ripley's faculties emerged in their full
+strength. The New England element was withdrawn. There was no longer
+thought for theology or reform, but solely for knowledge and literature.
+In Boston he had taken on himself every opprobrious epithet. In his
+final letter to his congregation he avows his interest in temperance,
+anti-slavery, peace, the projects for breaking down social distinctions;
+simply, it would seem, because his philosophy, falling in with popular
+sentiment, pointed that way; for he was never publicly identified with
+any of these causes, or ranked by reformers in the order of innovators.
+Indeed, one of the old Abolitionists told me that she had never
+associated him with the anti-slavery people, though her family went to
+his church. In New York there was no pretence of this kind. The devotion
+to literature absorbed his attention. His democratic concern for the
+workingmen continued, but in a theoretical manner, if we may judge from
+the fact that he took no part in domestic or foreign demonstrations,
+that he made no speech, attended no meeting, consorted with no social
+reformers, did not even keep up his intimacy with the original leaders
+of socialism in this country. When the sadness of his first wife's death
+was over, and the drudgery of toil was ended, he was happier than he had
+ever been. No time was wasted; no talent was misused. Mental labor was
+incessant, but in performing it there was pure delight. It is usual to
+think of his early life as his best, and there were some who regarded
+him as an extinct volcano; but I am of the opinion that his latter years
+were his most characteristic, and that he was most entirely himself when
+his intellectual nature came to its full play. In proportion as the
+"olden thoughts, the spirit's pall," fell off, he became peaceful and
+sweet; his view backward and forward became clear, his purpose steady,
+his will serene. The past was distasteful to him and he seldom alluded
+to it; but as one puts his childhood and his age together, a steady
+development is seen to run through both. His could not be a cloudless
+day, but he went on from glory to glory. His age more than justified the
+promise of his youth. In his latter years he befriended aspiring young
+men; he made literature a power in America; he threw a dignity around
+toil; he associated knowledge with happiness, and rendered light and
+love harmonious. His favorite author was Goethe, the apostle of culture.
+His familiarity with Sainte-Beuve, the master of literary criticism, was
+so great, that on occasion of that writer's decease, he sat down and
+wrote an account of him without recourse to books. Though without
+knowledge of art, destitute of taste for music, and deficient in
+æsthetic appreciation, his sympathy was so large and true that these
+deficiencies were not felt. The intellectual sunshine was shed over the
+entire nature, and the book was so universal that it seemed to embrace
+everything.
+
+This is the property of pure mind, rarely seen in such perfection of
+lucidity. Such a mind is at once conservative and radical; conservative
+as treasuring the past, radical as anticipating improvement in the
+future. There is nothing like fanaticism, but a bright look in every
+direction, a place for all sorts of accomplishments, hospitality to each
+new invention, a radiant acceptance of all temperaments. The mind cannot
+be superstitious, for it cannot believe that divine powers are
+identified with material objects or occasional accidents; it cannot be
+ever sanguine as those are who indulge in abstract visions of good, for
+it knows that progress is very slow and gradual, and that the welfare of
+mankind is advanced by the process of civilization, by cultivation,
+acquirement, refinement, the gains of wealth, elegance, and delicacy of
+taste. It judges by rational standards, not by sentimental feelings,
+accepting imperfection as the inevitable condition of human affairs and
+bounded characters. It is not exposed to the convulsions that accompany
+even the most exalted moods, but calmly labors and quietly hopes for the
+future.
+
+I do not say that George Ripley was such a mind, merely that his
+tendency was in that direction. He was limited by traditions; he had too
+many prejudices. The axioms of the transcendental philosophy clung to
+him. The shreds of religion hung about him. He could not divest himself
+of the ancient clerical memories and ways, nor wholly throw off the
+mantle of personal sympathy he had so long worn. He was not completely
+secular.
+
+That he was a perfect man is less evident still. His sunny quality was
+due in some degree to a happy temperament, and was subject to the
+eclipses that darken the blandest natures, and render sombre the most
+hilarious spirits. He lacked the steadfast courage of conviction, was
+somewhat over-prudent and timid, afraid of pain, of popular disapproval,
+of criticism and opposition. This may have been due in part to his
+frequent disappointments and the carefulness they forced upon him, to
+the distrust in his own judgment which he had occasion to learn, and the
+necessity of confining his action to the point immediately before him.
+But I am inclined to think that this apprehensiveness was
+constitutional. If it is suggested by way of objection that the bold
+experiment of Brook Farm, made in the face of obloquy and derision,
+indicated moral courage of a high stamp, I would remind the critic of
+the warm approbation of his friends, and the confident expectation of
+success on the part of those he was intimate with. His wife not merely
+gave him her countenance but stimulated his zeal, and surrounded him
+every day with an atmosphere of faith. He had the applause of Dr.
+Channing, and the support of his brilliant nephew. Men like Hawthorne,
+Ellis Gray Loring, George Stearns, not to mention others, urged him on.
+His own well-beloved sister was one of his ardent coadjutors. He had
+hopes of Emerson. In short, so far from being alone, he stood in an
+influential company, and instead of his being altogether unpopular was
+encompassed by the good-will of those he prized most. It would have
+required courage to resist such influences. Besides, he was inflated by
+a momentary enthusiasm which carried him along in spite of himself and
+would not allow his judgment to work. A sudden storm struck him, lifted
+unusual waves, caused unexampled spurts of foam, made the ordinarily
+quiet water boisterous and dangerous, and threw long lines of breakers
+on the coast, so that what was a still lake became of a sudden a
+tempestuous sea. One must not hastily imagine that the water had become
+an ocean, or that it was really an Atlantic formerly supposed to be a
+pool.
+
+Then it must be said he loved money too well. This infirmity was not
+native to him, but must probably be imputed to early poverty, the
+necessity of working hard in order to pay debts not altogether of his
+own contracting, thus pledging the meagre income of the first sixty
+years of his life. His final income was large, but it was earned by
+incessant literary toil, which naturally rendered him avaricious of the
+rewards that might come to him. His generosity did not have a fair
+chance to show itself outside of his family. There it was lavish, but
+there it was too much mixed up with affection, duty, and pride to be
+credited to his manhood. He did not live long enough, either, to attain
+complete superiority over his accidents. He was already an old man
+before he had money for his wants. I remember meeting him on Broadway in
+1861, the year of his wife's death, and he said: "My grief is embittered
+by the thought that she died just as I was getting able to obtain for
+her what she needed." He was then fifty-nine years of age. It cannot be
+expected that any impulse of generosity will overcome the habits of a
+life-time at so advanced a period as this. That they showed themselves
+at all is remarkable, and establishes as well their power as their
+existence.
+
+In a word, this man was too heavily weighted by circumstances to do his
+genius full justice. He seemed to be two individuals, with little in
+common between them. As one looked at his past or at his present, his
+real character was differently judged. The most plausible account of him
+was that which supposed the experiences to be buried in a deep grave,
+which was seldom uncovered even by the man himself, who lived in the day
+before him, and rarely glanced back save to mourn over or to make sport
+of his former career. The only way of establishing a unity in his
+history is to concede the supremacy of the intellectual quality over the
+moral in his first endeavors. The prejudice in favor of the moral was
+and is so strong that to maintain this supremacy will seem like a
+condemnation of him, though meant in his praise. He probably would so
+have considered it, especially when carried away by the flood of
+memories. It was easy for him to be mistaken. His merit consists in the
+energy of the reason which made headway against a host of disadvantages
+and achieved something resembling a victory in the end. Some time hence,
+when the homage paid to sentiment shall have yielded to the worship of
+knowledge, George Ripley will be regarded as one of the earliest
+apostles of the light.
+
+All these greatly enriched my life in New York, opened new spheres of
+activity, and enlarged my whole horizon, both intellectually and
+socially. Their variety, elasticity, and vigor in many fields of
+intellectual force added much to the extension of my view, and acted,
+not merely as a refreshment, but also as a stimulus.
+
+
+
+
+XV. THE PRESENT SITUATION.
+
+
+The progress of mind is continuous. Strictly speaking, there are no
+periods of transition, no crises in thought. The history of ideas
+presents no gap. Every stage begins and ends an epoch. One is often
+reminded of the common notion that the year begins and ends at a
+particular moment. Every day begins and ends a year; every hour is
+equally sacred. Yet solemn thought, worship, self-examination, are
+precious, and these can be secured only by the observance of times and
+seasons; so that we fall on our knees and pray when the old year ends
+and the new one begins.
+
+So, as a point of time must be fixed upon, we will begin with Thomas
+Paine. It is not easy to speak fully and justly of Paine, because in so
+doing we must speak of the misapprehensions and mis-statements of which
+he has been the victim; and even if we refute these, the bare mention of
+them leaves a stain on his fame. No doubt his method--application of
+common-sense to religion--was essentially vicious. Common-sense is an
+admirable quality in practical affairs, quite indispensable in the
+management of business of all kinds, but it has no place in the
+discussion of works of the higher imagination--of poetry, art, music, or
+faith. But such was the man's genius, such was the demand of his age. It
+is easy to speak of his ignorance, his coarseness, his impudence, his
+vanity; but it must be remembered that his education was very imperfect,
+for he was utterly ignorant of any language but his own, and he did not,
+apparently, read even the English deists; that he was a man of the
+people; that he lived in an age of revolutions; that he stood for the
+rights of common humanity. It must be remembered also that, in the first
+place, he brought the human mind face to face with problems which had
+been appropriated by a special class that considered itself exempt from
+criticism. In the next place he was in dead earnest; not attacking the
+Bible or religion out of flippancy or brutality, but because he really
+hated the interpretations that were usually given of sacred things; his
+attack was against orthodoxy, not against faith. "His blasphemy," says
+Leslie Stephen, "was not against the Supreme God, but against Jehovah.
+He was vindicating the ruler of the universe from the imputations which
+believers in literal inspiration and dogmatical theology had heaped upon
+him under the disguise of homage. He was denying that the God before
+whom reasonable creatures should bow in reverence could be the
+supernatural tyrant of priestly imagination, who was responsible for
+Jewish massacres, who favored a petty clan at the expense of his other
+creatures, who punished the innocent for the guilty, who lighted the
+fires of everlasting torment for the masses of mankind, and who gave a
+monopoly of his favor to priests or a few favored enthusiasts. Paine, in
+short, with all his brutality, had the conscience of his hearers on his
+side, and we must prefer his rough exposure of popular errors to the
+unconscious blasphemy of his supporters." Then Paine _did love his
+kind;_ he abhorred cruelty, and desired, after his fashion, to elevate
+his race.
+
+Examples of this are numerous. At the time when the "Common Sense" and
+"Crisis" were having an enormous sale, the demand for the former
+reaching not less than one hundred thousand copies, and both together
+offering to the author profits that would have made him rich, Paine
+freely gave the copyright to every State in the Union. In his period of
+public favor and of intimate friendship with the founders of the
+government, Paine declined to accept any place or office of emolument,
+saying: "I must be in everything, as I have ever been, a disinterested
+volunteer. My proper sphere of action is on the common floor of
+citizenship, and to honest men I give my hand and heart freely." The
+State of Virginia made a large claim on the general government for
+lands. Thomas Paine opposed the claim as unreasonable and unjust, though
+at that very time there was a resolution before the legislature of
+Virginia to appropriate to him a handsome sum of money for services
+rendered. In 1797, Paine was the chief promoter of the society of
+"Theophilanthropists," whose object was the extinction of religious
+prejudices, the maintenance of morality, and the diffusion of faith in
+one God. "It is want of feeling," says this _heartless blasphemer_, "to
+talk of priests and bells, while infants are perishing in hospitals, and
+the aged and infirm poor are dying in the streets." In 1774, Paine
+published in the _Pennsylvania Journal_, a strong, anti-slavery essay.
+While clerk in the Pennsylvania Legislature he made an appeal in behalf
+of the army, then in extreme distress, and subscribed his entire salary
+for the year to the fund that was raised. Towards the close of his life,
+he devised a plan for imposing a special tax on all deceased persons'
+estates, to create a fund from which all, on reaching twenty-one years,
+should receive a sum to establish them in business, and in order that
+all who were in the decline of life should be saved from destitution. It
+is not generally known that Paine often preached on Sunday afternoons at
+New Rochelle. In England he spoke in early life from Dissenting pulpits,
+and to him we owe this exquisite definition of religion: "It is man
+bringing to his Maker the fruits of his heart." All this is evidence
+that honorable considerations were at the bottom of his own belief. He
+was, according to his view, the friend of man, and in this interest
+wrote his books. He introduced kindness into religion.
+
+He certainly repeated the ideas of Collins and Toland, and the
+conceptions that were floating in the air, breathed by Voltaire and
+Diderot; but he did give them voice. The English deists were dead, and
+would have continued so but for him. He was essentially a pamphleteer,
+the master of a very rich, simple style that went directly to the hearts
+of the people. His best performances were unquestionably political, but
+all his works were marked by the same peculiarities. His mistake was in
+supposing that the power that could animate an army could pull down a
+church.
+
+Paine was no saint, but he was no sinner above all that dwelt in
+Jerusalem. He drank too much; he took too much snuff; he was vulgar; he
+was a vehement man in a vehement age; he went to dinner in his
+dressing-gown; and he certainly did not bring his best convictions to
+bear on his private character; but he did wake up minds that had been
+dumb or oppressed before. The "Age of Reason" went everywhere, into
+holes and corners, among back-woodsmen and pioneers, and did more
+execution among plain moral men than many a book that was more worthy of
+acceptance. It is a pity that his disciples should be content with
+repeating his denials, instead of building on the rational foundations
+which he laid. For instance, they might, while adding to his criticism
+of the Scriptures, have shown their high moral bearing and their
+spiritual glow. They might have carried out further his "enthusiasm for
+humanity," showing that man had more in him than Paine suspected. They
+might have justified by more scientific reasons his belief in God and in
+immortality. They might have been truly rationalists as he wanted to be,
+but could not be at that period. But they were satisfied with saying
+over and over again what he said as well as he could, but not as well as
+they can. He was simply a precursor, but he was a precursor of such men
+as Colenso and Robertson Smith, and a large host of scholars beside.
+
+Paine's best exponent in America is perhaps Robert G. Ingersoll. He is a
+sort of transfigured Paine. He has all Paine's power over the masses,
+being perhaps the most eloquent man in America; more than Paine's wit;
+more than Paine's earnestness; more than Paine's love of humanity; more
+than Paine's scorn of deceit and harshness,--for he extends his
+abhorrence of cruelty even to dumb beasts. He has great power of
+sympathy, a tender feeling for misery of all kinds. He is a poet, as is
+evident from these words:
+
+ We do not know whether the grave is the end of this life or the
+ door of another, or whether the night here is somewhere else a
+ dawn. The idea of Immortality, that like a sea has ebbed and flowed
+ into the human heart with its countless waves beating against the
+ shores and rocks of time and faith, was not born of any book or of
+ any creed or of any religion. It was born of human affection, and
+ it will continue to ebb and flow beneath the mists and clouds of
+ doubt and darkness as long as love kisses the lips of death. It is
+ the rainbow, Hope, shining upon the tears of grief.
+
+Paine's simple childlike belief in God and Immortality, Ingersoll
+remands to the cloudy sphere of agnosticism, as Paine probably would
+now; but it is my opinion that if evidence which he regarded as
+satisfactory--that is, legal evidence--could be given, he, too, would
+accept these articles; for he has none of the elements of the bigot
+about him. His detestation is simply of hell and a priesthood; for pure,
+spiritual religion, he has only respect. Like Paine, he attacks the
+ecclesiasticism and theology of the day, and is satisfied with doing
+that; and, like Paine, he has convictions instead of opinions, and his
+character is all aflame with his ideas.
+
+In his private life, in his family relations, in his public career,
+there is no reproach on his name--nothing that he need be ashamed of.
+
+Mr. Ingersoll does not worship the Infinite under any recognized form or
+name, but that he adores the _substance of deity_ is beyond all doubt;
+he worships truth and purity and sincerity and love,--everything that is
+highest and noblest in human life. One word more I must say,--that his
+motive is essentially religious. It is his aim to lift off the burden of
+superstition and priestcraft; to elevate the soul of manhood and
+womanhood; to promote rational progress in goodness; to emancipate every
+possibility of power in the race; and this is the aim of every pure
+religion,--to open new spheres of hope and accomplishment.
+
+The disintegration of the popular orthodoxy goes on very fast, and
+always under the influence of the moral sentiment. This is very prettily
+put by Miss Jewett, in one of her short stories, entitled "The Town
+Poor." Two ladies, jogging along a country road, fall to talking about
+an old meeting-house which is being _improved_ after the modern fashion.
+One of them laments the loss of the ancient pews and pulpit, and the
+substitution of a modern platform and slips. The other says:
+
+ When I think of them old sermons that used to be preached in that
+ old meeting-house, I am glad it is altered over so as not to remind
+ folks. Them old brimstone discourses! you know preachers is far
+ more reasonable now-a-days. Why, I sat an' thought last Sabbath as
+ I listened, that if old Mr. Longbrother and Deacon Bray could hear
+ the difference, they'd crack the ground over 'em like pole beans,
+ and come right up 'long side their headstones.
+
+In Chicago, some years ago, orthodox preachers begged a pronounced
+radical to stay and help them fight the matter out on the inside; and a
+minister of one of the principal churches there distinctly said that he
+did not believe in the infallibility of the Bible or an everlasting
+punishment. A Congregational minister in Connecticut expressed himself
+as thoroughly in sympathy with the advanced party in theology. An
+orthodox clergyman in New England declared that he did not know of an
+orthodox minister in the whole range of his acquaintance who believed in
+the old doctrine. A minister in Rhode Island, who occupied a high
+position in the orthodox church, while declining to make an open
+statement on account of social and political reasons, avowed his
+willingness to write a private letter disclaiming all belief in the
+accepted views. The Rev. Howard MacQueary, the Episcopal rector of
+Canton, Ohio, who has recently published a book, entitled the "Evolution
+of Man and Christianity," has been convicted of heresy against his own
+protest and the popular sentiment. The successor of Henry Ward Beecher,
+in Brooklyn, N. Y., recently published the essentials of his creed.
+There is no fall in it, no trinity, no miracle in the old sense, no
+eternal punishment. He declares, frankly, that there is no difference
+_in kind_ between man, Jesus, and God, but only a difference _in
+degree_. The same man recently preached in King's Chapel, and lectured
+in Channing Hall. The Andover controversy distinctly reveals the decay
+of the ancient theology. In England dissent has gone very far, as is
+evident from a book called "The Kernel and the Husk," written by the
+Rev. Dr. E. A. Abbott, the author of the article on "The Gospels," in
+the last edition of the "Encyclopædia Britannica." In this article the
+fall is repudiated, the trinity, miracles, the virgin birth, the
+physical resurrection of Jesus, and eternal punishment; yet even his
+bishop has not rebuked him. Yes, the moral sentiment is certainly coming
+to its rights.
+
+Of Unitarianism, after what has been said, it is unnecessary to speak.
+That there should be a difference between the East and the West is
+natural. The East holds fast, in large sense, to the ancient theological
+traditions. The West never had them, and can therefore declare that its
+fellowship is conditioned on no doctrinal tests, and can welcome all who
+wish to establish truth and righteousness and love in the world. The
+West will ultimately prevail; the temper of the East is rapidly wasting
+away, and the breach will soon be closed up. The new Unitarian churches
+will be founded on a practical basis, the only requirement being that
+the minister should be deeply in earnest about religious things. The
+characteristic of all churches, of whatever name, is an urgent interest
+in social reform, a deep concern for the disfranchised and oppressed,
+and a warm feeling towards the elevation of mankind. The universal
+prayer is, to borrow the pithy language of Dr. F. H. Hedge: "May Thy
+kingdom come on earth!" not "May we come into Thy kingdom."
+
+If it was hard to do full justice to Thomas Paine, it is harder to do
+full justice to the Broad Churchman. There is no authoritative account
+of his position to which appeal can be made, and the great variety of
+opinion on incidental points makes it difficult to frame any description
+which the leaders would accept. A great deal depends on the change of
+circumstances, the ruling spirit of the time, the prevailing tendencies
+of thought in the period,--whether scientific, critical, or social,--and
+a great deal depends, too, on the peculiarities of individual
+temperament, but the fundamental doctrines are the same. The ordinary
+observer can see the largeness, sympathy, inclusiveness, devotion to
+actual needs. But the ordinary observer cannot see the real basis of
+faith in human nature; the manifestation of the Divine Being in the
+highest possibilities of man; the trust in a living, active,
+communicating God.
+
+These are cardinal points, and must be insisted on. The inherent
+depravity of man; his essential corruption; his absolute inability to
+receive any portion of the divine life, is naturally repudiated. But his
+feebleness, crudeness, imperfection, his dearth and deficiency, his
+sensuality, hardness, love of material things, is insisted on, and
+cannot be exaggerated. Still there is a germ of the divine nature in
+him, a spark of the divine flame which can be kindled. The familiar
+language of Longfellow expresses this idea exactly:
+
+ "Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple,
+ Who have faith in God and Nature,
+ Who believe that in all ages
+ Every human heart is human,
+ That in even savage bosoms
+ There are longings, yearnings, strivings
+ For the good they comprehend not,
+ That the feeble hands and helpless,
+ Groping blindly in the darkness,
+ Touch God's right hand in that darkness
+ And are lifted up and strengthened:--
+ Listen to this simple story."
+
+To this nature, thus receptive, God addresses Himself. He is the
+Father, the absolute Love, and his desire is to lead men upward towards
+the height of divine perfection. In all ages, in every way, he has been
+trying to do this; and all nature, all art, all literature is full of
+this affection for his child. Even the Pagan myths express this striving
+of God with man. The existence of what we call evil is assumed, but
+there is no attempt to explain it or theorize about it or reconcile it
+with any mode of philosophy. To us it may be simply the divine effort to
+startle the soul into a consciousness of itself. Even the worst forms of
+doubt, of denial, of atheism may be parts of this divine effort; even
+men like Strauss and Feuerbach may be witnesses for truth, because they
+drive men back in horror from the pit of disbelief, and compel them to
+take refuge through tears and prayers in the supreme love. Of absolute
+evil we cannot be sure that there is any; so many ways must the infinite
+spirit have to awaken men to a sense of their own destiny.
+
+I cannot better convey my thought than by recounting the essence of two
+sermons that I heard some years ago from eminent preachers in different
+American cities; the first was on the death of Charles Darwin. After a
+very ornate service, the minister dwelt enthusiastically on the merits
+of Darwin as a philosopher, described his system, and declared that his
+own belief in the Deity of Christ, was confirmed in large measure by
+Darwin's theory of the Selection of the Fittest. The statement was
+startling at first, for the two doctrines seemed to point in opposite
+directions, but the speaker probably meant that the Christ expressed all
+the potentialities of human nature; that he was the Fittest; not a
+miracle, not an exception to humanity, but the perfection of man; in
+other words, a divine person. The other sermon turned on the murder of
+Sisera (Judges iv, 18), as contrasted with a statement in the first
+epistle of John (iv, 8), "God is love." The rector spoke of the
+assassination of Sisera in terms of extreme abhorrence; called it
+treacherous, cruel, base, and then said: "See what progress the human
+mind has made from this period to that when John was written." The
+common impression is that the _human_ mind had nothing to do with it, it
+being the _divine_ mind that was alone in question. But what the
+preacher meant was evidently this,--either that the divine mind dropped
+thoughts into the human mind as fast as they could be appreciated, or
+that the human mind, imperfect in development, apprehended all that it
+could of the perfect mind. Whichever case we assume, the integrity of
+the divine mind is secured, and at the same time the growth of the
+human.
+
+At this point, the conception of the Broad Churchman's idea of the
+inspiration of the Scripture must be dwelt upon, for the doctrine is
+very remarkable, and throws a flood of light upon his whole conception
+of the aim and purpose of Christianity. According to the common notion,
+the Bible is literally the word of God, and men have nothing to do but
+to submit themselves to its authority. They must suppress all natural
+desires, all dictates of their moral sense, to this supreme standard of
+truth and rectitude. According to this notion, the whole of man, as a
+thoroughly corrupted being, is _subject_, in obedience to this law. The
+second theory, adopted by the American Broad Churchman, holds that the
+Bible _contains_ the word of God; and this implies that there may be a
+part of the Bible that is not the word of God, and opens the way to an
+indefinite amount of criticism, speculation, and doubt. The English
+Broad Churchman holds, as I understand it, the common doctrine, but with
+this immense difference. That whereas, according to the common notion,
+the Bible is the word of God, he maintains that the whole object of the
+Bible is to educate and uplift man. The word is a minister to human
+needs. Through it, God is trying in various ways, by history, biography,
+tale, and song, to warn, persuade, teach, inspire the human soul.
+Sometimes he can do nothing but startle, shame, provoke; and the very
+things we find fault with may be designed for moral education. The
+Bible, itself, encourages this idea. Does not Paul preach
+reconciliation? Does not John speak of God as love? God hardened the
+heart of Pharaoh in order that he might show that He was stronger than
+Pharaoh. Jacob was not altogether a lovely character, but the Lord
+wrestled with him and lamed him, thus showing his own disapproval of the
+patriarch's temper. David was a seducer, adulterer, and murderer, but he
+_repented_, was ashamed, was sorrowful, and this repentance made him a
+man after God's own heart. It was not that God _approved_ of his
+conduct, but that he wanted to make us _disapprove_ of it. In like
+manner Luther based his faith on the Bible, because it convicted him of
+sin, and drove him to seek refuge for himself in Christ. The Church as
+an organization has always this one purpose in view--to minister to the
+soul of man. The "Articles" fairly throbbed with this conception. The
+outrage committed by the "Evangelicals," men who insist upon everlasting
+punishment and talk of doom, consists in their overlooking this divine
+purpose towards humanity.
+
+The _doctrines_ of the Church--the Deity of Christ, the Incarnation, the
+Resurrection, the Ascension--bear this testimony, and are inexplicable
+without it. But these doctrines simply convey one thought. The Christ
+must be God, otherwise he could not exemplify the perfect love; he must
+be Incarnate, otherwise he could not mingle with men. His Resurrection
+teaches his absolute triumph over death; his Ascension is a pledge of
+his union with God and his perpetual intercourse with God's children.
+
+The two _rites_, Baptism and Communion, give the same idea. Baptism
+imports a recognition of the duty to lead a Christian life; and
+Communion imports a wish, on the part of all who partake of it, to enter
+into the privilege of a perfect harmony with Christ. None of these
+points are reached by criticism, or any array of texts, though passages
+may be cited in confirmation of them. But the proof is derived from
+experience, from the felt need of enlightenment and inspiration, from
+prayer and the yearning after eternal life. No doubt it is taken for
+granted that neither the Bible nor the Church expresses the _whole_ word
+of God. The word is as large as the divine love, and this is infinite.
+The complete word of God includes all nature, all history, and all life.
+
+It will be understood that the Broad Church notion is only a theory and
+rests entirely on its reasonableness. It is simply a modification of
+Episcopalianism, and none but an Episcopalian would be likely to adopt
+it. Its interest for us consists in its _human_ character, in its
+earnestness for social reform, in its passionate desire to make
+conscience and justice and freedom of the Spirit supreme in all human
+affairs. It is essentially an ethical system with an ecclesiastical
+addition and a heavenly purpose.
+
+There is certainly a great difference between the Broad Church in
+America and the Broad Church in England; there are no Thirty-Nine
+Articles in this country; there is no National Church. The Broad
+Churchman here is still a Churchman, but the system is much more elastic
+and much more intellectual. The Church is to him also a divine
+institution, but not a final establishment; and it becomes divine by
+virtue of its helpfulness in imparting the divine life and its power of
+human service. The sacraments have become symbols, venerable from their
+antiquity, but more venerable from their use. The Broad Churchman is an
+orthodox believer, but he accepts only the simplest creeds, and he
+interprets them in accordance with the rational principles of thought,
+and with his fundamental conception of Christianity, holding not to the
+written letter, but to the real meaning of the Confession. This meaning
+is, he maintains, easily reconcilable with the idea that all revelation
+is made to a living mind,--whether that of a race or an individual,--and
+that the Bible is merely the record of it. No _book_, in his estimation,
+can be inspired. This, coupled with a belief in the unlimited progress
+of the natural conscience, brings the system within the category of
+modern arrangements.
+
+The idea that man is _developed_ into the divine life, not _converted_
+to it, seems to be the heart of the system. The writings of F. D.
+Maurice are full of it. He said that he did not know what the Broad
+Church was, and disclaimed any position in it; yet he is its reputed
+father, and certainly held its cardinal doctrine. This was the soul of
+his teaching; this dictated his likes and his dislikes; this animated
+his dissent from the Evangelicals on the one hand and the Rationalists
+on the other; this made him cling to the "Articles"; this made him love
+the Church. I cannot better convey my notion of the Broad Churchman's
+credence than by quoting some passages from Maurice:
+
+ I think that the _ground-work of this thought_ and this humanity
+ _is laid bare_ in the Thirty-nine Articles; _that for that
+ ground-work_ [namely, the living God, the living Word] all our
+ different schools are trying to produce feeble and crumbling
+ substitutes; that we must recur to it if we would pass the narrow
+ dimensions of Calvinism, Anglicanism, Romanism; if we would learn
+ what a message we have for Jews, Mahometans, Brahmins, Buddhists,
+ for all the nations of the earth, as well as our poor people at
+ home.
+
+ I cannot doubt that this belief [the confession of a God, who was,
+ and is, and is to come] is latent in every man now; that we are all
+ living, moving, having our being in this God, and that He does
+ reveal Himself to His creatures gradually, before He is revealed in
+ His fulness of glory.
+
+ I do perceive that if I have any work in the world, it is to bear
+ witness of this name [the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
+ Ghost], not as expressing certain relations, however profound, in
+ the divine nature, but as the underground of all fellowship among
+ men and angels, as that which will at last bind all into one,
+ satisfying all the craving of the reason as well as of the heart,
+ meeting the desires and intuitions that are scattered through all
+ the religions of the world.
+
+ The Church must either fulfil its witness of the redemption for
+ mankind or be cut off. And I cannot help thinking that a time is at
+ hand when we shall awaken to this conviction, and when we shall
+ perceive that what we call our individual salvation means nothing,
+ and that our faith in it becomes untenable when we separate it from
+ the salvation which Christ wrought out for the world by His
+ incarnation and sacrifice, resurrection and ascension.
+
+ He has been pleased to reveal to me in His Son the brightness of
+ His glory, His absolute love. On that point I have a right to be
+ certain; he who says I have not, rejects the Bible and disbelieves
+ the incarnation of the Lord. I will not give up an inch of this
+ ground; it is a matter of life and death.
+
+ By baptism we claim the position which Christ has claimed for all
+ mankind.... More and more I am led to ask myself what a Gospel to
+ mankind must be, whether it must not have some other ground than
+ the fall of Adam and the sinful nature of man.... No doctrine can
+ be so at variance as this, with the notion that it is a Gospel
+ which men have need of, and in their inmost hearts are craving for.
+
+Why is not this system sufficient? Simply because the claim that Christ
+is God, does not seem made out to severely critical minds. Such as these
+must hold even the Broad Church to be a mythology, beautiful and
+innocent, but still a mythology. The word "mythology" implies no
+disparagement. A mythology is simply the poetical form of an idea, and
+takes its character from the nature of the ideas it represents. The
+pagan mythology is on this account very different from the Christian,
+and a mythology that has universal love as its basis may well be called
+innocent and beautiful. To the doctrine of trinity, philosophically
+considered, even Unitarian scholars make no objection. What they cannot
+accept is the deity of Jesus as an historical person. The Christ is not,
+in their opinion, an historical person, but a doctrine, not identical
+with the man of the New Testament. The Divine Being has never, in their
+estimation, appeared on earth. They only who can put aside criticism,
+can suppress it, can regard it but as one of many manifestations of
+mind, can fix their eyes on a church for society at large and not for
+individuals, will be likely to accept it, and they will on the ground
+that it is altogether human, a church for mankind.
+
+The last phase in the development of the moral sentiment is represented
+by the "Ethical Societies." It is natural that the origin of these
+should be Jewish, for the Jews are unencumbered by the mysteries of the
+Christian theology; their genius is for social organization, and the
+moral element is very large in their religion. It is natural, too, that
+the system should be purer here than in England. Some of the members of
+the "Cambridge Ethical Society" are members of the Church of England,
+and have to be warned not to set themselves needlessly in opposition to
+the work of the Christian churches. The "Edinburgh Ethical Club" is
+mainly a debating society. In America it is usual to have a lecturer,
+and stated services on Sunday. But these services are very simple, nay,
+even bare; there is no prayer, and no scripture, no architecture or art
+or poetry; but there is an intense earnestness, nay, enthusiasm, for
+social reform. There are kindergartens for the poor children of the
+streets, there are classes for the untaught, libraries for the
+workingmen, plans for better lodging and employment for the families of
+artisans. There is no fixed doctrine in regard to the origin of the
+moral sentiments, lest any should be alienated; the object being to
+combine all who have at heart the moral interests of mankind. The
+peculiarity of these societies is not so much that they lay emphasis on
+the moral as distinct from the spiritual interests, or aim to break down
+the dividing line between Religion and Ethics, as it is that they rest
+upon conscience as the supreme authority, that they assume its practical
+function, build upon it as the one and only thing absolutely known.
+There is no pretence of following, even at a distance, the charities of
+the old churches with their vast funds, their immense organizations,
+their heaps of tracts, their legions of missionaries, all employed in
+calling unbelievers into the fold. The object is to elevate all mankind
+by appealing to their moral instincts, on the ground of their inherent
+ability to rise in the scale of being.
+
+To make their position clear let me quote the words of the founder of
+these societies, contained in an article entitled "The Freedom of
+Ethical Fellowship," in the first number of the _International Journal
+of Ethics_:
+
+ It is the aim of the Ethical Societies to extend the area of moral
+ co-operation so as to include a part, at least, of the inner moral
+ life; to unite men of divers opinions and beliefs in the common
+ endeavor to explore the field of duty; to gain clearer perceptions
+ of right and wrong; to study with thoroughgoing zeal the practical
+ problems of social, political, and individual ethics, and to embody
+ the new insight in manners and institutions....
+
+ It would be a wrong and a hindrance to the further extension of
+ truth to raise above our opinions the superstructure of a social
+ institution. For institutions in their nature are conservative;
+ they dare not, without imperilling their stability, permit a too
+ frequent inspection or alteration of their foundations.... The
+ subject part of mankind, in most places, might, with Egyptian
+ bondage expect Egyptian darkness, were not the candle of the Lord
+ set up by himself in men's minds, which it is impossible for the
+ breath or power of man wholly to extinguish. It is to this "candle
+ of the Lord set up in men's minds" that we look for illumination.
+ It is in the light which it sheds that we would read the problems
+ of conduct and teach others to read them. We appeal directly to the
+ conscience of the present age, and of the civilized portion of
+ mankind. There remains as a residue a common deposit of moral
+ truth, a common stock of moral judgments, which we may call the
+ common conscience. It is upon this common conscience that we
+ build.... The contents of the common conscience we would clarify
+ and classify, to the end that they may become the conscious
+ possession of all classes; and in order to enrich and enlarge the
+ conscience, the method we would follow is to begin with cases in
+ which the moral judgment is already clear, the moral rule already
+ accepted; and to show that the same rule, the same judgment,
+ applies to other cases, which, because of their greater complexity,
+ are less transparent to the mental eye....
+
+ And here it may be appropriate to introduce a few reflections on
+ the relations of moral practice to ethical theory in religious
+ belief. To many it will appear that the logic of our position must
+ lead us to underestimate the value of philosophical and religious
+ doctrines in connection with morality, and that, having excluded
+ this from our basis of fellowship, we shall inevitably drift into a
+ crude empiricism. I may be permitted to say that precisely the
+ opposite is at least our aim, and that among the objects we propose
+ to ourselves, none are dearer than the advancement of ethical
+ theory and the upbuilding of religious conviction. The Ethical
+ Society is a society of persons who are bent on being taught
+ clearer perceptions of right and wrong, and being shown how to
+ improve conduct. At least, let us hasten to add, the ideal of the
+ society is that of a body of men who shall have this bent. Is it
+ vain to hope that there will in time arise those who will render
+ them the service they require....
+
+ It is safe to say that every step forward in religion was due to a
+ quickening of the moral impulses; that moral progress is the
+ condition of religious progress; that the good life is the soil out
+ of which the religious life grows. The truths of religion are
+ chiefly two,--that there is a reality other than that of the
+ senses, and that the ultimate reality in things is, in a sense
+ transcending our comprehension, akin to the moral nature of men.
+ But how shall we acquaint ourselves with this super-sensible? The
+ ladder of science does not reach so far. And the utmost stretch of
+ the speculative reason cannot attain to more than the abstract
+ postulate of an infinite, which, however, is void of the essential
+ attributes of divinity. Only the testimony of the moral life can
+ support a vital conviction of this sort....
+
+ The Ethical Society is friendly to genuine religion anywhere and
+ everywhere, because it vitalizes religious doctrines by pouring
+ into them the contents of spiritual meaning.... A new moral
+ earnestness must precede the rise of larger religious ideals; for
+ the new religious synthesis which many long for, will not be a
+ fabrication, but a growth. It will not steal upon us as a thief in
+ the night, or burst upon us as lightning from the sky, but will
+ come in time as a result of the gradual, moral evolution of modern
+ society, as the expression of higher moral aspirations, and a
+ response to deeper moral needs.
+
+In his famous essay on "Worship," Emerson says:
+
+ There will be a new church founded on moral science, at first cold
+ and naked, a babe in a manger again, the algebra and mathematics of
+ ethical law, the church of men to come, without shawm or psaltery
+ or sackbut; but it will have heaven and earth for its beams and
+ rafters; science for symbol and illustration; it will fast enough
+ gather beauty, music, picture, poetry.
+
+Is this the church that Emerson predicted? It looks like it. Already we
+seem to hear the shawms and sackbuts. Already there are desires after a
+more rich and melodious administration.
+
+The last number of the _International Journal of Ethics_ contains two
+articles: one on "The Inner Life in Relation to Morality," the other on
+"The Ethics of Doubt," which suggest a transcendental ground for moral
+beliefs; and they who dissent from this position surround _action_ with
+an ideal solemnity. At all events it is something to see, even at a
+distance, a city that hath foundations.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. THE RELIGIOUS FUTURE OF AMERICA.
+
+
+In the _Revue des Deux Mondes_ of October 15, 1860, M. Renan wrote a
+remarkable article on the "Future of Religion in Modern Society." This
+paper of course dealt largely with questions that were interesting at
+that time, but it also contains very acute observations on the whole
+subject, which are of universal concern. His conclusions are that
+neither Judaism nor Romanism nor the established forms of Protestantism
+will constitute the coming faith, which must be spiritual (that is, free
+of space and time), undogmatical, and enfranchised. "The religious
+question," he says, "finds its solution in liberty.... The liberal
+principle pre-eminently is that man has a soul, that he is to be reached
+only through the soul, that nothing is of value save as it effects a
+change in the soul. An inflexible justice, granting with inexorable
+firmness liberty to all, even to those who, were they masters, would
+refuse it to their adversaries, is the only issue that reason discovers
+for the grave problems raised in our time." This essay, along with that
+of Emile de Laveleye of Liège in Belgium, on the "Religious Future of
+Civilized Communities," written in 1876, sums up the whole question. It
+only remains to apply their principles to America.
+
+Many dread the prevalence of Roman Catholicism. I confess I never could
+share in that apprehension. For if there is anything certain it is the
+unchangeableness of the lines of division that separate the three great
+regions of the earth, each having its own faith. There is the Greek
+Church, which rules in Asia; the Latin Church, which is confined to the
+Latin races, and is strongest in Southern Italy, where the people are
+most ignorant and supine; and the Protestant Church, which prevails in
+Northern Europe among the Germanic nations. As Renan says:
+
+ Nothing will come of the mutual struggle of the three Christian
+ families; their equilibrium is as well assured as that of the three
+ great races which share between them the world; their separation
+ will secure the future against the excessive predominance of a
+ single religious power, just as the division of Europe must forever
+ prevent the return of that _orbis romanus_, that closed circle,
+ which allowed no possible escape from the tyranny that unity has
+ engendered.
+
+Moreover, the Roman Catholic faith is essentially _Italian_, and as
+such can have no permanent influence in Germany, England, or America.
+The great popes of the Middle Ages, whose genius raised the papacy to
+power and splendor, were Italians. Italy, until a few years ago, was
+isolated; not a great political power, as it is now, among other powers
+of Europe, nor drawn by political affiliations into the schemes of other
+dominions. Besides, the Catholic Church had the advantages of the
+Italian genius for organization, command, wisdom in practical affairs.
+Then, too, it had the immense benefit of the old Roman treasures of art,
+which gave a glory to the system. These considerations alone would make
+it impossible that Romanism, in its foreign form, should ever become the
+religion of the United States. There may be another kind of
+ecclesiasticism, but without the ancient authority; an ecclesiasticism
+which stands for pomp, ornament, display, beauty, but not for anything
+more. There is evidence that every form of religion here is disposed to
+take on elements of decoration,--architecture, music, stained glass,
+drapery, pictures, and monuments; but this is only a sign of increasing
+wealth, not of increasing subjection.
+
+In addition to all this, the _genius_ of the American people is
+strongly against anything like submission to authority. The love of
+liberty is exceedingly powerful. It is claimed that Romanism is not
+committed to any form of government, that it is as favorable to
+republican institutions as to monarchical; but this is not the opinion
+of Renan, who was born and trained in the church, and who is therefore
+entitled to speak with knowledge; nor is it the opinion of other
+scholars, Martineau for instance, who says in his article on the "Battle
+of the Churches" (_Westminster Review_, January, 1851):
+
+ We are convinced it cannot occupy the scope which English
+ traditions and English usage have secured; that every step it may
+ make is an encroachment upon wholesome liberty; that it is innocent
+ only where it is insignificant, and where it is ascendant will
+ neither part with power nor use it well, and that it must needs
+ raise to the highest pitch the common vice of tyranny and
+ democracy,--the relentless crushing of minorities.
+
+But whether this charge of absolutism be just or not, Romanism has been
+so long associated as a polity with monarchical governments that it has
+contracted a habit of domineering, and the people can never be persuaded
+that the papacy is democratic in its constitution.
+
+Americans are very suspicious, too, of any interference on the part of
+the government. If a system demands an army, a palace, lands, it must
+pay for them out of its own private means. A generation or more ago it
+was possible for an administration to give for a merely nominal sum, in
+the very heart of a large city, great estates to one denomination. This
+is possible no longer. Every sect must vindicate itself, and stand on
+its own feet; this alone would make it impossible for a church so poor
+as the Catholic to establish itself in this country on any terms of
+supremacy.
+
+The desire for change which is inherent in the American mind must also
+prove fatal in the end to any claim of absolute stability. Protestantism
+is therefore better for Americans than Romanism is, because it is more
+portable, more various, more accommodating to popular tastes and
+inclinations.
+
+There is no disposition to undervalue the work of the Catholic Church.
+Its great saints, its heroic martyrs, its stupendous missions, its
+enormous philanthropy, its influence in educating and controlling masses
+of people, cannot be exaggerated; and still it is destined to wield an
+immense influence as a spiritual power over the human race; but it never
+again can be the absolute system it once was. However it may commend
+itself to certain classes in our population, it must always be simply
+one department in the universal church.
+
+But it will be said that the Catholic Church may _accommodate_ itself to
+republican institutions. M. Renan doubts whether any radical change can
+be made. He says:
+
+ Catholicism, persuaded that it works for the truth, will always
+ endeavor to enlist the state in its defence or its spread....
+ Catholicism is, in fact, the believer's country, far more than is
+ the land of his birth. The stronger a religion is, the more
+ effective it is in this way.... More and more have Catholics been
+ brought to think that they derive life and salvation from Rome. It
+ is especially worth remarking that the new Catholic conquests
+ exhibit the most sensitiveness on this point. The old provincial
+ Catholic, whose faith belonged to the soil, has less need of the
+ Pope, and is much less alarmed at the storms that menace him, than
+ the new Catholics, who are coming fresh to Catholicism, and regard
+ the Pope, after the new system, as the author and defender of their
+ faith.... Catholicism has been seduced into becoming a religion
+ essentially political. The Pope becomes the actual sovereign of the
+ church.
+
+But supposing that such an alteration is possible, that the church can
+abase its pretensions to supremacy over all other sects, that Romanism
+simply melts into our society,--in this case, the papacy, as usually
+understood, becomes simply a form of church government like
+Presbyterianism or Congregationalism or Episcopacy; Catholicism becomes
+a purely spiritual faith, and, as such, is not only harmless but
+beneficent.
+
+The religion, therefore, of America cannot be ecclesiastical; neither
+can it be dogmatic. I was on the point of saying _theological_; but
+there is a great difference between theological and dogmatical.
+Dogmatism is theology raised to power. Theology there always must be;
+some account of the Supreme Power in the world; some report of the
+contents of the Divine Mind. The present indifference to theology is
+hardly a good sign, unless it be an indifference to theology as usually
+regarded--that is, to the old systems of theology. The future religion,
+for this reason, cannot be Protestantism. For Protestantism is
+essentially dogmatical. It claims superiority to Romanism on the one
+hand and to infidelity on the other. Furthermore, it is identified with
+the Bible. Now, modern scientific criticism has so riddled the Bible,
+that it no longer can serve as a foundation. And this foundation being
+taken away, Protestantism must lose its corner-stone, and rest entirely
+on a rational basis. Likewise, Protestantism encourages sectarianism. It
+exists, in fact, only in numerous parties, each jealous of the rest and
+seeking to build up its own establishment without regard to the
+well-being of opposing bodies. There is a dream of unity amid all this
+diversity. But such unity can be gained only by the sacrifice of the
+very peculiarity of division, and the admission of certain things which
+all have in common; and such a reconciliation, besides the tyranny it
+engenders, cannot be desired, as it would be fatal to all activity.
+Sectarianism itself, apart from the "hatred, malice, and
+uncharitableness" which accompany it, may not of necessity be an evil;
+but sectarianism as it exists now is an evil of very great moment, and
+yet, without something of this alienation between sects Protestantism
+would decline.
+
+Is Unitarianism then to be the coming religion? I cannot think so.
+Unitarianism is but a form of Protestantism; the most attenuated form.
+It is committed to the Bible; held to it indeed by a very fine thread,
+but still held to it. No doubt it has gained greatly in the last years.
+The annual circulation of its tracts has risen in twenty-five or thirty
+years from fifteen thousand to three hundred thousand copies. A quarter
+of a century ago there was but one Unitarian church on the Pacific
+coast, now there are eighteen. A generation since it had, in the whole
+region from the Alleghanies to the Rocky Mountains, only fourteen
+churches, now there are ninety; and in the same period, sixty-three new
+societies have come into being in the New England and Middle States.
+Still, as compared with the great sects, it is very small, and never can
+be their rival. And this because, however interesting and precious it
+may be to some people, it lacks, and must ever lack, owing to its
+critical character, the elements of a great religion, the passionateness
+that charms the people, and the moral enthusiasm that catches up the few
+men of genius. The period of "pale negations" is past; but in proportion
+as the system becomes positive it tends more and more towards the
+principle that animates the ethical societies, namely, its supreme
+devotion to the moral law. Thus it stands at the beginning, not at the
+end, of the line of advance, and has all the work of building up to do,
+before it can grow in general influence.
+
+No, the religion of the future in America must be of the spirit; not
+merely as being independent of form and dogma, but as cherishing a great
+hope for the soul, and a great aspiration after perfection. No doubt
+every spirit must have a form of some kind, but it need not be a fixed,
+established, dominant imposition. M. Renan touched the matter exactly
+when commenting on the interview of Jesus with the woman of Samaria:
+"Woman, the hour is coming and now is, when men shall worship neither on
+this mountain nor at Jerusalem, but when the true worshippers shall
+worship the Father in spirit and in truth." Renan says:
+
+ When the Christ pronounced this word, he became really a Son of
+ God, and for the first time spoke the word upon which eternal
+ religion shall repose. He founded the worship without date, without
+ country, which shall endure to the end of time. He created a heaven
+ of pure souls, where one finds what one asks in vain for on the
+ earth, the perfect nobleness of the children of God, absolute
+ purity, total abstraction from the impurities of the world, the
+ liberty which has its complete amplitude only in the world of
+ thought.... The love of God conceived as the type of all
+ perfection, the love of man, charity, his whole doctrine is reduced
+ to this; nothing can be less theological, less sacerdotal, nothing
+ more philosophical, more profound, or more simple.
+
+The coming religion must also be humane and social. Intellectual it must
+certainly be, but it must, too, be emotional and adoring. There are
+three implications in it--a spiritual nature in man, a living power in
+the universe, an eternal life of progress and attainment, and these are
+assured only by reason.
+
+The coming religion, we may add, must be Christian in name, because
+Christianity as an ideal faith has worked itself into our common life.
+It is the soul of our laws, of our customs, of our institutions. All
+assume its authority; all respect its sanction. The great thinkers of
+the world conspire in thinking so. Thus Goethe says:
+
+ Let intellectual culture progress; let natural science extend our
+ knowledge; let the human mind grow; it will never outstrip the
+ grandeur of Christianity, nor its moral culture.
+
+Strauss, in his essay on "The Transient and Permanent in Christianity,"
+declares that humanity never will be without religion; and Laveleye
+says:
+
+ It is Christianity which has shed abroad in the world the idea of
+ fellowship, from which issue the aspirations after equality which
+ threaten the actual social order; it is also the influence of
+ Christianity which arrests the explosion of this subversive force,
+ and its principles, better comprised and better applied, will bring
+ back by degrees peace in society.
+
+Ours is a scientific age. There is a general demand for knowledge, a
+desire for demonstrated truth. Many will believe nothing that they
+cannot see with their eyes. In this sense, and in this sense alone, it
+is true that facts count for nothing in the domain of religion. But
+there are facts of the inner world that are quite as important as any
+facts in the outer world,--facts of the imagination; facts of love;
+facts of faith. Nothing is truer than that we are saved by hope. Science
+has enlarged the world; has beautified it; has made it look orderly,
+harmonious, poetic; but the realm of the known is very small indeed as
+compared with the realm of the unknown, and the more we discover, the
+more we find that there is to discover. The realm of the inner world is
+immensely large; and thousands of years must elapse before we discover
+its contents, if we ever do. The language of James Martineau is as true
+to-day as it was when the words were spoken, more than fifty years ago:
+
+ Until we touch upon the mysterious, we are not in contact with
+ religion; nor are any objects reverently regarded by us, except
+ such as, from their nature or their vastness, are felt to transcend
+ our comprehension.... The station which the soul occupies when its
+ devout affections are awakened, is always this; on the twilight
+ between immeasurable darkness and refreshing light; on the confines
+ between the seen and the unseen; where a little is discerned and an
+ infinitude concealed; where a few distinct conceptions stand in
+ confessed inadequacy, as symbols of ineffable realities.... And if
+ this be true, the sense of what we do not know is as essential to
+ our religion as the impression of what we do know: the thought of
+ the boundless, the incomprehensible, must blend in our mind with
+ the perception of the clear and true: the little knowledge we have
+ must be clung to as the margin of an invisible immensity; and all
+ our positive ideas be regarded as the mere float to show the
+ surface of the infinite deep.
+
+Shall I say that some form of theism will be the religion of America in
+the future? Not the literal theism of a generation or more ago, with its
+individual God, its contriving Providence, its supplicatory prayer, its
+future of retribution; nor yet the theism of Theodore Parker, of an
+infinite God revealed in consciousness, "the Being, infinitely powerful,
+infinitely wise, infinitely just, infinitely loving, and infinitely
+holy." It well may resemble the system described by Francis W. Newman in
+his book called "Theism," published in London in 1858. In this work he
+describes a religion based on conscience, without regard to any form of
+professed faith, yet covering in its theory and practice the whole
+region of ideal ethics. Different minds approach the problem from
+different directions. Mr. F. E. Abbot ("Scientific Theism," 1885)
+appeals to science; Josiah Royce printed a volume in 1885 entitled "The
+Religious Aspect of Philosophy," wherein he pursues the line of
+sympathetic thought; James Martineau in his "Study of Religion" (1888),
+bases his system on the moral sense; but all three arrive at the same
+point--a supreme mind in creation.
+
+We must be careful not to confound Theism with Deism, for though both
+are the same word--one Greek and one Latin--and mean the same thing, yet
+they stand for entirely different conceptions. Deism is a purely
+negative system, weighed down with denials. It is content when it has
+rejected what it calls all supernatural adjuncts--miracles, revelations,
+an inspired Scripture. Its face is set towards the past, not toward the
+future, and it is simply what is left of the old systems of belief,
+having no positive philosophy of its own. But Theism is a positive,
+fresh, original faith. It gazes forward, and builds on the natural
+consciousness of man, making no criticism on previous modes of belief.
+It is full of hope and enthusiasm, looking towards something that is
+before it, not scorning but believing. All that it needs in order to
+become a popular faith is a poetical element, something imaginative,
+symbolical, picturesque. The intellectual requirements it already
+possesses. It is affirmative; it is universal.
+
+Neither must this kind of theism be identified with natural religion,
+unless natural religion be made to comprehend facts of the inner as well
+as the outer world--facts of psychology as well as of physiology; facts
+of mind as well as of body. Such a theism is not a mere reminiscence,
+either, of an ancient faith; for every form of mediatorial religion,
+however modified, simplified, "enlightened," as it is called, leaves
+something of its temper behind it. The intellect is haunted by old modes
+of truth; the heart lingers around the ancient places of reverence; the
+conscience refers to some antique authority; the soul cannot pray except
+in the language of a pater-noster or a psalm. A scent as of roses may
+hang round the human mind; but the roses will be grown in some garden of
+the East, not in ours. Such a theism as I am thinking of will be
+grounded in Ethical Law. You may call it "Christian," if you will,
+because the word _Christian_ expresses the highest form of the moral
+sentiment, and carries a supreme authority to the human conscience; but
+on the _human conscience_ it must rest. It will be a noble, pure faith,
+giving a welcome to all knowledge, bright with anticipation, warm with
+enthusiasm. As John Weiss has said so much better than I can what I
+mean, I will quote a passage from him. It occurs in "American Religion"
+(page 67):
+
+ Cannot the power which sustains, without budging from the spot, my
+ personal vitality, sustain and nourish the immediate conscience of
+ which that vitality makes me aware? I cannot hurt my health, nor
+ tell a lie, nor commit a fraud, nor strike my brother, nor leave
+ the beggar in the ditch, nor parade my superiorities, without
+ knowing it by direct intimation. My pains are its rebukes, my
+ delights its sympathies, my hopes its suggestions, my sacrifices
+ its impost, my heavenly longings its apology for haunting me
+ forever. There is a power in which I live and move and have my
+ being, in which I eat, drink, breathe, sleep, wake, love and hate,
+ marry, and protect a home. Is it incapable of sustaining all my
+ functions of true religion on the spot as well as these? Do I have
+ these without a mediator, and must I travel for the rest? When I
+ undertake to breathe by tradition it will be time for me to get a
+ sense of God in the same way.
+
+The Dignity of Human Nature must be our watchword; of human _nature_,
+not of human _character_. For human _nature_ denotes the _capacities_ of
+man, what he _ought_ to be and _shall_ be, not what he _is_. Human
+character expresses only the undeveloped condition of man, and is
+therefore not to be taken as a final stand. This doctrine does not
+belong to a sect or a church, but to all mankind. It assumes an entirely
+new conception of the basis of religious faith; it makes a new
+beginning; it starts a new system; it exactly reverses the ancient order
+of thought, and builds up from a completely original foundation.
+
+The weightiest objections proceed from the undeveloped character of
+man. For example, the common saying that conscience is crude, confused,
+either does not exist at all, or erects inconsistent standards of right
+and wrong. But if a high criterion of morality is established, as it is,
+it has an educating and sustaining power. Every saint attests it; all
+the bibles of the world voice it; revelation owes to it its authority.
+Great souls do but raise the common level on which common souls tread;
+as the discovery of the ancient pavements in the Forum at Rome opens to
+ordinary feet the way that statesmen and heroes went. When I was in
+Salem, a young man who was very much addicted to drink, being
+remonstrated with, urged that he could not help it, that he was born so,
+just as another was born to praise and pray. His appetite for ardent
+spirits was just as natural to him as the preacher's appetite for
+spiritual things. His argument could not be refuted, but I always
+thought that in his hours of reflection, if he had any, he must have
+despised himself. At all events, the outside observer would class him
+with a lower order of humanity; the fixed rule of conscience being a
+universal judge.
+
+Again, the slowness of moral advance is flung in our teeth; the
+stubbornness of vice and evil. But we must give time for improvement and
+cultivation. All good things must wait--coal, petroleum, gas,
+electricity; the fertilizing qualities of guano were known and announced
+a full generation before the industrial world acted on the discovery;
+now millions of dollars are made by its importation. We are so used to
+thinking of the globe as round, and of men as living at the antipodes
+just as we live here, that we cannot believe that once it was deemed
+impossible for human creatures to live with their heads downward and
+their feet upward, and to walk like flies upon a ceiling. None but
+hopelessly crazy or foolish people were supposed to entertain such a
+notion. So the time will come when it shall be as natural for men to do
+right as to breathe; when all kinds of injustice, cruelty, and tyranny
+will be instinctively abandoned. When that time does come, men will be
+unable to believe that the ages ever were when men could make brutes of
+themselves or brutally treat each other. An eminent divine, commenting
+on a passage in Matthew, xviii., 15--"Moreover, if thy brother shall
+trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between him and thee
+alone; if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he
+will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the
+mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. And if he
+shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect
+to hear the church, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a
+publican,"--said: "This is equivalent to saying, 'You must begin all
+over again; must start fresh from the beginning.'" This was very bad
+exegesis, but it was excellent morality; even the "heathen man and the
+publican" holds in his bosom all the possibilities of human nature; and
+we are bound to believe that in time the like of him may be saintly.
+
+The decline of faith in religion, the passion for material
+things--money, fame, luxury,--is often cited as a proof that man is
+going downward; but may not this be a simple return to honesty and a
+rudimental integrity; a disposition to depend on one's self, and not on
+any mediator or redeemer? Let us build then in hope and faith, for,
+after all, these are the great architects. A listener to an eminent
+divine once said that when he got up to speak a radiance seemed to grow
+round his head; the great walls of a temple seemed to rise above him;
+the audience was composed of all nations, all sorts and conditions of
+men, and a choir of seraphs made the music; and yet this man spoke in a
+small, low-browed hall to a scanty audience, and the hymns were badly
+sung by a voluntary company. Such power has a great conviction; and when
+a deep conviction like that is extended and confirmed, the visible
+church will match the invisible, and shepherds will again hear the songs
+of angels.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. CONFESSIONS.
+
+
+The course of spiritual advance is traced with difficulty and
+hesitation. It is the most obscure phase of the general problem of
+progress, which is almost insoluble. There are so many currents and
+counter-currents; so many tributaries; so many swift torrents and still
+bays; so many times the stream seems moving in the opposite
+direction--it is not surprising if some have concluded that there was no
+progress at all, that we only moved in a circle, went over the same
+ground again and again, and even marched backwards; what some counted
+gain others counted loss. A keen examination suggests that on the whole
+advance has been made, allowance being conceded for many a turn and
+variation.
+
+The law of evolution may be considered established, but the method of
+evolution is hidden. The law of hereditary descent may be admitted, and
+yet the lines of hereditary descent are by no means obvious. Tendencies
+may even run in parallel lines, may aid each other, may confuse each
+other, may neutralize each other, may go very far or lie close at hand,
+and in any individual instance it is almost impossible to find how they
+work.
+
+In my own case the inferences of temperament followed each other. During
+the first fifty years of my life I was mainly under the influence of my
+father's temperament. I sang, wrote hymns and poems, sent pieces to the
+papers, was sanguine, inclined to take a happy view of all experiences;
+but at the same time I was conscious of another train of thought which
+struggled fitfully with the first, acquiring more and more power until
+at last it gained the ascendency, and I found myself more inclined to
+conservatism, as it is called, to a grave, sober, serious regard for
+existing institutions and modes of opinion. It is said that this might
+have been the effect of years, inasmuch as after middle life one is very
+apt to experience a change of sentiment. But in my own case time will
+hardly explain the phenomenon, for long before I came to middle age I
+was aware of this less hopeful tendency in my constitution. It was my
+mother's influence succeeding my father's. And though it never entirely
+prevailed, I can see how it may have shadowed my visions of the future.
+And it makes me somewhat distrustful of the entire sanity of my
+criticism. I am afraid of not being hopeful enough.
+
+I have sometimes suspected myself of a too critical disposition, a
+propensity to discover defects in men and opinion, to look at the dark
+side of systems that were repudiated; and in the effort to correct the
+aberrations of a literal estimate I may have gone too far in the
+opposite direction, rendering more than justice to antagonistic
+doctrines. But this, if it was an error, was certainly not an error to
+be ashamed of. For say what we will, the partial man is not the whole
+man, nor is cold perception true perception. There must be sympathy in
+every act of judgment, as Dr. Diman wisely wrote ("The Theistic
+Argument," p. 32): "In the pursuit of the highest truth not one faculty
+but all faculties need to be enlisted." Every system, however formal or
+dogmatical it may have become, had in the beginning its spiritual
+aspect; it was piously, if not humanely, meant; and in order to be
+rightly comprehended, should be surveyed from the inside. The most
+repulsive doctrine has something to urge in its favor, and it is the
+duty of the true rationalist to find out what it may be.
+
+If the inclination to take a common-sense view of opinions was derived
+from my mother's side, a strong democratic bent was primarily due to
+her. My grandfather was a poor boy who earned his fortune by the simple
+qualities of industry, integrity, perseverance, independence,
+faithfulness, honesty,--virtues which he bequeathed to his children.
+These inherited dispositions were encouraged by the social influences of
+the public school, which, in spite of its laborious method of imparting
+a knowledge of Latin and Greek, threw the lads together, thus breaking
+down artificial distinctions; and also by my experience at Harvard
+College, where scholarship was associated with mere manhood, and was
+cultivated by youth of all conditions. The anti-slavery agitation was a
+practical instructor in humanity, indicating as it did the widest
+sympathy of race. An assumption of the essential identity of all sorts
+of mind was a cardinal principle of transcendentalism, while my later
+experiences confirmed these early tendencies. My societies in Jersey
+City and New York were popular in their composition. The "Free Religious
+Association" was based on universal sentiments. The clerical profession
+was, in my day, broadly human, so that aristocratic proclivities had
+small hope of prevailing. In fact, the lessons which I learned from
+R. W. Emerson and Wendell Phillips sank deeply in, and became clearer as
+years went on.
+
+One can hardly say that learning is retrogressive when one thinks of Dr.
+Döllinger, of Germany; Ernest Renan, of France; Benjamin Jowett, Arthur
+P. Stanley, James Martineau, of England; but erudition must, as a rule,
+be conservative; for it associates the mind directly with the past,
+binds one down to facts of history, and lays great stress on the
+testimony of evidence. It still is true that abundance of luggage is a
+sign that one is far from home. And they who can move quickly with all
+this weight upon them must have extraordinary genius.
+
+An indifference to dogma is also characteristic of a speculative
+reformer; and I cannot recollect the time when I cared much for
+doctrinal differences. All questions were to me open questions. I had
+doubts about everything, and never suffered acute pain from such doubts.
+The influence of Jesus, the immortality of the soul, the existence of
+God, were always exposed to misgivings. Everything active was
+interesting to me, whether it looked toward "radicalism" or not. This
+was an advantage, not merely because it saved me from suffering, but
+because it enabled me to face all emergencies.
+
+But some one will say: Does not the love of truth count for anything?
+Yes, undoubtedly it does. But lovers of truth do not by any means belong
+to the same school, or look for light from the same quarter; some are
+Romanists, some Protestants; some have no religion at all. Lovers of
+truth are found in all denominations, from Calvinist to Unitarian, from
+Christian to Buddhist. Truth exists for us in layers. There are truths
+of the letter and truths of the spirit; there is truth to fact, and
+truth to fancy; there is truth to the individual soul, and truth to the
+public conscience; there is truth to the heart, to the moral sense, to
+the spiritual intuition: but it will not do to charge lack of
+truthfulness upon anybody simply because he does not hold the same
+opinion with ourselves. M. Renan somewhere says that in order to judge a
+system one must have been in it as a disciple, and outside of it as a
+critic. But then only a very extraordinary person can do this. As a
+disciple he must be earnest, intelligent, devoted; as a critic he must
+be without prejudice, without animosity, and without guile. Thus the
+point of view must of necessity be individual. There can be no general
+or absolute standard of judgment. One thing only is certain: the fact of
+spiritual progress; but what constitutes this progress nobody can tell.
+Since 1822 till now the change in _Unitarianism_ has been immense, and
+it has consisted in the gradual supremacy of reason over tradition, but
+it has been almost too sudden and too swift. Progress had better be
+slow, in order that it may be sure. One step at a time, for the reason
+that only one step at a time can be taken safely. We must not jump at
+conclusions. There must be unbounded catholicity of thought, but it must
+not be made up of indifference, concession, and idle compliance.
+
+Experience has taught me many things--this among others, that there is
+no final criterion of truth, not criticism, or "science," or philosophy,
+or liberty. There is no question any more of "destructive" and
+"constructive." The Supreme Power is always constructive, and the
+Supreme Power is sure at last to prevail. There is an old Greek fable,
+that Apollo once challenged Jupiter to shoot. The sun-god shot an arrow
+to the very confines of the earth; then Jupiter, at one stride, reached
+the limits of creation, and said, "Where shall I shoot?" We are not
+Jupiters; we are not Apollos; but we can take our stand and shoot our
+arrows a little way into the dark. The utmost we can do is to be
+steadfast in our own places; be faithful to our own calling; draw our
+own shaft to the head. Father Hecker said a brave thing to me when, on
+declining my request that he would speak before the Free Religious
+Association, he took the ground that in a few weeks Catholicism would
+enter Boston in triumph. I honored the Broad Churchman, who said to me
+once that he always preached Christ as an historical person, and wished
+he had a church big enough to hold all humanity; and I admired the
+Presbyterian clergyman who commended the sincerity of Dr. Briggs, whom
+some regarded as a heretic. Fidelity to one's own word and gift is the
+one thing needful here.
+
+Whether it be the tendency of modern thought, or whether it be not, to
+abandon the Christian religion and cast discredit on every kind of faith
+held by the churches and professors throughout the world, cannot, in
+this generation, be decided. In any event, we shall not be left
+desolate. For nature will remain, with its unfathomable resources of use
+and beauty. The mind will remain, with its infinite faculties of reason
+and imagination. The heart will remain, with its insatiable affections
+and desires. Conscience will remain, with its sense of duty. The
+sentiments of awe, wonder, admiration, worship, will not expire. The
+reconstructive powers will still be active, and every creative quality
+will continue in full operation. Knowledge, literature, art, will live
+and flourish in new manifestations; and no original capacity will lie
+unemployed.
+
+We should have learned by this time that nothing dies before its hour
+has come; that processes of recuperation keep even pace with processes
+of decay; that forms alone perish while principles endure; that living
+things become more mighty and glorious as they throw off encumbrances;
+that strength always in the end accompanies simplicity.
+
+The idea of God has passed through several phases, and each new phase
+has been a gain. The deity who was an individual has become a person;
+the attributes of personality, as commonly understood, have disappeared,
+so that pantheism has succeeded to a mechanical theism; God has become a
+name for our most exalted feelings, so that instead of saying "God is
+Spirit," some read "Spirit is God"; yet the ancient reverence more than
+persists, is on the increase. And if the course of disintegration of the
+old clumsy conception should go on, there need be no apprehension that
+loving veneration will decline.
+
+The future life is no longer associated with retribution, and
+immortality means opportunity instead of doom. Should the doctrine of
+moral influence follow upon the doctrine of spiritual progression, the
+essential significance of the tenet would be preserved, for that is
+ethical not individual.
+
+Prayer, too, is no more a begging for favors, or an act of
+intercession. Supplication for outward benefits has given place to
+petition for spiritual gifts, and this to pure aspiration, the desire
+for excellence; still the soul's passion is as deep as ever, perhaps
+deeper.
+
+If Mr. Tyndall's prophecy should be fulfilled, and we should come to
+"discover in that matter which we, in our ignorance, and notwithstanding
+our professed reverence for its Creator, have hitherto covered with
+opprobrium, the promise and potency of every form and quality of life,"
+then what we call matter would simply assume new properties commensurate
+with novel tasks. The properties themselves will remain as they were,
+and will in nowise change their peculiarity. The ancient attributes of
+mind will persist, whatever theory of their origin be adopted. The old
+sanctities will endure, and the burden of responsibility will fall upon
+another pair of shoulders.
+
+Thus every virtue will be maintained in complete vigor,--reverence,
+aspiration, trust, submission, confidence, serenity, patience,
+fortitude,--and nothing will be lost.
+
+Then there is the social world, in which we "live and move and have our
+being." This "encompasses us behind and before, and lays its hand upon
+us." There is not an hour in the day, hardly a moment of the hour, when
+the call of duty is not made upon us. None but the rarest spirits
+discharge the claims of mercy and brotherhood; people generally do not
+know what they are; repudiate them when presented. The preachers have
+more than they can do to induce practice of even the commonest virtues
+of good will. Humanity, in its grand aspects, is left to the writers of
+Utopias. Not a day passes that conscience is not over-worked, even when
+it is not perplexed by misgivings in regard to the amount or the kind of
+service it ought to render. Some have sought an escape in the immortal
+life from the demands of this; and some have denied the doctrine of
+another world because it drew attention away from this, and made the
+ills of the present seem light in view of some coming beatitude. In
+truth, the friends of that great hope will do well to remember that it
+is identical with moral attainment; that it is for great souls; that
+
+ The life of heaven above,
+ Springs from the life below.
+
+It is, to say the least, doubtful whether any future life can do more
+than ripen seeds that are sowed here, or whether spiritual perfection
+will owe anything essential to other events of time, while it is certain
+that nothing is sure to abide but what is born of love.
+
+Unless the doctrine of a future life can be used to reinforce the
+doctrine of moral attainment in the present state of existence, its
+power must depart. The cords of personal affection are not strong enough
+to hold the belief. The true inference from disbelief is not expressed
+in the words, "Let us eat and drink for tomorrow we die"; but in these,
+"I must work while it is day." This idea is a very old one. The air was
+full of it when I was a youth. It was the soul of all liberal faith. The
+_Westminster Review_, which was in full force in my early manhood,
+having begun in 1824, two years after my birth, was animated by it. The
+_Prospective Review_, the organ of the spiritual Unitarians, and edited
+by such men as James Martineau, John James Taylor, John Hamilton Thom,
+and Charles Wicksteed, a magazine aiming to "interpret and represent
+Spiritual Christianity in its character of the Universal Religion," was
+started about 1845. In its pages "spirituality" was intimately
+associated with "humanity." The books of F. W. Newman, "The Soul"
+(1849); "Phases of Faith" (1850); "Catholic Union" (1854), teemed with
+this conception. The charming verses of William Blake, published in his
+"Songs of Innocence," had somehow came to my knowledge.
+
+ To mercy, pity, peace, and love,
+ All pray in their distress;
+ And to these virtues of delight
+ Return their thankfulness.
+
+ For mercy, pity, peace, and love
+ Is God, our Father dear;
+ And mercy, pity, peace, and love
+ Is man, His child and care.
+
+ For mercy has a human heart;
+ Pity, a human face;
+ And love, the human form divine
+ And peace, the human dress.
+
+ Then every man of every clime
+ That prays, in his distress,
+ Prays to the human form divine
+ Love, Mercy, Pity, Peace.
+
+ And all must love the human form
+ In Heathen, Turk, or Jew;
+ Where mercy, love, and pity dwell,
+ There God is dwelling too.
+
+In this country the same idea prevailed in the early period of
+transcendentalism, and gradually worked its way into the common heart.
+Channing lent it an impulse. His brilliant nephew, William Henry
+Channing, exemplified it. The transcendental preachers all insisted on
+it. The "Dial" was charged with it. The most kindling literature of my
+growing days drew inspiration from it. Brook Farm, Fruitlands, and every
+other attempt at association was built upon it. Modern socialism owes to
+it the fascination it has for the heart; and we cannot listen to a
+sermon now that does not throb with the emotion it excites.
+
+For myself I must confess that I have no interest in another life, save
+as it encourages the endeavor after this human excellence. My mental
+constitution makes me insensible to sentimental considerations, to
+arguments addressed to private affections. As my first sermon was about
+the brotherhood of man, so my present hope is that love may increase,
+and that the reign of theology may be succeeded by that of charity.
+
+This was the dream of Abbot Joachim, in the twelfth century, the
+Cistercian monk, founder of the monastery of Floris, author of "The
+Everlasting Gospel." It was his notion that the existing era of
+Christianity was passing away. According to him, there were three
+dispensations, corresponding to the three persons in the Trinity--that
+of the Father, that of the Son, that of the Spirit,--the dispensation of
+Awe, the dispensation of Wisdom, and the dispensation of Love. The first
+was represented by Peter, the organizer, the patron saint of Romanism;
+the second, by Paul, the preacher of the Word, the bulwark of
+Protestantism; the third by John, the seer, the beloved disciple, the
+apostle of love. How much the pious man meant by this we cannot tell.
+His own contemporaries were divided in opinion; but a pretty fair
+commentary is furnished, in the fact that his writing was condemned by
+two Councils--that of the Lateran in 1215, and of Arles in 1260,--and
+that he has ever since been classed among the mystics--that is, the
+unintelligible and the unbalanced in mind.
+
+True the prophecy has not been literally fulfilled, inasmuch as the
+first two dispositions are still in force, and are likely to be for many
+a day, but the essence of it has come to pass. Romanism has been
+deprived of its temporal authority, and is reduced to a picturesque form
+of faith; its disciples easily throw off its bondage, while its new
+professors never put it on. Protestantism is decomposing under the
+influence of doubt and criticism. The thought of brotherhood is
+extending. I have small faith that the time will ever come when all
+people will worship under one form, or will accept the same mode of
+believing. I cannot think that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow,
+or that every tongue will make confession of his Lordship; but I do
+believe that the reign of justice and good-will shall be established. It
+is a great deal to hope for a time when the many will submit to the law
+of reason, becoming strong enough to withstand the force of authority in
+church or creed, and content with charity.
+
+We have gained much since Joachim's day. We have acquired knowledge,
+industry, civilization, freedom, enterprise, intelligence, the sense of
+mutual dependence. The bars of prejudice are being taken down. Class
+distinctions are being abolished. Newly discovered arts are bringing men
+nearer together, and weaving the ties of fraternity. All this is
+opportunity--opportunity that immediately precedes performance. When we
+see the road prepared for the Spirit, we may be sure that the Spirit
+itself is not far off.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ A
+
+ Abbot, F. E., 117, 282
+ Abbott, E. A., 256
+ Abolitionists, 45, 183
+ Adler, Felix, quoted, 268
+ Alcott, A. B., 52
+ Anti-slavery, 44, 46, 49
+ Arminians, 1
+ Arnold, M., 13
+
+
+ B
+
+ Barnard, F. A. P., 226
+ Barnard, T., 43
+ Bartol, C. A., 119
+ Baur, F. C., 57
+ Beecher, H. W., 256
+ Bellows, H. W., 63, 74, 76, 115, 116, 118, 184
+ Blake, Wm., quoted, 299
+ Boston, 17
+ Brace, C. L., 226
+ Brazer, John, 43
+ Broad Church, 71, 257, etc.
+ Brook Farm, 136, 227, 235, 236, 239, 240, 241, 244
+ Brown, John, 104
+ Browning, R., 4, 16, 145, 201
+ Brownson, Orestes, 203
+
+
+ C
+
+ Calvinism, 1
+ Carlyle, 7, 124
+ Carter, R., 226
+ Cary, Alice, 225
+ Cary, Phoebe, 225
+ Chadwick, J. W., 187
+ Channing, W. E., 47, 183, 186, 235, 300
+ Channing, W. H., 236, 300
+ Clarke, J. F., 44, 124
+ Clerical Profession, The, 146, etc.
+ Colonization, 181
+ Communion Service, 66, etc.
+ Comte, A., 217
+ Conference, Unitarian, 115-117
+ Curtis, G. W., 42
+
+
+ D
+
+ Darwin, C., 259
+ Deists, 61, 62
+ Dewey, Mary, 176
+ Dewey, Orville, 176, etc.
+ Dillaway, C. K., 20
+ Diman, J. L., quoted, 291
+ Divinity Hall, 26
+ Divinity School, 25-34
+ Dixwell, E. S., 20
+ Dwight, J. S., 236
+
+
+ E
+
+ Eliot, George, 138
+ Emerson, R. W., 21, 34, 42, 48, 68, 75, 122, 134, 135, 145, 166, etc.,
+ 196, 209, 245, 270, 292
+ Endicott, John, 36
+ Ethical Religion, 267, etc.
+ Europe, 131
+ Evolution, 145, 194, 217
+
+
+ F
+
+ Field, H. M., 227
+ Fourier, C., 240
+ Francis, Convers, 27
+ Fraternity Club, 128, 129
+ Free Religious Association, 119, etc., 124-126, 209, 292
+ Free Thought in America, 133, etc.
+ Frothingham, Ann G., 14-17
+ Frothingham, N. L., 2-14
+
+
+ G
+
+ Gardner, F., 20
+ Garrison, W. L., 44
+ Greeley, H., 109, 226, 227
+ Goethe, J. W. von, quoted, 280
+
+
+ H
+
+ Haeckel, E., 217
+ Harvard College, 21
+ Hawthorne, N., 42, 236, 246
+ Heath, 131
+ Hecker, I. T., 226, 295
+ Hedge, F. H., 257
+ Higginson, T. W., 35, 122
+ Hillard, G. S., 21
+ Hitchcock, R. D., 226
+ Holland, J. G., 227
+
+
+ I
+
+ Independent Society, 126-131, 132, 138, 139
+ Ingersoll, R. G., 227, 253, etc.
+
+
+ J
+
+ James, H., quoted, 155
+ Jersey City, 63, 65
+ Jewett, Sarah O., quoted, 255
+ Joachim (Abbot), 301
+ Johnson, S., 50, 210, etc.
+ Joy, Charles, 226
+
+
+ K
+
+ King, T. S., 42, 191, note.
+ Kirwan, R., 38
+
+
+ L
+
+ Latin School, 19
+ Laveleye, E. de, quoted, 272, 281
+ Leverett, F. P., 20
+ Longfellow, H. W., 51, 258, quoted
+ Loring, E. G., 245
+ Lyric Hall, 125, 128
+
+
+ M
+
+ Mahomet, 124
+ Martineau, J., 58, 165, 185, quoted, 275, 281, 282
+ Masonic Temple, 127
+ Maurice, F. D., 123, 264
+ McQueary, Rev. H., 256
+ Minister, Office of, in War Time, 106
+ Ministry in New York, 131
+ Mott, Lucretia, 121
+
+
+ N
+
+ National Conference, 85
+ Negroes, 111, 179
+ Newman, F. W., 282, 299
+ New York, 76
+ "North Church," 42
+ Noyes, G. R., 26
+
+
+ O
+
+ Osgood, S., 92, etc.
+
+
+ P
+
+ Paine, T., 248, etc.
+ Parker, T., 44, 54, etc., 70, 122, 134, 135, 203, 233, 282
+ Phillips, W., 9, 44, 292
+ Poe, E. A., quoted, 134
+ Prescott, W. H., 6, 21
+ Priests in the Riot, 113
+ _Prospective Review_, 299
+ Protestantism, 275, 277
+ Putnam, Eleanor, 36
+
+
+ R
+
+ Reid, Whitelaw, 227
+ Renan, J. Ernest, 58, 272-274, 276, 279, 293
+ Riot in New York, 107, etc.
+ Ripley, George, 227
+ Romanism, 273, etc.
+ Rood, O. N., 226
+ Royce, J., 282
+ Runkle, Mrs. Lucia, 227
+
+
+ S
+
+ Salem, 35, etc., 51
+ Sanitary Commission, 83
+ Scherb, E. V., 51
+ Schwegler, A., 57
+ Slavery, 47
+ Smith, S., 207
+ Stearns, G., 245
+ Stephen, Leslie, quoted, 249
+ Strauss, D. F., 217, 280
+ Sumner, C., 21, 221
+
+
+ T
+
+ Taine, H. A., 217
+ Taylor, Bayard, 226
+ Thackeray, W. M., 8
+ Ticknor, G., 6, 21
+ Torrey, H. W., 20
+ Transcendentalism, 47, 135-137, 214
+ Tübingen School, 57
+ Tyndall, J., 217, 297
+
+
+ U
+
+ Unitarianism, 256, 278
+ Unitarians, 47, 69, 102, 115, 117, 124, 183, 266
+
+
+ V
+
+ Voltaire, 62
+
+
+ W
+
+ War, Civil, The, 114
+ Washburn, E. A., 227
+ Washington, George (Gen.), 105
+ Washington, L. W., (Col.), 105
+ Wasson, D. A., 60, 119, 122
+ Webster, D., 21, 180
+ Webster, J. W., 22
+ Weiss, J., 122, 190, etc., 284, quoted
+ _Westminster Review_, 299
+ White, R. G. 226
+ Williams, R., 36
+ Winthrop, T., 110
+ Wise, H. A. (Gov.), 104
+ Woman, Rights of, 221
+
+
+ Y
+
+ Youmans, E. L., 226
+
+
+ Z
+
+ Zeller, E., 58
+
+
+
+
+
+WORKS BY OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM.
+
+
+THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY. 4th edition, 12mo, pp. 338. $1.50
+
+ "A profoundly sincere book, the work of one who has read largely,
+ studied thoroughly, reflected patiently."--_Boston Globe._
+
+STORIES FROM THE LIPS OF THE TEACHER. Retold by a Disciple. Sixth
+edition, 16mo, pp. 193. $1.00
+
+ "It is in style and thought a superior book, that will interest young
+ and old."--_Zion Herald_ (Methodist).
+
+STORIES OF THE PATRIARCHS. 3d edition. 16mo, pp. 232. $1.00
+
+ "The sublimest lessons of manhood in the simple language of a
+ child."--_Springfield Republican._
+
+THE CHILD'S BOOK OF RELIGION. For Sunday-Schools and Homes. New edition,
+revised. 16mo, pp. xii. 273. $1.00
+
+TRANSCENDENTALISM IN NEW ENGLAND. A History. Second edition. 8vo, pp.
+iv. + 394. $1.75
+
+ "The book is masterly and satisfying."--_Appleton's Journal._
+
+THE CRADLE OF THE CHRIST. A Study in Primitive Christianity. 8vo, pp.
+x. + 234. $1.50
+
+ "Scholarly, acute, and vigorous."--_N. Y. Tribune._
+
+THEODORE PARKER. A Biography. 8vo, pp. viii. + 588. $2.00
+
+GERRIT SMITH. A Biography. 8vo, pp. 371. $2.00
+
+ "A good biography, it is faithful, sufficiently full, written with
+ vigor, grace, and good taste."--_N. Y. Evening Post._
+
+BELIEF OF THE UNBELIEVERS. 12mo, sewed $0.25
+
+ Speaking of Mr. Frothingham's Sermons, the _Springfield Republican_
+ says: "No one of serious intellectual character can fail to be
+ interested and taught by these most thoughtful discourses."
+
+BOSTON UNITARIANISM. 1820-1840. A Study of the Life and Work of
+Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham. 8vo, pp. 272. $1.75
+
+ "The book, to a thoughtful reader, cannot fail to be elevating and
+ suggestive of high ideals, high thinking, and noble living."--_Newark
+ Advertiser._
+
+RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS. 1822-1890. 8vo. $1.50
+
+
+G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, NEW YORK AND LONDON
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections and Impressions, by
+Octavius Brooks Frothingham
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections and Impressions, by
+Octavius Brooks Frothingham
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Recollections and Impressions
+ 1822-1890
+
+Author: Octavius Brooks Frothingham
+
+Release Date: October 13, 2011 [EBook #37744]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Miller, tallforasmurf and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="center"><b><big>Transcriber's Note&nbsp;:</big></b> &nbsp; This etext differs from the original in that it<br />
+corrects three minor typographical errors that do not affect the meaning.</p>
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class='titlepages' style='margin-top:6em;'>
+<h1 style='letter-spacing:4px;'>
+ RECOLLECTIONS AND<br />IMPRESSIONS
+<br />
+<br />
+ 1822-1890
+</h1>
+<h2 style='margin-top:3em;'>
+ OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM
+</h2>
+<h3 style='font-size:x-small;'>
+ AUTHOR OF "BOSTON UNITARIANISM, 1820-1850, A STUDY OF THE LIFE<br />
+ AND WORK OF NATHANIEL LANGDON FROTHINGHAM,"<br />
+ "THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY," ETC., ETC.
+</h3>
+<hr style='width:6em;margin-top:8em;' />
+<h3>
+ G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>
+ NEW YORK&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONDON<br />
+</span><span style='font-size:x-small;'>
+ 27 WEST TWENTY-THIRD ST.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 KING WILLIAM ST., STRAND</span><br />
+
+ The Knickerbocker Press<br />
+
+ 1891</h3>
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span>
+</p>
+<div class='titlepages'>
+<h3>
+ <span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1891<br />
+
+ <span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+ OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM<br />
+</h3><h3>
+ The Knickerbocker Press, New York<br />
+<span style='font-size:x-small;'>
+ Electrotyped, Printed, and Bound by G. P. Putnam's Sons</span>
+</h3>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span>
+</p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='right'>I</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Parentage</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Education</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_19'>19</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Divinity School</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_25'>25</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IV</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Salem</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_35'>35</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>V</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Crisis in Belief</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_53'>53</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VI</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Jersey City</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_65'>65</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VII</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">New York</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_76'>76</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VIII</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">War</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_104'>104</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IX</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Free Religious Association</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_115'>115</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>X</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Progress of Religious Thought In America</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_133'>133</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XI</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Clerical Profession</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_146'>146</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XII</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">My Teachers</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_165'>165</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIII</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">My Companions</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_190'>190</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIV</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">My Friends</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_225'>225</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XV</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Present Situation</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_248'>248</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVI</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Religious Future of America</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_272'>272</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVII</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Confessions</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_289'>289</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#Page_303'>303</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS.</h2>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>I.<br />
+
+PARENTAGE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>My father was, as I have said elsewhere, a clergyman
+in Boston, Massachusetts, a Unitarian minister
+to the First Church, standing in a long line of men,
+of whom the earliest was severely orthodox, while
+he abhorred orthodoxy. Yet he was ordained without
+hesitation, was more than acceptable to the best
+minds through a service of thirty-five years, and continued
+more and more unorthodox to the end; so
+gradually and insensibly did the Puritan tenets disappear
+one by one until the shadow of them only
+remained. We are assured that by 1780 nearly all
+the congregational pulpits were filled by Arminians.
+In 1815, the year of my father's ordination, they
+were well domesticated in New England, Calvinism
+having lost its hold on the minds of thinking people,
+and none but keen-eyed watchers on the tower seeing
+what course opinion was taking. How far the tendency
+towards the moral and practical view of religion
+as distinct from the speculative view had gone,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+is well illustrated in my father's case. He was a
+man of excellent education, one of the best scholars
+in a distinguished class at Harvard, an enthusiast
+for intellectual cultivation, singularly refined in perception,
+an acute critic, a careful, precise, elegant
+writer. His tastes were pre-eminently literary. This
+is said in full view of the fact that he was a learned
+theologian, a pungent disputant, a zealous student
+of biblical researches, a faithful pastor.</p>
+
+<p>He was essentially a man of letters. His passion
+was for the Latin classics. The best edition of
+Cicero was on his shelves; the finest copy of Horace
+graced his book-case. His knowledge of the Greek
+literature and language was fair. He was fond of
+poetry of a stately and romantic description; was,
+himself, a poet of a gentle, meditative, spiritual cast,
+especially eminent as a composer of hymns written
+for church occasions, the dedication of meeting-houses,
+the consecration of ministers, many of them
+of permanent and general value, as both "liberal"
+and "orthodox" collections attest; while he has
+done as much as any man in his generation to
+elevate, purify, and console delicate and serious
+natures.</p>
+
+<p>His library of about three thousand volumes was
+exceedingly miscellaneous, illustrating the breadth
+of his interests and the activity of his mind. There
+were Bibles of choice editions and in every tongue.
+There were biblical commentaries, dictionaries, grammars.
+The Church Fathers were well represented.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+Church history was presented by its best narrators.
+But the bulk of the collection was secular. It contained
+copies of Addison, Johnson, Bayle, Carlyle,
+Milton, Bacon, Dante, Dickens, Emerson, Grote,
+Shakespeare, Goethe, Schiller, Hugo, Heeren, Hume,
+Iriarte, Michelet, Lessing, Kingsley, Macaulay, Longfellow,
+Plutarch, Pindar, Pope, Scott, Rousseau, Racine,
+Rückert, Rabelais, Tasso, George Sand, Thucydides,
+Theocritus, Virgil, Voltaire, Wieland, Pliny,
+Wordsworth, Wilkinson, Zschokke, Walt Whitman.
+They were very various. They commanded all extremes:
+Augustine and Anacreon; Aratus and <i>Annual
+Register</i>; Æschylus and Molière; Aristotle and
+Herrick; Seneca and Horace; Antoninus and Almanacs;
+Burton and Boccaccio. There was no pure
+metaphysics&mdash;a compendium or two of philosophy,
+a bit of Spinoza, of Kant, of Cousin, of Jouffroy,
+of Malebranche, the "Dialogues" of Plato&mdash;nothing
+of Schelling or Hegel. I find Proclus, and Jamblicus,
+and Böhme, and dramatic literature in Greek,
+Latin, French, German. Here is Burlamaqui on
+Law, and Erasmus Darwin, and Godwin's "Memoirs
+of Mary Wollstonecraft," and the Hitopadesa,
+and the "Hymns" of Orpheus, and Palæphatus,
+together with many a forgotten book.</p>
+
+<p>The favorite language next to English was German,
+then came French, then Latin, which was
+pretty well represented in its literature. Dr. Frothingham
+was a wide reader, but his finest gift was a
+power of penetrating to the heart of an author, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+power that was akin to genius. He called himself a
+<i>taster</i>. But every taster must take into his mouth
+some things that are unpleasant, and he did. He
+nibbled at Heine, but Heine's philosophy disgusted
+him. He nibbled at Browning, but Browning's
+lack of sensuous music did not satisfy his idea of
+poetry. His mind, trained in the old school, could
+not adapt itself to the new style of expression.</p>
+
+<p>He gladly turned his back on doctrines he did
+not like. He was spiritually minded, but soberly so,
+as if to be spiritually minded belonged to a special
+temperament; a Christian theist in all respects,
+though indifferent to many details of Christian
+doctrine; an optimist on principle as well as from
+instinct, inclined to put the most cheerful construction
+on the ways of divine Providence, and to look
+patiently on the moral conditions of human life; an
+unquestioning believer in Christ, immortality, the
+need of revelation, the supremacy of the religious
+and moral nature, the demand for the steady influence
+of the spiritual world to enlighten mankind on
+the truths of conscience no less than on the mysteries
+of faith. He was no seer, gazing on things
+unseen with the penetrating, inward eye; no prophet
+possessed by an overwhelming conviction of the
+absolute law; no regenerator believing that men
+must be lifted up from the earth by an interior
+renewal of soul; no reformer bent on changing the
+circumstances of society. He was an apostle of air,
+sunshine, and the mild, enticing summer shower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+which covered the wintry ground with the smiling
+grass and the sweet-smelling flowers. Reformers, of
+whatever school, were not to his taste, partly because
+their methods seemed to him violent, but partly
+also because their primary assumption that the
+world was out of joint did not command his sympathy.
+He could not think that the established institutions
+of the age ought to be subverted, even
+though they might be improved under enlightened
+teaching. Socially he was conservative, although
+by no means reactionary; disposed to see the soul
+of good in things evil, though not always as studious
+as one must needs be to "search it out." Rather he
+took it for granted, and was often impatient with
+those who felt keenly the evil but could not discover
+the good.</p>
+
+<p>High-minded he was rather than deep-souled;
+devout in sentiment, chivalrously moral in principle
+and in practice; ideal, poetic, delicate of sensibility,
+but not soaring of spirit; certainly not a spiritual
+enthusiast, as little a prosaic plodder; no mystic but
+no disciple of "common-sense." For the dignity,
+decency, purity, propriety of the clerical profession
+he had great regard, but as much on account of its
+social position as on account of its sanctity. It indicated
+the highest type of gentlemanliness, the finest
+style of personal character, a kind of exquisite courtliness
+of manhood, humanity of a finished stamp of
+elegance; and he resented everything like an admixture
+of ordinary philanthropy. It was in his view a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+descent to enter the arena of strife even for the purpose
+of removing an evil. Thence his dislike of
+Channing; his disapproval of Pierpont, otherwise a
+particular favorite of his; his disagreement with
+Parker, of whom he was fond. When the "Miscellanies"
+were published the writer sent a copy to his
+friend, who acknowledged the volume by a letter in
+which expressions of personal affection were curiously
+blended with antipathy towards the class of
+speculations with which Mr. Parker was identified.
+George Ripley and R. W. Emerson won and held his
+attachment to the end, but he never visited Brook
+Farm, and was deaf to solicitations to join the
+Transcendental Club.</p>
+
+<p>His friends were many and various&mdash;Emerson,
+Ripley, Francis, Hedge, Bartol, Stetson, Parkman,
+Longfellow, Felton, Hillard,&mdash;the list is long, for
+the sunny temper of the man drew all hearts to him
+and his warm affectionateness of disposition made
+him tenacious of good-will. He was interested in
+men as individuals not as members of a clique or
+party, and was not repelled by differences of opinion
+where his heart was engaged. On the whole, his
+sympathies were with conservatives like George
+Ticknor and W. H. Prescott, and the literary spirit
+mainly kept him in association with those. Where
+this spirit was wanting and there was divergence of
+sentiment there was no attempt at intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>Of interest in the denomination, the sect, the party
+name, he was absolutely devoid. He never attended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+the conventions or conferences of the Unitarian body
+or spoke in their deliberations. On anniversary
+week it was for many years his custom to visit New
+York, where no professional responsibility rested
+upon him, and where he could find recreations of
+a purely social kind. But at the "Boston Association"
+where he met friends one by one, and
+could talk half confidentially, with perfect freedom,
+in a conversational tone, he delighted to be
+present.</p>
+
+<p>For the rest, he was a man universally respected,
+admired, and beloved, mirthful and sportive, more
+than tolerant of gaiety, as a rule in excellent spirits,
+though subject, as such temperaments usually are,
+to moods of depression. Without private ambition
+and utterly destitute of vanity, his uneventful days
+were spent among his friends and his books. The
+round of clerical duties was even and monotonous;
+his calling had few excitements; even poverty had
+limits, and social iniquity was manageable in those
+times when relations were simple. The routine of
+parochial service was such as a friendly man of
+quick sympathies and ready speech could easily
+discharge in a few hours of each week, nor was
+the transition violent from it to the quiet library,
+the companionship of Cicero, Shakespeare, Milton,
+Walter Scott, Herder, Rückert. The love of art,
+society, literature, was not inconsistent with a love
+of the Saviour; and though as a matter of taste he
+would not have spoken of a sonata of Beethoven in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+a sermon, there was nothing in his philosophy to
+render secular allusions improper.</p>
+
+<p>His literary predilections were somewhat at the
+mercy of his sense of beauty, as if he had an eye to
+artistic effect quite as much as to intellectual justice,
+as if the firm lines of logical discernment were blurred
+by the passion for poetic or scenic grace. Of the two
+famous German writers about whom opinions were
+divided, he greatly preferred Schiller to Goethe,
+probably because the former was glorious, ardent,
+declamatory. Of the two eminent English novelists
+whom all the world was reading, Dickens was his
+choice far above Thackeray, perhaps for the reason
+that Dickens had color and warmth of sentiment,
+while Thackeray seemed to him cold, skeptical, and
+cynical. The flow of eloquence, the charm of dramatic
+style made him relish authors as radically
+unlike as Carlyle, Ruskin, and Macaulay, rendering
+him unmindful of qualities in their cast of thought
+which he might have disapproved of if less seductively
+presented. When a lady objected to
+Macaulay on the score of his material ethics,
+Dr. Frothingham was too much captivated by
+Macaulay's manner to criticise his philosophy, and
+he let the philosophy go. It sometimes looked
+as if the way in which things were said was of
+more importance in his view than the things themselves;
+but it was not so, for he could respond
+to ideal sentiments when they offered themselves
+fairly to his mind, and his moral indignation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+against an act of flagrant turpitude was quick
+and hot.</p>
+
+<p>With politics, whether speculative or practical, he
+gave himself small concern, for in his day politics
+were hardly an honorable calling. He belonged to
+the Whig party, as it was then called, because it
+comprised the greater number of educated men&mdash;scholars,
+divines, lawyers, physicians, judges, and
+people of consideration from their position in society.
+The Republican party in Massachusetts was
+not formed till his public life was nearly ended, and
+we may doubt whether he would in any case have
+connected himself with it, for its aims and purposes
+were hardly such as he could have gone along with.
+The well-known sentiment, ascribed to Wendell
+Phillips, "Peace if possible, Truth at any rate,"
+he would in all probability have reversed so as to
+read, "Truth if possible, Peace at any rate"; not
+because the search for truth was difficult, and peace
+furnished the most promising conditions for finding
+it, but because peace was preferable in itself as being
+stable and quiet. He was not a fighter; he disliked
+the noise of battle; his horror of anti-slavery agitation,
+as of all other, was constitutional; and even if
+he had been convinced of the slave's degradation, no
+mode of redress that was proposed commended itself
+to his gentle, apprehensive mind. To him the chief
+interest of society was enlightenment associated
+with refinement; the needed influence was that of
+education. He was a delicately organized, sensitive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+man, fond of repose, happy in his temperament, in
+his tastes, in his occupation, in his social position, in
+his relationships, in his home. He had his disappointments
+and sorrows like other men, but he did
+not repine. His latter years were afflicted with
+total blindness, accompanied by constant distress
+and steadily increasing pain; but his friends never
+failed to find him cheerful; the companion who ministered
+to his daily necessities and culled from books
+and periodicals the materials for his entertainment,
+seldom had reason to complain of his petulance; the
+visitor could with difficulty be brought to believe
+that the man was living in the presence of death,
+and was exposed to frightful phantoms due to a
+slowly decomposing brain.</p>
+
+<p>His æsthetic tastes were active, as may be supposed,
+and would have been keen if there had been
+opportunity for cultivating them, and leisure to pursue
+them. The pictures that adorned his parlor
+walls were not distinguished as works of art, but
+they were pure in sentiment, they showed a love of
+color, and of the highest truth. There was not much
+fine painting at that time in America, and what there
+was required for its fair appreciation more training
+and experience than was possessed by one immersed
+in the cares of an exacting profession and interested
+also in literary pursuits. Mr. Frothingham's artistic
+taste was, besides, so much controlled by moral feeling
+that he could not be critical of form. Of art
+for its own sake he had no conception, and could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+have none, for that cry which voices the demands of
+technical execution had not been raised; but even if
+it had been he would have felt no sympathy with
+any kind of excellence that was not directly associated
+with the moral sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>His taste in music was much like his taste in
+painting,&mdash;that is to say, it was uneducated and unscientific.
+To the great music,&mdash;that of the intellect
+and the soul,&mdash;the compositions of the masters, of
+Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, he was indifferent;
+but the music of the heart, of feeling,
+emotion, elevated passion,&mdash;the Scotch songs, the
+Irish melodies, the English lays, madrigals, glees,
+was his delight. He was especially fond of religious
+airs. The oratorios of "The Creation" and
+"The Messiah" he was never tired of hearing. His
+voice was melodious, and he was fond of using it.
+His organist taught him the principles of his own
+art, and hours were spent at a parlor-organ in playing
+favorite hymn-tunes, the melody of which he
+sang as he played. He amused his children by trilling
+nursery ditties, and joined his boys as they performed
+glees from the "Orphean Lyre," sometimes
+singing with the heart quite as much as with the
+understanding. His joyous nature expressed itself
+instinctively in song. His whole nervous system responded
+to it. He was transported out of himself
+by sweet strains, and fairly trembled under the influence
+of divine harmonies.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Frothingham's love of dramatic art amounted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+to a passion, but the art must be high as well as
+pure. Tragedy he did not like. All of the Shakespearian
+plays he was critically familiar with, but he
+loved "The Tempest" best, as uniting poetry with
+cheerfulness in fullest measure. The lines he wrote
+on the restoration of the Federal Street Theatre expressed
+the depth of his interest. A religious
+society, afterwards the "Central Church" in Winter
+Street, was gathered here. Of this kind of
+enterprise the poet says:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">More reverence than befits us here to tell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We yield to courts where sacred honors dwell.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But have not they their places? Have not we?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Has not each liberal province leave to be?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The "Lecture-Room" he had little respect for,
+none at all for the "Variety Show." To every
+device he wishes a cordial farewell, exclaiming:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Restored! Restored! Well known so long a time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">These buried glories rise as in their prime.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our tastes may change as fickle fashions-fly,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But art is safe: the Drama cannot die.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">More than restored! Whate'er the pen since wrought<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of loftiest, sprightliest, here that wealth has brought.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whate'er the progress of the age has lent<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of purer taste and comelier ornament,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To this our temple it transfers its store,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And makes each point shine lovelier than before.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But the drama must be clean:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But more yet,&mdash;and how much! We claim a praise<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Playhouse knew not in the ancient days.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Own us, ye hearts with moral purpose warm!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our word Renewal adds the word Reform.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span><hr style="width: 45%;" /><br />
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come, friends of Virtue! Share the feast we spread.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It loads no spirits, and it heats no head.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But rouses forth each power of mind and soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With food ambrosial and its fairy bowl.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<hr style="width: 45%;" /><br />
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Hearts are improved by Feeling's play and strife;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Refined amusement humanizes life.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So wrote the Sages, whom the world admired;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So sang the Poets, who the world inspired;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Why in New England's Athens is decried<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What old Athenian culture thought its pride?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Thus Righteousness and Peace are made to kiss
+each other. Art and Virtue walk hand in hand.
+The sole condition is that art shall be virtuous and
+that virtue shall be artistic. There was a singular
+blending in his mind of the sacred and the secular.
+Perhaps Matthew Arnold's definition of religion as
+"morality touched with emotion" comes as near expressing
+Dr. Frothingham's conception as any.
+There must be morality; that is cardinal; that lies
+at the foundation of all systems; that must be strict
+and high. But emotion is indispensable also. This
+runs into praise, the love of goodness, the worship
+of the highest. This imparts warmth, glow, passion,
+the upward lift that inspires. Morality alone is
+cold, emotion alone is apt to be visionary. But the
+two united propel the ship, one serving as ballast to
+keep it steady, and one as sails to catch the winds of
+heaven.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My mother was an example of pure character.
+She laid no claim whatever to literary talent. Indeed
+she had none. I cannot associate her with
+books of any special description, but I can always
+associate her with goodness, with humility, sincerity,
+duty, kindness, pity, and simplicity. Truthfulness
+was her great virtue, and was saved from bluntness
+only by her delicate feeling for others and her inborn
+politeness. The severest rebuke I ever received from
+her was on account of a sharp arraignment of merchants
+in a youthful sermon, which to her seemed presumptuous.
+Her household cares, the nurture of her
+children (she had seven, five sons and two daughters,
+all of whom she trained most carefully like a devoted
+mother), the family visitings, the parish calls,
+missions among the poor, occupied the day. She
+would sit for hours knitting or sewing, or in an armchair
+before the coal fire silently musing. She was
+quiet, reserved, old-fashioned in her sentiments, but
+with a great fund of inward strength, which came
+out on emergencies. I shall always remember her
+ceaseless solicitude for an unfortunate elder brother
+of mine who had for years been an anxiety and a
+trouble. When he died in early manhood, after
+nursing him tenderly, she softly closed his eyes, and
+preserved the memory of him in her heart. Her
+chamber window in the country looked upon his distant
+grave, the little white stone over which kept
+him before her eye who was always in her thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>She accepted the existing order of things because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+it was established, disliking experiments, however
+humane, for the reason that they had not been tested;
+and if she had misgivings, she kept them to herself
+not daring to set up her private feelings in opposition
+to the will of the Supreme, the question whether
+the existing order expressed the will of the Supreme
+never being raised by her.</p>
+
+<p>She was Unitarian, having so been taught, but
+speculative matters were out of her reach as well as
+uncongenial with her sphere. Her faith was of the
+heart, and all the reason for it she had to give was an
+uplifted life, "unspotted from the world." Of creeds
+she knew nothing, not that she was deficient in mind,
+but because they seemed to her to be affairs of criticism,
+with which she had nothing to do. Her concern
+was with practical things, and conduct was,
+with her, more than seven eighths of life. Even the
+very mild decoction of theology that was administered
+from Sunday to Sunday in Chauncy Place was
+sometimes too much for her. She was a practical
+Christian, if there ever was one.</p>
+
+<p>Her love of nature was genuine. As a young
+woman she could distinguish the colors of a flying
+bird. When she had a house of her own in the
+country, she preferred a spot remote from the world
+of society; went there as early as possible in the spring,
+and stayed as late in the autumn as she could. She
+delighted in the place; loved the air, the trees, the
+smell of the ground. She enjoyed her garden; liked
+to see plants grow. Every morning after breakfast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+she went out to inspect the grounds, and came
+back laden with modest flowers; in the fall with
+pine cones, the flame of which she enjoyed. On her
+last evening, quite unaware of her coming end, she
+sat on the piazza, and looked at the sunset, wrapped
+in shawls, though it was midsummer, for she was
+weak and emaciated but patiently tranquil.</p>
+
+<p>Her habits were simple, not from parsimony but
+from taste. She cared nothing for decoration or display.
+She spent no more than was necessary on dress
+or furniture. She was fond of old-fashioned, solid
+things. In the midst of abundance, her appetite was
+for plain food, yet she was no ascetic or prude, but
+a largehearted, sensible woman, sober and serious
+but genial too.</p>
+
+<p>Browning makes Paracelsus say:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'T is only when they spring to heaven that angels<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Reveal themselves to you; they sit all day<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beside you, and lie down at night by you,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who care not for their presence,&mdash;muse or sleep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all at once they leave you and you know them.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This is in a measure true. Death is a great revealer.
+Unfortunately it is a great deceiver also,
+putting wings on very earthly bodies. But in this
+instance, the qualities were all there in the living
+form, and all clearly visible to those who sat all day
+beside my mother. Death did but brush away a
+little film that hung before distant eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Until near middle life I had the example and advice
+of these dear spirits. It is my privilege to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+their blood in my veins. That was my best endowment,
+and kept me always hopeful of a better future
+in the time to come. The dream of a nobler age for
+literature, art, science, humanity, came directly from
+my father. The desire to do something to make the
+dream an actual fact, to prove myself as of some
+service in the world, came from my mother. His
+was the love of intellectual liberty. Hers was the
+passion for practical accomplishments. He was a
+scholar. She was a worker.</p>
+
+<p>Both had thoughts deeper than they could express.
+Both were utterly sincere in their calling,
+and the limitations of their age alone confined their
+advance. The times were quiet then; the world
+was small and disconnected; Boston was a little
+place and shut off even from American cities by difficulties
+of travel and by exorbitant rates of postage.
+Thus responsibility was mainly confined to individuals.
+There were no wearing duties; no perplexing
+cares; even railroad disturbances did not worry, for
+there was no railroad speculation, and no railroad
+system. Hours were early, dinner was at two or
+half-past, tea at six or seven, the evening ended at ten,
+and was spent with books, melodious music, or playful
+games of amusement, not of instruction. There were
+few social gatherings; balls were very rare, seldom
+lasting later than eleven o'clock. There was an
+occasional concert, and here and there a theatre, but
+there were no great dinner parties. Social problems
+were exceedingly simple; the classes were divided by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+lines that nobody attempted to pass over. Socialism
+was unborn, and labor agitations were unknown.
+In a word, there was such a thing as leisure, and this
+was used chiefly for the cultivation of the mind.</p>
+
+<p>My father was greatly interested in the education
+of his boys; watched all their attainments; taught
+them French; encouraged their learning how to box,
+and fence, and swim; while my mother shed an atmosphere
+of peace over the whole household. She made
+one joke only, as far as my memory serves me,&mdash;and
+I mention it here lest any one should suppose there
+was a lack of sunshine in her nature. My father
+was very fond of "vöslauer," an Austrian red wine.
+When the last bottle was produced my mother,
+said archly, "your <i>face</i> will <i>lower</i> when it is all drunk
+up." It was not much of a joke, but a small jest will
+show the spirit of fun quite as well as a large one.</p>
+
+<p>There was a singular combination of aspiration
+with peace at that time. Probably there is as much
+aspiration now as there was then, perhaps more;
+but it is associated with social reform rather than
+with personal perfection; there is peace, too, at the
+present day, but it is harder to get at and needs to
+be sought most often in private homes; the inward
+peace is found in all periods.</p>
+
+<p>How the principles then formed would bear the
+strain of a later age or a larger sphere remained to
+be proved. Fifty years ago the modern era with its
+complications and perplexities could not even be
+suspected. The foundations alone could then be laid.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+<h2>II.<br />
+
+EDUCATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Of the primary schools it is unnecessary to speak.
+They were of the same kind that were established
+in Boston at that period. Indeed I can recollect but
+two, one, a child's school of boys and girls, kept by
+a Miss Scott, at the corner of Mt. Vernon Street and
+Hancock; the other a boys' school kept by a Mr.
+Capen, a poor hump-backed cripple who could not get
+out of his chair, but wheeled himself about the room,
+and kept on his table a cowhide, which was pretty
+generously exercised. The school was on Bedford
+Street behind the "Church of Church Green." A
+little alley-way ran along in the rear of the church
+through which I used to go to the school-house.</p>
+
+<p>The Latin School was an old institution brought
+hither by Rev. John Cotton, who remembered the
+Free Grammar School founded in Lincolnshire,
+England, by Queen Mary, in which Latin and Greek
+were taught. It was established here, in 1635, five
+years after the landing of Winthrop, two or three
+years before Harvard College. When I was there,
+it stood on School Street, opposite the Franklin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+statue. It had a granite front and a cupola. The
+head-master was Charles K. Dillaway, an excellent
+scholar, a faithful teacher, an agreeable man. He had
+to resign in consequence of ill-health. The tutors
+were Henry W. Torrey and Francis Gardner, who
+afterwards became head-master. Both were pupils of
+the school. Mr. Frederick P. Leverett, author of
+the Latin Lexicon, was chosen to succeed Mr. Dillaway,
+but died before assuming the office. The next
+head-master, during my course, was Epes Sargent
+Dixwell, a most accomplished man, an elegant scholar,
+a gentleman of the world, very much interested, as
+I remember, in the plastic art of Greece. He is still
+living, and amuses himself by writing Greek. Mr.
+Dixwell held office till 1851, when he established a
+private school. The discipline of the Latin School
+was strict but mild. Corporal punishment was the
+unquestioned rule, but it was never harshly administered,
+though the knowledge that it might be undoubtedly
+did a good deal toward stimulating the
+ambition of the scholars. Here and there no doubt
+a boy exasperated the teacher by idleness or disorder;
+possibly at moments the teacher was nervous
+and irritable. I recollect a single instance in which
+he was over-sensitive, too prone to take offence,
+which fastened suspiciously upon some individual
+scholar; but injustice was a very rare occurrence.
+We learned Greek and Latin, the rudiments of algebra,
+writing and declamation; but the best part of
+the education I received in those days was an atmosphere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+of elegant literature, derived from friends of
+my father. I used to see William H. Prescott taking
+his walk on Beacon Street, in the sun, and have
+often sat in his study in his tranquil hours, and heard
+him talk. The beautiful library of George Ticknor,
+at the head of Park Street, was open to me, and I can
+see his form now as he walked on the Common.
+George S. Hillard, the elegant man of letters, was a
+familiar figure on the street. Charles Sumner, then
+a young law student, strode vigorously along, his
+manner even then suggesting the advent of a new
+era.</p>
+
+<p>In 1846, I listened to his oration before the Phi
+Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University on the
+Scholar [Pickering]; the Jurist [Story]; the Artist
+[Allston]; the Philanthropist [Channing]; and his
+bold declamation was strangely in contrast with the
+academical gown that he wore. Daniel Webster
+used to stalk by our house, the embodiment of the
+Constitution, the incarnation of law, the black locomotive
+of the train of civilization. Ralph Waldo
+Emerson often sat at my father's table diffusing the
+radiance of serene ideas, and heralding the diviner
+age that was to come.</p>
+
+<p>From the Latin School to Harvard College was an
+easy transition. There existed an impression that
+Latin-School boys might take their ease for the first
+year at Cambridge, because they were so well prepared,
+but I found enough to do; there was the
+great library, there were the advanced studies, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+was the more perfect training. The President was
+Josiah Quincy, the elder. Henry W. Longfellow
+was professor of modern languages; Cornelius C.
+Felton, the ardent philhellene, taught Greek; Charles
+Beck, a German, taught Latin; Benjamin Peirce was
+professor of mathematics; James Walker was an instructor
+in intellectual and moral philosophy; Joseph
+Lovering, teacher in chemistry. Among the tutors
+were Bernard Roelker, in German; Pietro Bachi, in
+Italian; Francisco Sales, in Spanish.</p>
+
+<p>The new buildings now in the college yard were
+not erected; Holworthy (1812), Stoughton (1804-1805),
+Hollis (1763), Harvard (1766), Holden (1734),
+Massachusetts Hall (1720), University Hall (1812-1813)
+were in existence. There were no athletics;
+there was no gymnasium; there was no boating;
+there was little base-ball. There were few literary
+societies; so that we were driven back mainly upon
+intellectual labor. The professors' houses were
+always open, and there was choice society in the
+town. I recollect particularly well going to the
+house of John White Webster, who was executed
+later for the murder of Dr. Parkman. He was very
+fond of music and had a daughter who sang finely,
+besides being handsome. She afterwards married
+Mr. Dabney, of Fayal. The Doctor was a nervous
+man, high strung, but good-natured and polite.
+His fatal encounter with Dr. Parkman I always
+attributed to a sudden outbreak of passion.</p>
+
+<p>Within the grounds of the college we were quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+studious, companionable among ourselves. There
+was no rioting, no excess of any kind. Walking and
+swimming in the river Charles were our chief recreations.
+Connection with Boston was infrequent and
+difficult, as there was no railroad. The Sundays
+could be passed in the city if the student brought a
+certificate that he went regularly to church; otherwise
+it was expected that the First Church, or one
+of the others, should be frequented. The instruction
+was of a cordial, friendly, courteous, and humane
+kind; the professors were enthusiastic students in
+their departments. I well recollect Professor Longfellow's
+kindness; Professor Felton's ardor (I visited
+Pompeii with him in 1853). Charles Beck was a
+burning patriot in the war. Pietro Bachi's great
+eyes lighted up and glowed as he talked about Dante.
+Bernard Roelker afterwards became a lawyer in
+New York. Charles Wheeler and Robert Bartlett,
+tutors, both rare spirits, died young. On the whole,
+life at Harvard College was exceedingly pleasant,
+and a real love of learning was implanted in young
+men's bosoms.</p>
+
+<p>The corner-stone of Gore Hall was laid in 1813.
+The books were moved into the library in the summer
+vacation of 1814. There were forty-one thousand
+volumes at that time.</p>
+
+<p>In the early part of my career, I took my meals in
+Commons, at an expense of two dollars and a quarter
+a week, the highest price then paid. Commons was
+abolished for a time in 1849, it being found difficult<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+to satisfy the students, who for some years had
+boarded in the houses in the neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>There were excitements too. Though there was
+no gymnasium, or boating, and little foot-ball, base-ball,
+or cricket (these games were all very simple
+and rudimentary), there were the clubs, the "&#913;&#916;&#934;,"
+still a secret society, and occupying a back upper
+room, to which we mounted by stealth,&mdash;the same
+room serving for initiations and sociables,&mdash;was exceedingly
+interesting in a literary point of view. There
+were papers on Scott, Byron, Wordsworth, delightful
+conversations, anecdotes, songs.</p>
+
+<p>The "Institute of 1770" taught us elocution, and
+readiness in debate; the "&#934;&#914;&#922;," no longer a secret
+society, and no longer actively literary, hung over us
+like a star, stimulating ambition and inciting us to
+excellence in scholarship.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether it was a delightful life; a life between
+boyhood and manhood; of purely literary ambition,
+of natural friendship. There was no distinction of
+persons, no affected pride. We found our own level,
+and kept our own place. Money did not distinguish
+or family, only brains. There was no care but for
+intellectual work; there was no excess save in study.
+Expenses were small, indulgences were few and
+simple. The education was more suited to those
+times than to these, when culture must be so much
+broader, and social expectations demand such varied
+accomplishments.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
+<h2>III.<br />
+
+DIVINITY SCHOOL.</h2>
+
+
+<p>To enter at once the Divinity School was to start
+on a predestined career. From childhood I was
+marked out for a clergyman. This was taken for
+granted in all places and conversations, and my own
+thoughts fell habitually into that groove. There
+was nothing unattractive in the professional career
+as illustrated by my father. I was the only one of
+a large family of brothers who pursued the full
+course of studies at Cambridge, or who showed a
+taste for the scholastic life. An appetite for books
+rather than for affairs pointed first of all to a literary
+calling, while a fondness for speculative questions,
+a leaning towards ideal subjects, and a serious turn
+of mind naturally suggested at that time the pulpit.
+An inward "experience of religion," which in some
+other communions was regarded as essential to the
+character of a minister of the gospel, was not demanded.
+Religion was rather moral and intellectual
+than spiritual, a matter of mental conviction
+more than of emotional feeling. The clerical profession
+stood very high, higher than any of the three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+"learned professions," by reason of its requiring in
+larger measure a tendency towards abstract thought,
+an interest in theological discussions, and a steady
+belief in doctrines that concerned the soul. Literature
+was not at that period a profession; there was
+no Art to speak of except for genius of the first
+order like that of Allston or Greenough. Men of
+the highest intellectual rank, whatever they may
+have become afterwards, tried the ministry at the
+start. The traditions of New England favored the
+ministerial calling. The great names, with here and
+there an exception, were names of divines. The
+great books were on subjects of religion; the popular
+interest centred in theological controversy; the
+general enthusiasm was aroused by preachers; the
+current talk was about sermons. The clergy was
+a privileged class, aristocratic, exalted.</p>
+
+<p>Divinity Hall had been dedicated in August,
+1826. It was situated on an avenue about a quarter
+of a mile from the college yard. It contained, besides
+thirty-seven chambers for the accommodation
+of students, a chapel, a library, a lecture-room, and
+a reading-room; it stood opposite the Zoölogical
+Museum. Before it was a vacant space used for
+games. Behind it was meadow land reaching all
+the way to Mr. Norton's. Just beyond it was Dr.
+Palfrey's residence. George Rapall Noyes, D.D.,
+was elected in May, 1840, with the title of "Hancock
+Professor of Hebrew and Oriental Languages, and
+Dexter Lecturer on Biblical Literature." He had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+already translated the poetical books of the Old Testament,
+and it was his eminence as a translator which
+had won him fame while a minister at Petersham.
+It was his duty also to explain the New Testament,
+and in addition to give lectures in systematic theology.
+Besides all this he was to preach in the
+college chapel a fourth of the year. He steadily
+grew in the respect and attachment of the young
+men; his authority in the lecture-room was very
+great; his opinions were carefully formed and precisely
+delivered; and his shrewd, practical wisdom
+was long remembered by his pupils. Convers
+Francis, D.D., appointed to the "Parkman Professorship,"
+after the resignation of Henry Ware, Jr.,
+was his associate. The branches assigned to him
+were ecclesiastical history, natural theology, ethics,
+the composition of sermons, and instruction in the
+duties of a pastor; besides all this he was to preach
+half of the time in the college chapel. Dr. Francis
+was an accomplished scholar and a faithful teacher.
+The best man, too, for his position, at a time when
+in an unsectarian school it was exceedingly desirable
+that the professors should harmonize all tendencies;
+for with a strong sympathy with "transcendentalism,"
+as it was then called, he had been a most successful
+parish minister, a very acceptable preacher,
+and a man in whom all the churches had confidence.</p>
+
+<p>At Cambridge, owing to the influence of Buckminster,
+Ware, and Norton, Unitarian opinion prevailed,
+though the controversial period had passed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+by when I was there. The clouds of warfare no
+longer discharged lightning; there was no roll of
+thunder; only a faint muttering betrayed the former
+excitement; and the memory of old conflicts hovered
+round the spots where the fights had been hottest.
+Marks of strife were still visible on texts,
+and chapters were scarred with wounds. Comment
+still lingered near the passages where polemics had
+raged, and the blood burned as we read the tracts or
+studied the essays of the champions we admired.</p>
+
+<p>It was impossible to forget the interpretations
+that had been given to words or phrases. A strictly
+scientific study, either of the Bible or the creed, was
+therefore out of the question. But the course of
+exercises was broad, generous, inclusive, as far as
+this was feasible. The bias was decidedly unorthodox,
+yet without the bitter temper of opposition.
+The old system was rather set aside than attacked.
+It was assumed to have been vanquished in the fair
+field. The professors were liberal in their views. A
+small but serviceable library furnished the students
+with a certain amount of needed material, the college
+library was freely opened to them, and the
+collections of the professors were gladly placed at
+their disposal. The days were fully occupied with
+lectures, recitations, discussions, exercises in writing
+out and taking of notes. Once a week there was a debate
+on some general theme not connected with the
+topics of the class-room; and at the latter part of the
+course there was special training in the composition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+and delivery of sermons, accompanied by a brief
+experience of extemporaneous speaking. The Unitarian
+ministry was alone contemplated; no wide
+divergence from it was encouraged, and the conservative
+methods of interpretation were the ones
+recommended. Some knowledge of Greek and Latin
+being presupposed, the study of Hebrew was made
+the one study of language, and this was pursued
+with the best available helps. Biblical criticism
+naturally took a prominent place in the current
+curriculum, under the guidance of the most distinguished
+authorities; books of every school were
+recommended, whether old or new, Catholic or
+Protestant, "conservative" or "liberal," Horne, Tholuck,
+De Wette being consulted in turn. The New
+Testament and "Historical Christianity" were taken
+for granted; and these meant belief in miracles,
+which were defended against rising objections of
+the Strauss and Paulus schools, the former holding
+by the "mythical" theory, the latter favoring the
+notion of a natural explanation of some sort. The
+hostility towards rationalism was decided. This
+was forty years ago, before the "historical method,"
+as it was called, instituted by Baur, Schwegler,
+Zeller, Sneckenburger, and the <i>Theologische Jahrbücher</i>,
+had any expositor in this country, long
+before the Dutch school, the later French school&mdash;Kuenen,
+Reville, Reuss, Nicolas, Renan,&mdash;came out.
+The great issue was the credibility of the miracles
+of the Old and New Testaments.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+The half-monastic life we led at Divinity Hall cut
+us off a good deal from social amenities, reform agitations,
+attempts to change institutions, and even
+from the deeper currents of religious sentiment.
+None but the very observant took note of Brook
+Farm, or heeded the movements in behalf of Association
+that were going on in other communities.
+Whatever was outside of the "Christian" ministry
+concerned us but little. The professors did not
+direct our eyes to the mountain tops or call attention
+to the bringers of good tidings from other quarters
+than the Christian Revelation, as explained by
+its scholars and writers. Even such a phenomenon
+as Emerson did not make a profound impression on
+the average mind.</p>
+
+<p>A tone of old-fashioned piety pervaded the establishment.
+A weekly prayer-meeting, always attended
+by one of the professors, though officially rather
+than as a stimulator, was much in the manner and
+spirit of similar exercises at Andover. The students
+were cautioned against excessive intellectualism.
+Several of them spent their Sundays in teaching
+classes of the young in the neighboring towns, in
+ministering to the sick in hospitals, or in carrying
+the monitions of conscience to the criminals in the
+prison at Charlestown. The aims of a practical ministry
+were thus kept in view as well as the circumstances
+of the time permitted. Of course the school
+could not be a philanthropic institution any more
+than it could be independent or scientific. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+committed to a special purpose, which was the supply
+of Christian pulpits with instructed, earnest,
+devoted men. That they should be Unitarians was
+expected; that they should be Christians in belief
+was demanded. There were two ever-present spectres,
+"orthodoxy" and "rationalism," the one represented
+by Andover, the other by Germany. Audacity of speculation
+when unaccompanied by practical piety was
+discountenanced, and in flagrant instances rebuked.</p>
+
+<p>The literal form of the orthodox creed, it need
+hardly be said, was made more prominent than its
+imaginative aspect. This was inevitable, for the
+object was to assail it rather than to understand it.
+To be perfectly fair to all sides was, under the circumstances,
+not to be expected at a period so near
+the era of controversy. An earnest, ingenuous
+youth could find at Cambridge all the courage and
+impulse he needed, for the atmosphere of the place
+was neither chilling nor depressing. The less emotional,
+more intellectual scholar was left to pursue
+his studies undisturbed, the wind of spiritual feeling
+not being strong enough to carry him away.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, the institution was all that could have
+been looked for in a time when ecclesiastical and
+doctrinal traditions were fatally though not confessedly
+broken, and naked individualism was not
+avowedly adopted. The task of the professors,
+conscientious, hard working, utterly faithful men,
+was laborious, difficult, and thankless. The Unitarian
+public, fearing a tendency to unbelief, gave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+them a grudging confidence; the students, I am
+afraid, were not considerate of them,&mdash;the zealous
+finding them lukewarm, the cold-blooded blaming
+them for stopping short of the last consequences of
+their own theory. It is wonderful that the school
+went on at all. The single-minded devotion of the
+teachers alone preserved it. Looking thoughtfully
+back across a wide gulf of years, the writer of these
+pages feels that he owes this tribute to Convers
+Francis and George R. Noyes. How often he has
+wished he could take them by the hand and ask
+their forgiveness for his frequent misjudgment of
+them, misjudgment the remembrance of which makes
+his heart bleed the more as he can only think of
+their generous forbearance. Their influence was
+emancipating and stimulating. They were friendly
+to thought. Under their ministration the mind took
+a leap forward towards the confines of the Christian
+system of faith. What the divinity school of the
+future may be able to accomplish it would be hazardous
+to conjecture. It could hardly then have
+done more than it did.</p>
+
+<p>The study of comparative religions, so zealously
+prosecuted within a few years, together with a desire
+to do perfect justice to orthodox doctrines, may
+render practical a scientific review of theological
+systems, but in this event a predilection in favor of
+a separate "Christian" ministry can be no longer
+characteristic of a divinity school which proposes to
+prepare young men for the clerical calling.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The three years of secluded life passed quickly
+away. The trial sermon in the village church was
+delivered and criticised. The President of the college
+then was Edward Everett, my uncle. The next
+morning I went to his office; he spoke warmly of
+my sermon, but advised me henceforth to commit
+sermons to memory as he did. This I tried two or
+three times, but the effort to write the sermons so
+fatigued me that the task of committing them to
+memory was too great, and for years I wrote my
+discourses, until for convenience' sake I learned to
+preach without notes. The diploma was bestowed,
+the actual ministry was begun. The term of preaching
+as a candidate did not last long. By the advice
+of friends an invitation was accepted to an old established
+conservative parish in Salem, Mass. Ordination
+and marriage soon followed, and public life was
+inaugurated under the most promising conditions.
+I had the best wishes of the conservative portion of
+the community to which I was, properly, supposed
+to belong, and the hopes of the radical portion who
+anticipated a change of view as time went on, and I
+was brought into sharper collision with prevailing
+habits of thought than was possible at Cambridge,
+where the student was in a great measure cut off
+from intercourse with the world.</p>
+
+<p>At the "Divinity School" I was known as a
+young man with conservative ideas. I remember
+now discussions, essays, criticisms, in which the opinions
+in vogue among old-fashioned Unitarians were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+defended somewhat passionately against the more
+daring convictions of my companions. In especial
+my faith was in direct opposition to the spiritual
+philosophy; Strauss was a horror; Parker was a
+bugbear; Furness seemed an innovator; Emerson
+was a "Transcendentalist," a term of immeasurable
+reproach. All this was soon to pass away, and I
+was to go a great deal beyond even Parker. The
+word "Transcendentalist" ceased to be a synonym
+for "enthusiast." The philosophy of intuition was
+first literally adopted, then dismissed, and I came
+out where I least expected. But I well remember,
+one evening as I was walking out from Boston, presenting
+to myself distinctly the alternative between
+the adoption of the old and the new. I am afraid
+that the old commended itself by its venerableness,
+the solidity of its traditions, and the authority of its
+great names, while the new was still vague and formless.
+I then and there decided to follow in the
+footsteps of my fathers, a course more in sympathy
+with the prevailing temper of the age and with the
+current of thought at Divinity Hall, though Emerson
+had delivered his address some years before,
+and the New Jerusalem was even then coming down
+from heaven.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+<h2>IV.<br />
+
+SALEM.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Old Salem was a city of the imagination. History
+does it no justice. The "Essex Institute," founded
+in 1848, by the union of the "Essex County Historical
+Society" and the "Essex County Natural
+History Society," has a very fine collection of books,
+pamphlets, manuscripts, an invaluable museum, relics,
+pictures, so that in no locality in the country
+has so much been accomplished in exhuming the
+treasures of municipal and civil history, and in
+bringing to light antiquities. Hurd's "History of
+Essex County," published in 1888, with its monographs
+on commerce, religion, literature, newspapers,
+etc., written by thoroughly competent men, throws
+a flood of light on the past of the place. Mr. Upham's
+"Memoir of Francis Peabody," published in
+1868, gives an admirable account of the literary
+eminence of the old town. Colonel Higginson's
+article in <i>Harper's Monthly</i> on "Old Salem's Sea
+Captains," published in September, 1886, gives
+something of its romantic character. But best of all
+as illustrating this feature are the articles written<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+by "Eleanor Putnam" (Mrs. Arlo Bates), and republished
+after her death under the title of "Old
+Salem," in 1887. She was about thirty years old
+when she died; but if she had lived she would have
+presented the old city in its quaintest aspect. Her
+love of antiquarian research, her taste, her devotion
+to Salem qualified her in an eminent degree for her
+self-appointed task.</p>
+
+<p>There can hardly be a doubt that the origins of
+the town were religious; that a religious purpose,
+deep though undefined and undeclared, animated
+the emigrants before Winthrop. The very name,
+Salem, the Hebrew for peacefulness, instead of
+"Naumkeag" (the old Indian name), adopted in
+1628, to commemorate the reconciliation between
+the company of Roger Conant and that of John
+Endicott, was already suggestive of spiritual qualities.
+Eminent forms loom up in the distance: Francis
+Higginson, the first minister of Massachusetts Bay;
+Roger Williams, whose name is identified with
+"soul freedom"; Hugh Peters, his opponent. John
+Endicott was a most imposing figure; hasty, rash,
+choleric (as was shown by his striking a man in
+early life), imperious, but brave and bold. He was
+a stern Puritan, hating popery so much that he cut
+out the image of the king from the English banner,
+because it was an image, while at the same time he
+persecuted the Quakers, because they advocated
+obedience to the "inner light" and were disturbers
+of the established peace. But he had sweeter qualities&mdash;gentleness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+generosity, and kindness. An old
+scripture (Ecclesiasticus xi., 28) says: "Judge none
+blessed before his death; for a man shall be known
+in his children." The descendants of John Endicott
+are graceful, elegant, refined people, lovely in manners,
+gentle in disposition. The root of these qualities
+must have been in the forefather two centuries
+and a half ago. The intellectual history of the city
+is very illustrious and began early. A strong intellectual
+bent characterized the early settlers, who
+were persons of inquisitive minds, addicted to experiments
+and enterprises, exceedingly ingenious. Near
+the middle of the last century there was in existence
+in Salem a social evening club, composed of eminent
+cultivated and accomplished citizens. On the evening
+of Monday, March 31, 1760, a meeting was
+held at the Tavern House of a Mrs. Pratt for the
+purpose of "founding in the town of Salem a handsome
+library of valuable books, apprehending the
+same may be of considerable use and benefit under
+proper regulations." The books imported, given, or
+bought, amounted to four hundred and fifteen volumes.
+This society, which may be regarded as the
+foundation of all the institutions and agencies established
+in this place to promote intellectual culture,
+was incorporated in 1797. In 1766, the famous
+Count Rumford was an apprentice here. In 1781,
+Richard Kirwan, LL.D., of Dublin, an eminent
+philosopher of the period, had a valuable library in
+a vessel which was captured by an American private<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+armed ship and brought into Beverly as a prize. The
+books were given by Dr. Kirwan, who would accept
+no gratuity and was delighted that his volumes were
+put to so good a use. The books were sold to an
+association of gentlemen in Salem and its neighborhood,
+and formed the "Philosophical Library." This
+and the "Social Library" were afterwards consolidated
+into the "Salem Athenæum," which was incorporated
+in March, 1810.</p>
+
+<p>Among the distinguished men were William H.
+Prescott, Benjamin Peirce, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
+John Lewis Russell, Charles Grafton Page, and Jones
+Very. Here lived Edward Augustus Holyoke, president
+of the Massachusetts Medical Society and the
+American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Timothy
+Pickering, Rev. John Prince, Rev. William Bentley,
+Nathaniel Bowditch, author of the "Practical Navigator"
+and translator of the "Mecanique Celeste";
+John Pickering, Joseph Story, of the Supreme Bench;
+Daniel Appleton White, Leverett Saltonstall, Benjamin
+Merrill, and many another man of accomplishments
+and learning. Even the uneducated, and
+those engaged in the common occupations of everyday
+life, gratified their love of knowledge, and followed
+up, for their private enjoyment, researches in
+intellectual and philosophical spheres; apothecaries
+and retail shopkeepers distinguished themselves as
+writers; one of them&mdash;Isaac Newhall by name&mdash;was
+reputed the author of the famous "Junius Letters,"
+thus enjoying companionship with Burke, Gibbon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+Grattan, Camden, Chatham, Chesterfield, and other
+distinguished writers.</p>
+
+<p>Its commercial history was exceedingly brilliant.
+In its palmy days it had more trade with the East
+Indies than all the other American ports put together.
+Its situation by the sea encouraged maritime adventure.
+From its very infancy its inhabitants sent
+vessels across the Atlantic of forty to sixty tons, and
+followed up the trade with Spain, France, Italy, and
+the West India Islands. In the war of the Revolution
+it sent out one hundred and fifty-eight armed
+ships, mounting at least two thousand guns, and carrying
+not less than six thousand men. In 1785, Salem
+sent out the first vessel to the Isle of France, Calcutta,
+and China; she began also the trade to the other
+ports of the East Indies and Japan; to Madagascar
+and Zanzibar, Brazil and Africa. In the south seas,
+Salem ships first visited the Fiji Islands; they
+first opened up to our commerce New Holland and
+New Zealand. In the war of 1812 she had two
+hundred and fifty privateers. When the war was
+over, these vessels were engaged in the merchant
+service. Mr. E. H. Derby, one of the great merchants,
+said to be the richest man in America, sent out thirty-seven
+vessels in fourteen years, making a hundred
+and twenty voyages. The names of the great merchants,
+E. H. Derby, N. Silsbee, William Gray, Peabody,
+Crowningshield, Pickman, Cleveland, Cabot,
+Higginson, are of universal celebrity. Then Derby
+Street was alive with sea-captains, the custom-house<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+was active, the tall warehouses were full of treasures,
+the great East Indiamen fairly made the air fragrant
+as they unloaded their merchandise. To quote the
+language of "Eleanor Putnam": "There was poetry
+in the names of the vessels&mdash;the ship <i>Lotus</i>, the
+<i>Black Warrior</i>, the brig <i>Persia</i>, the <i>Light Horse</i>,
+the <i>Three Friends</i>, and the great <i>Grand Turk</i>.
+There was, too, a charm about the cargoes. They
+were no common-place bales of merchandise, but
+were suggestive in their very names of the sweet,
+strange odors of the East, from which they came.
+There was food for the imagination in the mention
+of those ship-loads of gum copal from Madagascar
+and Zanzibar; of hemp and iron from Russia; of
+Bombay cotton; of ginger, pepper, coffee, and sugar
+from India; of teas, silks, and nankeens from China;
+salt from Cadiz; and fruits from the ports of the
+Mediterranean."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Putnam speaks of the gorgeous fans, the
+carved ivory, the blue Canton china, the generous
+tea-cups, the tureens, the heavy tankards, the Delft
+jars, the ancient candle-sticks, the heavy punch bowls,
+the strange beads, suggestive of the Hindoo rites,
+Nautch dances, and women with dusky throats.
+Then the very air was weighty with romantic adventures.
+We read with awe of cashmere shawls hanging
+on clothes lines, of jars full of silver coin, of the
+gilded fishes on the side of each stair, of the grand
+staircase in the front hall of Mr. Pickman's house on
+Essex Street, of logs of sandal-wood. The museum<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+of the East India Marine Society contains sceptres
+from the Fiji Islands; a musical instrument from
+New South Wales, another from Borneo; a carved
+statue of a rich Persian merchant of Bombay; an
+alabaster figure of a Chinese Jos; a copper idol from
+Java; a mirror from Japan; fans from Maraba, the
+Marquesas Islands, Calcutta; cloth from Otaheite;
+an earthen patera from Herculaneum; two dresses
+of women from the Pelew Islands; sandal-wood from
+the Sandwich Islands; a parasol from Calcutta; nutmegs
+from Cayenne; thirty-six specimens of Italian
+marble; cement from the palace of the Cæsars at
+Rome; white marble from Carthage; porphyry from
+Italy; beads worn by the Pundits and Fakirs in India;
+a glass cup from Owyhee; Verde Antico from
+Sicily; sandal-wood tapers from China; wood images
+of mummies from Thebes; a silver box from Soo-Soo;
+porphyry from Madagascar; a piece of mosaic from
+ancient Carthage; silk cocoons from India; marble
+from the temple of Minerva at Athens; piece of
+pavement from the site of ancient Troy; and polished
+jasper from Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>When I was in Salem, from 1847 to 1855, this
+splendor had departed. Derby Street was deserted,
+the great warehouses were tenements for laborers.
+Hawthorne has described the custom-house in his
+famous preface to the "Scarlet Letter." The sailors
+had disappeared; the commerce, owing mainly to
+the shallowness of the water in the harbor, had gone
+to Boston and New York. But traces of the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+glory still lingered. Here and there a great merchant
+was seen on the streets. Some of the old
+houses remained: the Pickering House on Broad
+Street, built in 1651; the Turner House; Roger
+Williams' house, at the corner of Essex and North
+Streets, built before 1634; and Mr. Forrester's
+house.</p>
+
+<p>As the chairman of the Salem Lyceum, it was my
+privilege to entertain such men as R. W. Emerson,
+George W. Curtis and others. Thomas Starr King,
+when he lectured in Danvers, drove over to my
+house, and spent the rest of the evening. Nathaniel
+Hawthorne I used to meet frequently on the street.
+I often saw Mrs. Hawthorne leading her children by
+the hand. Mr. Hawthorne, who was in Salem from
+1846 to 1849, was remarkable for his shyness. His
+favorite companions were some Democratic politicians,
+who met weekly at the office of one of them,
+where he occupied himself in listening to their talk,
+but he avoided cultivated people. On one occasion
+a friend of mine asked us to meet him at dinner;
+twice he went to remind his guest of the engagement.
+The hour arrived, the dinner was kept waiting
+half an hour for Mr. Hawthorne to come. He
+said but little during the dinner, and immediately
+afterward got up and went away; his reluctance to
+meet people overcoming his sense of propriety.</p>
+
+<p>My church, the "North Church," as it was called,
+was a handsome building on the main street, a stone
+structure with a tower, and a green before it. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+was founded in 1772 by people who had left the
+First Parish by reason of great dissatisfaction. The
+first minister, called in 1773, was Thomas Barnard.
+He was a broad-minded, liberal man, and left the
+church substantially Unitarian. His successor was
+J. E. Abbot, called in 1815, whose ministry, from
+ill-health, was very short. My predecessor, John
+Brazer, a cultivated, scholarly, sensitive man, a good
+preacher, an excellent pastor, was settled in 1820.
+My ministry there was exceedingly pleasant and
+tranquil for several years. There were long hours
+for studying; the parish work was not hard; the
+people were honest, quiet, sober, some of them exceedingly
+refined and gentle; it was as if the old
+Puritan spirit, modified by time, still lingered about
+the old town. Family life was beautiful to see; the
+homes were charming; there was luxury enough;
+there was great intelligence, singular activity of
+mind; and I remember well the bright conversations,
+the entertainments, the teas, the dinners, the
+receptions, the social meetings. The women, especially,
+were distinguished for interest in literary
+matters. Many interesting people still lived in the
+town, Daniel Appleton White, for instance, Dr.
+Treadwell, Benjamin Merrill, Thomas Cole; some of
+these were my parishioners and all were my friends.
+But the life was almost too quiet for me, as circumstances
+presently proved.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, as if to render impossible my
+further ministration in this first place of service, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+anti-slavery agitation was at its height, dividing
+churches, breaking up sects, setting the members of
+families against each other, detaching ministers from
+their congregations, and arraying society in hostile
+camps. The noise of the conflict filled the air. It
+was impossible to evade the issue. Those who had
+fixed positions in the community, were of a tranquil
+temperament, or of an easy conscience, might survey
+the battle calmly, or be vexed only by the confusion
+in the social world; but they who had the future
+still before them could not but feel the necessity of
+taking sides in the quarrel. When Garrison, the
+incarnate conscience, was enunciating the moral law
+and illustrating it by flaming texts from the Old
+Testament; when the intrepid Phillips was throwing
+the light of history on politics, and putting
+statesmanship in the face of humanity, judging all
+men by the maxims of ethical philosophy; when
+Parker was proclaiming the absolute justice, and
+Clarke was applying the truths of the eternal love;
+and many others, men and women, were thundering
+forth the divine vengeance on iniquity; when facts
+were set out for everybody's reading, and tongues
+were unloosed, and fiery messages proceeded from all
+mouths, and conviction was deep, and eloquence was
+stirring, it was impossible to be still.</p>
+
+<p>Now the situation is changed; the evil is removed;
+the wound has healed; the surgeon's knife has been
+put up in its case. A new philosophy is disposed to
+blame the action of the anti-slavery champions. Some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+critics have doubted whether the conduct of the
+abolitionists was wise; whether their primary assumption
+of the political equality of all men was
+correct; whether a race that had never founded
+a government or contributed to the advance of civilization
+could add any weight to the cause of liberty.
+But then such misgivings could not be raised. The
+abolitionists seemed to have on their side the precepts
+of the New Testament, the teachings of the
+Sermon on the Mount, the character and example of
+Jesus, the burning language of prophecy, the inspiring
+traditions of primitive Christianity, the humane
+instincts of the heart, the moral sentiments of equity,
+pity, compassion, all reinforced by the growing
+democratic opinion of the age, and by the tenets of
+the intuitive philosophy then coming to the front.
+The glowing passages from Isaiah and from Matthew:
+"Let the oppressed go free; break every
+yoke"; "Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the
+least of these, ye did it unto me," shone in our eyes.
+To the anti-slavery people belonged the heroic virtues,
+courage, faithfulness, and sacrifice. Theirs was
+the martyr spirit; the readiness to surrender ease,
+position, and success for an idea. It would have
+been strange if, at such a time, a young man, a
+clergyman, too, had been a champion of vested interests.
+The doctrine of a higher law than that
+of the State commended itself to his idealism, and
+pledged him to oppose what he regarded as legalized
+wrong. The doctrine of legal rights for all men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+made him a firm enemy of organized inhumanity.
+It was a period of passionate war. In every department
+of the Church and State the irrepressible
+conflict went on. It was no time for the calm voice
+of the loving spirit of wisdom to be heard. It was
+no time to propose that the local laws respecting
+slavery should be remodelled, and the relation
+between whites and blacks readjusted on more equitable
+principles. The science of anthropology had no
+weight in America or anywhere else. No exhaustive
+study of race peculiarities could be entered on. The
+combatants had the whole field, and between the
+combatants there seemed to be no room for choice
+by a minister of the Gospel, an enthusiastic friend of
+humanity, a democrat, and a transcendentalist.</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion, after a brutal scene in Boston
+attending the return of a slave to his master, feeling
+that the larger part of his congregation were in sympathy
+with the government, and approved of the act
+of surrender, the excited minister declined to give
+the ordinance of communion, thinking it would be
+a mockery. This action brought the growing disaffection
+to a head. The feeling of the parish was
+divided. Bitter words were exchanged. The situation
+on both sides became uncomfortable, and he
+accepted an invitation to another city, where he
+could exercise his independence without check or
+limit.</p>
+
+<p>The position in regard to slavery which was
+taken thirty years ago there is no room to regret.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+It was taken with perfect sincerity, and under an
+uncontrollable pressure of conviction. The part performed
+by the abolitionists was predestined. The
+conduct of their opponents looks now as irrational
+as it did then. American slavery was so atrocious a
+system, so hideous a blot, that no terms were to be
+kept with it. Probably nothing but the surgeon's
+knife would have availed in dealing with such
+a cancerous mass. The cord had become so fatally
+twisted that the knot, too closely drawn to be
+untied, must be cut with the sword. The abolition
+of slavery was inevitable; it came about through a
+great elemental upheaval. The situation had become
+intolerable and was past reforming. Long
+before the war, it had become impossible to get
+along with the slaveholders, except on the most
+ignoble principles of trade or fashion. All manly
+acquiescence was out of the question. The Unitarians,
+as such, were indifferent or lukewarm; the
+leading classes were opposed to the agitation. Dr.
+Channing stood almost alone in lending countenance
+to the reform, though his hesitation between the
+dictates of natural feeling and Christian charity
+towards the masters hampered his action, and rendered
+him obnoxious to both parties,&mdash;the radicals
+finding fault with him for not going further, the
+conservatives blaming him because he went so far.
+The transcendentalists were quite universally abolitionists,
+for their philosophy pointed directly towards
+the exaltation of every natural power. Wherever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+they touched the earth&mdash;as they did not always,
+some of them soaring away beyond terrestrial things&mdash;flowers
+of hope sprang up in their path. In
+France, Germany, and England, they were friends
+of intellectual and social progress, of the ideal democracy.
+The spiritual philosophy was in the air;
+its ideas were unconsciously absorbed by the enthusiastic
+spirits. They constituted the life of the
+period; they were a light to such as dwelt in
+darkness or sat under the shadow of death.</p>
+
+<p>In this country Mr. Emerson led the dance of the
+hours. He was our poet, our philosopher, our sage,
+our priest. He was the eternal man. If we could
+not go where he went, it was because we were weak
+and unworthy to follow the steps of such an emancipator.
+His singular genius, his wonderful serenity
+of disposition inherited from an exceptional ancestry
+and seldom ruffled by the ordinary passions of men,
+his curious felicity of speech, his wit, his practical
+wisdom, raised him above all his contemporaries.
+His infrequent contact with the world of affairs, his
+seclusion in the country, his apparitions from time
+to time on lecture platforms or in convention halls,
+gave a far-off sound to his voice as if it fell from the
+clouds. Some among his friends found fault with
+him for being bloodless and ethereal, but this added
+to the effect of his presence and his word. The
+mixture of Theism and Pantheism in his thoughts,
+of the personal and the impersonal, of the mystical
+and the practical, fascinated the sentiment of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+generation, while the lofty moral strain of his teaching
+awakened to increased energy the wills of men.
+His speech and example stimulated every desire for
+reform, turning all eyes that were opened to the
+land of promise that seemed fully in sight. How
+much the anti-slavery conviction of the time, along
+with every other movement for the purification of
+society, owed to him we have always been fond of
+saying with that indefiniteness of specification which
+communicates so much more than it tells. This
+must be said, that, in the exhilaration of the period,
+they that worked hardest felt no exhaustion, and
+they that sacrificed most were conscious of no self-abnegation,
+and they that threw their lives into this
+cause had no sentiment but one of overflowing gratitude
+and joy. The anti-slavery agitation was felt to
+be something more than an attempt to apply the
+Beatitudes and the Parables to a flagrant case of
+inhumanity&mdash;it was regarded as a new interpreter
+of religion, a fresh declaration of the meaning of the
+Gospel, a living sign of the purely human character
+of a divine faith, an education in brotherly love and
+sacrifice; it was a common saying that now, for the
+first time in many generations, the essence of belief
+was made visible and palpable to all men; that
+Providence was teaching us in a most convincing
+way, and none but deaf ears could fail to understand
+the message.</p>
+
+<p>It was, indeed, a most suggestive and inspiring
+time. Never shall I forget, never shall I cease to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+be grateful for, the communion with noble minds
+that was brought about, the moral earnestness
+that was engendered, the moral insight that was
+quickened. Then, if ever, we ascended the Mount
+of Vision. I was brought into close communion
+with living men, the most living of the time, the
+most under the influence of stimulating thoughts;
+and if they were intemperate in their speech, extravagant
+in their opinions, absolute in their moral
+judgments, that must be taken as proof of the depth
+of their conviction. They loved much, and therefore
+could be forgiven, if forgiveness was necessary.
+They sacrificed a good deal, too, some of them everything
+in the shape of worldly honor, and this brought
+them apparently into line with the confessors and
+saints. They made real the precepts of the New
+Testament. Their clients were the poor, the lowly,
+the disfranchised, the unprivileged, against whom
+the grandeurs of the world lifted a heavy hand.
+They were champions of those who sorrowed and
+prayed, and this was enough to win sympathy and
+disarm criticism. It was a great experience; not
+only was religion brought face to face with ethics,
+but it was identified with ethics. It became a religion
+of the heart: pity, sympathy, humanity, and
+brotherhood were its essential principles. At the
+anti-slavery fairs all sorts and conditions of men met
+together, without distinction of color or race or sex.
+There was really an education in the broadest faith,
+in which dogma, creed, form, and rite were secondary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+to love; and love was not only universal, but
+was warm.</p>
+
+<p>Salem was the home of story and legend. There
+Puritanism showed its best and worst sides, for
+there Roger Williams preached, and there the
+witches were persecuted. The house where they
+were tried and the hill where they were executed
+were objects of curiosity. There were the wild
+pastures and the romantic shores, and broad streets
+shaded by elm trees, and gardens and greenhouses.
+There were spacious mansions and beautiful country-seats
+and pleasant walks. There was beauty and
+grace and accomplishment and wit. There were
+quaint old buildings, and ways once trodden by
+pious and heroic feet. On the whole, this was the
+most idyllic period in my ministry. Thither came
+Emanuel Vitalis Scherb, the native of Basel, an
+exile for opinion's sake, a man full of genius, learning,
+enthusiasm. Young, handsome, hopeful, his
+lectures on German literature and poetry attracted
+notice in Boston, whence he came to Salem to talk
+and be entertained. The best houses were open to
+him; the best people went to hear him. Alas, poor
+Scherb! His day of popularity was short. He
+sank from one stage of poverty to another; he was
+indebted to friends for aid, among the rest to H.
+W. Longfellow, who clung to him till the last, and
+finally died from disease in a military hospital early
+in our Civil War.</p>
+
+<p>I remember, in connection with Samuel Johnson,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+collecting an audience for Mr. A. B. Alcott, the
+most adroit soliloquizer I ever listened to, who
+delivered in a vestry-room a series of those remarkable
+"conversations"&mdash;versations with the <i>con</i> left
+out&mdash;for which he was celebrated. It was, in many
+respects, a happy time.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+<h2>V.<br />
+
+THE CRISIS IN BELIEF.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I was in Salem when this came. It happened in
+the following way: A woman in my choir, a melancholy,
+tearful, forlorn woman, asked me one day
+if I knew Theodore Parker. I said I did not, but
+then, seeing her disappointment, I asked her why
+she put that question. She replied that her husband
+had abandoned her some months before and
+with another woman had gone to Maine. There he
+had left the woman and was living in Boston, and
+was a member of Mr. Parker's Society; and she
+thought that if I knew Mr. Parker I might find out
+something about him, and perhaps induce him to
+come back to Salem. I told her I was going to
+Boston in a day or two, and would see Mr. Parker.</p>
+
+<p>My visit, again and again repeated, resulted in an
+intimacy with that extraordinary man which had a
+lasting effect on my career. His personal sympathy,
+his profound humanity, his quickness of feeling, his
+sincerity, his courage, his absolute fidelity of service,
+even more than his astonishing vigor of intellect
+and his earnestness in pursuit of truth, made a deep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+impression on my mind. To be in his society was
+to be impelled in the direction of all nobleness. He
+talked with me, lent me books, stimulated the thirst
+for knowledge, opened new visions of usefulness. As
+I recall it now, his influence was mainly personal,
+the power that comes from a great character. He
+communicated a moral impetus. Faith in man, love
+of liberty in thought, institution, law, breathed in all
+his words and works. His theological ideas were
+somewhat mixed, as was inevitable then. His gift
+of spiritual vision, especially as shown in his interpretation
+of the Old-Testament narratives, may have
+been imperfect; his moral perspective may have
+been incomplete; his learning was copious, rather
+than discerning. But his single-mindedness was
+perfect, and his devotion to his fellow-men was
+almost superhuman. It was a privilege to know
+such a man, so simple-hearted and brave. The
+slight disposition to put himself on his omniscience,
+to strike an attitude, was not strange considering his
+enormous force, his consciousness of power, his
+singular influence over men, and his conviction (in
+large measure forced on him by his advocates) that
+he was a religious reformer, a second Luther, the
+inaugurator of a new Protestantism. His three
+doctrines, to which he constantly appealed, and in
+proof of which he adduced the testimony of the
+human soul,&mdash;the existence of a personal God, the
+immortality of the individual, and the absoluteness
+of the "moral law" might have been untenable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+in the presence of modern knowledge under the
+form in which he stated them. His vast collection
+of materials in attestation of Theism may have been
+valuable chiefly as a curiosity; but the man himself
+was all of one piece, genuine through and through.
+The mingling of fire and moderation in him was
+very remarkable, the blending of consuming radicalism
+with saving conservatism puzzled his more
+vehement disciples; but his character interested
+everybody; his firmness was visible from afar, and
+his warmth of heart was felt through stone walls.
+There were no two ministers in Boston who did as
+much for the inmates of hospitals and prisons as he
+did. His ministry ceased a quarter of a century ago,
+but the effect is vital yet, and will last for years to
+come. At this distance the heart leaps up to meet
+him. His chief work was done, for it consisted mainly
+in the adoption of a type of character, and length
+of days is not needed for this, while it is apt to be
+impaired by the infirmities of age. His long, wearisome
+illness, full of weakness and pain, tested the
+strength of his fortitude, patience, hopefulness, and
+trust, and was interesting as showing the passive,
+acquiescent side of heroism, all the more impressive
+in view of his love of life, his desire to finish his
+course, his sense of accountability (stronger in him
+than in anybody I ever met), and his wish to serve
+his kind. It was my happiness, more than ten years
+after he went away from men, to dwell for months
+in his atmosphere, while writing his biography, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+all my old impressions of him were confirmed. And
+five years later, reviewing his life in the <i>Index</i>,
+I was again struck by his greatness. I may be
+excused for quoting the closing passage from the
+<i>Index</i>, of July 5, 1877, in which I stated the claims
+of Theodore Parker to the honor of posterity. The
+paragraph sums up the qualities that have been
+ascribed to him&mdash;integrity, catholicity, outspokenness;
+to these might have been added warmth
+of heart, but this last attribute lay on the surface,
+and could be easily appreciated by ordinary observers&mdash;in
+fact, was seen and acknowledged by his
+enemies, and by those who knew him least.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>On the whole, then, I should say that <i>manliness</i> was Theodore
+Parker's crowning quality and supreme claim to distinction.
+That he had other most remarkable gifts is conceded as a
+matter of course. Everybody knows that he had. But this
+was his prime characteristic. The other gifts he had in spite
+of himself&mdash;his thirst for knowledge, his love of books, his all-devouring
+industry, his unfailing memory, his natural eloquence
+or power of affluent expression; but character men regard as
+less a gift than an acquisition,&mdash;the fruit of aspiration, resolve,
+fidelity,&mdash;the product of daily, nay, of hourly, endeavor.
+Hence it is that intellectual greatness does not impress the
+multitude; even genius has but a limited sway over the
+masses of mankind. But character goes to the roots of life.
+In fact, Theodore Parker's eminence as a man of thought and
+expression in words has concealed from the world at large the
+intrinsic quality of the person. His reputation as theologian,
+preacher, controversialist, has concealed the real greatness
+which comes to light as the dust of controversy subsides.
+The very causes in which the heroism of his manliness was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+displayed&mdash;as, for example, the anti-slavery cause, to which
+he devoted so much of his time and vitality&mdash;rendered inconspicuous
+the contribution he made to the treasury of humane
+feeling. Now that that great conflict is over, now that its
+agitations have ceased and its heats have cooled, the character
+of which this conflict revealed but a portion, the career in
+which this long agony was but an episode, loom up into
+distinctness. The greatest of all human achievements is a
+manly character&mdash;guileless, sincere, and brave; that he by all
+admission possessed. He earned it; he prayed for it; meditated
+for it; worked for it;&mdash;how hard, his private journals
+show. And for this he will not be forgotten. For this he
+will be remembered as one of the benefactors, one of the
+emancipators, of his kind.</p></div>
+
+<p>From a shelf in his library, I took Schwegler's
+"Nachapostolische Zeitalter," a work which threw a
+flood of light on the problems of New-Testament
+criticism. This led to a study of the writings of
+F. C. Baur, the founder of the so-called "Tübingen
+School." A complete set of the <i>Theologische
+Jahrbücher</i>, the organ of his ideas, was imported
+from Germany, and carefully perused. These volumes
+contained full and minute studies on all the
+books of the New Testament&mdash;Gospels, Epistles, the
+writing termed "The Acts of the Apostles," with incidental
+glances at the "Apocalypse." The calm,
+consistent strength of these expositions commended
+them to my mind. The author was a university
+professor, a man of practical piety, a Lutheran
+preacher of high repute, simple, affectionate, faithful
+to his duties, quite unconscious that he was undermining
+anybody's faith, so deeply rooted was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+old Lutheran freedom of criticism in regard to the
+Bible. In the German mind, religion and literature,
+Christianity and the Scriptures, were entirely distinct
+things. The scholar could sit in his library in
+one mood and could enter his pulpit in another,
+preserving in both the single-mindedness that became
+a Christian and a student.</p>
+
+<p>Other theories have arisen since, but none that
+have taken hold of such eminent minds have appeared.
+Theodore Parker accepted it; James Martineau
+adopted its main proposition in several remarkable
+papers written at various times, last in the Unitarian
+magazine <i>Old and New</i>. In the brilliant lectures
+delivered in London, during the spring of 1880, on
+the Hibbert Foundation, Ernest Renan's striking
+account of early Christianity owed its force to the
+assumption of the fundamental postulate of the
+Tübingen School. In the latter years of his life,
+Baur summed up the results of his criticism in a
+pamphlet that was designed to meet objections; and
+in 1875-1877 his son-in-law, the learned Edward
+Zeller, one of his ablest disciples, an eminent professor
+of history at Berlin, published an earnest,
+carefully considered, masterly report of the writings
+of the now famous teacher, in the course of which
+he paid a merited tribute to his character, vindicated
+his views from the charge of haste and partisanship,
+and predicted for them a triumphant future.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a>&nbsp;&nbsp;"Vorträge und Abhandlungen," von E. Zeller, 2 vols., Leipzig.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The adoption of these opinions, so opposed to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+views current in the community, compelled the
+adoption of a new basis for religious conviction.
+Christianity, in so far as it depended on the New
+Testament or the doctrines of the early Church, was
+discarded. The cardinal tenets of the Creed&mdash;the
+Deity of the Christ, the atonement, everlasting perdition&mdash;had
+been dismissed already, and I was virtually
+beyond the limits of the Confession. But
+Theism remained, and the spiritual nature of man
+with its craving for religious truth. Without going
+so far as Theodore Parker did, who maintained that
+the three primary beliefs of religion&mdash;the existence
+of God, the assurance of individual immortality, the
+reality of a moral law&mdash;were permanent, universal,
+and definite facts of human nature, found wherever
+man was found; without going so far as this, I
+contended that man had a spiritual nature; that
+this nature, on coming to consciousness of its powers
+and needs, gave expression to exalted beliefs, clothing
+them with authority, building them into temples,
+ordaining them in the form of ceremonies and priesthoods.
+In support of this opinion, appeal was made
+to the great religions of the world, to the substantial
+agreement of all sacred books, to the spontaneous
+homage paid, in all ages, to saints and prophets; to
+the essential accord of moral precepts all over the
+globe, to the example of Jesus, to the Beatitudes
+and Parables, to the respect given by rude people
+to the noblest persons, to the credences that inspire
+multitudes, to the teachings of Schleiermacher,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+Fichte, Constant, Cousin, Carlyle, Goethe, Emerson,
+in fact, to every leading writer of the last generation.
+All this was so beautiful, so consistent and convincing,
+so full of promise, so broad, plain, and inspiring
+that, with a fresh but miscalculated enthusiasm,
+over-sanguine, thoughtless, the young minister undertook
+to carry his congregation with him, but
+without success; so he went elsewhere. This action
+proceeded from the faith that Parker instilled.
+Parker was pre-eminently, to those who comprehended
+him, a believer.</p>
+
+<p>In the words of D. A. Wasson, his successor in
+Music Hall:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Theodore Parker was one of the most energetic and religious
+believers these later centuries have known. This was the
+prime characteristic of the man. He did not agree in the
+details of his unbelieving with the majority of those around
+him, because it was part of his religion to think freely, part of
+their religion to forbear thinking freely on the highest matters.
+But he was not only a powerful believer in his own soul, but
+was the believing Hercules who went forth in the name of
+divine law to cleanse the Augean stables of the world....
+This, I repeat, and can not repeat with too much emphasis,
+was the characteristic of the man&mdash;sinewy, stalwart, prophetic,
+fervid, aggressive, believing.... The Hercules rather
+than the Apollo of belief, it was not his to charm rocks and
+trees with immortal music, but to smite the hydra of publicity,
+iniquity, and consecrated falsehood with the club or mace of
+belief; if this might not suffice, then to burn out its foul life
+with the fire of his sarcasms.</p></div>
+
+<p>To quote my own words, written in 1873 (see
+"Life." p. 566):<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>With him the religious sentiment was supreme. It had no
+roots in his being wholly distinct from its mental or sensible
+forms of expression. Never evaporating in mystical dreams
+nor entangled in the meshes of cunning speculation, it preserved
+its freshness and bloom and fragrance in every passage
+of his life. His sense of the reality of divine things was as
+strong as was ever felt by a man of such clear intelligence.
+His feeling never lost its glow, never was damped by misgiving,
+dimmed by doubt, or clouded by sorrow. Far from
+dreading to submit his faith to test, he courted tests; was as
+eager to hear the arguments against his belief as for it; was
+as fair in weighing evidence on the opponent's side as on his
+own. "Oh, that mine enemy had written a book!" he was
+ready to cry, not that he might demolish it, but that he might
+read it. He knew the writings of Moleschott, and talked
+with him personally; the books of Carl Vogt were not strange
+to him. The philosophy of Ludwig Büchner, if philosophy it
+can be called, was as familiar to him as to any of Büchner's
+disciples. He was intimate with the thoughts of Feuerbach.
+He drew into discussion every atheist and materialist he met,
+talked with them closely and confidentially, and rose from the
+interview more confident in the strength of his own positions
+than ever. Science he counted his best friend; relied on it
+for confirmation of his faith, and was only impatient because
+it moved no faster. All the materialists in and out of Christendom
+had no power to shake his conviction of the Infinite
+God and the immortal existence, nor would have had had he
+lived till he was a century old, for, in his view, the convictions
+were planted deep in human nature, and were demanded by
+the exigencies of human life. Moleschott respected Parker;
+Dessor was his confidential friend; Feuerbach would have
+taken him by the hand as a brother.</p></div>
+
+<p>There can be no greater mistake than to call
+Theodore Parker a Deist; than to class Theodore
+Parker with the Deists. He was utterly unlike<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Chubb or Shaftesbury, Herbert of Cherbury or
+Bolingbroke. Even the most philosophical of them
+had nothing in common with him. Hume and Voltaire,
+for instance, were utterly unlike him. They,
+it is true, believed in <i>a</i> God, the "First Cause," the
+"Author of Nature," the "Supreme Being," and in
+a future life. But their belief was merely logical
+and mechanical, his was vital; he believed in the
+real, living, immanent Deity. They thought that
+religion was an imposition, a policy of the priests,
+who played upon the fears of mankind; he believed
+that religion was a working power in the world, the
+origin of the highest achievement, the soul of all
+aspiration. They had no faith in the direct communication
+of the "Supreme Mind" with the soul
+of man; he believed in the infinite genius of man,
+and in the direct communication of the absolute
+intelligence. They thought of justice as a contrivance
+for securing happiness; he thought of it as
+the law of life. One of Mr. Parker's friends ascribed
+to him a gorgeous imagination; if he had it,
+it is a surprise that it should have been so completely
+suppressed as it was, for his taste in pictures
+and in poetry was very questionable. His want of
+speculative talent probably helped him with the
+people. Whether he formulated his thoughts is uncertain.
+Such was not his genius. He was a constructive,
+not a destructive. It was his faith that he
+criticised the Bible in order that he might release
+its piety and righteousness; that he tore in pieces<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+the creeds in order to emancipate the secrets of
+divinity.</p>
+
+<p>It is useless to conjecture what Parker might
+have been had he lived. That he would have held
+to his primary convictions is almost certain; it is
+quite certain that he would have loved mental liberty.
+He would have been a great power in our Civil War;
+he would probably have been a leader in the free religious
+movement. Parker, when I first knew him,
+was in full life and vigor. He had gone to Boston a
+short time before my ordination in 1847, and had before
+him a long future of usefulness. All the exigencies
+in which he might have been conspicuous were
+distant. That the effect of such a man on me and my
+connections was exceedingly great is not strange. It
+would have been strange had it been otherwise. In
+sermon, prayer, private conversations my convictions
+came out. That the people were disappointed may
+be assumed, but they were kind, generous, and patient.
+The congregations did not fall off; there
+was little violence or even vehement expostulation.
+But the position was not comfortable, and when an
+invitation came from Jersey City to found a new
+Society, I accepted it at once. It had been a dream
+of Dr. Bellows to establish a Society at that place,
+and, learning that I was in search of another sphere
+of activity, he asked me to undertake the work.
+This was seconded by a cordial representation from
+Jersey City itself, on the part of some who were
+Dr. Bellows' own parishioners. The uprooting was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+not easy, for Salem had become endeared to me as
+the first scene of my ministry, a place where I could
+be useful in many ways, and which contained a delightful
+society; an established, well-furnished town,
+with historic associations; a country centre, an
+agreeable situation. But the waters were getting
+still there, and the sentiment of the past was getting
+to over-weigh the promises of the future.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+<h2>VI.<br />
+
+JERSEY CITY.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Jersey City, to which I went directly from Salem,
+was a very different place from what it is now;
+smaller and perhaps pleasanter. Where now is a
+large city, a few years ago was but a village. Now
+it is a manufacturing place, with great establishments,
+foundries, machine-shops, banks, insurance
+companies, newspapers, more than forty schools, and
+more than sixty churches. Then it was a large
+town, though it was nominally a city (incorporated
+in 1820), with a population of about twenty thousand,
+the increase being chiefly due to the annexation
+of suburbs, not to its own vital growth. It
+was substantially rural in character, with extensive
+meadows, broad avenues; a place of residence
+largely, the gentlemen living there and doing business
+in New York. There were a few Unitarians,
+a few Universalists, but there was no organized
+Unitarian society before I went there. A great
+many cultivated people resided in this place. There
+was wealth, culture, and interest in social matters.
+A meeting-house was built for me and dedicated to
+a large, rational faith.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chief peculiarity of my ministry there was
+the disuse of the communion service. This rite I
+had thought a great deal about in Salem. There
+had been, then, a well-meant proposal on the part
+of the pastor to make an alteration in the form
+of administering the communion service. The custom
+had been (quite an incidental one, for the usage
+was by no means the same in all the churches of the
+denomination) to thrust the rite in once a month,
+between the morning worship and dinner time, and
+to offer it then to none but the church-members,
+who composed but a small part of the congregation.
+As a consequence of this arrangement, the observance
+became formal, dry, short, and tiresome. To the
+majority of the Society it seemed a mystical ceremony
+with which they had no concern, while those
+who stayed to take part in it, wearied already by the
+preceding exercises, and hungry for their mid-day
+meal, gave to it but half-hearted attention. The
+observance was thus worse than thrown away; for,
+in addition to the loss of an opportunity for spiritual
+impression, a dangerous kind of self-righteousness
+was encouraged in the few church-members, who
+regarded themselves as in some way set apart from
+their fellow-sinners, either as having made confession
+of faith or as being subjects of a peculiar
+experience. To impart freshness to the rite, and at
+the same time to extend its usefulness as a "means
+of grace," the minister proposed to celebrate it less
+frequently (once in two or three months), to substitute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+it in place of the usual afternoon meeting, to
+make special preparation for it by the co-operation
+of the choir, and to throw it open to as many as
+might choose to come, be they church members
+or not. The suggestion met with feeble response,
+and that chiefly from young people who had hitherto
+stayed away out of a laudable feeling of modesty,
+not wishing to remain when their elders and betters
+went out, and not thinking themselves good enough
+to partake of a special privilege. The "communicants,"
+as a rule, set their faces against the innovation,
+perhaps because they were secretly persuaded
+that the change portended the secularizing of Christianity
+by a removal of the barrier that divided the
+church from the world, possibly because they wished
+to retain an exclusive prerogative which had always
+marked the "elect."</p>
+
+<p>The matter was not pressed; the routine went on
+as before; the minister did his best to render the
+service impressive and interesting. But his studies
+and meditations led him to the conclusion that the
+observance had no place in the Unitarian system;
+that it was a mere formality, without an excuse for
+being; that it contained no idea or sentiment that
+was not expressed in the ordinary worship; that it
+was a remnant of an otherwise discarded form of
+Christianity, where it had a peculiar significance;
+that it was the last attenuation of the Roman sacrament
+of transubstantiation; that it ought to be
+dropped from every scheme of liberal faith as an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+illogical adjunct, a harmful excrescence, a hindrance,
+in short. No whisper of these doubts was breathed
+at the time, but the pastor's silence allowed the
+scepticism to strike the deeper root in his mind.
+Mr. Emerson's departure from his parish, on the
+ground that he could no longer administer the communion
+rite according to the usage of the sect, had
+occurred many years before this, but was still
+remembered in discussion and talk. Theodore Parker
+had no communion; but he was an established
+leader of heresy, and did not furnish an example.
+Many, agreeing with Emerson's reasoning, disapproved
+of his course in resigning his pulpit rather
+than continue to administer the bread and wine.
+He himself advised others to hold on to the observance,
+if they could, hoping for the time when it
+might be universally vivified by faith. Some might
+do it as it was. The congregations would, it is
+likely, without exception, have decided as his did,
+to lose their minister sooner than their "Supper."
+Some years later, on passing through Boston on my
+way to another scene of labor, I called on a distinguished
+clergyman who had taken a part in my
+ordination, and was asked by him what I intended
+to do in my new parish with regard to the communion.
+I replied that it was not my purpose to
+have it, "You cannot give it up," he said; "it
+is stronger than any of us. I should drop it if
+I dared, for there is nothing real in it that is not
+in the general service, but I am afraid to try. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+shall watch your experiment with interest, but without
+expectation of its success." "Very well," I replied,
+"we shall see." The experiment was tried
+and succeeded. For four years I had no communion,
+and not a word was said about it. On leaving for
+New York, several of my friends, who had been
+accustomed to the ceremony all their lives, were
+asked if they did not think it would be wise to reinstate
+the rite. To my surprise, they with one voice
+said that there was no need of it, that the Society got
+along perfectly well without it. It is needless to say
+that in New York the observance was never celebrated.</p>
+
+<p>The ceremony was justified among Unitarians by
+various reasons which, in the end, seemed apologies.
+With the old-fashioned, semi-orthodox members of
+the congregations it was a precious heirloom, prized
+for its antiquity; a link that still held them in the
+bond of fellowship with the universal church; a last
+relic of the supernaturalism to which they clung
+without knowing why; the pledge of a mystical
+union with their Christ. Any change in the administration
+of it was regarded as a desecration; the
+suggestion of its complete discontinuance could,
+they thought, arise in no mind that was not fatally
+poisoned by infidelity. It was not, in their opinion,
+a symbol of doctrine, but a channel of divine influence,
+which no intellectual doubts could touch,
+which spiritual deadness alone could dispense with.
+Tenets might be abandoned, forms of belief might
+be discredited, but this citadel of faith must not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+assailed or approached by irreverent feet. Mr. Emerson's
+example was not followed by his contemporaries.
+His fellows did not so soon reach his
+point of conviction. Even radicals, like George Ripley,
+did not. In my own case it was the growth of
+time. At the moment there was no disposition to
+abandon the observance, simply a desire to reanimate
+it. It was not perceived till much later that
+the changes proposed implied a virtual abandonment
+of the rite itself; that the communion is regarded as
+a sacrament, that as a sacrament it might be presumed
+to be supernaturally instituted for the communication
+of the divine life; that, when faith in
+the supernatural declines, the sacrament no longer
+has a function as a medium, and must be omitted;
+that no attempts to revive it as a sentimental practice
+could be justified to reason; that all endeavors
+to awaken interest in it by assuming some occult
+efficacy must be futile because groundless. The
+"memorial service" can in no proper sense be called
+a sacrament. It may be a pleasing expression of
+sentiment, somewhat over-strained and fanciful, but
+capable of being made attractive. The task of reproducing
+the emotions of the early disciples as they
+sat at supper with their Master, nearly two thousand
+years ago, is too severe for the ordinary imagination,
+and when persisted in from a sense of duty may become
+a dull, creaking performance, against which the
+sensitive rebel and the witty are tempted to launch
+the shafts of their sarcasm. The only way of saving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+it from gibes is to ascribe to it some mystical efficacy
+for which there is no logical excuse. The Roman
+Catholic doctrine of Transubstantiation had a
+foundation in the philosophy of the Church. The
+Lutheran doctrine of Consubstantiation, which recognized
+the presence of Christ on the occasion, but
+not the literal change of the substance of his flesh,
+was legitimate. But the Sabellian theory, which
+the Unitarians inherited, was in no respect justified,
+save as a tradition.</p>
+
+<p>The sole alternative at that time for me, when the
+Communion service was made a test question between
+the "conservative" and the "radical," was to
+drop it. At present the situation is altered. It is
+no longer a ceremony or a tradition, but a means of
+spiritual cultivation. It stands for fellowship and
+aspiration, not for a communion of saints, but of all
+those who desire to share the saintly mind, of all
+who aim at perfection. The rite is one in which all
+may unite who wish, however fitfully, for goodness;
+<i>all</i>, whether Romanist or Protestant, and Protestant
+of whatever name; <i>all</i>, in every religion under the
+sun, Eastern or Western, Northern or Southern, old
+or new, every dividing line being erased. I once
+attended the Communion service of a Broad Churchman.
+The invitation was large and inclusive, comprehending
+everybody who, though far off, looked
+towards the light, everybody who had the least
+glimmer of the divine radiance; and none but an
+absolute infidel was shut out. There was a recognition
+of a divine nature in men,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Like plants in mines which never saw the sun,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But dream of him, and guess where he may be,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And do their best to climb and get to him.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The idea of spiritual communion is a grand one.
+It is universal too; it is human in the best sense.
+The symbols were ancient when Jesus used them,
+the Bread signifying Truth, the Wine signifying Life.
+Originally the symbols referred to the wealth of
+nature, as is evident from an ancient prayer. It
+was the custom for the master of the Jewish feast to
+repeat this form of words: "Blessed be Thou, O
+Lord, our God, who givest us the fruits of the
+vine," and then he gave the cup to all.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving out the personal application which is
+purely incidental, and discarding the sacramental
+idea which is a corruption, throwing the service
+open to the whole congregation as an opportunity, a
+great deal may be accomplished in the way of spiritual
+advancement. True, the ceremony contains no
+thought or sentiment that is not expressed in the
+sermon or the prayer, but it puts these in poetic
+form, it addresses them directly to the imagination,
+it associates them with the holier souls in their
+holiest hours, and brings people face to face with
+their better selves in the tenderest and most touching
+manner, teaching charity, love, endeavor after
+the religious life. The rite is full of beauty when
+confined within the bounds of Christianity, but when
+extended to the principles of other faiths, it is rich
+in meaning, and may be used with effect by those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+who wish to educate the people in the highest form
+of idealism, who desire comprehensiveness. A symbol
+often goes further than an argument, and a symbol
+so ancient and so consecrated ought to be preserved.
+A friend of mine included all religious
+teachers in his commemoration. This was a step in
+the right direction, but if the people are not ready
+for this yet, they may welcome an extension of the
+reign of spiritual love among the disciples whom
+theological hatred has kept apart. But this was
+not suspected then.</p>
+
+<p>It will be remarked that my reasons were not
+those of Emerson. His argument was solid and
+sound, but his real reason was personal. He said in
+his sermon: "If I believed it was enjoined by Jesus
+and his disciples that he even contemplated making
+permanent this mode of commemoration, every way
+agreeable to an Eastern mind, and yet on trial it
+was disagreeable to my own feelings, I should not
+adopt it.... It is my desire in the office of a
+Christian minister to do nothing which I cannot do
+with my whole heart. Having said this I have said
+all.... That is the end of my opposition, that I am
+not interested in it." My ground was different; I
+had no objection to the symbol, none to an Oriental
+symbol, and the mere fact that I was not interested
+in it seemed to me not pertinent to the case. My
+objection was that it divided those who ought to be
+united; that it encouraged a form of self-righteousness;
+that it implied a "grace" that did not exist.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+For the rest, my form of religion was of sentiment.
+It was scarcely Unitarian, not even Christian in a
+technical sense or in any other but a broad moral
+signification. It was Theism founded on the Transcendental
+philosophy, a substitute for the authority
+of Romanism and of Protestantism. This was an admirable
+counterfeit of Inspiration, having the fire,
+the glow, the beauty of it. It most successfully tided
+over the gulf between Protestantism and Rationalism.
+Parker used it with great effect. It was the
+life of Emerson's teaching. It animated Thomas
+Carlyle. It was the fundamental assumption of the
+Abolitionists, and of all social reformers.</p>
+
+<p>I had perfect freedom of speech in Jersey City;
+there was no opposition to the doctrine announced.
+The Society there was large and flourishing, and its
+influence in the town was on the increase. But Jersey
+City was, after all, a suburb only of New York.
+Some of my most devoted hearers came from New
+York, and urged me to go there. Dr. Bellows was
+anxious to found a third Society in the great city, and
+added his word to their solicitations, so that in the
+spring of 1859 I went thither. My church in Jersey
+City was continued for a short time, but I had
+no settled successor; the congregation did not grow;
+some of my most earnest supporters had either died
+or left the town. The war broke out and was fatal
+to institutions that had not a deep root. The building
+was sold soon after, for business purposes I think,
+and the society was never renewed. This may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+appear singular considering that there are Unitarian
+churches elsewhere in New Jersey, at Camden,
+Orange, Plainfield, Vineland, and Woodbury. The
+changed condition of the town may have had something
+to do with the failure to revive, after the war,
+the Unitarian Society. The Catholic, Presbyterian,
+Orthodox Congregationalist communions were more
+suited to the new population than the Unitarian was.
+Possibly, too, the "radical" complexion of the parish
+had something to do with the disrepute that fell
+upon it. However this may have been, the cause
+did not seem to prosper. Mr. Job Male, who died
+recently at Plainfield, was one of my most zealous
+supporters and exerted himself to keep the enterprise
+alive, but in vain. It is understood that the flourishing
+Unitarian church in Plainfield was largely due
+to his efforts.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<h2>VII.<br />
+
+NEW YORK.</h2>
+
+
+<p>For the first year in New York I lived with Dr.
+Bellows at his parsonage. Mrs. Bellows and the
+children were at Eagleswood, New Jersey, the children
+being at school with Mr. Weld. And this is
+the place to say something about Henry Whitney
+Bellows. He was a very remarkable man, most extraordinary
+in his way; an original man, a peculiar
+individual; of mercurial temper, various, quick,
+sympathetic, brave, whole-hearted, generous, but all
+in his own fashion. More Celtic than Saxon, more
+French than English, prone to generalize, something
+of a <i>doctrinaire</i>, indifferent to personalities,
+but of warm affections where he was interested;
+loyal, as knights always are, where his honor was
+concerned, but impatient of dictation, restless, nervous,
+impetuous, dashing from side to side, always
+consistent with himself, yet rarely consistent with
+ordinary rules of conventional society. Such a man
+is best described in detail.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Bellows, as we called him, had a singular gift
+of <i>expression</i>. This was the soul of him, his most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+prominent feature, the trait that explains every other.
+His appearance indicated as much. He had a
+mobile mouth, flexible features, a ringing voice, a
+cordial manner. He was fond of talking, brilliant in
+conversation, attractive in social intercourse, a charming
+companion, full of wit, rapid in repartee, ready
+with anecdote, illustration, allusion. He was a
+great favorite at the dinner-table, at friendly gatherings,
+at the club, where a circle always collected
+round him and were delighted with the endless
+versatility of his discourse. In fact, he was a man
+of society rather than a clergyman, though he occupied
+a pulpit from the beginning, and was faithful to
+all the duties of his profession. Still they were not
+altogether to his taste, and he got away from them
+whenever he conscientiously could. His best deliverances
+were half-secular addresses on some theme of
+immediate popular interest, speeches, orations, ethical
+talks, ever on a high plane of sentiment, but
+looking towards the urgent preoccupations of the
+time. He was not a student in any direction; not a
+deep, patient, exhaustive thinker; not a scholar in
+any school, but an immense reader of current literature,
+of magazines, papers, memoirs, and an eloquent
+reproducer of thoughts as he found them
+lying on the surface of the intellectual world. His
+brain was exceedingly active, and reached forth in
+all directions; his pen was fluent, facile, and busy;
+language exuded from all his pores. As a preacher
+he was conventional, restrained, and, it must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+confessed, not engaging as a rule, but as a talker he was
+delightful, copious, entertaining, kindling, attractive
+to old and young, and crowds thronged the house
+when he spoke about what he had seen or felt, while
+his pulpit discourses did not fill the pews. Like
+many men of remarkable talents, he imagined his
+strong points to be those in which he was most
+deficient, not being gifted with much power of self-knowledge,
+and perhaps aspiring after accomplishments
+he did not possess. He prided himself more
+than he should have done on his insight as a theologian,
+his depth as a philosopher, his skill as an
+administrator, his practical success as an organizer;
+whereas his consummate ability consisted in exposition,
+not in original discovery. He was not a
+theologian, not a philosopher, not a builder, but a
+most persuasive advocate, perhaps the most adroit I
+ever met with. His range was wide, his exuberance
+infinite, his sway over his listeners absolute. It is
+no marvel that such a man was persuaded that he
+could achieve all things.</p>
+
+<p>He was the only speaker I ever knew who could
+talk himself into ideas. Many, by dint of talking,
+can work themselves into an implicit faith in doctrines
+they were indifferent about at starting; but
+this man had the dangerous gift of being able, not
+merely to think on his feet, but to set his faculties
+in motion by the action of his tongue. Again and
+again he has gone to a public meeting, at which he
+was expected to speak, with no preparation at all, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+none but a very general one, depending upon some
+impulse of the moment to set him a-going. A word
+dropped by a previous speaker, the mere presence of
+the audience, a suggestion awakened in his mind as
+he sat awaiting his turn, would excite him sufficiently;
+and when he stood up one idea started another, an
+illustration opened a new field of thought, till the
+torrent, growing deeper and more tumultuous as it
+flowed, carried the hearers away in ecstasy. One
+who did not know him found it hard to believe that
+he had not meditated his address beforehand. He
+has gone into the pulpit with a written sermon, and
+being struck by a sentence in the Scripture he
+was reading, has laid his manuscript aside and
+delivered an extemporaneous discourse on an entirely
+different theme.</p>
+
+<p>The reason why he did not preach habitually
+without notes was that this fatal facility of speech
+excited him too much, carried him too far, rendered
+him discursive, led him on to inordinate length, and
+wearied his congregation. He needed the restraint
+of the paper, the calm dignity of the closet meditation;
+he needed also to spread his thoughts over a
+larger expanse of time, and thus to secure quiet for
+his brain. At the risk, therefore, of being dull, he
+spared himself, as well as his parishioners, the stimulating
+fervor of the extemporaneous address. He
+may have felt, too, that his was not the quality of
+mind for this method. It required a less fluent
+talent, a less ready loquacity, a less mercurial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+temperament, a more reserved habit. There are those
+whose constitutional reticence preserves them from
+aberration; who can see the end from the beginning;
+can cling closely to the matter in hand; can walk a
+thin plank; and have too few ready ideas to be in
+any peril of going astray. Such are the most successful
+extemporaneous preachers. Dr. Bellows'
+genius was better adapted to an address, therefore,
+than to a sermon.</p>
+
+<p>The secular view of things was more attractive to
+him than the spiritual. His defence of the drama in
+1857 (an oration delivered in the Academy of Music,
+and which was very bold for that time); his vigorous
+conduct of the <i>Christian Inquirer</i>, a Unitarian
+paper, which he managed and for which he wrote
+constantly for four years, advocating an unwonted
+liberality of sympathy, maintaining, for example,
+the substantial identity of the Unitarian and the
+Universalist confessions; his interest in questions of
+social and philanthropic concern; his lectures before
+the Lowell Institute in 1857,&mdash;all attest his desire to
+effect a reconciliation between science and religion,
+between this world and the next. His oration before
+the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard, in
+1853, is an admirable specimen of his treatment
+of similar themes. The subject of the oration was
+"The Ledger and the Lexicon, or Business and
+Literature in Account with American Education";
+and its purpose was to assert the claims of popular
+life against those of scholarship,&mdash;to state the case<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+of natural instincts and practical intelligence as the
+controlling force of our destiny. He says, most
+truly, at the outset, "Speaking purely as a scholar,
+I should unaffectedly feel that I had nothing to
+offer worthy this audience or occasion," and then he
+goes on with a full, earnest, eloquent plea for the
+intellectual character of our political and commercial
+activity. Here is an extract:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>What History asks from us is not Literature and Art.
+The world is full of what can never grow old in either.
+<i>American</i> Literature, <i>American</i> Art! Heaven save us from
+them! Let us freely use what is so much better than anything
+one nation can make, the Literature and Art of the
+whole past and the whole world. History implores us, first of
+all, to be true to humanity. She begs to see the education,
+the taste, the sensibility of this great people turned to the
+serious, vital, universal interest of thoroughly vindicating
+<i>Man</i> from the scorn of <i>men;</i> of establishing man on his
+throne as man,&mdash;free because man, happy because man, noble
+and religious because man! Literature and Art will take care
+of themselves; high education and scholarship will come in
+their own time; and so, thank God, will everything humanity
+needs. But for ourselves and the immediate generation, there
+is no work so worthy as confirming the faith of our people in
+their own principles; encouraging devotion to Liberty as the
+supreme interest of Man;&mdash;of man sacred in his own eyes,
+with duties, rights, aims, that are bounded neither by color,
+nationality, nor law. The love of the race, the liberation of
+humanity from complexional, material, political, and moral
+disfranchisements; the elevation of the individual and of
+every individual; the prostration of all partition-walls that
+separate our kind; the tumbling of the artificial pedestals
+that elevate the few, into the unnatural pits that bury the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+rest; the affiliation of the foreigner, and the emancipation of
+the slave; the subjugation of rebellious matter and reluctant
+wealth to the wants and desires of man; the establishment of
+beautiful and independent homes, of high and free and noble
+lives;&mdash;this is American scholarship, this American art. A
+country that sacrifices even its nationality, that proudest of
+all prejudices, to its humanity, will be the first to pay that
+tribute to man, which Christ waits to welcome as the final
+triumph of his kingdom. And, finally, here in America,
+where for the first time universal comfort and general abundance
+reign, the race looks to us to pronounce the banns
+between the spiritual and material interests and pursuits of
+man,&mdash;his worldly well-being, and his heavenly prosperity,&mdash;a
+union that shall not be a miserable compromise of which both
+shall be ashamed and which neither shall keep, but an honorable,
+hearty, and intelligible alliance, on the highest grounds.</p></div>
+
+<p>This is very fine and brave, and similar in tone was
+all he said about American life and destiny. He
+tried to exalt common things, and in this way he
+more than made amends for his lack of scholastic
+equipment. His mission was to encourage and fortify
+and console actual men and women, not to solve
+deep problems of fate. A good but commonplace
+man spoke to me with tears in his eyes of his endless
+gratitude to Dr. Bellows because on one New Year's
+Day he preached a doctrine of promise, and said that
+men did their best, and that the world was as good
+as could be expected; not an extraordinary doctrine
+certainly, but one that is seldom announced with so
+much cordial, human sympathy. This same ardor he
+threw into his ordinary lectures, carrying audiences
+away with a flood of conviction.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+When our Civil War broke out and it became
+evident, as it soon did, that the conflict would be
+a long one, necessitating large armies in a region of
+country unused to military needs and ignorant of
+military exigencies, Dr. Bellows' attention was drawn
+to the questions involved in the maintenance of a
+vast number of men in the field, their protection,
+discipline, and comfort; the proper supply of food,
+clothing, medicine; the best kind of tent, the best
+kind of hospital, the duty of keeping up the home
+associations by means of correspondence and missives.
+He talked over the situation with a few
+friends; societies were formed, organizations instituted,
+the means of relief set in motion. Out of this
+grew the Sanitary Commission, of which he was the
+mouthpiece and the inspiring soul. The work was
+immense, but the task of awakening the country to
+the necessity of endeavor was, beyond all ordinary
+power of conception, arduous. Such was the blind
+faith in the government,&mdash;a government inexperienced
+in similar matters,&mdash;such was the indifference
+of multitudes who were far removed from actual
+danger, such the unconsciousness of the magnitude
+of the peril, such the insensibility to the demands of
+the hour, the serene confidence that all was going
+well, the jaunty sense of complacency in having
+raised the regiments, that nothing less than a trumpet
+call was required to rouse the country to a feeling
+of obligation. Afterwards when the magnitude
+of the strife was self-evident, when the dangers of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+camp-life were understood, and the temptations to
+infidelity of many kinds were painfully apparent,
+other forces came in to carry forward the work; but
+at first prescience was needed, and zeal, and faith in
+principles, and a sense of the gravity of the situation.
+It is hardly too much to say that but for the
+energy shown by the Sanitary Commission in the
+early part of the war, the issue might have been indefinitely
+postponed. That the Commission itself
+flourished to the end was due in the main to Henry
+Bellows. Of course he did not do everything, but
+he did his part. The labor of organization was discharged
+by other orders of genius. The duties of
+treasurer devolved upon men differently constituted
+still; there were many hands employed, many heads
+busy with planning. But his was the potent voice.
+He sounded the clarion; East, West, North, and as
+far South as he could go, he argued, remonstrated,
+pleaded, exhorted, interpreted, inspired, and wherever
+he was heard he filled veins with patriotic fire.
+He was never daunted, never disheartened, never
+depressed. His tones always rang out clear, strong,
+decisive. The bugle never gave an uncertain sound.
+In Washington he addressed the highest authorities
+and was so urgent, not to say so imperious, that
+President Lincoln asked him which of the two
+ran the machine of government. He possessed in
+a singular degree the power of making people work,
+and work gladly,&mdash;all sorts of people, men and
+women, the sensible and the enthusiastic, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+practical and the sentimental, the low-toned and the
+high-strung; and they toiled day after day at scraping
+lint, packing garments, raising money, organizing
+fairs. In the meantime he travelled to and fro, lecturing,
+addressing crowds in the meeting-houses,
+halls, theatres; writing letters to committees, visiting
+men of influence, inspecting hospitals and camps,
+making himself acquainted with the newest methods
+of dealing with sanitary problems, and imparting
+ideas as fast as they came to him. His activity was
+prodigious. He was one of the most conspicuous
+figures in the country. He brought the Commission
+into universal repute. Under his spell it lost its
+local character and became a national concern. He
+was a Unitarian preacher; his immediate co-operators
+were Unitarians; yet so broad and mundane
+was he that no savor of sectarianism mingled with
+his zeal, nor could it be suspected, except for his
+aims, that he was a clergyman. As long as the
+war lasted this energy continued, the enthusiasm
+did not abate, the outpouring did not slacken.
+It was not till the struggle was over that the
+over-tasked brain craved repose. Then the reaction
+was purely nervous, not in the least moral or intellectual.
+He sprang up again and threw himself into
+new enterprises with the old fervor and the old brilliancy
+of speech, striving to awaken a desire for
+religious unity, as he had promoted national concord.
+The establishment of the National Conference of
+Liberal Churches, which was to supplement the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+more local Unitarian Associations, was his suggestion.
+The scheme did not entirely meet his expectations,
+but this shows how large his expectations were, and
+how comprehensive were his purposes of good. As
+has been intimated already, his desires were in
+advance of his practical ability. He was a man of
+wishes rather than of expedients. His plans often
+failed, but his aspirations were always pure and
+lofty, and it was characteristic of him to impute the
+failure of the special plan to some stubbornness in
+the materials he attempted to manipulate, rather
+than to any deficiency in his own faculty. Thus his
+confidence in himself was sustained, and he went on
+trying experiments and believing in his talent to
+set anything, even communities and States, on their
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>People used to say that his advocacy was very
+uncertain; that it was impossible to tell in advance
+whether he would take a liberal or a conservative
+view of a party or dogma; in short, he had the
+reputation of being somewhat of a chameleon, of
+catching his line from the last person he talked with.
+One of his parishioners remarked, jestingly, that the
+hearers of Dr. Bellows were taught in perfection one
+lesson,&mdash;that of self-reliance. This was probably
+true, as it was a general impression; and it illustrates
+the warmth of his sympathy, the impressionableness
+of his temperament, the readiness of his adaptation,
+the facility of his discourse, as well as the want of
+depth in his speculative intellect and his lack of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+hold on fundamental principles. He was an advocate
+by nature, not a theologian, a philosopher, or a
+critic; an adept in speech, not a subtle or profound
+thinker. He saw the effective points in either doctrine,
+and chose the one that was most captivating
+at the time. His eclecticism was simply ease of
+transference, not a keen perception of the grounds
+of identity. His logic was the skilful accommodation
+to circumstances, not absolute fidelity to the
+laws of reason. His affluence of diction and his
+profusion of thoughts covered up his essential
+poverty of insight, and persuaded some that he
+looked farther than he did; but still it remains true
+that he was not a sure guide in matters of opinion.
+He was a most adroit, subtle, engaging talker, and
+as such was of incalculable value; a fountain of entertainment,
+and a source of influence. A decided
+vein of Bohemianism ran through his character. He
+was light-hearted, gay, versatile, fond of fun, restless,
+addicted to society, abhorrent of solitude, darkness,
+confinement; a friend of artists, musicians, wits; a
+club-man; could smoke a cigar, and drink a glass of
+wine, and tell a merry story; a man of quick
+emotions, volatile some would call him, though of
+unquestioned and unquestionable loyalty when any
+principle was at stake, or any person he loved and
+trusted was in trouble. Otherwise he forgot unpleasant
+things and went to something else, dropping
+the individual, but holding fast to the elements of
+charity. This faculty of changing rapidly from one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+interest to another saved him from a vast deal of
+fatigue, and enabled him to pursue his almost incredible
+labors with less wear and tear than would have
+been possible under other circumstances. The formation
+of roots, and the necessity of pulling them up
+frequently with a feeling of loss and pain, is sadly
+weakening and disabling. This fosters a disposition
+to stay at home, to form few ties, to remain quietly
+where one is placed by destiny, to expose one's self
+to no more disruptions than are appointed, to hide
+one's self in a corner of existence, to avoid the wind.
+The scholar hugs his library, reads books, meditates,
+cultivates his mind, appears in public only when he
+is prepared. The man of society dashes out and
+deems the time wasted that is passed in the house.
+Dr. Bellows once expressed his wonder that a friend
+should have no desire to go abroad, but should be
+content in his study.</p>
+
+<p>He was a knight-errant, a Norman gentleman,
+ever ready to succor the oppressed, but satisfied
+when he had unhorsed the oppressor, though the
+victim lay helpless on the ground. He derived his
+name from "Belles Eaux." He was not a democrat
+as implying one that had affinities with the people.
+On the contrary, he was at bottom an aristocrat,
+looking down on the people; but he was humane in
+idea, holding it to be the part of a gentleman to
+relieve the unfortunate. The motto, "<i>Noblesse
+oblige</i>" applied to him exactly, with the understanding
+that he belonged to the <i>Noblesse</i>, and was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+privileged to patronize. This tendency was prominent
+in him. He would not allow a companion to
+pay his car fare, because he would not borrow so
+small a sum, but he confronted the man to whom he
+had lent fifty dollars, and who had forgotten the
+payment, as people often do. Meeting the defaulter
+in the street, he reminded him of the transaction,
+taxed him with infidelity to his engagements, and
+had the satisfaction of receiving his money and
+relieving his mind at the same time. Magnanimous
+he was by nature. I will give a single instance of
+it, out of several I could detail if personalities did not
+forbid. When I first came to New York to found a
+parish, there was a woman in my congregation,&mdash;an
+angular, brusque woman, not sunny or agreeable,&mdash;whose
+husband, being unfortunate, had, to repair his
+fortune, gone to San Francisco; she stayed in New
+York and kept school, for the purpose of educating
+her children, and of eking out the family expenses.
+One day, complaining to me of her lot and labor,
+she spoke of certain prejudices against her as interfering
+with her success, and accused Dr. Bellows of
+being one of her enemies. Having satisfied myself
+of the injustice of the impression about her, and of
+her worthy deserving, I took occasion at once to
+speak to Dr. Bellows on the subject. Reminding
+him of the circumstances in which the woman was
+placed, I asked him if he did not think she ought to
+be helped instead of being hindered. He acknowledged
+that he knew her, that he did not like her,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+that he had spoken harshly of her under the impression
+that she was not deserving of moral support.
+On my presentation of her case, and conviction that
+he was wrong, he, being persuaded of his heedlessness,
+offered to do everything in his power to repair
+any mischief he might have caused. In my excitement,
+I became audacious and suggested the drawing
+up and signing of a paper,&mdash;about the most disagreeable
+thing that could be proposed. But he assented,
+prepared the paper, affixed his signature, and from
+that hour did his utmost to befriend the woman
+whom he took no pleasure in thinking of. This was
+noble, even great. He could put his personal tastes
+aside when a principle was involved.</p>
+
+<p>It used to be urged against him that he dropped
+people when he had done with them, and felt no
+scruple in sacrificing them to his views of policy.
+But it cannot be proved that he was false to anybody,
+and his notion of the absolute unfitness of the
+individual for his place, or of the man's unreliability,
+was probably the real cause of his opposition. Probably,
+in each instance of his withdrawal of confidence,
+there were excellent reasons for his conduct, though
+it was natural that those who were suddenly neglected
+or displaced should feel indignant and aggrieved.
+Dr. Bellows was not one to act on a private
+prejudice or a personal pique. His affections were
+strong and would have led him to make any concession
+that was consistent with what he regarded
+as his public duty. No doubt he was somewhat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+imperious in judging what his duty was; he lacked
+the useful faculty of remaining in the background;
+he was impetuous and forward; but he never was
+or could be insincere, and he always had a sufficient
+explanation of the course he pursued,&mdash;an explanation
+perfectly satisfactory to one who bore his temperament
+in mind and considered what he could do and
+what he could not.</p>
+
+<p>A most lovable, cordial, faithful man I always
+found him,&mdash;a man to be depended on in difficult
+and trying times, high-minded, courageous, daring,
+ready to enter the breach, happiest when leading a
+forlorn hope, straight-forward, inspiring, easily lifted
+beyond himself, and imparting nervous vigor to his
+followers. Followers he must have, for he was not
+content to obey any behest; but then his leadership
+was so hearty and wholesome, so free from superciliousness,
+so abundant in expressions of loyalty,
+that it was a joy to go with him. He was more than
+willing to do his share of hard work, and to indulge
+his servants. If one could forbear to cross him, he
+was friendliness itself; a warm advocate of liberty,
+only insisting that liberty and progress should march
+hand in hand; that private idiosyncrasies should not
+stand in the way of practical advance. He was a
+very different man from Dr. Dewey, yet he loved
+Dr. Dewey devotedly while life lasted. He was an
+entirely different man from me in temperament and
+in gifts,&mdash;quite opposite in fact,&mdash;yet he was one of
+the best of my friends as long as he lived, seldom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+resenting my radicalism, never impatient of my slowness,
+but warm, sunny, helpful to the end, the man
+to whom I instinctively resorted for sympathy in the
+most painful passages of my career.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, the foundation of his character was
+impulse. He was a man of fiery zeal, of moral passion,
+of vast enthusiasm, and when a storm of spiritual
+power came sweeping down from some unseen
+height, he was easily carried away. This impulsive
+character explains his chivalry of disposition, his
+magnanimity, his self-abnegation; for though he was
+self-asserting, he could at once forget himself, and
+sink his own individuality entirely when some cause
+he had at heart strongly appealed to him. This
+impulsiveness explains, too, his theological inconsistency,
+for when the popular feeling struck him,
+he was carried away in a different direction from
+what he had first proposed. For instance, once&mdash;I
+think it was at Buffalo&mdash;he gave a most eloquent
+plea for individualism, having determined to speak
+in favor of institutions; and in Boston when he had
+been expected to uphold a creed, he was so borne
+away by the opposite sentiment that, when he ended,
+a creed seemed absolutely impossible.</p>
+
+<p>A very different person from the foregoing was Dr.
+Samuel Osgood, the successor of Dr. Dewey in the
+Church of the Messiah on Broadway, and the close
+associate of the pastor of "All Souls," which name
+he suggested when the new edifice on the corner of
+Fourth Avenue and Twentieth Street was christened.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+He was a lover of ecclesiasticism, of forms, usages,
+ceremonials, though he was not unmindful of the
+ideas that lay beneath them, and too good a New
+Englander, too good a Unitarian, too staunch a
+friend of free thought to be anything but a liberal
+Protestant; a man of names and dates, and instituted
+observances, not "electric," "magnetic," or a
+leader either of thought or action; not a man of
+deep emotions, or moving eloquence in or out of the
+pulpit; not a man of long reach or wide influence,
+but conspicuous in his way, unique, worth studying
+as a figure in his generation.</p>
+
+<p>He was devoted to books, of which he read and
+produced many, and might have been called learned,
+yet he was not a closet man, not a recluse; on the
+contrary, he knew about public affairs, talked about
+what was going on in the world, attended political,
+social, and literary meetings, was a member of the
+prominent clubs, like the "Century" and the "Union
+League," was for years the Corresponding Secretary
+of the "Historical Society," rather prided himself,
+in fact, on the number and intimacy of his outside
+relations. With all this, he was a diligent pastor,
+an excellent denominationalist, a dependence on all
+church occasions within his sect, a speaker at conventions,
+a worker of the ecclesiastical machinery,
+a man much relied on for denominational work.</p>
+
+<p>His writings were numerous. In fact he always
+seemed to have the pen in his hand. Besides the
+books which are known,&mdash;"Studies in Christian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+Biography," "The Hearthstone," "God with Men,"
+"Milestones in Our Life Journey," "Student Life,"&mdash;all
+popular once,&mdash;he contributed frequently to
+the <i>Christian Examiner</i>, the <i>North American Review</i>,
+the <i>Bibliotheca Sacra</i>, and other important
+magazines; delivered orations, printed theological
+discourses, especially a famous one before the theological
+school at Meadville, Pennsylvania, on "The
+Coming Church and its Clergy," and for several
+months, during Mr. Curtis' illness, prepared the
+essays in the "Easy Chair" for <i>Harper's Monthly
+Magazine</i>. His interest in matters of education and
+literature was incessant, active, and useful. He
+made speeches, served on committees, prepared reports,
+in every way tried to serve the cause of
+rational knowledge. Yet with all his industry and
+all his ability&mdash;for he possessed ability of no mean
+order,&mdash;he had a mind singularly destitute of vitality.
+His ingenuity, his pleasantry, his sententiousness,
+his versatility, could not conceal this lack of
+organic power. His vivacity did not exhilarate, his
+happy expressions did not create the sense of life in
+the mind, but were like artificial flowers that had no
+perfume, and reminded one more of the perfection
+of art than of the involuntary sweetness of nature.
+He was destitute of genius to inspire. It is the
+more wonderful that he could persevere, as he did,
+without the popular recognition that his talents
+merited, or the applause his endeavors deserved.
+He had praise, to be sure, but it was not hearty or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+effusive, and they who rendered it probably wondered
+why they could not put more soul into their
+laudation. The address was brilliant, but not warming.
+One must come within arm's length of him to
+feel the beating of his heart, to be sensible of his
+force. He was unable to project himself far, and
+relied upon incidental advantages of occasion for
+effects which he could not produce by genius.</p>
+
+<p>He was a most affectionate man, dependent, clinging,
+always ready to serve, obliging, docile, patient,
+without hardness and without guile. He was devoted
+to his family, faithful to his friends, never
+allowing differences of opinion to interfere with his
+duty towards those who might expect support from
+him, but fulfilling disagreeable offices when he felt
+that loyalty made perfect truthfulness incumbent.
+There was something touching in his fidelity towards
+men who gave him nothing but outside recognition,
+and who were willing to abandon him when
+he could no longer be useful. There was something
+plaintive in his readiness to work for men who accepted
+his labor as a matter of course, and allowed
+him to throw away his love. He, for his part, asked
+no reward, but was quite satisfied if his service was
+accepted kindly by those to whom he rendered it.
+Not that he did not like recognition; he did, and
+the more public it was the better he liked it. For
+he was fond of notoriety, had a craving for publicity,
+and was happiest when a multitude applauded.
+This may have grown out of his affectionateness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+for he reached forth his arms as widely as possible,
+and wanted to hear the sound of many approving
+voices, needing sympathy and the assurance that he
+was conferring pleasure, the noise of plaudits reassuring
+his heart. Still he could do without this, if
+he was certain of the attachment of a single warm
+friend. Recognition of some sort was essential to
+his peace, for he did not possess independence enough
+to stand alone, and he cared too much for individuals
+to be easy if they were displeased. He gave
+himself a great deal of pain, worried, took infinite
+trouble about imaginary sorrows, not being able to
+feel or to affect indifference, and being destitute of
+the robustness of character necessary to throw off
+unpleasant things; for his ambition, not springing
+from vitality of mind, was no guard against griefs of
+the spirit. He that cannot lose himself in his studies
+fails to derive from them their best satisfaction,&mdash;that
+of consolation and refuge. He stands naked to
+the wind, and, if his skin is tender, suffers acutely.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Osgood was intensely self-conscious, self-regarding,
+self-referring. Not vain in the ordinary
+sense, though he seemed so from his countenance,
+attitude, manner, for all of which, I am persuaded,
+nature was more responsible than disposition, his
+physical formation producing a certain carriage that
+suggested superciliousness and conceit. If he were
+forth-putting, it was, in most instances at least, because
+he lacked self-reliance, and wished to be <i>seen</i>,
+knowing that he could not be <i>felt</i>. In reality he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+was a modest, timid, shrinking man, with an inordinate
+desire for distinction, which impelled him continually
+to make a demonstration in public. Mere
+vanity&mdash;the love of appearances&mdash;he was destitute
+of, for he was too tender-hearted and too conscientious
+to make victims. One must be self-centred to
+be vain, as he was not. I recollect his coming one
+day into the office of the <i>Christian Inquirer</i>, with
+his head up as usual, and calling out in a loud voice:
+"Where do you think I went on my way down
+town?" Of course none of us knew or could guess.
+"Well," he went on to say, with an air of complacency,
+"I stopped at Fowler &amp; Wells' and had my
+head examined." "Ah!" exclaimed one of the impudent,
+"did they find anything, Sam?" "What
+they did <i>not</i> find," he said, "will interest you more.
+They declared that I was deficient in self-respect,
+and it is true." And it <i>was</i> true. Samuel Osgood
+assumed a brave air, for the reason that he could not
+trust himself in the open field. He needed the protection
+of a rampart. He wore a showy uniform,
+because he was not valiant. He had too much self-esteem
+to forget himself, and too little courage to
+assert himself; the consequence was that he said and
+did numerous things that looked vainglorious and
+were absurd, but which were intended to conceal his
+impuissance. It was an innocent kind of bravado,
+like poor Oliver Proudfute's, in Scott's romance,
+"The Fair Maid of Perth." Nobody was hurt by
+it, though to him the passion for notoriety was fatal.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+He liked to see his name in a newspaper, coveting
+the kind of reputation that came in that way, and
+comforting his heart with the thought of lying on
+the broad bosom of the community. His restless
+desire for public notice brought ridicule on him, for
+ordinary people ascribed it to his conceit, whereas it
+rather indicated an absence of self-confidence. It
+was a cloak to hide his depreciation at the same time
+that it made him look larger in the general eye. It
+was, therefore, more touching than despicable, and if
+it excited mirth there was nothing bitter in the smile
+which could not break into laughter. Selfish he
+could not be called, for he was always serving others,
+and disinterestedly too; but on a charge of complacency
+he could hardly be acquitted. This was the
+manner in which he took his reward, and, as I said,
+it cost nothing to anybody, while the public received
+a great deal of service very ungrudgingly bestowed.</p>
+
+<p>The change from Unitarianism to Episcopacy is
+very easily explained. His craving for sympathy
+was boundless. He was necessarily isolated in New
+York, nor had he the solace of a great popular success.
+In fact his following was small; his church
+was dwindling; his reputation was certainly not increasing;
+and he became persuaded, I think without
+sufficient reason, that he was the victim of adverse
+influences. In London, he was charmed with the
+blended freedom and sanctity of the "Broad
+Church" represented by Stanley, Kingsley, Jowett,
+and a host of cultivated men; by its unity amid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+diversity; its sympathy and fellowship and large
+scholarship. Here was a church indeed; wide,
+holy, liberal, devout, with articles admitting of
+various interpretations, sacraments tender and elastic,
+forms that did not constrain, and usages that did
+not bind, an unlimited range of speculation, and a
+spirit of reverence that kept the most widely separated
+together. Here was something very different
+from the sectarianism he had, all his life, been accustomed
+to, and, all his life, had loathed. He
+joined this Communion not so much on account of
+its <i>creed</i> as of its <i>creedlessness;</i> not as another form of
+denominationalism, but as an escape from denominationalism;
+a real, living, comprehensive church, where
+there was room for all Christian souls, whatever
+their special mode of belief; a Protestant church
+with a truly catholic temper, cordial, humane, courteous;
+with a respect for literature, and a love for
+knowledge; with no jealousy or ill-will, or fear of
+thought. His heart was warmed, his fancy fired.
+Shortly after his return, as he sat in my study, I
+asked him if he had materially changed his theology.
+He replied that he had not, he had simply altered
+the <i>emphasis;</i> as much as to say that in substance
+it remained what it was before, essentially Unitarian,
+as he understood that designation. In fact, his sermons
+were to all intents and purposes the same;
+they never abounded in doctrine, they did not now;
+they were always "sentimental," in the sense of
+dealing with sentiment, they were so still. He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+not a prime favorite with Episcopalians in America.
+He was not narrow or strict enough for the orthodox;
+he was not "sensational" enough for the liberals;
+he was too ecclesiastical for the Low Churchmen;
+too rationalistic for the High Churchmen;
+and his failure to communicate warmth was not
+favorable to his attractiveness. There were not
+many Broad Church ministers in New York, so that
+his circle of fellowship was small; and on the whole
+the reception was a disappointment. He longed for
+recognition, which he found among many of his old
+associates, as he did not find it among his new
+friends. He was always a churchman when he was
+a Unitarian; he was no more of a churchman now,
+and the sympathy he sought he might have found in
+his former connection. Probably had he lived
+elsewhere than in New York, where the competition
+was sharp, and where individuality alone without
+distinguished power counted for nothing, he would
+have continued Unitarian, and been happy, but he
+was ambitious of eminence; he wanted to live in a
+great city, to be minister of a metropolitan parish, to
+be a Doctor of Divinity, and for all this he lacked
+the force. There was a perpetual conflict between
+his aspirations and his vigor. He joined the Episcopal
+fraternity, hoping for what none but those
+born into it attain without energy of an exalted
+kind. His ancient comrades fell away, as was
+natural; he could not win other comrades, and his
+later years became lonely. He cared more for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+Christian fellowship than for any other; and he had
+not the power to secure this. Thus his affectionateness
+was against him. He was a loyal man, true to
+his convictions, faithful to the bent of his mind. He
+could not be a deceiver or a renegade, and his heart
+was not strong enough or wide enough to push him
+forward.</p>
+
+<p>Some thought him deficient in common-sense, and
+this is, in a sense, true. He had not the force to
+carry projects through, nor had he the hearty accord
+with the people of his generation that would give
+him an instinctive insight into their wishes and
+enable him to strike into the current of their designs.
+His self-reference always stood in the way of
+his sympathy with other men; yet he often took
+practical views of speculative questions, and curbed
+a propensity to moral enthusiasm on the part of
+some of his associates. This, however, was due to
+his timidity, to his absence of vigor, to his want
+of vital conviction, rather than to any clearness
+of perception. He had no humor, no sense of the
+incongruous, the incompatible, or the absurd. He
+named rocks, groves, arbors, on his summer estate,
+after the famous poets, and used to sit in turn on the
+seats he had thus immortalized. He said things that
+no man of taste would have uttered, and did things
+that no man of judgment would have been guilty of.
+But all this was owing to the absence of sensible
+qualities rather than to the presence of visionary
+ones. He was not perverse, stubborn, or wrong-headed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+did not outrage common opinion, or fly in
+the face of established prejudice. His want of
+good sense was negative, not positive; innocent, not
+harmful.</p>
+
+<p>Such men have their uses and their place, and
+neither is small or low. His love of learning, his
+devotion to duty, his friendliness, his fidelity, his
+kindliness, were rare gifts, particularly rare in communities
+like ours. His child-like conceit, very different
+from the aggressive vanity that offends the
+sensitive soul, was not offensive or noxious, and was
+a source of harmless amusement. His guilelessness
+was more than touching; it was admirable as an
+example and as a lesson, in an age that honors
+knowledge of the world beyond its deserts; and his
+simplicity of nature, his trustingness, his ingenuousness,
+rendered him a confiding friend, dear to those
+whose hearts were sore. Few men living have so
+small a number of enemies. He did not provoke
+the hostility he received. It was possible to be
+sorry for him; it was impossible to bear him malice.</p>
+
+<p>As I think of him, the vision arises of a complacent
+man, with a loud greeting, a metallic voice,
+an outstretched hand, a consequential manner. All
+this is dust and ashes, but his singleness of intention
+is not dead. When everything else is forgotten, his
+faithfulness will be remembered.</p>
+
+<p>Both these men gave me a warm welcome; in
+fact, my relations were most friendly among the
+other Unitarian ministers in the neighborhood. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+was anticipated, no doubt, that I would establish a
+third Unitarian Society "up town," of a liberal type;
+but a wide departure from the existing order was
+not suspected. The expectation was that the usual
+doctrines were to be proclaimed; that the sacraments
+were to be administered; that the regular
+order was to be observed. Perhaps my willingness
+to undertake such an enterprise was regarded as
+a sign of concession on my part; perhaps it was
+supposed that the conservative tone of the city,
+together with the attitude of the other churches,
+would repress the radical tendencies of the young
+clergyman; perhaps the trials incident to a new
+society and the confusions of the time concealed
+somewhat the real bearing of the undertaking.
+However this may be, there was no opposition, no
+criticism, no dictation, no proscription of radical
+leanings. My congregations were composed of all
+sorts of people. There were Unitarians, Universalists,
+"come-outers," spiritualists, unbelievers of
+all kinds, anti-slavery people, reformers generally.
+But this, as being incidental to the formation of
+every liberal society, was not objected to. It need
+not have been; for if there had been no interruption,
+no check, everything might have gone smoothly, as
+in similar societies since.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p>
+<h2>VIII.<br />
+
+WAR.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Hardly had I got warm in my place when the
+mutterings of war were in the air. During the autumn
+of 1859, on the 16th of October, John Brown
+planned his attack on Harper's Ferry. His was a
+portentous figure. His position in history&mdash;greater
+than his achievements would warrant&mdash;was due partly
+to his position as herald of the coming strife, but
+mainly to his personal qualities. These were colossal;
+however much one may criticise his particular
+deeds, or the details of his motive, these qualities
+can not be exalted too highly. His courage, heroism,
+patience, fortitude, were most extraordinary. Even
+Governor Wise, the man whose duty it was to see
+him tried and executed as a felon, said of him;
+"They are mistaken who take Brown to be a madman.
+He is a bundle of the best nerves I ever saw;
+cut and thrust and bleeding and in bonds. He is a
+man of clear head, of courage, fortitude, and simple
+ingenuousness. He is cool, collected, indomitable;
+and it is but just to him to say that he was humane
+to his prisoners, and he inspired me with great trust<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+in his integrity as a man of truth." Colonel Washington,
+another Virginia witness, testified to the
+extraordinary coolness with which Brown felt the
+pulse of his dying son, while he held his own rifle in
+the other hand, and cheered on his men. His character
+made his prison cell a shrine. On the day
+of his execution, December 2, 1859, he stood under
+the gallows with the noose round his neck for full
+ten minutes while military evolutions were performed;
+he never wavered a moment, and died with
+nerves still subject to his iron will. He was a Calvinistic
+believer in predestination; a real Covenanter,
+more like the Scotch Covenanters of two centuries
+ago than anything we know of to-day. He was an
+Old-Testament man, and like all fanatics was indifferent
+to death, either that of other men or his
+own. His anti-slavery zeal began in his youth. He
+early took an oath to make war against slavery, and,
+it is said, called his older sons together on one occasion
+and made them pledge themselves, kneeling in
+prayer, to the anti-slavery crusade. This purpose
+he always bore in mind, whatever else he was doing;
+he even chose the spot for his attempt&mdash;the
+mountains which Washington had selected as a final
+retreat should he be defeated by the English. Nearly
+nine years before his own death, he exhorted the
+members of the "League of Gileadites" to stand by
+one another and by their friends as long as a drop of
+blood remained and be hanged, if they must, but to
+tell no tales out of school.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then came the war. Though its physical aspect,&mdash;the
+loss of treasure and of blood&mdash;was most affecting,
+I cannot but think that its mental and moral
+aspect has been underrated. Its whole justification
+lay in its moral character, and I must believe that
+full justice has never been done to those who were
+obliged to stay at home and uphold this feature.
+The preacher of the Gospel of Peace had as much as
+he could do to overcome the horrors of war; and
+the preacher of Righteousness was engaged all the
+time in promoting the cause of justice. They who
+went to the front had the excitement of battle, the
+pleasures of camp-life, the assistance of comradeship,
+the comfort of sympathy. The preacher had none
+of these. Every day rumors were reaching his ears;
+"extras" were flying about in the silence; he had to
+comfort people under defeat, to humble them in
+hours of victory; to interpret the conflict in accordance
+with the principles of equity; to keep alive
+the moral issues of the struggle. This was an incessant
+weariness and anxiety; to fight foes one could
+not see, and to uphold a cause that was discredited,
+fell to his portion; it is no wonder that when the
+war was over he was spent and aged.</p>
+
+<p>An illustration of a part of what he had to contend
+with is found in the riot of the summer of
+1863. This was an anti-abolitionist riot, a fierce
+protest against the conscription, and at the same
+time an uprising against the government, which was
+supposed to maintain a war of the blacks against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+the whites. The riot was directed against the negroes
+and the abolitionists, and was pitiless and
+ferocious in the extreme. It was my lot to be in
+New York in that dreadful week in July. I was
+visiting friends in the upper part of the town when
+the uproar began. As I walked home down Madison
+Avenue a group of rough men met me; one of
+them snatched at my watch chain, and I should have
+been maltreated had not more attractive game in the
+shape of people in a buggy drawn away the attention
+of my assailants. I reached my home in safety.
+The next morning, as I walked about the city, there
+were groups of men standing idle, or armed with
+missiles, in almost every street. Had the mob been
+organized then it might have done more mischief
+than it did, for the inhabitants of the city were unprepared
+and unprotected. As I stood at night on
+my roof, I could see the fires in different parts of
+the town, and hear the shots. An arsenal stood on
+Seventh Avenue, near my house, full of arms and
+ammunition which the insurgents wanted. When
+the United States troops arrived, they defended this
+arsenal. Cannons were pointed up and down the
+street, guards were posted, officers with their clanking
+swords marched up and down before my door.
+The riot lasted three days,&mdash;from the 13th to the
+16th. On the following Sunday a sermon was
+preached which gives expression to the better
+thoughts of the wisest people, and from which accordingly
+extracts are made:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Of all the dreadful and melancholy passages in the history
+of human progress, none, to a thoughtful man, are more dreadful
+or melancholy than those which tell how men have resisted,
+pushed away, reviled, cursed, beaten, mobbed, crucified their
+benefactors. It does seem, as we read them, as if the most
+dreaded thing on earth had been the personal, the domestic,
+the social welfare; as if the deepest anxiety on the part of
+men of all sorts was an anxiety to escape from their health and
+salvation; as if the profoundest dread was a dread of mending
+their estates, and their utmost horror was a horror of
+heaven! It does seem, as we read, as if happiness, prosperity,
+success, were the pet aversion of mankind; as if the signs
+that were looked for with the most agonized apprehension
+were the signs that the kingdom of heaven was at hand....
+We saw this conspicuously and dismally exemplified in the
+events of the past week. The one man who, before and above
+all others, was a mark for the rage of the populace, the one
+man whose name was loud in the rabble's mouth, and always
+coupled with a malediction, the one man who was hunted for
+his blood as by wolves, who would have been torn in pieces
+had the opportunity been afforded, and on whose account the
+dwelling of a friend was literally torn in pieces, was a man
+who had been the steadfast friend of these very people who
+hungered for his blood; their most constant, uncompromising,
+and public friend; thinking for them, speaking for them,
+writing for them; pleading their cause through the press, in
+the legislature, from the platform; excusing their mistakes and
+follies, asserting and reasserting their substantial worth and
+honesty and rectitude, advocating their claims as working people,
+vindicating their rights as men; proposing schemes for the
+safety of their persons, the healthfulness of their houses, the
+saving and increase of their earnings, the education of their
+children, the exemption of their homesteads from seizure in
+cases of debt, the enlargement of their sphere of labor, the
+transferring of their families from the crowded city, where
+they could do little more than keep themselves alive by arduous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+toil, to the fruitful lands of the West, where they could
+become noble and self-respecting men and women. This was
+the man whose blood was hungered for. I need not speak his
+name,&mdash;you know whom I mean, Horace Greeley,&mdash;a man
+whom some call visionary, but whose visions are all of the
+redemption of the people; whom some call "fool," but who, if
+he seem a fool, is foolish that the people may be wise; whom
+some call "radical," but whose radicalism is simply a determination
+that the popular existence shall have a sound, sure, and
+deep root in natural law and moral principle; at all events, a
+man who has lived for the people and suffered for the people,
+and been laughed at when he suffered and because he suffered.
+<i>This</i> was the man whose blood was hungered for. And
+yet the most moderate, kind, considerate of all the papers, the
+last week, was his paper. And I believe he, even had he
+fallen into the hands of his enemies, would have said, "Forgive
+them, they know not what they do."</p>
+
+<p>Indulge me in one more personality. I said that the dwelling
+of a friend was pillaged by the mob, under the impression
+that Mr. Greeley lived there. What was this dwelling? Who
+was this friend? The dwelling was one the like of which
+is rare in any city, a dwelling of happiness and peace, a home
+of the tenderest domestic affections, a house of large friendliness
+and hospitality, a refuge and abiding-place for the unfortunate
+and the outcast. There was no display of wealth there&mdash;there
+was no wealth to display; yet the house was full of
+things which no wealth could buy. It was crowded with
+mementos. The pieces of furniture in the rooms had family
+histories connected with them; chairs and tables were precious
+from association with noble and rare people who had gone.
+Pictures on the walls, busts in the parlor, engravings, photographs,
+books, spoke of the gratitude or love of some dear
+giver. One room was sacred to the memory of a noble boy,
+an only son, who had died some years before. There was his
+bust in marble, there were his books, there were the prints
+he liked, the little bits of art he was fond of, and all the dear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+things that seemed to bring him back. The whole house was a
+shrine and a sanctuary.</p>
+
+<p>And who were the inmates? The master, a man whose
+sympathies were always and completely with the working-people,
+a man of steady and boundless humanity; the mistress,
+a woman whose name is familiar to all doers of good
+deeds in the city of New York, and dear to hundreds of the
+objects of good deeds. To the orphan and friendless and
+poor, a mother; to the unfortunate, a sister; to the wretched,
+the depraved, the sinful, more than a friend. In the city
+prison her presence was the presence of an angel of pitying
+love; at Blackwell's Island she was welcome as a spirit of
+peace and hope. The boys at Randall's Island looked into
+her face as the face of an angel. Again and again had she
+rescued from the life of shame the countrywoman, and possibly
+the kindred of these very people who plundered her house.
+For the better part of a year and more she has been in camp
+and city hospitals, nursing their brothers and sons, performing
+every menial office. At this moment she is at Point Lookout,
+doing that work, amid discomforts and discouragements that
+would daunt a less resolute humanity than hers, giving all she
+has and is to the <i>people</i>, to the wounded, crippled, bleeding,
+and broken people; giving it for the sake of the people&mdash;giving
+it that the people may be raised to a higher social level!
+And she, forsooth, must be selected to have her house pillaged!
+She must be stabbed to her heart of hearts, stabbed through
+and through, in every one of her affections, by these people
+for whom her life had been a perpetual process of dying!
+Why, if they had but known this that I have been telling you,
+or but a tenth part of it, those men would have defended with
+their bodies every thread of carpet she trod on. But so it
+was, and so it must be! Only the best names are ever taken
+in vain on human lips, and they are so taken because they are
+the best, and best is worst to those who cannot understand it.
+Theodore Winthrop was shot by a negro. Did he know what
+he did?... In thinking of it one's bosom is torn with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+distracting emotions, and between feeling for the persecuted
+and feeling for the persecutors, one almost loses the power of
+feeling. Could anything be more pitiful? Yes, one thing
+more pitiful there was&mdash;the savage hunting down and persecution
+of the negroes, as if they, too, were the enemies of these
+working-people. The poor, inoffensive negroes, most innocent
+part of the whole population! Most quiet, harmless, docile
+people, who could not stand in the way of the white people
+if they would, and who never thought of anything but
+of keeping out of their way! These the enemies of white
+labor! As if they had not, for these very white people,
+borne the burden and heat of the tropical day, raising the
+cotton by which we are clothed, and the rice by which
+we are fed! As if to these and the like of these, the white
+people did not owe a large share of the manufacturing towns
+where they get their bread! As if the lowest foundation
+stones of this very New York of ours were not cemented by
+their bloody sweat! As if there were too many of them in
+the country now for the country's needs, supposing the country
+ever to fall into a settled and civilized condition again!
+As if all there are might not by and by be <i>required</i> to do the
+work which white labor can not for a long time, if it can ever,
+safely undertake! Strange complications of things! Strange
+cross-purposes of human nature! The Southern people would
+revive the slave trade, because they have not black laborers
+enough, and their allies among ourselves would banish or kill
+all the black people, because they interfere with white labor!
+A mutual stabbing at each other's hearts! And on each side
+a stabbing to its own heart!... It is a very mysterious
+thing in history, this alliance between the most turbulent and
+the most tyrannical, the most depraved and the most despotic
+portions of society. The most undisciplined, barbarous,
+savage members of a community are ever in a league with the
+most overbearing, insolent, imperious, and domineering members
+of it. They who are under the least self-control bow
+most deferentially before those who rule others with the most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+cruel rod. The people who were proudest of having turned
+out to a man, in London, for the maintenance of law and
+order, on the day of the great Chartist demonstration there,
+were the most immoral class in the city&mdash;proved by the criminal
+returns to be nine times as dishonest, five times as drunken,
+and nine times as savage as the rest of the community. (See
+Spencer's "Social Statics," p. 424.)</p>
+
+<p>In Boston, on the occasion of the rendition of Anthony
+Burns, all the thieves, burglars, cut-throats, swarmed from
+their dens and volunteered with alacrity to enforce the fugitive-slave
+law. And now the leaders of the Southern Confederacy
+count, and count securely, on the Northern populace.
+The fiercest allies of the only absolutely despotic class in the
+country are the outlaws of society. The men who are fighting
+for the privileges of the extremest tyranny, the privileges
+not of ruling merely, but literally of owning the laboring class,
+these men have the implicit, unquestioning, fanatical loyalty
+of the people who are at the opposite end of the social scale&mdash;the
+people who own nothing either of fortune, position, influence,
+or character, and whose sole relation towards the despots
+they worship is that of mad, savage slaves.</p>
+
+<p>In Europe this alliance between the despotic and the
+lawless may be fortunate for the peace of the community.
+In our Southern States it is eminently conducive to the
+tranquillity they desire. But when the lawless are here and
+the despotic are there, when the barbarism is in New York and
+the tyranny in Richmond, when the elements of discord and
+turbulence in our Northern cities fly to support their iron-handed
+rulers in the seceded States, there ensues a state of
+things, especially in time of war, that is calculated to shake
+society to its foundations, and fill every loyal heart with dread.
+The unruly, as if they felt instinctively their lack of self-control,
+seek a ruler&mdash;fly to the strongest to save them from
+themselves, worship the sternest, the most high-handed, the
+cruellest, and by that natural sympathy with brutality are
+maintained in subjection to law.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Heaven speed the time when these heedless, reckless,
+licentious children of humanity may feel sensible of the weight
+of power without its brutality, may reverence authority when
+it is neither beastly nor cruel, may yield obedience to Order,
+whose symbol is not the sword, and to Law, whose badge is
+not the bayonet. But till that time comes, we, with thoughtful
+minds and sad hearts and sober consciences, and souls full
+as we can make them of human charity and good-will, must
+hold in our hands those terrible symbols, and in the Christian
+spirit do the ruler's part.</p></div>
+
+<p>The insurrection did not last long. As soon as
+the United States troops appeared the trouble was
+over and order was restored. There was fighting;
+there was pillage; but how many lives were lost and
+how much property was destroyed was never exactly
+known. On the whole, the riot strengthened
+the hands of the government, increased pity for the
+victims of outrage, and excited sympathy for the
+negroes and the abolitionists. The priests, as I well
+remember, helped in the work of pacification. On
+the second day of the uprising, as I was visiting
+a friend in his studio on Fifth Avenue, the mob
+came along, shouting, yelling, brandishing clubs, on
+their way to the archbishop's palace, to hear an
+address by him. The prelate appeared on the balcony
+dressed in full canonicals, in order to impress
+the people, and delivered a most ingenious and persuasive
+address. Beginning "Men of New York,"
+he flattered their self-esteem, paid a tribute to their
+sense of power and exalted influence, and advised
+them against cruelty and anarchy. The effect of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+this speech was surprising in soothing and quieting
+the crowd. They had come there in a mood of
+tumult&mdash;they separated peacefully and went to their
+own homes, satisfied. From that hour the soul of the
+riot was broken.</p>
+
+<p>The incidents of the war cannot be detailed here.
+The story has been told too often, and is altogether
+too long for my space. And after all the moral
+issues of the war were the most interesting though
+not the most pathetic. The sentiment of union, the
+establishment of the national supremacy, the authority
+of the reign of law, the emancipation of a
+degraded race, the new inspiration imparted to a
+great people, and the advent of a universal republicanism
+were most significant. It is quite likely that
+the modern uprising of labor and the urgent claims
+of women for recognition and civil power were
+aided, if not suggested, by this overwhelming triumph
+of order and enlightenment. It is more than
+likely that the position of the United States, as a
+power among the nations of the earth, was due
+mainly to the victory that was achieved by the
+powers of liberty.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p>
+<h2>IX.<br />
+
+THE FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The happy ending of the war stimulated, as has
+been said, the sentiment of Unity. The success of
+the government in putting down the rebellion filled
+the air with the spirit of union. The restoration of
+political harmony suggested a deeper harmony, when
+divisions should cease. At this moment, in April,
+1865, the indefatigable Dr. Bellows, who had been
+the soul of the Sanitary Commission, summoned all
+Christian believers of the liberal persuasions to a
+convention in his church for a more complete organization.
+The invitation was most generously interpreted,
+and was hailed by some who could be called
+Christians only under the most elastic definition of
+the term. A prominent layman of the Unitarian
+body brought an elaborate creed which he wished
+the convention to adopt; and a distinguished minister
+of the West was of the opinion that the work
+of perfect organization could best be done by the
+adoption of stringent articles of faith. But the
+minimum of belief was imposed. The preamble
+of the constitution, the work of reconciling minds,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+reads thus: "Whereas the great opportunities and
+demands for Christian labor and consecration, at
+this time, increase our sense of the obligations of all
+disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ to prove their
+faith by self-denial and by the devotion of their
+lives and possessions to the service of God, and
+the building up of the kingdom of his son, Therefore."
+Then follow the articles. It was this phrase,
+"Lord Jesus Christ," that provoked discussion. The
+struggle was renewed at Syracuse on October 8th of
+the next year, 1866, and an attempt was made to
+explain away the force of the declaration by announcing
+that while the preamble and articles of the
+constitution represented the opinions of the majority,
+yet they were not to be considered an authoritative
+test of Unitarianism, or to exclude from fellowship
+any who though differing in belief "are in general
+sympathy with our purpose and practical aims."
+But this was not considered by the radicals as satisfactory.
+For in the first place the title of "Lord"
+seemed to contain by implication a doctrine which
+could not be subscribed to, as the "Lordship" of
+Jesus was supposed to be supernatural. Here
+seemed to be a fundamental difference between
+those who held to the old world's idea of a spiritual
+kingdom, and those who proclaimed the new world's
+idea of a spiritual democracy. In fact, one of the
+leaders&mdash;Dr. Bellows&mdash;plainly said if there was to
+be any change it must be made in the other direction;
+"we are to consider not only the few on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+one side, who may or may not care to unite with us,
+but the great body of Christians of all denominations,
+the Universal Church of Christ; I demand
+liberality to them, the liberality which acknowledges
+their Lord and Leader, and welcomes them to a
+household whose hearth glows with faith in and
+loyalty to the personal Saviour." It was plainly declared
+by him that Unitarians assumed the name of
+liberal Christians, because they allowed liberality of
+inquiry and opinion <i>within the pale of Christian
+discipleship</i>. This of itself was enough to create a
+palpable division, but it was felt besides that freedom
+of interpretation did not imply freedom of rejection.
+The phrase <i>Lordship of Jesus</i>, although as
+little of a creed as could be devised, was hostile to
+freedom, besides not being altogether true, as Jesus
+never claimed to be infallible. The radicals, under
+the lead of Francis E. Abbot, attempted to introduce
+a substitute for the original preamble, inculcating
+unity of spirit and of work as the basis of the "National
+Conference of Unitarian and Independent
+Churches." This substitute was not carried, and a
+final breach between the Independents and the Unitarians
+was thus established. This was inevitable
+twenty-five years ago; it could not happen to-day,
+when both wings are united in one body.</p>
+
+<p>For my part I did not go to Syracuse, having
+foreseen what eventually occurred, namely, the intended
+solidification of the Unitarian body by the
+strengthening of the bonds of organization. My own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+personal experience, which other radicals knew
+nothing of, led me to this conclusion. My church
+edifice on 40th Street was begun in the spring of
+1863. The two ministers in New York were present
+at the informal service of laying the corner-stone.
+The walls were going up during the summer; on the
+week of the riot the mob called the workmen off,
+threatening to destroy what was built if the masons
+did not leave. The building was finished in the
+winter, and dedicated on Christmas Day. To the
+warm personal invitation which was sent to all the
+Unitarian clergy in New York and Brooklyn&mdash;there
+were but three then&mdash;no response was returned; and
+when my father and I went to the church there were
+no ministers on the platform. We went through
+the service, my father offering the prayer and I
+preaching the sermon. No remark was made at the
+time beyond an expression of surprise at the non-appearance
+of the "brethren." The next day my
+father, who had come from Boston on purpose to
+attend the dedication, and whose blindness was
+approaching fast, went to make a friendly visit on
+Dr. Bellows. On his return, when asked if any
+reason was assigned for the failure to participate in
+the proceedings of the day before, he said that the
+duties of Christmas were alleged as the cause. I was
+sure there was another explanation behind; and as
+soon as I had put my father in the train for home
+wrote to Dr. Bellows, taxing him among the rest
+with discourtesy. It was evident that such a charge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+was anticipated and prepared for; that the ministers
+had met and had agreed on a course to be pursued
+in my case. For at once there came a reply to my
+note, accusing me of studiously neglecting all the
+usual observances of the denomination. My invitation
+had not been official; there was no "church";
+there had never been any sacrament; the allegiance
+to fundamental doctrines of the sect had been slack.
+All this was true, and no attempt at exculpation
+was made, but it was felt that a breach existed.
+The excitements of the war overshadowed everything
+else at this period, and nothing more was said.
+My Society was duly represented at the first
+conference; but as soon as our side was argued,&mdash;as it
+was by D. A. Wasson,&mdash;it was plain that the spirit
+of organization prevailed and was against us. A
+division was inevitable. The "Independents" must
+form a separate party.</p>
+
+<p>This virtual exclusion occasioned the formation of
+the Free Religious Association. A meeting was
+held on the 5th of February, 1867, at Dr. C. A. Bartol's,
+in Boston, to consider a plan for creating a new
+association on the basis of free thought. Very
+strong words were spoken on that occasion. One
+man, I recollect, spoke of all churches, all ministers,
+and all religion as being outgrown. But the majority
+were of the opinion that religion was an
+eternal necessity, and the administration of it an
+absolute demand. Dr. Bartol himself was always a
+warm friend of the Association, appearing on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+platform, speaking always hopefully, one of the
+most welcome of its supporters. The Association
+was formed in the spring of that same year. In the
+plan of organization it was distinctly announced that
+the aim of the Association was to "promote the interest
+of pure religion, to encourage the scientific
+study of theology, and to increase fellowship in the
+spirit; and to this end all persons interested in these
+objects are cordially invited to its membership."
+Thus the object of the Association was exceedingly
+broad. It proposed to remove all dividing lines and
+to unite all religious men in bonds of pure spirituality,
+each one being responsible for his own opinion
+alone, and in no degree affected in his relations with
+other associations. If the movement had been in
+the hands of orthodox and well-reputed people, it
+would have seemed not only large but noble and
+beneficent. Being, as it was, in the hands of a few
+radical clergymen and laymen, it was supposed to be
+"infidel" in its character; and was misrepresented
+and abused accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>At first, the dissensions of the sects were rebuked.
+Afterwards, the scope of the idea was extended; all
+the religions of the world being put on an equality
+of origin and purpose. The spiritual nature of man
+was assumed; the universality of religious feeling;
+the inherent tendency to worship, aspiration, prayer,
+being taken for granted as an element in the best
+minds; all churches and confessions of faith being
+looked upon as achievements of the soul; Jesus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+being classed among the leaders of humanity; the
+Bible being accepted as a record of spiritual and
+moral truth; and the church being regarded as an
+organization to diffuse belief. The foundation,
+therefore, was a pure Theism, and the effort contemplated
+the elevation of all mankind to the dignity
+of children of the Highest. That this aim was
+always borne in mind is not pretended. The negative
+side was made too conspicuous. Now and then
+there was a lurch in the direction of denial. There
+was too much criticism, and it was not always just.
+There was too much speculation, and it was not
+always wise. The plan of letting each sect tell its
+own story was a little confusing at the start. Still,
+on the whole, the object was pretty faithfully kept
+in view. Lucretia Mott suggested that the word
+"religion" should be substituted for the word
+"theology," but the word "religion" was too vague
+to afford ground for discussion, and it was felt that
+the phrase "scientific" sufficiently explained, through
+the substitution of the scientific for the theological
+method, the purpose of the association. Moreover,
+the purpose was to remove <i>theological</i> differences,
+the only differences that existed.</p>
+
+<p>There were names of distinguished men and women
+on our list of officers, members, speakers, and friends&mdash;Ralph
+Waldo Emerson, Amos Bronson Alcott,
+Gerrit Smith, George William Curtis, Edward L.
+Youmans, Nathaniel Holmes, William Lloyd Garrison,
+Wendell Phillips, Rowland G. Hazard, Lucretia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+Mott, Lydia Maria Child, Ednah D. Cheney. Thomas
+W. Higginson was one of our most effective speakers;
+John Weiss read on our platform his most brilliant
+paper on "Science and Religion"; David Atwood
+Wasson lent us the light of his countenance.</p>
+
+<p>Our greatest want was the want of a leader,&mdash;a
+man not only of competent learning and spiritual
+enthusiasm, but of natural impulse and vigor; a man
+of the people, a man of rugged speech, a man of
+vivacity and humor. If Theodore Parker had been
+alive he might have taken this position, and distinguished
+himself as a leader in this movement; as
+it was, there was no one who could take his place,
+and the enterprise flagged accordingly, lacking the
+popular zeal which would give it currency. The
+speculative character of the association was always
+against it and rendered it somewhat dry; but this
+under the circumstances was inevitable, because we
+were forced to deal with technicalities of credence,
+and had not power enough to get beyond them into
+the universalities of faith.</p>
+
+<p>There was an expectation in many quarters that
+the association would devote itself to beneficent projects;
+and this was natural, because it seemed as if
+those who gave up the bond of belief must adopt
+the bond of work. Mr. Emerson seems to have had
+a similar desire. "I wish," he said, "that the various
+beneficent institutions which are springing up like
+joyful plants of wholesomeness all over this country,
+should all be remembered as within the sphere of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+this committee,&mdash;almost all of them are represented
+here,&mdash;and that within this little band that has
+gathered here to-day should grow friendship." But
+in the first place, ours was not a philanthropic institution;
+its aim was religious entirely, as it attempted
+to substitute the universality of religion for the
+one faith of Christendom. The chief workers in
+several forms of charity presented their schemes for
+our consideration, and at one time it looked as if we
+must be borne away into some philanthropic enterprise.
+The current, however, which carried us towards
+"religious" unity was too strong.</p>
+
+<p>And then, at that time there was little scientific
+philanthropy. The word <i>charity</i> was more or less
+associated with patronage and pity, the very things
+that we wanted to avoid; they who were bent on
+wiping out distinctions could not countenance these,
+and it was safer not to let our hearts get the better
+of our reason. But even if there had been a scientific
+treatment of humane questions, we were afraid
+of the danger of becoming too much absorbed in
+this kind of work, and so of losing sight of our chief
+end.</p>
+
+<p>At present the idea of our Association is pretty
+well domesticated in Christendom. It was not, after
+all, entirely new. In 1845 and 1846 Frederick
+Denison Maurice, lecturing on the Boyle Foundation
+in London on "The Religions of the World and their
+Relations to Christianity," attempted to do justice to
+the ancient faiths of India, Persia, Egypt, Greece,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+and Rome. In 1882, in Edinburgh, eminent men
+discussed the same problems under the title of "The
+Faiths of the World." In 1871 James Freeman
+Clarke published his "Ten Great Religions." The
+study of comparative religion has been going on for
+many years. When Mozoomdar came to this country
+a few years ago, there was such a rush for him
+among American orthodox Christians that the Free
+Religious Association could not get at him at all,
+though it had tried in vain to get a real Brahmin on
+its platform. True, there were differences of opinion
+among the orthodox students of the old-world systems.
+Some regarded the ancient religions as effete;
+some denied that Christianity touched them at more
+than one or two points; some treated them simply
+as preparations for the crowning faith of Christ.
+Still, whatever their differences, all agreed that the
+religious instinct was universal; that there was a
+ground for revelation in the human heart; since
+Carlyle's famous lecture in "Heroes," delivered in
+1840, it was impossible to regard Mahomet as an impostor,
+or to look upon religion as a fabrication of
+the priests, as an attempt to practise upon human
+ignorance and fear.</p>
+
+<p>Among the Unitarians our conception is familiar.
+At the convention that was held in Philadelphia,
+in October, 1889, both parties, the most conservative
+and the most radical, sat side by side. A manager
+of the Free Religious Association delivered one of
+the addresses, and said: "I never believed one tithe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+as much as I believe to-night. Never did I have
+such faith in God; never did I so believe in man;
+never did I see such a glorious outlook for the
+Church; never did I hold such a glad theory of human
+hope for the future." The secretary of the
+American Unitarian Association was full of joy.
+The secretary of the Western Unitarian Conference
+quoted the opinion of the Western churches, assembled
+at Chicago in May, 1887, and declared "our
+fellowship to be conditioned on no doctrinal tests,
+and welcomes all who wish to join us to help establish
+truth and righteousness and love in the world."
+A prominent leader of Unitarianism in Illinois
+uttered himself thus: "Whatever its traditions,
+whatever its present positions, or its prospects, this
+spiritual commonwealth is extra-Unitarian, extra-American,
+extra-Christian; it is human, and on that
+account it is universal, and it is divine." Another
+speaker at this convention declared that "the hand
+that shall hold this master key is Christ, as the
+modern mind conceives him,&mdash;Christ healing the
+sick, raising the dead, cleansing the leper, casting
+out devils from society and business, from politics
+and religion; Christ, the friend of Lazarus and of
+Mary Magdalen; Christ robed in absolute justice
+and also in transcendant love, and embracing the
+whole world."</p>
+
+<p>It is not claimed that this extraordinary change in
+ecclesiastical fellowship and sympathy is due to the
+Free Religious Association. That was one of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+signs of the times, and is an effect rather than a
+cause; but it is a sign of the grander unity. When
+the portrait of Theodore Parker is hanging on the
+walls of Channing Hall; when a cordial welcome is
+extended to all seekers for the light; when the East
+and West are ready to embrace in a fellowship of
+aspiration; when the young men are all alight with
+fresh hope and fresh endeavor, we may with confidence
+anticipate the time when there shall be but
+one fold, and the aim of the Free Religious Association
+be met.</p>
+
+<p>The emancipation from denominational trammels
+was of great service to the young minister. It is
+true that he was still in a "church" which kept him
+within ecclesiastical associations; but these fetters
+were not heavy, and they were soon to be thrown
+off. For in the spring of 1869, the church was sold
+to another congregation. This was done partly because
+the acoustic properties of the building were
+not favorable, and partly because the place was not
+suited to the genius of the new society. "There
+was no room in the inn," was the subject of the last
+sermon preached in that building. Lyric Hall, to
+which we removed, is situated on Sixth Avenue,
+between 40th and 41st streets. It is a large room
+fifty by one hundred feet. During the week it was
+used as a dancing hall, but on Sundays it was
+arranged for a religious service. A small organ was
+placed there, a platform was built, and seats were
+brought up from the cellar below. The first sermon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+preached there was on "Secular Religion," and it
+indicated the whole character of the services. The
+most remarkable thing, as regards myself, that happened
+in Lyric Hall, was the adoption of the habit
+of speaking without notes. The light from the
+avenue was too far off for reading, and the speaker
+was therefore obliged to dispense with a manuscript
+altogether. A theme was first chosen that admitted
+of subdivisions, so that as fast as the speaker exhausted
+one he could fall back on another. The
+habit soon became so familiar that no difficulty was
+experienced in handling the most complicated subject.
+Here we remained until the spring of 1875,
+when we removed to Masonic Temple, on Sixth
+Avenue and 23d Street.</p>
+
+<p>This building, which was very large and handsome,
+had just been erected by the Masons, who
+designed it for their own accommodation. The
+structure having cost, however, more than was anticipated,
+the owners were obliged, reluctantly, to let
+the large hall, which they did for literary and religious
+purposes only. We were the first to occupy
+it. The hall was spacious and stately, with fixed
+seats for about a thousand people. A fine organ
+stood at one end of the platform; at the other end
+there was a large reception room. The first sermon
+there was on "Reasonable Religion." The audience
+was never large&mdash;never more than eight or nine
+hundred, usually six or seven hundred. The form
+of service much resembled the form common in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+Unitarian churches, with the exception that Mr.
+Conway's "Sacred Anthology" was substituted for
+the Bible, and the other exercises were more universal
+in their character. It had long ceased to be a
+Unitarian congregation. There were people of
+Catholic training, many of Protestant training, some
+of no religious training whatever, materialists, atheists,
+secularists, positivists&mdash;always thinking people,
+with their minds uppermost. It was a church of
+the unchurched. George Ripley, the journalist, was
+always there; E. C. Stedman, the man of letters;
+Calvert Vaux, the architect; Sanford R. Gifford,
+the painter; Henry Peters Gray, the artist, was
+there until he died; C. P. Cranch, the poet, was
+a member of the Society as long as he was in
+the city. In the Lyric-Hall days, Judge Geo. C.
+Barrett had a seat in the audience. The secular
+character was always prominent. When we had a
+church on 40th Street, the large basement was used
+for music, dramatic performances, readings, festivities,
+social gatherings. In Lyric Hall, these were
+continued as far as they could be.</p>
+
+<p>The "Fraternity Club" was organized in 1869 by
+a devoted member of the Society for the entertainment
+and improvement of its members; and drew together
+very brilliant minds both within and without
+the immediate fellowship. The meetings were held
+once in two weeks, when an essay was read, a debate
+carried on, and a paper presented; all the performers
+being nominated in advance by the President. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+work was mainly done by a few young men, who have
+since become eminent in various fields&mdash;as teachers,
+lawyers, literary critics, publishers,&mdash;and by witty
+women not a few. There were about seventy members,
+each one standing for some peculiar accomplishment.
+The subjects of the essays were such as
+these, illustrating the breadth of the intellectual
+interest: On "Taste"; on "Expressions"; on "The
+Coming Man"; on "Wordsworth"; on "The Tree
+of Life"; on "Spencer's Britomart as the Type of
+Woman"; on "Light and Laughter"; on "Successful
+People"; on "Culture"; on "The Cultivation of
+the Masses." The subjects for debate were equally
+varied: "Ought the sexes to be educated apart?";
+"Does a house burn up or burn down?"; "Is the
+highest musical culture compatible with the highest
+intellectual development?"; "Is there a distinctly
+American literature as contrasted with that of
+England?"; "Should matrimonial union be contracted
+early or late?"; "Ought we to cultivate
+most those faculties in which we naturally excel,
+or those in which we are naturally deficient?";
+"Does increase of culture involve decrease of
+amusement?"; "Is the existence of a 'Mute inglorious
+Milton' possible?"; "Will giving the franchise
+to women exert a beneficial influence on
+society?"; "Had you rather be more stupid than
+you seem, or seem more stupid than you are?"</p>
+
+<p>The "papers," of which there are some nine volumes
+existing, were receptacles for the fancy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+imagination, sentiment, and humor of the editors or their
+co-editors; there were verses, stories, criticisms, jokes,
+illustrations, in them; each had its name: "The Bubble,"
+"The Venture," "Bric-a-Brac," "Stuff," "The
+Rag-Bag." The club ceased soon after the Society
+disbanded, in 1880.</p>
+
+<p>The root idea of the Society, apart from its independence,
+was the mingling of the spiritual and the
+natural; the domestication of faith. With a view
+of making the idea more prevailing and complete, a
+children's service in the afternoon was substituted
+for the regular Sunday-school. A book was prepared,
+"The Child's Book of Religion," by the
+pastor, for this express purpose. There were responsive
+readings, recitations in unison, songs, and
+an address, simple and anecdotical, by the minister.</p>
+
+<p>The Society was never fashionable, or even
+popular. At one period&mdash;that of the Richardson-McFarland
+matter&mdash;there was a vast deal of misrepresentation,
+criticism, and abuse, but all this had no
+effect on the constituency of the parish. There was
+the same loyalty, the same interest, the same determination
+to sustain a thoroughly liberal ministry, by
+which every form of conviction was made conducive
+to a purely spiritual faith.</p>
+
+<p>It was never pretended that the Society was anything
+more than a beginning. A small and feeble
+beginning, but of something that was to grow and
+spread; the beginning of a faith that is as rational
+as it is wide. Its influence was more diffusive than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+concrete as an instituted thing. It is the pride and
+consolation of those who began it that they removed
+some of the barriers that divided the great brotherhood
+of believing men.</p>
+
+<p>My ministry in New York ended in the spring of
+1879. Its close was due entirely to my ill-health. A
+year before the doctors had warned me not to continue
+longer than was necessary my rate of speed. They
+urged me to go slower, to "take in sail," and to withdraw
+as far as I could from all public demonstrations.
+Measures were taken against every emergency,
+and I sailed away in the French steamer, with the
+hope that in six months I might regain my nervous
+power, and return. There was first the exhilarating
+sea voyage; then the beautiful city hall of Rouen,
+the churches and famous buildings, the square where
+Joan of Arc suffered; then came Paris with its enchantments;
+after that Basel showed its great Holbeins,
+and its lovely promenade overlooking the
+river; this led to the celebrated baths at Ragatz
+in Switzerland, the placid waters of Pfeffers', the
+gorge, the hotel gardens, and the lovely walks; after
+this came the pass of the Splügen, the Via Mala,
+the hotel at the summit of the pass among the snows,
+the pastures, the wild goats; then came Lake Como
+in Italy, Bellagio, the charming Villa Serbeloni, looking
+down upon the two lakes, Como and Lecco, the
+vineyards ripening in the sun, the terraces, looking
+across upon the mountains; then Milan opened
+its great cathedral, the gallery of the Brera, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+ancient church of Saint Ambrose. Afterwards came
+Florence and its heavenly environs, its pictures and
+statues and public buildings, its groves and stately
+drives and lovely villas; Florence was followed by
+Siena, and there I saw the great cathedral, walked
+on the esplanade, enjoyed the public square, the
+palaces, the pictures of Sodoma. From there I went
+to Rome, in December.</p>
+
+<p>It was all in vain; I became satisfied that the
+complaint was not of a temporary nature, not owing
+to overwork or over-excitement, not easily cured&mdash;if
+curable at all,&mdash;but nervous and hereditary. Thereupon,
+I wrote a letter to my trustees absolutely resigning
+my office and declining to be a clergyman
+any longer, as I could not attempt to renew the
+same kind of labor. An attempt was made to secure
+a successor; several names were mentioned, and
+among men greatly my superiors in learning and
+eloquence, but none, it was thought, represented the
+precise form of speculation, the exact view of religion
+which my friends desired. The Society therefore
+was disbanded, and no attempt has been made since
+to reorganize it. The members were scattered, some
+among other churches, some among other cities,
+while some never joined any religious society whatever.
+Thus a thriving and growing organization is
+now simply a memory.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p>
+<h2>X.<br />
+
+THE PROGRESS OF RELIGIOUS THOUGHT IN AMERICA.</h2>
+
+
+<p>An article in the <i>North American Review</i> for
+April, 1885, on "Free Thought in America," is
+chiefly significant as showing how gradual and tentative
+the progress of thought in religion was. The
+comments on individuals are often wide of the mark,
+but the general drift is quite correct. The course
+was shadowy, but the main point was unmistakable.
+At this day, the wholesale abuse of religion is harmless,
+and can exert no wide influence. The friends of
+liberal thought are against it; and those who seek
+the old grim conclusion do so in another way,
+striving to substitute a new faith in nature for the
+old faith in divine inspiration, and to prove the
+latter to have been a growth rather than an imposition.
+The study of comparative religions has put a
+new face on the question, and the concern is now to
+discover the source of faith in the supernatural and
+not to make it appear a creation of priestcraft. No
+sooner had serious investigations into antiquity become
+known, than the method pursued by Voltaire
+and Dupuis was abandoned, and each generation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+since has confirmed the facts of historic development.</p>
+
+<p>That my own immediate predecessors were Emerson
+and Parker is most true. With the writings of
+the former I was familiar; the latter was my intimate
+friend. Perhaps my theological views are due
+to him more than to any other man, though the circumstances
+of his generation were peculiar, and
+determined, in a much greater degree than in my own
+case was possible, the cast of his thought. The Unitarian
+controversy, in which he played so prominent
+a part, and by stress whereof he was driven into
+some of his positions, is over. The anti-slavery
+struggle, into which he threw himself and as a result
+of which his religious antagonisms were sharpened,
+was ended many years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Poe said in the preface to "Eureka," that perfect
+beauty was a guaranty of perfect truth; so I felt&mdash;felt
+rather than reasoned&mdash;that a great character
+was sufficient proof of the truth of doctrine, and I
+accepted the teaching on the strength of the nobleness
+which was before my eyes. Later researches
+confirmed my opinions, but while I was under
+Parker's influence, his theological views were accepted
+without much consideration; his unique style
+of personality laying my heart as it were under a
+spell.</p>
+
+<p>Emerson was a man of colder temperament, thinner
+of blood, more spare in frame; of finer intellectual
+fibre, of more commanding intellectual supremacy;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+not a combatant on any field; a sweet, gracious,
+shadowy personality; calm, lucid, imperturbable;
+pursuing knowledge along the spiritual path of
+pure thought, although he was also a student of
+books; a regenerator of mind rather than a reformer
+of customs; a prophet, distinguished for penetration
+rather than for will. His ideas were substantially
+the same as Parker's, but he did not arrive at them
+in the same way, or hold them in the same spirit,
+or apply them with the same directness. He carried
+them out further, not being hindered, as his
+contemporary was, by the immediate necessities of
+the hour. In short, he was another sort of man
+entirely. Both were transcendentalists, but Parker
+shaped his philosophy to the working exigencies of
+his generation, while Emerson let his stream freely
+in the air. The writer of the article in question
+accuses Emerson of want of pathos, and declares
+that this was the lack of the transcendentalists, as a
+school. But he could hardly charge this on Parker,
+who was an ardent transcendentalist, but whose
+very language was vascular, who affected multitudes
+of men and women, and who held audiences by the
+heartstrings. Did Hopkins or Bellamy or Edwards
+melt people? Were the preachers of Calvinism
+priests of sorrow? This is a matter of temperament
+and not of creed. Extreme rationalists leave their
+congregations in tears, and extreme churchmen dismiss
+theirs unmoved, the humors of the men deciding
+the issues of their ministrations. The closer to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+the ground, the more abundant the sympathy. The
+question is whether one is more mundane or more
+ethereal by native gift and endowment.</p>
+
+<p>That transcendentalism was mainly speculative
+may be doubted, but if it was so this may be accounted
+an incidental circumstance to be explained
+by the prevailing theological temper of the age, and
+the duty imposed on it of transferring the body of
+doctrine to an ideal realm; a task which demands
+an intellectual effort of no common magnitude. And
+when with this task was joined the endeavor to
+sift out the purely spiritual ideas from the mass of
+dogmatical and ecclesiastical error, it is no wonder
+that it should have been speculative in its tendency.
+Certainly, Brook Farm was concrete enough, and
+the transcendentalists were, as a rule, interested in
+social reconstruction, though not in a way to touch
+popular emotion. One cannot, even at this distance,
+think of the quickening radiance shed by the transcendentalists
+over the whole region of religious
+belief and duty, without gratitude. The hymns, the
+sermons, the music, the Sunday-schools, the prayers,
+the charities, the social ministrations, breathed forth
+a fresh spirit. If there were fewer tears of woe,
+there was more weeping for joy. There was too
+much gladness for crying. Life was made sunny.
+Human nature was interpreted cheerfully. There
+was an unlimited future for misery, ignorance, turpitude.
+Sin was remanded to the position of crudity,
+and was banished from the heavenly courts.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+Violence was protested against in laws, customs,
+manners, speech. Harsh doctrines were criticised.
+Austere views were discarded. Intellectual barriers
+were removed. Spiritual channels were deepened
+and widened. Light was let into dark places. The
+brightest aspects of divinity were presented. Immortality
+was rendered native to the soul. The life
+below was regarded as the portal to the life above.</p>
+
+<p>In my own case, whatever of enthusiasm I may
+have had, whatever transports of feeling, whatever
+glow of hope for mankind, whatever ardor of anticipation
+for the future, whatever exhilaration of mind
+towards God, whatever elation in the presence of
+disbelief in the popular theology, may be fairly
+ascribed to this form of the ideal philosophy. It
+was like a revelation of glory. Every good thought
+was encouraged. Every noble impulse was heightened.
+It was balm and elixir to me. If transcendentalism
+did not appear as a sun illuminating
+the entire mental universe it was the fault of my
+exposition alone. Absolute faith in that form of
+philosophy grew weak and passed away many
+years since, and the assurance it gave was shaken;
+but the sunset flush continued a long time after
+the orb of day had disappeared and lighted up the
+earth. Gradually the splendor faded, to be succeeded
+by a softer and more tranquil gleam, less
+stimulating but not less beautiful or glorious. The
+world looks larger under the light of stars. I always
+loved Blanco White's magnificent sonnet to Night,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+but never appreciated its full significance until the
+scientific view had succeeded to the transcendental,
+and I began to walk by knowledge, steadily and
+surely, but not buoyantly any more. It would be a
+mistake to suppose that anything like pain, sadness,
+or sterility accompanies the departure of an old
+faith, when a new one takes its place and soon opens
+fresh prospects of good. The universe but grows
+larger: other methods are adopted, other hopes are
+entertained, other consolations are presented, and
+soon the mind adjusts itself to the altered conditions.
+The downcast mood of George Eliot, of the author
+of "Physicus," and of many another less distinguished
+unbeliever, may be due in part to temperament, in
+part to the first feeling of chill that ensues upon a
+transitional period, which brings in a different
+climate; but the allegation of lasting coldness, gloom,
+discontent, is wholly groundless. The old fable
+says that quails drop from the clouds, that even rocks
+quench the traveller's thirst. There is, in short, no
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>That the creed was "filmy," the foothold "unsteady,"
+is altogether likely, for the ancient supports
+were removed, the pillars that replaced them were
+shaking, and tradition alone remained to hold by.
+But religion was still the Poetry of Life, and kept
+its place among the interests singly represented by
+art, music, literature, philosophy, those fine intimations
+of a higher state, those splendid foreshadowings
+of the future, those noble efforts to solve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+problems that must be forever insoluble. My creed
+did not pretend to be final or even definite. It was
+simply a study, a preliminary sketch, an essay towards
+truth. A claim to completeness, to logical
+consistency, would have been fatal. Still less, if possible,
+did it pretend to meet popular wants. It
+resolutely turned in the opposite direction, and took
+up positions which, it was understood, the general
+public could not occupy without abandoning all its
+works and retiring to other ground. No effort was
+made to commend it to common opinion; on the
+contrary, everything like concession was shunned,
+and the slightest signal of agreement with current
+beliefs was regarded as a warning against a compromise
+of principle. Nothing was assumed except the
+validity of the human faculties, including, of course,
+the higher reason, the insight of genius, and such
+feelings as were parts of the rational constitution,
+together with perfect liberty in their exercise. Every
+theological system was repudiated; even the doctrines
+of a conscious Deity and the individual immortality
+of the soul were left open to discussion,
+the atheist and the materialist being listened to with
+as much deference as any. These doctrines were
+accepted, yet not on the ground of authority or tradition,
+but simply considered as faiths, hopes, sentiments
+of the spiritual being; the existence of living
+mind, coupled with the demand for unity, seeming
+to guarantee the first, the fact of individual persistency
+appearing to demonstrate the second. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+all definition was carefully avoided, conviction being
+confined to the main idea, and being purely spiritual
+in its character, not in the least dogmatical, or exclusive
+of knowledge. Of doctrine in the usual sense
+there was none. There was merely thought. The
+very teaching was more of the nature of suggestion
+than of final conclusion. For this reason no account
+of the "credo" can be given, all fixed expressions
+of views being discountenanced as premature, and
+therefore irrational. This should be distinctly understood
+by those interested in coming at the truth
+on this subject. The object was to disintegrate, to
+pulverize, to enable mind to float freely in the air of
+intellect, to the end that it might crystallize about
+natural centres. All dogmatism, that of the infidel
+as well as that of the believer, of the man of science
+as well as of the theologian, of the sensualist as well
+as of the spiritualist, was obnoxious. There was no
+sympathy with those who regarded the case as
+closed, either as the anti-Christian assailant or as the
+apologist did; either with the school of Paine or
+with the school of Calvin. Hereafter there may be
+articles of belief, at present there can be none. This,
+it may be said, was a temporary, incidental position,
+quite indeterminate and unsatisfactory. No doubt
+it was. That was all it pretended to be. The sooner
+it disappeared and was succeeded by a more stable
+one, so it was reasonable, the better, for that would
+indicate an advance in rational judgment.</p>
+
+<p>This task&mdash;the complete emancipation of the human<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+mind from every form of thraldom&mdash;will occupy
+liberal teachers for a long time to come. All
+that can be said in defence of instituted religion, and
+all that can be urged on the other side, had been put
+forward again and again, but in a sectarian&mdash;that is,
+in a partisan&mdash;spirit. Now an even temper is demanded.
+Unfortunately, impartiality is apt to degenerate
+into indifference. Breadth of view is, as a rule,
+inconsistent with rapidity of motion. The fact that
+the Free Religious Association had a small constituency
+as compared with many an orthodox society is
+no evidence whatever that the orthodox society is
+nearer the truth. The former was broad enough
+to admit all religions, the latter shut out all save the
+Christians, thus making them a special community
+saved by their belief. The problem is to preserve
+and, if possible, deepen intellectual enthusiasm while
+opposing fanatical adherence to dogmas; to associate
+breadth with force, to unite freedom with earnestness,
+and to render the love of truth more intense in
+proportion as the horizon recedes and ideas multiply.
+Such ought to be the result of free thinking, and
+such it is when <i>thinking</i> goes hand in hand with
+<i>freedom</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Critical studies must keep an even pace with philosophy,
+and both must conspire to push back the
+lines of credence as far as faith in the spiritual sentiment
+will permit. The latest investigations have
+substantiated liberal conclusions and carried them
+into regions which were inaccessible to the authorities<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+of an early day. A certain amount of denial
+was necessary of course, but this was made in view
+of a larger affirmation which had to be brought forward,
+and was, moreover, confined to matters incidental,
+not directed at the substance of faith. The
+assumption of a spiritual nature in man guaranteed
+the inherent genuineness of all aspiration.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt the assumption of a creative religious
+nature in man lent aid to the endeavor to glorify the
+pagan faiths, and predisposed the mind to accept
+criticisms on Christianity; but scientific investigation
+of the world's bibles went on quite independently of
+this assumption. It was promoted by Catholics and
+Protestants, by Lutherans and Unitarians, by Germans,
+French, English, Americans. Certainly the
+alleged antiquity of a system is not in its favor; for
+ignorance, credulity, superstition, are much older
+than this; older than the ancient books, than the
+ancient thinkers. The oldest things are errors, delusions,
+falsities. The allegiance of great minds simply
+proves the limitations of intellect. Sir Thomas
+More believed in transubstantiation, and Samuel
+Johnson believed in ghosts. The wide reverence for
+the Scriptures is an impressive fact, until it is seen
+that no writings have been so guarded, nor have such
+pains been taken in regard to any other literature to
+create for it a habit of docile veneration. Fidelity
+is praiseworthy, but it is no pledge of wisdom. On
+the contrary it draws attention to the merits or demerits
+of the creed to which it is consecrated. Is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+witchcraft respectable? Yet it had its martyrs. Is
+demoniacal possession credible? Yet saints attested
+it. The fury of the fighter cannot vouch for the
+worthiness of the cause. If it could, the narrowest
+credence would be the truest as the world goes, and
+they who adhere to the "Christian" tradition would
+be consigned to the darkest cells of it. The newest
+thing is knowledge. This never paralyzes, and
+never is fanatical. Its heat is stimulating yet gracious.
+Its zeal does not scorch or consume. It
+awakens every faculty, keeps inquiry on the stretch,
+excites the noblest ambition, and at the same time
+rebukes the partisan temper in all its manifestations.
+Its reign is beneficent; its coming is full of hope.
+It is ever looking forward with sanguine anticipation,
+and if it is at times impatient, petulant, or imperious,
+it is because it is fretted by stubborn
+obstacles that prevent the full realization of its purpose
+to discover the truth. For a long time to come
+there will be controversy, but its violence will disappear,
+its acrimony will gradually cease, the passion
+for victory will yield to the love of knowledge, and
+all genuine seekers will unite in the search after
+light.</p>
+
+<p>In the last generation the progress of intelligent
+examination into nature's secrets has been exceedingly
+rapid. During my active ministry I was
+hardly aware of it, for though an assailant of the
+popular religion, a champion of the freest thought, I
+was a defender of the current religious ideas; since<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+leaving the profession, the significance of the mental
+revolution that is taking place, has been more fully
+revealed to me. The advance has approached very
+near to the heart of the citadel. The questions
+under discussion are fundamental ones, the existence
+of a self-conscious deity, the fact of personal continuance
+beyond the grave, the line of distinction
+between "material" and "spiritual" things. The
+dispute hangs on invisible threads of logic. The
+conservatives occupy positions which radicals of
+thirty years back could not assume.</p>
+
+<p>The next step in the development of free thought
+must be toward the realization of all the ideal
+supports of mankind, the spiritualizing of the secular,
+the lifting into heavenly places of this world's
+activity, the transfiguration of our common life. If
+by religion is understood the striving after perfection
+in intellectual things by the untrammelled pursuit of
+knowledge, in social concerns by the exercise of
+fraternal kindness, in the spiritual world by aspiration
+towards a complete surrender to natural law,
+every free thinker will encourage that and will do
+what he can to promote it. That there is no final
+truth discoverable must be admitted, but such a
+confession need not trouble those who look manfully
+forward to a future of new discoveries, and gird
+themselves to remove all obstacles to the knowledge
+of the world they live in.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Browning in his "Paracelsus," published in
+1835, anticipates the doctrine of evolution.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i8">Thus He dwells in all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From life's minute beginnings, up at last<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To man&mdash;the consummation of this scheme<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of being&mdash;the completion of this sphere<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of life; whose attributes had here and there<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Been scattered o'er the visible world before,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Asking to be combined.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In 1836, Emerson in his "Nature," reiterated this grand prophecy:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A subtle chain of countless rings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The next unto the farthest brings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The eye reads omens where it goes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And speaks all languages, the rose;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And striving to be man, the worm<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mounts through all the spires of form.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In 1867, science had gone so far that it could
+announce the Unity of Creation; the absolute Order
+and Law; one continuous Force; Progress as the end
+of life. The eternal beauty existed for those who
+had eyes to see. On this foundation the human heart,
+with its qualities of mercy, pity, peace, and love, its
+sentiments of justice and equity, its hunger for
+advance, its idea of goodness, built up a very noble
+and benignant conception of deity and the sure hope
+of moral perfection.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XI.<br />
+
+
+THE CLERICAL PROFESSION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It is natural that the clerical profession should be
+an order by itself. Every other calling is&mdash;the lawyer's,
+the physician's, the artist's and the merchant's.
+There is an absurd notion that the clerical profession
+stands alone; that it has a supernatural origin, which
+takes it out of the circle of ordinary employments;
+that it is not to be compared with other institutions
+of society. But the real dignity of the profession
+consists in its filling its place among human arrangements.
+A certain temperament too, seems to belong
+to all employments. There is the legal temperament,
+the artistic, the dramatic, the mercantile. It
+is no disadvantage that one prefers solitude, likes
+abstract thoughts, has no taste for business enterprise,
+is fond of books and study. Indeed, this is an
+advantage for one whose office it is to amass learning,
+to weigh opinions in fine scales, to follow the
+spiritual laws, and to peer into the mystery that
+surrounds human life. The very misunderstandings,
+illusions, superstitions that gather around the
+calling may be recommendations, inasmuch as they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+prevent the intrusion of rude minds, and draw their
+attention towards subjects they would not otherwise
+be interested in.</p>
+
+<p>A certain amount of positiveness is necessary to
+ensure the worth of the profession. The Catholic
+priest has no doubt whatever of the providential
+establishment of the church in which he is a servant.
+This must be beyond question or misgiving. This is
+taken for granted by clergy and laity. All learning
+must be made to confirm it, all observation is compelled
+to favor it. The laws of society must have
+nothing to do with the kingdom of God; for society
+is to be redeemed, nature is to be supplanted by
+grace, secular life must therefore be excluded. The
+priest, such is the theory, dwells out of the world,
+and is encouraged to do so. He is poor, celibate,
+homeless, has no attachments, no affections, no terrestrial
+occupations. He must be to all intents and
+purposes dead to mortal affairs. One may find fault
+with earthly institutions; one is bound to find fault
+with them, but the church must be beyond criticism
+and must be accepted as a gift from heaven.</p>
+
+<p>The Protestant clergyman holds fast by his doctrine
+of faith as by divine appointment. His chief
+tenets must not be submitted to doubt. Whatever
+he may reject, there remains something he is not
+tempted to resign&mdash;namely, the presence of the Holy
+Spirit in his creed. Reason may carry the outworks&mdash;ceremonies,
+ordinances, incidental points of belief,&mdash;but
+the citadel is removed from assault. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+world-spirit may hover around him, envious, expectant,
+watchful, applauding his boldness, cheering his
+progress towards negations, glad to see the gulf
+betwixt him and the age gradually diminishing, and
+pressing into every vacant position; society may
+claim interest in him more and more; but there are
+points he must not yield, and which he merely
+wishes to bring into prominence in surrendering
+others which he regards as secondary. So much
+may be necessary, but religion must practically take
+its place among the ideal pursuits of men and be exposed,
+as they are, to the full examination of the
+mind before any fair account of it can be given.
+And this cannot be so long as a region, however
+small, is shut off from investigation by supernatural
+powers.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, it is the common impression that the
+office of the ministry is detrimental to the best
+interest of humanity, because it establishes another
+caste and thus destroys the unity that is so important
+in the integrity of the world. By it the priest
+is a person set apart, hedged about by the laws, held
+in peculiar reverence, habited in special garments.
+Some kinds of entertainments, such as dancing, the
+drama, are commonly forbidden to him. His presence
+on festive occasions used to be regarded as a
+gracious intrusion. He was not expected to take
+part in gayeties or to have any share in frivolities,
+which were much more hilarious when he was absent
+and the restraint of his presence was removed. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+was thought to be somehow at war with nature, and
+his looking on at merrymaking was regarded by the
+polite as a piece of condescension on his part, an
+evidence of unusual liberality of sentiment. It was
+but the other day that a young physician, belonging
+to a Unitarian family, and himself an enthusiastic
+student of science, praised a minister for excusing
+his continual absence from church on the ground of
+his being so well employed. This was regarded as
+a long step in the direction of indulgence towards
+natural inclination. Even among rationalists, a
+symptom of the old idea appears in an expression of
+the face, the manner of address, the walk, or the
+general bearing. It is thought a great stretch of
+charity if he is kind to the atheist, the materialist,
+the infidel; and to take in the tempted child of
+nature, the drunkard, the victim of lust, avarice, is
+extreme good-will, benevolence amounting to saintliness.
+To abolish from it the pretension of superiority
+in the form of pity, as the high look upon the
+low, the good upon the bad, the moral upon the immoral,
+the virtuous upon the vicious, is, it is presumed,
+to overlook all recognized distinctions, to
+enthrone nature, to accept instinct as a safe guide,
+to renounce religion altogether and reject the saying
+that "the Christian church is immortal because its
+fundamental dogma involves a doctrine of God in
+nature so ample and clear as to satisfy every profoundest
+want of the heart and every urgent demand
+of the head towards God forever."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There are distinctions enough among men at any
+rate, and to obliterate them as far as possible is the
+office of true religion and all real humanity; to increase
+love, to multiply the bonds of fraternity, to
+bring mankind to a social equality, to annihilate all
+that keeps mortals apart. Of course the safety of
+society must be preserved by laws, customs, prejudices,
+but care should be taken to make these simply
+protective in their function, and in no event should
+it be assumed that such distinctions, however radical,
+have any absolute value or go beyond the limits of
+this outward world. Save men, if you can, from
+intemperance, violence, covetousness, lasciviousness,
+cowardice, gluttony, laziness, from every vice that
+brutalizes them, renders them objects of hate, fear,
+suspicion, or jealousy; make their circumstances
+wholesome, their condition in life invigorating, but
+do it in the name of enlightenment, do it as members
+of the human brotherhood, not as members of a
+divine organization. Many ministers make great
+efforts to exorcise this demon of exclusiveness, but
+the effort is too severe for any but the few, and the
+success of it is of doubtful accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>The Christian minister is a representative of humanity,
+pure and simple, without recognition of its
+division into classes. He is neither rich nor poor,
+high nor low, in society nor out of it, elevated nor
+obscure. He is democratic, the friend of everybody,
+the servant of all, on terms of charity and sincerity
+with all men. Sectarianism, with its manifold evils<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+of violence, malignity, hatred, misrepresentation, is a
+standing evidence of the harm done to society by a
+priesthood, whether Catholic or Protestant, and ministers
+who have labored to overthrow its influence as
+being fatal to charity have been obliged to fight
+against the spirit of party, and to rely more upon
+their natural disposition than upon their professional
+training. In this respect the laity have been in advance
+of their so-called leaders. The people have
+always been opposed to dogmatical exclusiveness,
+and have welcomed every sign of generosity towards
+unbelievers. They have followed their instinct of
+sympathy, they have read the New Testament by
+the light of their human feeling, and setting common-sense
+against doctrinal narrowness, have rejoiced at
+every victory gained over intolerance. They have
+been friends of brotherhood; they have adopted the
+cause of liberty; and I must own with grief, the
+foes they have had to contend with have been, in
+too many instances, the ministers who would not see
+that charity was before faith.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody must have observed the unanimity and
+the persistency with which ministers of all denominations
+and of all ages have devoted themselves to
+the rich. In fact the devotion is so conspicuous
+that it is one of the commonplace criticisms on the
+profession. People in general assume that this kind
+of adulation, amounting often to toadyism, is characteristic
+of the clerical calling, so inseparable from it
+indeed that the majority of men are incredulous as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+to any departure from it, and look with unfeigned
+admiration, when there are no reasons for distrust,
+on the minister who knows no distinction of persons
+or conditions, but has regard to intellectual or spiritual
+considerations alone. Such a man is viewed as
+a wonder, an exception to all rules, singularly constituted,
+either extraordinarily humane or extraordinarily
+obtuse, either more or less than a man. The
+worship of wealth is so common that some explanation
+of it must be given. The sufferings, mishaps,
+troubles of the rich are reputed to be more serious
+than they are in the ordinary run of cases; their
+disappointments are more pitiable, their crosses
+heavier, their losses severer, their sorrows a graver
+imputation on Providence. They are looked on as
+the favorites of heaven, and the cotton-wool in which
+they are wrapped is spoken of as the provision that
+is made for them expressly by the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>This may be accounted for on grounds of material
+convenience. They who have money are of great
+importance, and that they should be interested in
+church affairs is of immense moment to all concerned,
+not to the ministers alone, but to the entire
+congregation, nay, to the whole community of believing
+men. There is always need of money, to build
+churches, pay officials, hire singers, furnish ornaments,
+support charities, maintain organizations for
+various ecclesiastical purposes; and it is much easier
+to get this in larger sums and with little trouble,
+than to obtain it in little driblets, with much pain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+great expenditure of time, and constant vexation of
+spirit. The minister, from the nature of the case, is
+chargeable with this concern, which obliges him to
+visit frequently the wealthier members of his sect.
+To this end he must keep on good terms with them,
+must sit at their tables, eat their dinners, drink their
+wine, praise their pictures, compliment their tastes,
+commend their performances, flatter their self-esteem,
+admire their surroundings, take their side in controversy;
+and all such conduct is set down by kindly,
+thoughtful people, to the account of prudence which
+is more than pardonable in one situated as he is.</p>
+
+<p>This is quite true, but it is not the whole truth.
+By implication already, the duty of cultivating the
+rich as donors involves the qualities of manhood
+to an indefinite extent. The line of necessary courtesy
+is not decisively drawn; cannot be drawn by
+the rules of etiquette. This must be the result of a
+trained experience, of a delicacy and sensitiveness, of
+a pride of selfhood, of a loftiness or dignity of
+mind that are hardly to be looked for in any large
+class of human beings, however free from special
+temptation or particular seductions that may be.
+The influence of luxury, ease, comfort, elegance, is
+very insidious, so that even an unusual zeal for
+truth, an extraordinary passion for excellence, yields
+to the power of moral indifference, of intellectual
+superficialness, which is characteristic of those who
+do not do battle with circumstances. It is so much
+easier to do nothing than it is to do something; it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+so charming to be deferred to, to be looked up to, to
+be flattered, to have one's opinion sought without
+being involved in discussion, or vexed by opposition,
+or confronted with scepticism; it is so delightful
+to the natural man to sit in an easy cushioned chair,
+and be treated with delicate courtesy and dainty
+refinement as an authority on matters theological,
+philosophical, literary, instead of being put on the
+defensive by keen questioners who submit awkward
+problems for immediate solution; it is so gratifying
+to one's self-esteem to be received as a superior
+being, that ordinary human nature generally succumbs
+to the temptation and finds ready excuse for
+acquiescence in the necessity of being on good terms
+with one's wealthier parishioners, and so securing
+their all important good-will. In short, a fastidious
+kind of flunkeyism is engendered that is quite inconsistent
+with the spiritual life. The rich become
+a refuge as well as a resource, and the inner man is
+weakened while the outer man is confirmed. A
+species of lethargy creeps over mind and conscience.
+Even the moral purpose faints and languishes, and
+charity ceases to be athletic, as elegance of form is
+substituted for pith of resolution. The prophet is
+induced to say smooth things, to announce easy
+principles, to gloze over hard interpretations, to keep
+out of sight unwelcomed truths; and extraordinary
+courage is required of those who would resist this
+tendency to complaisance. The rich are, from the
+nature of the case, easily persuaded of the excellence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+of existing institutions, ideas, observances. I
+had been in the pulpit five years before I saw Henry
+James' remarkable lecture on "Property as a Symbol,"
+and learned for the first time that "Property
+symbolizes the perfect sovereignty which man is
+destined to exercise over nature"; that "Property
+as an institution of human society expresses or
+grows out of this instinct of sovereignty in man.
+While this instinct is as yet misunderstood or unrecognized
+by the individual, while its full issues
+are as yet unimagined by him, society lends all her
+force to educate it under this form of an aspiration
+after property, or a desire to appropriate to one's self,
+land, houses, money, precious stones, and whatsoever
+else evidences one's power over nature....
+Thus the moral law is nothing more or less than an
+affirmation of the sacredness of private property. It
+virtually asserts an individuality in man superior to
+that conferred by his nature.... Such is the
+temper of mind which God begets in him, to subdue
+the whole realm of the outward and finite to himself,
+to the service of his proper individuality, and so
+vindicate the truth of his infinite origin....
+The sole ground of our sovereignty over nature is
+inward, consisting in a God-inspired selfhood, instinct
+with infinite power."</p>
+
+<p>It would be comforting to believe that a felt consciousness
+of this infinitude, however dim, animates
+the attachment of the clergyman to the opulent of
+any congregation; but I, for one, must make the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+confession that the fact of property was taken
+literally, that the ideal, symbolical character of it
+was concealed, that the instinct of sovereignty was
+unrecognized and unimaginable, and that the divine
+intent was unsought for, the institution being held
+quite sufficient to itself and needing no authentication
+beyond its existence. And such, I apprehend,
+is the prevailing view among the clergy, whose
+worship of it is not identical with the adoration of
+the Infinite.</p>
+
+<p>One cannot undertake to speak with knowledge
+on a subject so complicated as this is with private
+motives, personal temperaments, social circumstances;
+but, as far as my memory goes, the clergy, as a class,
+have been too much engaged with matters ecclesiastical
+to be deeply interested in any cause of reform,
+and too timid to take the initiative in any matter
+involving disagreeable relations with controlling
+powers.</p>
+
+<p>While towards the rich the attitude of the clergy
+is one of allegiance, towards the poor it has been
+one of patronage. This is a danger. "The poor ye
+have always with you, and whenever ye will ye can
+do them good," expresses their doctrine of charity.
+As if the poor were created in order that others
+might exercise beneficence; as if poverty was a
+providential institution, maintained in the interest
+of religion! It is hard in a so-called "Christian"
+community to get away from this view. The modern
+scientific theory and the "Christian" theory are thus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+at war; the former being intent on the well-being
+of society, the latter having in mind the cultivation
+of the individual in tenderness of sympathy; the
+former educating intelligence, the latter educating
+feeling. Still there was charity.</p>
+
+<p>The Catholic Church, to say nothing here of any
+ecclesiastical purpose in keeping masses of men and
+women out of the world, gathered those who could
+not help themselves into great buildings and took
+care of them. In the Protestant Church the care of
+the poor has been held to be a religious duty, and a
+large part of the efforts of Christian ministers is
+directed to the fostering of pity and generosity in
+the hearts of the wealthy. To give to those who
+had nothing was reckoned the chief of graces, and
+"charity"&mdash;interpreted as love for those in want&mdash;was
+placed above "faith" and "hope," even when
+money alone was given. Not long ago a Unitarian
+minister exhorted his congregation to set apart for
+the uses of the poor one tenth part of their annual
+income, and doubtless he had the consciences of
+nearly all his hearers with him, for the monstrous
+proposition has been so often asserted as to seem by
+this time a commonplace. Probably no man living
+does that or ever did, and the practice of it on a
+large scale would pauperize the community. Think
+of it! Five thousand dollars a year is not a great
+income, yet if every one who had as much bestowed
+a tenth part of it on charitable objects what a fund
+for human demoralization would be raised! And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+when the income is ten thousand, fifteen thousand,
+twenty thousand, the amount of imbecility created
+would be indescribable; inertia would be frightfully
+increased, and multitudes would sit with folded
+hands who otherwise would have lifted them to do
+some honest work. A moral lethargy would fall on
+the toiling masses; wealth-producing labor would
+shrink to narrower and narrower limits, and a
+paralysis of energy would steal over the will of
+those whose need of resolution is the sorest. Wealth
+would consequently decrease, and the number of the
+givers get smaller and smaller until accumulation,
+which is the life of the modern world as distinguished
+from the ancient, would be blighted. The industrial
+classes would be reduced to servitude, enormous
+fortunes would be gathered by fraud, speculation,
+cruelty, and progressive society would relapse into
+sterility. Fortunately the minister could not persuade
+people to adopt this fatal policy. Fortunately,
+in this particular, niggardliness went hand in hand
+with common-sense.</p>
+
+<p>That the churches, under the lead of the ministers,
+have done a vast deal in the direction of charity, so
+far from being denied or disputed, is cordially
+allowed and even maintained. Indeed, this has been
+their chief function, and they have discharged it
+with immense zeal and astonishing results.</p>
+
+<p>But that it was an "ideal" profession is, as I said,
+a recommendation to the ministry. It is a broad
+foundation for spiritual-mindedness, for unworldliness.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+True, the habit of dealing with abstract topics,
+of holding commerce with purely speculative themes,
+of entertaining mere theories which cannot be verified,
+of going back to what are called "first principles,"
+imparts a curiously vague, dreamy, impersonal,
+impalpable character to the minister's intellect, rendering
+it unfit to treat concrete questions of life or
+morals; for this reason he is not often successful as
+a man of business, a practical politician, a manager
+of affairs, his cast of mind disqualifying him for
+close consideration of details.</p>
+
+<p>The duty of answering unanswerable questions,
+too, of solving problems that are insoluble, of replying
+positively to what, from the nature of things, he
+cannot know, gives him a kind of ingenuity which
+is not genuine insight, but consists in subtle turnings,
+windings, in making fine distinctions and splitting
+hairs, and inventing ingenious interpretations, rather
+than in keen insight or straightforward analysis. He
+must seek ways of escape from his pursuers, and,
+when no other offers, hide in the thicket of mystery
+or run up the tree of faith. He must, if possible,
+have an explanation ready, and, if he has none, he
+must fall back on authority, and be impressive,
+addressing the sentiment of awe which is usually
+alive in every bosom, or, in the last resort, asseverating
+the truth of revelation, and thus silencing
+the debate he cannot continue. If neither conscience
+is satisfied, his own or his interlocutor's, there is no
+remedy save in submission. He makes no attempt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+to clear up his conceptions, or, if he does, ends
+at last in vacuity or discontent. His neighbor,
+unconvinced, concludes that this is a clerical subterfuge,
+and so far loses confidence in a profession he
+cannot understand. Probably he does not do it
+justice, but the effect is the same,&mdash;a rooted depreciation
+such as would not be felt towards a layman
+who simply said that he had no answer.</p>
+
+<p>The minister, also, is generally committed to a
+conception of the universe as a product of the
+Supreme Will which, makes him an apologist. He
+is, after a fashion, in the secret of God. He is
+supposed to deliver messages and to utter oracles.
+His is the wisdom of the Eternal. His is the Bible.
+His are the testimonies. He must follow the ways
+of the Spirit and defend the divine economy in the
+constitution of the world. But in each case, every
+allowance being made for indefiniteness, for largeness
+of statement and broadness of exposition, the
+minister must be a champion of the Infinite Wisdom
+and Goodness, pledged to maintain it against all
+opponents; and however cordially he may choose
+that part, the consciousness of being bound may act
+as a fretting annoyance, not to say a galling restraint.</p>
+
+<p>A singular dogmatism often accompanies this
+claim to speak in the name of the Almighty; the
+minister must enunciate truths, not deliver opinions.
+An authoritative tone gets into his voice, pervades
+his manner, affects his whole expression of face,
+is conveyed by his gait and walk, so that he is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+known at once from afar. Men hush their voices
+in his presence, ventilate thoughts not natural to
+them, conceal their actual sentiments, from a feeling
+that he is to be deferred to, not argued with like
+another man. The tone of the pulpit animates his
+conversation and works into the very structure of
+his thought. He is always a preacher. The atmosphere
+of Sunday hangs about him. He carries the
+New Testament into the parlor; unconsciously to
+himself he uses the language of authority, and finds
+to his mortification that he is angered by dispute.</p>
+
+<p>The duty of administering consolation to the
+afflicted adds to this visionary frame of mind. Frequent
+intercourse with the suffering, sad, and bereaved,
+intimate commerce with sick-beds and graves,
+besides creating ghostly dispositions, deepens his
+cast of thought. To comfort people under disappointments,
+to smooth the rugged path, to quiet the
+perturbed heart, is a business to discharge which all
+the resources of faith are called into requisition, and
+any means that will accomplish the end in view are
+considered as justifiable. In the effort to find comfortable
+things to say, the temptation to say pleasant
+things, easy things, amiable things, to present the
+kindly aspect of Providence, and to indulge happy
+fancies in regard to human allotments and destiny,
+is exceedingly strong; so that one may come at last
+to believe himself what gives so much contentment
+to others in the severe crises of existence. The loving
+heart is in perilous proximity to the thinking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+head. All the sweetest feelings of our nature, the
+wish to console people, to make them patient, trusting,
+resigned, cheerful, are brought in to reinforce
+the faith in a benignant purpose on the part of the
+Creator, and an unquestioning disposition is encouraged
+in the spiritual physician as well as in the
+stricken patient.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Henry James says ("Substance and Shadow,"
+p. 214): "Protestant men and women, those who
+have any official or social consequence in the church,
+are apt to exhibit a high-flown religious pride, a
+spiritual flatulence and sourness of stomach which
+you do not find under the Catholic administration."
+This is strong language, but not too strong considering
+the author's abhorrence of exclusiveness, separation,
+Pharisaism, and his identification of this with
+official religion.</p>
+
+<p>If humility is the base of all the virtues, as it is
+commonly reported, then a profession that directly
+favors pride is not productive of the highest type of
+character. And if love,&mdash;kindness, brotherhood, fellowship,&mdash;is
+the fulfilment of the law, then a calling
+that puts desire in conflict with duty is not conducive
+to unity or peace, whether in the private mind
+or in the collective household. Character, as <i>naturally</i>
+interpreted, consists of an innate superiority to
+one's fellow-men in the qualities that glorify humanity,
+purity, heavenly-mindedness, patience, earnestness,
+truthfulness, sincerity. Character, as <i>spiritually</i>
+interpreted, consists of the cordial affiliation with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+one's fellow-men in the qualities that unite the atoms
+of humanity in love, compassion, humility, forgiveness,
+sympathy. But the higher view has not prevailed
+in my experience; let me repeat, in the most
+emphatic language at my command, my conviction
+that ministers as a body do not succumb to the temptations
+thus apparently incident to their profession.</p>
+
+<p>It is commonly supposed that the intellectual part
+of the minister's labor&mdash;the making of the sermons&mdash;is
+most severe. It is imagined that the task of
+addressing the same audience every Sunday must be
+exceedingly arduous. This is a mistake. There is
+a facility of work in every profession. The mind
+becomes accustomed to running in certain grooves,
+to going through the same process of thinking, to
+applying the same rules to many details of practice.
+The longer one's continuance in the ministry, the
+easier this becomes. Experience accumulates. Themes
+multiply. Novel suggestions occur. New thoughts
+arise. Fresh books are written. Singular questions
+are proposed. Problems present fresh aspects. The
+old interests remain in all their force. Men never
+tire hearing about God, Immortality, Destiny. In
+truth, the intellectual difficulties become less and less
+appalling until at last they disappear. The real
+effort is to keep alive the feelings of humanity; to
+overcome the inclination towards separation into
+classes; to avoid distinguishing between persons; to
+keep love glowing; to maintain the supremacy of
+soul; to identify spirituality with custom. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+preaching is subordinate not to the private practice
+alone, but to the religious attitude towards mankind,
+which is conditioned on charity and the recognition
+of human worth and sonship. The most beautiful
+trait in the pastor is his universality, his simple, unaffected
+manhood.</p>
+
+<p>But enough of criticism. It is a privilege to belong
+to a profession occupied with things ethereal;
+to be interested in the grandest themes; to hold
+intercourse with the loftiest minds; to live aloof
+from the world; to put the happiest constructions on
+the events of human life; to interpret Providence
+beneficently. And it is my firm persuasion that in
+proportion as the profession throws off the thraldom
+of ecclesiasticism and dogmatism, it increases in
+power and is sure to recover its ancient superiority.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XII.<br />
+
+MY TEACHERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Among Englishmen, I owe the most to James
+Martineau, at the time of my ordination (1847), a
+Unitarian clergyman in Liverpool. His lectures in
+the Unitarian controversy (1839) on "Christianity
+without Priest and without Ritual," on "The Christian
+View of Moral Evil," on "The Bible: What It
+Is and What It is Not"; his articles on "Distinctive
+Types of Christianity," on "Creeds and Heresies of
+Early Christianity," on "The Ethics of Christendom,"
+on "The Creed of Christendom," on "St. Paul and
+His Modern Students," made a profound impression
+on my mind. One passage in particular, at the close
+of the essay on "The Ethics of Christendom," still
+lingers in my memory:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The old antagonism between the world that now is and any
+other that has been or is to come, has been modified, or has
+entirely ceased.... <i>Here</i> is the spot, <i>now</i> is the time for
+the most devoted service of God. No strains of heaven will
+wake man into prayer, if the common music of humanity stirs
+him not. The saintly company of spirits will throng around
+him in vain if he finds no angels of duty and affection in his
+children, neighbors, and friends. If no heavenly voices wander<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+around him in the present, the future will be but the dumb
+change of the shadow on the dial. In short, higher stages of
+existence are not the refuge of this, but the complement to it;
+and it is the proper wisdom of the affections not to escape the
+one in order to seek the other, but to flow forth in purifying
+copiousness on both.</p></div>
+
+<p>Martineau's intellectual fidelity, accurate learning,
+earnestness of feeling, were exceedingly fascinating.</p>
+
+<p>In this country Ralph Waldo Emerson was the
+great teacher. He gave an atmosphere rather than
+a dogma. He was air and light. He is best described,
+not as a philosopher, a man of letters, a
+poet, but as a seer. His gift was that of insight.
+This he tried to render comprehensive, searching,
+intelligent, accurate, by reading, study, meditation,
+the acquaintance of distinguished men; but he was
+never beguiled into thinking that learning, eloquence,
+wit, constituted his peculiarity. He had a penetrating,
+eager, questioning look. His head was thrust
+out as if in quest of knowledge. His gaze was
+steady and intense. His speech was laconic and to
+the purpose. His direct manner suggested a wish
+for closer acquaintance with the mind. His very
+courtesy, which was invariable and exquisite in its
+way, had an air of inquiry about it. There was no
+varnish, no studied grace of motion or demeanor, no
+manifest desire to please, but a kind of wistfulness
+as of one who took you at your best and wanted to
+draw it out. He accosted the soul, and with the
+winning persuasiveness which befits friendliness on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+human terms. There was a certain shyness which
+indicated the modesty which is born of the spirit.</p>
+
+<p>But a commanding doer he certainly was not;
+that is, he was no man of expedients, of practical
+resources, of merely executive will. He appreciated
+this kind of ability, as his lecture on Napoleon
+shows, but he possessed little of it, his Yankee ingenuity
+being more confined in its range. The moral
+courage belonged to him, the earnestness, the faith,
+but his ethereal qualities lacked driving force. His
+principles made him interested in every movement
+of reform, for he had a boundless hope which led
+him sometimes into extravagant anticipations of
+truth and benefit. Every sign of life, intellectual,
+moral, spiritual, caught his eye, and so long as it
+promised new developments of power his eager sympathy
+went with it, but when the creative period
+ceased he turned away. He early enlisted in the
+anti-slavery cause, not because he had entire confidence
+in the negro, or specially liked the abolitionists,
+but because he demanded the utmost liberty for
+all men in order that substantial advantages might
+be widely shared; but he was not prominent among
+the workers of that reform. His name stood foremost
+in the list of those who claimed the emancipation
+of woman from social or political disability, not
+that he was a worker in the woman's-rights phalanx,
+not that he looked for any immediate benefit from
+that agitation, or felt any particular interest in the
+leaders or in the success of that individual crusade,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+but that he was in favor of the largest opportunity
+for all human beings, and wished every particle of
+power to be used. From the first he welcomed the
+Free Religious Association as giving promise of
+original light, greater breadth, fresh vigor, new
+revelations of knowledge in that most ideal, but most
+deplorably limited, of all spheres; but when in his
+view that promise was unfulfilled, though his name
+still stood with those of its vice-presidents, he ceased
+to take any part in its proceedings or to feel any
+personal concern in its affairs. There was something
+theoretical, speculative, in his attitude as a reformer.
+His philosophy pledged him to the utmost individualism,
+and this called for the utmost liberty, that
+each might receive all he could of the divine fulness
+and be as much as his nature required. Hence his own
+limited expectation; hence his enthusiasm in behalf of
+individuals like Walt Whitman, John Brown, Henry
+Thoreau; hence the light that came into his eyes
+when he sat in some reform convention where high
+thoughts were spoken. His word was given, and it
+was always inspiring, emancipating, uplifting, heard
+in the valleys from the dizziest heights of vision;
+but force was not his to give. Such words were
+more than "half battles," to be sure, so invigorating
+were they to all the champions of good causes, but
+they were <i>words</i> still, and seemed to proceed from
+some upper region of impersonal mind. They expressed
+convictions, feelings, desires, but there was
+lack of blood in them. They seemed made of air;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+there was soul behind them, but not as much body
+as many wished. In a word, all the ideal elements
+were present. He was a man who believed, felt,
+hoped, had vast resources of faith, but was a thinker
+more than an actor. Thinking is indeed doing, yet
+not in the same sphere of achievement.</p>
+
+<p>Emerson recognized the limitations of genius.
+"Life is a scale of degrees," he says in the lecture on
+the "Uses of Great Men."</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Between rank and rank of our great men are wide intervals.
+Mankind have in all ages attached themselves to a few persons
+who, either by the quality of that idea they embodied, or by
+the largeness of their reception, were entitled to the position of
+leaders and lawgivers.... With each new mind a new
+secret of nature transpires; nor can the Bible be closed until
+the last great man is born.... We cloy of the honey of
+each peculiar greatness. Every hero becomes a bore at last.... We
+balance one man with his opposite, and the health
+of the state depends on the see-saw.</p></div>
+
+<p>Emerson looks forward to the time when all souls
+shall lie open to the heavenly influx, and he regards
+greatness as an earnest of that possibility. What
+disappointments he must have felt as he was forced
+to turn away from people who should have been
+saints and heroes, but were none! What bitter
+moments he must have known when he stretched
+out his arms to welcome a goddess and embraced
+only a cloud! But his expectations continued eager;
+no feature betrayed evidence that these practical
+refutations of his theory had effect on his heart.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Whether Emerson's constant belief in the Over-soul,
+his stubborn theism, his persuasion of an immanent
+God, was an advantage or a disadvantage to his
+philosophical view of the universe may be doubted.
+On the one hand, we cannot question the fact that
+he owed to it his enthusiastic faith in the substantial
+unity of creation, his optimism, his assurance of
+future progress, his confidence in man, his moral
+earnestness, his elevation of soul, his buoyancy of
+spirit, his forwardness in all endeavors after reform.
+On the other hand, it can hardly be denied that it
+led him to take some things for granted, diverted his
+mind from the unprejudiced observation of phenomena,
+prevented his rendering full justice to the
+scientific method, was the cause of wide aberrations
+in his estimates of human character, and of a curious
+onesidedness in his judgments on human condition.</p>
+
+<p>Emerson was always profoundly religious, at
+heart a supernaturalist. The blood of centuries of
+pious ancestors was in his veins. His soul was
+uppermost, not his intellect nor his heart. He was
+a closet man, a minister at the altar. True, he
+rejected every form of the religious sentiment, and
+moved with entire freedom among dogmas however
+expressed in word or in rite. Every attempt at
+giving voice to spiritual emotion was disagreeable
+to him.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I like a church; I like a cowl;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I like a prophet of the soul;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And on my heart monastic aisles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet not for all his faith can see<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Would I that cowled churchman be.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Theology had fallen from him like a shroud. He
+would not venture any definition of the spiritual
+laws. Doctrine had become faith; prayer was
+changed into aspiration; the speechless utterance
+was the only one he cordially listened to. But faith
+he held fast; aspiration he cherished; the inarticulate
+language of the eternal was ever in his ears.</p>
+
+<p>Ever and anon would come a burst of conviction.
+"Oh, my brothers, God exists!" he cries in an
+ecstasy of emotion. Some years ago Emerson seemed
+fascinated by the inductive method, so that some of
+his admirers thought he would become a convert to
+physical science. But the bent of his nature asserted
+itself, and he pursued the deductive system as before.
+His passion for "First Truths," as they were called,
+was irresistible. He could not abandon the philosophy
+of intuition, and all his studies&mdash;comprehensive,
+profound, and original as they were,&mdash;his insatiable
+thirst for knowledge, his inordinate appetite for
+details of fact, incidents, anecdotes, gleanings from
+literature of every kind, were subservient to this.</p>
+
+<p>Emerson's serenity is often spoken of as evidence
+of the power of his religious faith. It may allow
+of this construction, but it may be accounted for on
+other and different grounds which lie nearer at
+hand and proceed immediately from more obvious
+sources. How far may a long ancestral experience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+in devout meditations, practices, longings, worked
+into the system and producing a sedate, calm, interior
+temperament, go in explaining that almost imperturbable
+tranquillity? The piety of his forefathers
+was so genuine that it drove him from the church
+of his adoption, and rendered another calling sacred.
+Their descendant exhibited the same saintliness
+which they possessed but in a different fashion.
+And he was probably saintlier than they were,
+because he was their child. His brothers had the
+same characteristic of equanimity by virtue of the
+same parentage. His brother William, whom I
+knew intimately in New York, showed in his daily
+life a similar dignity, and tradition reports the same
+of Charles. It was the perfect fruitage of centuries
+of heavenly-minded men, not the peculiarity of an
+individual soul.</p>
+
+<p>This predisposition to inwardness was favored by
+the long seclusion of Concord, which kept Emerson
+aloof from the world and prevented the friction
+which is so damaging to serenity. He saw those
+only who respected, loved, honored, and revered
+him. He came into collision with none. Men of
+thought, unambitious men, students, farmers, were
+his fellow-townsmen. Several hours in each day he
+was alone with his books or his mind. When he
+visited the city it was for an intellectual or social
+purpose, as one who had dropped from a star and
+was soon to vanish. His contact was with men of
+letters, clergymen, publishers, friends, gentlemen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+interested in mental pursuits who had left their
+business in order to disport themselves in the fields
+of thought. These added to his stores of wisdom,
+and sent him home replenished rather than drained.
+The gains of his day were not dissipated either by
+business occupation or pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>Then, whether from disposition or philosophy we
+cannot tell, this man avoided everything dark, evil,
+unwholesome, unpleasant. Sickness of all kinds,
+complaint, depression, melancholy, was an abomination
+to him. He turned away from ugly sights and
+sounds, thus evading conflict. He never argued,
+never discussed, but said his word as well as he
+could, and encouraged others to say theirs, in this
+way hoping to get at the truth. By this course he
+escaped the usual provocations to ill-temper, and
+was forced upon an undisturbed equipoise of mind.
+Nothing helps serenity so much as avoidance of
+contest, and when one can thoroughly convince himself
+that there is no rooted evil in the world to be
+fought against, an even condition of soul is not hard
+to maintain; optimism is proverbially cheerful, but
+an optimism that is grounded in principle must be
+unconquerable by any force that circumstances can
+bring against it.</p>
+
+<p>It must be remembered that Emerson was not a
+man of warm temperament, not tropical in color or
+in heat; more like the morning, cool and breezy, than
+like the sultry noon-day, or the glowing evening;
+more like the dewy spring, than the effulgent summer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+or the fruit-bearing autumn; not a child of the
+sun, rather suggesting the still, white, imaginative
+moonlight. There was an air of remoteness about
+him. His remark to the inn-keeper,&mdash;"heat me red-hot,"
+tells the story. Simple habits kept his frame
+wiry, and a New England nurture saved his mind
+from luxuriant uncleanness. By nature he was passionless.
+The beautiful "Threnody" on the death
+of his boy, reveals the sorrow of a soaring mind
+rather than the grief of a crushed heart. To command
+one's self enough for such an effort evinces a
+rare power of rising above mortal conditions. Such
+a constitution finds solitude congenial and is calm by
+force of inclination. Friendship seems an emotion
+better suited than love to that ethereal soul, which
+was always radiant but seldom burning, benignant,
+seldom craving, always gracious in imparting, seldom
+hungry for receiving. One might walk in his illumination,
+but one could hardly bask in his heat, or
+lie on his bosom, or nestle near his heart. They
+that knew him at home may speak more warmly of
+him, but thus he appeared to people outside; thus he
+appeared to many who had admired him as I did
+and tried to get close to him.</p>
+
+<p>The love of wild, untrimmed nature, the want of
+interest in cultivated gardens, was part of his theory
+of the universe as the expression of God; the richer,
+the less it was interfered with. He would approach
+as near to the Creator as possible, listening for the
+divine voice, which was most clearly heard in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+wilderness. To the same source must be ascribed
+his partiality for wild, untrained men,&mdash;foresters,
+hunters, pioneers, trappers, back-woodsmen. He
+sought everywhere after originality, freshness, power,
+in individuals and in groups. He hailed a genius,
+however rough. Unconventionality excited his enthusiasm
+to such a degree that he could scarcely
+contain himself, but said the most extravagant things
+in the ecstasy of his hope. Men of polished outside
+he did not care for; mechanical men, however successful,
+politicians, however popular and adroit, were
+his aversion. Accomplishments, however great, scholarship
+however finished, he did not respect. He
+wanted the rough, uncut gem. Genius of whatever
+description, in whatever class, whatever its order or
+grade, was his joy. In him the love of truth predominated.
+He submitted to the inconvenience of
+imperfect opinion, but respected the highest law of
+his being. He believed in the eternal laws of mind,
+in the self-existence of right, in purity, veracity,
+goodness. He was one of the most honest of men,
+one of the cleanest, and he did his utmost to bring
+his life into correspondence with his best thought.
+That all created things must be imperfect was part
+of his creed; that this imperfection ran through
+human character he was as much convinced as any
+man; and his efforts were unceasing to turn men's
+eyes towards the beauty "ancient but ever new,"
+which he in his moments of insight beheld. No one
+lives up to his most exalted faith. No one ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+endeavored to do so more sincerely and humbly than
+Ralph Waldo Emerson.</p>
+
+<p>In my early ministry, the discourses of Dr. Orville
+Dewey on "Human Nature," "Human Life," "The
+Nature of Religion," seemed all-sufficing. I read them
+over and over again with increasing admiration, and
+his solutions of spiritual problems were accepted as
+final.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Mary Dewey, in the admirable memoir of her
+father, lays great stress on his affectionate qualities.
+These cannot be too emphatically asserted; yet they
+probably had more scope than even she suspected.
+Indeed, unless I am much mistaken, they formed the
+basis of his character. He was a most deep-feeling
+man. He loved his friends in and out of the profession,
+with a loyal, hearty, obliging, warm, and even
+tender emotion, expressing itself in word and deed.
+It was overflowing, not in any sentimental manner,
+but in a manly, sincere way. He was a man of infinite
+good-will, of a quite boundless kindness. His
+voice, his expression of face, his smile, the grasp of
+his hand,&mdash;all gave sign of it. He felt things keenly;
+his sensibilities were most acute; even his thoughts
+were suffused with emotion. He could not discuss
+speculative themes as if they were cold or dry.
+Nothing was arid to his mind. In prayer it was not
+unusual for his audience to discern tears rolling
+down his cheeks. One day, in his study, on speaking
+about the intellectual implications of the "Philosophie
+Positive," he dropped his head and seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+for a moment lost in reverie largely made up of
+devotion. In him, heart was uppermost; intellect,
+conscience, were of subordinate value when taken
+alone; in fact, they were incomplete by themselves,
+and wanted their proper substance. He said once
+that his skin was so delicate that the least soil on his
+hands was felt all through his system and prevented
+him from working. This excessive sensibility, which
+could not be understood by the world at large, was
+at the bottom of his likes and dislikes, of his personal
+fears and hopes. Excitement drained off his
+strength. He exhausted himself physically, and fell
+into ill-health by exertions that would not have
+taxed an ordinary constitution. It cost him a great
+deal to write sermons, to visit the sick or sorrowing,
+to conduct public services. At the same time, he
+was disqualified, by a certain want of steel in his
+blood, for any but the clerical profession, where
+qualities like his are of inestimable value, and of the
+rarest kind. He was a minister from the beginning,
+always profoundly interested in questions of the interior
+life, and though he early left the orthodox
+communion and became a preacher of Unitarian
+Christianity, making it his work to apply religious
+ideas to all the concerns of the natural world and
+the secular life, he retained all the fervor of spirit
+that charaterized the most devout believer. A vein
+of passionate feeling ran through all his discourses,
+and while his themes were taken from daily existence,
+his thoughts were fixed on eternity. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+was absorbed in the destiny of the human soul, of
+the <i>individual</i> soul, bringing all discussions to that
+point, and trying to make lasting impressions on the
+spiritual natures of men and women.</p>
+
+<p>When I first knew him he had the reputation
+of being a self-indulgent man. This was a great
+mistake. His way of life was exceedingly simple,
+and his habits were almost abstemious. In fact,
+neither his physical nor his mental constitution allowed
+of any indulgence in eating or drinking. Still
+the impression was a natural one, for a certain
+amount of ease, exemption from care, gayety, was
+necessary to him. The society of elegant, accomplished
+people was indispensable to his recreation
+and rest. His motive for seeking such was not the
+love of luxury so much as a demand for recreation
+and a craving for repose. He was not, in any sense,
+an earthy man or one who loved sensual delights.
+On the contrary, he was always mindful of his calling,
+always intent on high subjects, always ready to
+lead intercourse upwards, always, to the extent of
+his power, interested in the moral aspect of current
+discussions; over-anxious, if anything, to approach
+speculative themes. He possessed an eager, unresting,
+questioning mind. He was always thinking,
+and on great subjects of theology or philosophy, and
+he put into them an amount of feeling that is extraordinary
+with intellectual men.</p>
+
+<p>That he should have been so sensitive as he was to
+the words and suspicions of anti-slavery men who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+charged him with being an advocate of a fugitive-slave
+law, an apologist for slavery, a ready tool of the
+inhuman, reactionary party of the country, is not
+surprising. His dread of pain, his hatred of falsehood,
+his horror of injustice, his love of fair play,
+will sufficiently account for this; while the impossibility
+of explaining himself kept the wound open.
+That for thirty years the sore should have bled,
+shows the delicacy of his temperament and the
+shrinking nature of his will. To speak of him as
+a friend of slavery is absurd. No one can read his
+sermon on "The Slavery Question," preached shortly
+after the annexation of Texas and at a moment of
+great excitement at the North in regard to the
+advances of the slave-power, and not perceive that
+he was deeply moved.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Are these people</i> <span class="smcap">men</span>?" he said; "that is the
+question. If they are <i>men</i>, it will not do to make
+them instruments for mere convenience,&mdash;for the
+mere tillage of the soil;&mdash;if they are <i>men</i>, it is
+not enough to say that they have a sort of animal
+freedom from care, and joyance of spirits. If they
+are <i>men</i>, they are to be cultivated; their faculties
+are to be regarded as precious; they are to be improved.... If
+he is a <i>man</i>, then he is not only
+improvable and ought to be improved, but he <i>will
+improve</i> in spite of all we can do." And a great
+deal more to the same effect. He indignantly protested
+against treating "an intelligent creature, a
+fellow-being, a brother-man, a being capable of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+indefinite expansion and immortal progress," as one
+would treat a tree, a flower, an ox, or a horse.
+"Grant that the African of the present generation
+cannot be raised to our stature; yet if in the course
+of ages he may be, and if it is our policy systematically
+to arrest or to retard his growth, does the
+case materially differ from what I have supposed?"
+Namely that of a child. Dr. Dewey visited slave-States
+and talked with slave-holders in order to make
+himself fully acquainted with the condition of opinion
+and of feeling about the case, and he took occasion
+everywhere to argue the Northern side. This
+ought to be enough in the way of vindication of his
+personal sentiments.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, he was a Unionist of the
+Webster school. His attachment to the Union was
+intense. Disunion in his judgment meant ceaseless
+discord, the end of republican institutions, the arrest
+of civilization, the indefinite postponement of progress,
+the hopelessness of education and uplifting for
+the slave, the withdrawal of Northern influence, the
+final overthrow of government by moral powers. A
+long reign of anarchy, in the course of which the
+lovers of the race must see their visions of good disappear,
+would supervene, and this he could not
+contemplate with equanimity.</p>
+
+<p>Then he was an old-fashioned enemy of war,
+especially of civil war. He was a sincere lover
+of peace, and a believer in the arts of peace, in
+industry, education, the diffusion of intelligence, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+weaving of the ties of fraternity; and though he
+acknowledged the heroic mission of strife, he recoiled
+instinctively from it. War, in his estimation,
+was an inevitable necessity in the order of the world,
+but it was an awful element in the "world problem";
+"a fearful scourge," a condition to be outgrown
+along with vice, passion, injustice, selfishness, ambition,
+a sign that is destined to disappear as intelligence
+and Christianity come in. It must be submitted
+to as an ordination of Providence, but it should
+never be precipitated by men, least of all should it
+be brought on hastily, by unreasonableness, malignity,
+or hate. The evils of war were precisely such
+as appealed most directly to his imagination; they
+were so personal, they were so domestic, they were
+so pitiable, they were so full of tears. He shrank
+from violence, from rage, from party ambition, from
+curses and cries. He loved his countrymen, and, so
+long as any reason remained, he could not bear to
+think of fighting. So long as any oil was left in the
+can, the troubled waters were not to be abandoned
+by the peace-makers. It was much for him to have
+patience with those who used angry words, even in
+a cause of righteousness. He, for his part, could
+not scold or overstate, or do anything in a harsh
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Dewey believed in colonization; not necessarily
+in Africa, but in a separation between the
+white and black races, in the civilization of the
+negro. In the tenth lecture of the course on "The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+Problem of Human Destiny" (1864), he takes
+occasion to welcome "the great hope" that thus
+was opened "for purging our American soil from
+the stain of slavery. Many of us have long been
+asking how this is to be done. Look at Africa,
+surrounded by a wall of darkness, and filled with
+cruelty and blood, with no civilizing influence in
+herself, as the story of ages has proved; what now
+do we see? Britain sends to her borders the man-stealer,
+to tear her children from her bosom and
+transport them to the American colonies. It was a
+deed of unmingled atrocity, compared with which
+capture in war was generous and honorable; the
+African King of Dahomey grows white by the side
+of the Saxon slave-trader. But what follows? The
+African people in this country improve, and are
+now far advanced beyond their kindred at home.
+And now they begin to return; they are building a
+state on their native borders which promises to stop
+the slave trade with Africa and to spread light and
+civilization through her dark solitudes." At the
+close of his discourse on the slavery question, he
+said:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>If I were to propose a plan to meet the duties and perils of
+this tremendous emergency that presses upon us, I would engage
+the whole power of this nation, the willing co-operation
+of the North and the South, if it were possible, to prepare this
+people for freedom; and then I would give them a country
+beyond the mountains,&mdash;say the Californias,&mdash;where they
+might be a nation by themselves. Ah! if the millions upon
+millions spent upon a Mexican war could be devoted to this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+purpose,&mdash;if all the energies of this country could be employed
+for such an end,&mdash;what a noble spectacle were it for all the
+world to behold, of help and redemption to an enslaved
+people! What a purifying and ennobling ministration for
+ourselves!</p></div>
+
+<p>The intimacy with Dr. Charming re-inforced the
+conclusions which were native to Dr. Dewey's temperament.
+The moderate view, the dread of overstatement,
+the fear of fanaticism, the faith in reason,
+the love of tranquillity, the desire after truth, were
+rooted in his mind. His constitutional conservatism
+was confirmed. Then he was a Unitarian, and therefore
+rational in his methods, inclined to judge by
+arguments, to sift opinions by the understanding.
+The abolitionists were, for the most part, either Calvinists
+or transcendentalists, people who followed an
+inward voice, who placed interior conviction before
+ratiocination, and encouraged moral sentiment to
+take the lead in action, blowing coals into a flame,
+and not content unless they saw a blaze. The Unitarians,
+as a class, were not ardent disciples of any
+moral cause, and took pride in being reasoners,
+believers in education, and in general social
+influence, in the progress of knowledge, and the
+uplifting of humanity by means of ideas. The
+habit of discountenancing passion may have been
+fostered in a school like this. Perhaps if young
+Dewey had continued in his old belief he would
+have been a more vehement reformer than he was.
+His natural glow was softened down into a mild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+effulgence, communicating warmth to his convictions,
+but not producing a burning zeal for any substance
+of doctrine.</p>
+
+<p>His power of emotion made him a powerful
+preacher but prevented his being a great philosopher.
+Dr. Bellows, who was his close friend for many years,
+described him as a man of "massive intellectual
+power," and then went on to impute to him the gifts
+that belong to the pulpit orator: "poetic imagination,"
+a "rare dramatic faculty of representation."
+Perhaps by "massive" Dr. Bellows meant the power
+to throw thoughts in a mass, with cumulative effect.
+This power Dr. Dewey certainly possessed in an
+extraordinary degree. But of philosophical talent
+he had little. Indeed, he seemed to be conscious of
+this himself. At the end of his first lecture before
+the Lowell Institute he said:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I am not sorry that the place and occasion require me to
+make this a popular theme. I am not to speak for philosophers,
+but for the people. I wish to meet the questions which arise
+in all minds that have awaked to any degree of reflection
+upon their nature and being, and upon the collective being of
+their race. I have hoped that I should escape the charge of
+presumption by the humbleness of my attempt&mdash;the attempt,
+that is to say, to popularize a theme which has hitherto been
+the domain of scholars.</p></div>
+
+<p>The lecture assumes the existence of a Personal
+God, the reality of a conscious soul, the freedom of
+the human will, the fact of a moral purpose in creation,
+the perfectibility of man, the idea of progress,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+the evidence of design in the universe attesting a
+divine intelligence. The treatment nowhere shows
+metaphysical acumen or speculative insight. On
+every page is brilliancy, eloquence, skilful manipulation
+of arguments, fervent appeal to conscience.
+Nowhere is subtilty or depth of intuition. Take for
+example the discourse on "The Problem of Evil," the
+most intellectually exacting of all subjects. It ends
+thus after a series of pictures:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Give me freedom, give me knowledge, give me breadth of
+experience; I would have it all. No memory is so hallowed,
+no memory is so dear, as that of temptation nobly withstood,
+or of suffering nobly endured. What is it that we gather and
+garner up from the solemn story of the world, like its struggles,
+its sorrows, its martyrdoms? Come to the great battle, thou
+wrestling, glorious, marred nature! strong nature! weak
+nature! Come to the great battle, and in this mortal strife
+strike for immortal victory! The highest Son of God, the best
+beloved of Heaven that ever stood upon earth, was "made
+perfect through suffering." And sweeter shall be the cup of
+immortal joy, for that it once was dashed with bitter drops of
+pain and sorrow; and brighter shall roll the everlasting ages,
+for the dark shadows that clouded the birth-time of our being.</p></div>
+
+<p>This is not argument, but preaching&mdash;- very fine,
+stimulating, powerful preaching, but preaching nevertheless;
+quite different from James Martineau's treatment
+of the same theme, in the course of the Liverpool
+lectures (delivered in 1839). Mr. Martineau, too,
+addressed a popular assembly, and closed his discourse
+in a strain of exhortation. Still, the grave
+tone of the previous discussion sobered the rhetoric,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+and the background of the ancient debate made the
+moral lessons solemn. Philosophy yielded to the
+necessities of ethics, much as the "Kritik der Reinen
+Vernunft" gave place to the "Kritik der Practischen
+Vernunft" of Kant&mdash;the preacher and the reasoner
+standing indeed on different ground, but the moral
+instruction being tempered by the philosophical.</p>
+
+<p>Orville Dewey was a great preacher, perhaps the
+greatest that the Unitarian communion has produced;
+greater as a preacher than Dr. Channing, because
+more various and more sympathetic, nearer to the
+popular heart, less inspired by grand ideas, and for
+that reason more moving. He was imbued with
+Channing's fundamental thought&mdash;the "Dignity of
+Human Nature,"&mdash;and illustrated it with a wealth
+of imagination, enforced it by an urgency of appeal,
+quickened it by an affluence of dramatic representation
+all his own. His function was to apply this
+doctrine to every incident of life, to politics, business,
+art, literature, society, amusement, and he did this
+with a boldness, a freedom, a frankness unusual at
+any time, but without example when he was in the
+ministry. I shall never forget, in one of his sermons,
+an allusion to a symphony of Beethoven which gave
+me a new conception of the essential humanity of
+the pulpit's office, of the close association that there
+was between religion and art. His conversational
+style, impassioned but not stilted and never turgid,
+was exceedingly impressive, while his constant employment
+of the forms of reasoning added weight to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+his sentences. The discourse was plain, and yet
+from its copiousness it was ornate; and the affectionate
+tone assumed an air of grave remonstrance
+which was deepened in effect by the appearance of
+formal logic. The hearer seemed to be admitted to
+the secrets of a living, earnest mind, and to be listening
+to something more than the usual enunciations
+of ethical principle. At the same time his own will
+was consulted, he was taken into partnership with
+the orator and introduced to the processes of conviction.
+His state of feeling was considered, his
+objections were met, his scruples answered, his arguments
+confronted. He was, in short, treated like a
+rational being, to be reasoned with, not to be looked
+down upon.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Dewey was always a friend of liberal thought.
+There are no more significant pages in his daughter's
+memoir of him than those which contain his correspondence
+with Mr. Chadwick, one of the most radical
+of Unitarian divines. He was himself a student
+of divinity at Andover, early converted to Unitarianism,
+became an assistant and warm friend of Dr.
+Channing, but instead of remaining stationary in
+dogmatic faith, took a rational view of all religious
+questions, favored the largest liberality, and welcomed
+every effort to adapt spiritual ideas to actual
+knowledge. He had no dogmatic prepossessions,
+and no professional fears. What he asked for was
+sincerity coupled with earnestness. This being given,
+conclusions, within certain limits, of course, were of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+little moment. Theodore Parker used to sadden and
+irritate him, but less on account of his opinions than
+on account of his pugnacious manner in expressing
+them. Parker rather despised him for what he regarded
+as his time-serving disposition, and could not
+understand his mental delicacy; but men who
+thought as Parker did were even then on the best
+terms with Dr. Dewey, whose mellowness, on the
+whole, increased instead of diminishing with age,
+and was greatest in his declining years.</p>
+
+<p>He was a man fond of personalities; even in his
+addresses on the greatest themes, he would if possible
+narrow the subject down to the measure of
+individual application. Thus when lecturing on
+"The Problem of Evil," after submitting various
+considerations, he adds:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Broad and vast and immense as that problem may appear,
+it is after all, in actual experience, purely individual....
+The truth is, nobody has experienced more of it than you or I
+have, or might have, experienced. With regard to all the
+intrinsic difficulties of the case, it is as if one life had been
+lived in the world; and since no man has lived another's life,
+or any life but his own, there <i>has been</i> to actual individual
+consciousness <i>but one life</i> of thirty, seventy, or a hundred
+years lived on earth. The problem really comes within that
+compass.... If I can solve the problem of existence for
+myself, I have solved it for everybody; I have solved it for
+the human race.... Do you and I find anything in this our
+life that makes us prize it, anything that makes us feel that
+we had rather have it than have it not? Doubtless we do and
+other men do; all men do.</p></div>
+
+<p>This passage illustrates well the tendency to personal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+reference that distinguished the man. In a
+discourse on war delivered before the Peace Society
+he resolves its miseries into those of the individual,
+as if mass&mdash;affecting, as it does, nations, civilizations,
+humanity itself&mdash;counted for nothing. This tendency
+explains his fondness for his friends, his
+strength of sympathy, his tenacity of attachment,
+his love for people. It does not betoken a broad,
+deep, philosophic mind, but it does betoken a warm,
+clinging, affectionate nature.</p>
+
+<p>It made him too a charming feature in society, a
+delightful talker, an easy, graceful, delectable companion,
+an interested adviser and counsellor, a
+beloved person in his family, an excellent townsman.</p>
+
+<p>We should be grateful for this, that one has lived
+to irradiate a somewhat sad profession, to warm the
+bleak spaces of mortal existence, to throw a gleam
+of gladness upon the sunless problems of human
+destiny. It is a great deal to be assured that a
+living heart has walked with us, and that a living
+voice has proclaimed the heart-side of man's lot.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XIII.<br />
+
+MY COMPANIONS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>These were many, but most of them are living
+and cannot, therefore, be spoken of. There is an
+advantage in writing about the dead, for they cannot
+protest against the handsome things you say,
+and they cannot remonstrate against the unhandsome
+things. I shall on this account choose but two,
+with whom I was very intimate, and who are very
+near to my heart. I shall give sketches of John
+Weiss and Samuel Johnson, and first of John Weiss.<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2">
+<span class="label">[B]</span></a> Reprinted from the <i>Unitarian Review</i> of May, 1888.</p></div>
+
+<p>This man was a flame of fire. He was genius
+unalloyed by terrestrial considerations; a spirit
+lamp always burning. He had an overflow of
+nervous vitality, an excess of spiritual life that
+could not find vents enough for its discharge. As
+his figure comes before me it seems that of one who
+is more than half transfigured. His large head; his
+ample brow; his great, dark eyes; his "sable-silvered"
+beard and full moustache; his gray hair,
+thick and close on top, with the strange line of black
+beneath it, like a fillet of jet; his thin, piping,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+penetrating, tenuous voice, that trembled as it conveyed
+the torrent of thought; the rapid, sudden manner,
+suggesting sometimes the lark and sometimes the
+eagle; the small but sinewy body; the delicate
+hands and feet; the sensitive touch, feeling impalpable
+vibrations and detecting movements of intelligence
+within the folds of organization (they say he
+could tell the character of a great writer by holding
+a sealed letter from his hand),&mdash;all indicated a half-disembodied
+soul. His spoken addresses and written
+discourses confirm the impression.</p>
+
+<p>I first met him at the meetings of the "Hook-and-Ladder,"<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a>
+a ministerial club of which we both were
+members. At the house of Thomas Starr King, in
+Boston, he read a sermon on the supremacy of the
+spiritual element in character, which impressed me
+as few pulpit utterances ever did, so fine was it, so
+subtle, yet so massive in conviction. Illustrations
+that he used stay by me now, after the lapse of more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+than forty years. I next heard him in New Bedford,
+at the installation of Charles Lowe, when, in
+ill-health and feeble, he gave, in substance, the discourse
+on Materialism, afterwards published in the
+volume on "Immortal Life." It struck me then as
+exceedingly able; and it derived force from the intense
+earnestness of its delivery, as by one who could
+look into the invisible world, and could speak no
+light word or consult transient effects. Many years
+later, I listened, in New York, to his lectures on
+Greek ideas, the keenest interpretation of the ancient
+myths, the most profound, luminous, sympathetic, I
+have met with. He had the faculty of reading between
+the lines, of apprehending the hidden meaning,
+of setting the old stories in the light of universal
+ideas, of lighting up allusions. The lecture on
+Prometheus I remember as especially radiant and
+inspiring; but they were all remarkable for positive
+suggestions of a very noble kind.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> We copy from a private letter the following
+account of the origin of this club and of its grotesque
+name, which has lost, alas! its significance to the
+younger generation. "In the year 1844 (I think it was)
+a few of us young ministers formed a club, including Charles
+Brigham, Edward Hale, John Weiss, with one or two elders, as
+Dr. Hedge and, later, O. B. Frothingham, Starr King, W. R. Alger,
+William B. Greene, and others. We went long without a name,
+in spite of my urgent appeals as Secretary, till one fine day,
+at George R. Russell's house in West Roxbury, in an after-dinner
+frolic, Weiss turned the garden-engine hose upon a fellow-member
+and drenched him from head to foot; upon which escapade it
+was unanimously agreed to call ourselves the 'Hook-and-Ladder,'
+by which name the memory of it is fondly kept among us to this
+day. A similar older fraternity had gone by the name of
+the 'Railroad Association,' and, in imitation, when it was proposed
+to borrow a title from some like line of industry we, on this sudden
+whim, chose the fire-department."</p></div>
+
+<p>His genius was eminently religious. Not, indeed,
+in any customary fashion, nor after any usual way.
+He belonged to the Rationalists, was a Protestant of
+an extreme type, an avowed adherent of the most
+"advanced" views, a speaker on the Free Religious
+platform, a writer for the <i>Massachusetts Quarterly</i>,
+and for the <i>Radical</i>. His was a purely natural,
+scientific, spiritual faith, unorthodox to the last degree,&mdash;logically,
+historically, critically, sentimentally so,&mdash;so
+on principle and with fixed purpose. The
+accepted theory of religion excited his indignation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+his scorn, his amazement, and his mirth. He could
+brook no dogmatic limitations, even of the most
+liberal sect, but went on and on, past all barriers,
+facing all adversaries, confronting every difficulty,
+and resting only when there was nothing more to
+discover. He had an agonized impatience to know
+whatever was to be known, to get at the ultimate
+data of assurance. Nothing less would satisfy him.
+His cup of joy was not full till he could touch the
+bottom. Then it overflowed, and there was glee as
+of a strong swimmer who is sure of his tide. His
+exultation is almost painful, as he welcomes fact
+after fact, feeling more and more positive, with each
+new demonstration of science, that the advent of
+certainty was by so much nearer. Evidence that to
+most minds seemed fatal to belief was, in his sight,
+confirmatory of it, as rendering its need more clear
+and more imperious. "We need be afraid of nothing
+in heaven or earth, whether dreamt of or not in our
+philosophy." "The position of theistic naturalism
+entitles it not to be afraid of all the scientific facts
+that can be produced." "There is dignity in dust
+that reaches any form, because it eventually betrays
+a forming power, and ceases to be dust by sharing
+it." "It is a wonder to me that scholars and clergymen
+are so skittish about scientific facts." "We owe
+a debt to the scientific man who can show how many
+moral customs result from local and ethnic experiences,
+and how the conscience is everywhere capable
+of inheritance and education. He cannot bring us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+too many facts of this description, because we have
+one fact too much for him; namely, a latent tendency
+of conscience to repudiate inheritance and
+every experience of utility, to fly in its face with a
+forecast of a transcendental utility that supplies the
+world with its redeemers, and continually drags it
+out of the snug and accurate adjustment of selfishness
+to which it arrives." There is a great deal to
+the same purpose. In fact, Mr. Weiss cannot say
+enough on this head. He accepts the doctrine of
+evolution in its whole length and breadth. "Of
+what consequence is it whence the living matter is
+derived? We are not appalled at the possibility
+that organic matter may be made out of non-living,
+or, more properly, inorganic matter. We are nerved
+for such a result, whether it occur in the laboratory
+or in nature, by the conviction that the spiritual
+functions are no more imperilled by using matter in
+any way, than that the Creator hazarded his existence
+by originating matter in some way to be used
+by himself and by us." "Science does me this inestimable
+benefit of providing a universe to support
+my personal identity, my moral sense, and my feeling
+that these two functions of mind cannot be
+killed. Its denials, no less than its affirmations, set
+free all the facts I need to make my body an expression
+of mental independence. Hand-in-hand with
+science I go, by the steps of development back to
+the dawn of creation; and, when there, we review
+all the forces and their combinations that have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+helped us to arrive, and both of us together break
+into a confession of a force of forces."</p>
+
+<p>This cordial sympathy with science, this absence
+of all savor of a polemical spirit, this hearty welcoming
+of every fact of anatomy and chemistry, is
+very noble and inspiring. It is very wise, too, though
+the noble, hearty side was alone attractive to him.
+He had in view no other, being a single-minded lover
+of truth. But, nevertheless, he could not have
+adopted a more politic course. For thus he propitiated
+the scepticism of the age, struck in with the
+prevailing current, disarmed opposition, and erected
+his own principles on the eminence which scientific
+men have raised and which they cannot build too
+high for his purposes. He doubles on his pursuers,
+and fairly flanks his foes. This throws the labor of
+refuting him on the idealists, who may not care to
+become responsible for his positions, and may demur
+to conclusions he arrives at, while they cannot but
+applaud his general aims, and wish they could give
+positive assent to all his specific doctrines. There
+was always this discrepancy between his sentiment
+and his logic; but it came out most conspicuously
+in his elaborate arguments.</p>
+
+<p>The burden of his exposition was the existence of
+an ideal sphere, quite distinct from visible
+phenomena; facts of consciousness attesting personality,
+a moral law, an intelligent cause, an active conscience,
+a living heart; order, beauty, harmony, humanity,
+self-forgetfulness, self-denial. As he states it:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I claim, against a strictly logical empirical method, three
+classes of facts: first, the authentic facts of the Moral Sense,
+whenever it appears as the transcender of the ripest average
+utility; second, the facts of the Imagination, as the anticipator
+of mental methods by pervading everything with personalty,
+by imputing life to objects, or by occasional direct suggestion;
+third, the facts of the Harmonic Sense, as the reconciler of discrete
+and apparently sundered objects, as the prophet and
+artist of number and mathematical ratio, as the unifier of all
+the contents of the soul into the acclaim which rises when the
+law of unity fills the scene. Upon these facts, I chiefly sustain
+myself against the theory which, when it is consistently explained,
+derives all possible mental functions from the impacts
+of objectivity.</p></div>
+
+<p>If Mr. Weiss had stopped with this general thesis,
+he would probably have carried most Rationalists,
+certainly the mass of Transcendentalists, with him.
+They would have been only too glad to welcome so
+clear and brilliant a champion. But he insisted on
+gathering up these conceptions into two points of
+doctrine&mdash;God and Immortality. On these points
+his arguments become strained, and too subtle for
+ordinary minds. Indeed, many will be inclined to
+suspect his whole exposition, which would be a misfortune
+of a very grave character. Mr. Emerson
+avoided all definite assertion of personality carried
+beyond the limits of individuality in the present
+state of existence. Mr. Weiss is more daring, and
+proclaims a God who arranges creation <i>as it is</i>, and
+an immortality that drops what to most people constitutes
+their highly valued possessions&mdash;namely,
+their "animalities" of various kinds. What will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+most men think of a God who "takes his chances,"
+who "in planet-scenery and animal life is at his
+play," who puts up in his divine laboratory "curare
+and strychnine," and cannot "recognize the word
+<i>disaster</i>," though he makes the thing? To how
+many will an immortality be conceivable that can
+"belong only to immutable ideas," that only "springs
+from the vital necessity of their own souls," that is a
+clinging "to the breast of everlasting law"?</p>
+
+<p>To tell the truth, the arguments themselves for
+this rather questionable result of idealism are somewhat
+unconvincing, not to say fanciful. They are
+chiefly of a dogmatic kind, that may be met with
+counter affirmations, equally valid. Many of them
+are stated in a symbolical or poetical or illustrative
+manner, the most dangerous of all methods. Examples
+of this might be multiplied indefinitely. I
+had marked several for confirmation, but they were
+too long for quotation. One instance of his mode of
+reasoning may be given<a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a>:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It is objected that no thought and feeling have ever yet been
+displayed independently of cerebral condition; they must have
+brain, either to originate or to announce them. If brain be
+source or instrument of human consciousness, what preserves
+it when the brain is dead? But there would have been no
+universe on such terms as that. What supplied infinite mind
+with its preliminary <i>sine qua non</i> of brain matter?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> It occurs in "American Religion," p. 149.</p></div>
+
+<p>But, surely, if this is an argument at all, if it does
+not beg the very question in debate&mdash;namely, whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+there is an infinite mind,&mdash;is it not an argument for
+atheism? For either the existing universe fully expresses
+Deity, in which case Deity is something less
+than infinite; or Deity must be conceived as very
+imperfect, and a progressive, tentative Divinity is no
+better than none.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, he says: "We attribute Personality
+to the divine Being, because we cannot otherwise
+refer to any source the phenomena that show Will
+and Intellect." That is to say, we yield to a logical
+necessity. To argue that materialism "reeks with
+immortality" because "the baldest negation is not
+merely a verbal contradiction of an affirmation, but
+a contribution to its probability,&mdash;for it testifies that
+there was something previously taken for granted,"&mdash;is
+really a play upon words, inasmuch as the denial
+is simply an affirmation of certain facts, and by no
+means a categorical declaration involving all the facts
+at issue. By claiming none but relative knowledge,
+the antithesis is removed.</p>
+
+<p>One is conscious of a suspicion that the author's
+tremendous overflow of nervous vitality had much
+to do with the vehemence of his persuasions. He
+himself countenances such a suspicion. "I confess,"
+he declares, "to an all-pervading instinct of personal
+continuance, coupled with a latent, haunting feeling
+that there is a point somewhere in human existence,
+as there has been in the past, where animality controls
+the fate of men. Where is that point? We
+recoil from every effort to draw the line." He had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+a very strong sense of personality, with its inevitable
+reference of persistency. "To us, perhaps," he cries,
+in a kind of anguish, "no thought could be so dreadful,
+no surmise so harrowing, as that we might slip
+into nonentity. We impetuously repel the haunting
+doubt. We shut the eyes, and cower before the
+goblin in abject dread until it is gone. With the
+beauty-loving and full-blooded Claudio, we cry,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, but to die, and go we know not where."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and he quotes the rest of the famous passage in
+"Measure for Measure," adding for himself: "Put
+us anywhere, but only let us live; and we could feel
+with Lear, when he says to Cordelia,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">Come, let's away to prison.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We two alone will sing like birds i' the cage."<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Then, too, there come to us the tender and overpowering
+moments when we can no longer put up with being separated
+from beloved objects, who tore at the grain of our life when
+they went away elsewhere, with portions of it clinging to them.
+We must have them again. Shall life be stabbed and no
+justice compensate these sickening drippings of the soul in
+her secret faintness? The old familiar faces have registered
+in our hearts a contempt for graves and burials. Not so
+cheaply can we be taken in, when the lost life lies quick in
+memory still, and cries against the insults which mortality
+wreaks on love.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Is not this an exclamation of temperament?</p>
+
+<p>John Weiss was essentially a poet. His pages are
+saturated with poetry. His very arguments are
+expressed in poetic imagery. To take two or three
+examples:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>One who rides from South-west Harbor to Bar Harbor in
+Mt. Desert will see a grove in which the pines stand so close
+that all the branches have withered two-thirds of the way up
+the trunks, and are nothing but dead sticks, broken and dangling.
+But every tree bears close, each to each, its evergreen
+crown; and they seem to make a floor for the day to walk on.
+This pavement for the feet of heaven, more precious than the
+fancied one of the New Jerusalem, stretches all round the
+world, above the thickets of our spiny egotism, where people
+run up into the only coherence upon which it is safe for Deity
+to tread.</p></div>
+
+<p>Or this about the poet's inspired hour:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Through flat and unprofitable moments, a poet is waiting
+for the next consent of his imagination. The bed of every
+gift, that lately sparkled or thundered as the freshet of the
+hills sent its surprises down, lies empty, waiting for the master
+passion to open the sluice when it hears the steps of coming
+waves. The poet's nature strains against the dumb gates of
+his body and his mood. With power and longing he hears
+them open, and is brim full again with the rhythm that collects
+from the whole face of Nature,&mdash;the hillside, the ravine,
+the drifting cloud, the vapors just arrived from the ocean, the
+drops that flowers nod with to flavor the stream, the human
+smiles that colonize both banks of it. All passions, all
+delights hurry to possess his thought, crowd into the precincts
+of his person, pain him with the tumult in which they offer
+him obedience, remind him of his last joy in their companionship,
+and will not let him go till he ennobles them by bursting
+into expression. Relief flows down with every perfect word;
+the congested soul bleeds into the lyric and the canto; the
+poet's burden becomes light-hearted, and the supreme moment
+of his travail, when it breaks in showers of his emotion, cools
+and comforts him; he must die or express himself. All the
+blood in the earth's arteries is running through his heart; all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+the stars in the sky are set in his brain's dome. This light
+and life must be discharged into a word, and the poet restored
+to health and peace again.</p></div>
+
+<p>Or the following rhapsody about health:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>What a religious ecstasy is health! Its free step claims
+every meadow that is glad with flowers; its bubbling spirits
+fill the cup of wide horizons and drip down their brims; its
+thankfulness is the prayer that takes possession of the sun by
+day and the stars by night. Every dancing member of the
+body whirls off the soul to tread the measures of great feelings,
+and God hears people saying: "How precious also are
+thy thoughts, how great is the sum of them! When I awake,
+I am still with thee." Yes,&mdash;when I awake, but not before;
+not while the brain is saturated with nervous blood, till it falls
+into comatose doctrines, and goes maundering with its attack
+of mediatorial piety and grace; not while a stomach depraved
+by fried food, apothecary's drugs, and iron-clad pastry (that
+target impenetrable by digestion) supplies the constitution
+with its vale of tears, ruin of mankind, and better luck hereafter.
+When all my veins flow unobstructed, and lift to the
+level of my eyes the daily gladness that finds a gate at every
+pore; when the roaming gifts come home from Nature to
+turn the brain into a hive of cells full of yellow sunshine, the
+spoil of all the chalices of the earth beneath and the heavens
+above,&mdash;then I am the subject of a Revival of Religion.</p></div>
+
+<p>Or these passages about music, of which he was
+always a devoted lover, a passionate admirer, an
+excellent critic. My first extract is used to illustrate
+the doctrine of evolution, and suggests Browning's
+poem of "Abt Vogler." It should be said, by
+the way, that Weiss was a great student of Browning,
+whose lines in "Paracelsus," prophetic of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+evolution doctrine, was often on his lips. He even
+understood "Sordello."</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The divine composer, summoning instrument after instrument
+into his harmony, climbed with his theme from those
+which offered but a single note to those that exhaust the complexity
+of thought and feeling, to combine them into expression,
+kindling through hints, phrases, sudden concords, mustering
+consents of many wills, releases of each one's felicity
+into comradeship, till the sweet tumult becomes his champion,
+and bursts into an acclaim of a whole world. "I ought&mdash;so
+then I will." The toppling instruments concur, become the
+wave that touches that high moment, lifts the whole deep, and
+holds it there.</p>
+
+<p>When perfect music drives its golden scythe-chariot up the
+fine nerves, across the bridge of association, through the stern
+portcullis of care, and alights in the heart of man, there is
+adoration, whether he faints with excess of recognition of one
+long absent, and lies prostrate in the arms of rhythm, feeling
+that he is not worthy it should come under his roof, or
+whether he mounts the seat and grasps the thrilling reins;
+God's unity is riding through his distraction, brought by that
+team of all the instruments which shake their manes across
+the pavement of his bosom, and strike out the sparks of
+longing.</p></div>
+
+<p>In calling Mr. Weiss essentially a poet, I am far
+from implying that he was not a thinker. Perhaps
+he was more subtle and more brilliant a thinker for
+being also a poet&mdash;that is, for seeing truth through the
+medium of the imagination, for following the path
+of analogy. At any rate, his being a poet did not
+in the least interfere with the acuteness or the precision
+of his thinking, as any one can see who reads<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+his chapters&mdash;those, for example, which compose the
+volume entitled "American Religion." I had marked
+for citation so many passages that it would be
+necessary to quote half the book to illustrate my
+thesis. When I first knew him, he was a strict
+Transcendentalist. Dr. Orestes Brownson, no mean
+judge on such matters, spoke of him as the most promising
+philosophical mind in the country. To a native
+talent for metaphysics, his early studies at Heidelberg
+probably contributed congenial training. His knowledge
+of German philosophy may well have been
+stimulated and matured by his residence in that
+centre of active thought; while his intimacy, on his
+return, with the keenest intellects in this country
+may well have sharpened his original predilection
+for abstract speculation. However this may have
+been, the tendency of his genius was decidedly
+toward metaphysical problems and the interpretation
+of the human consciousness. This he erected as a
+barrier against materialism; and this he probed with
+a depth and a fearlessness which were truly extraordinary,
+and would have been remarkable in any disciple
+of the school to which he belonged. No one
+that I can think of was so fine, so profound, so analytical.
+His volume on "American Religion" was
+full of nice discriminations; so was his volume on
+the "Immortal Life"; so were his articles and lectures.
+His "Life of Theodore Parker" abounded in
+curious learning as well as in vigorous thinking.
+He could follow, step by step, the great leader of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+reformatory ideas, and went far beyond him in subtlety
+and accuracy of mental delineation. He could
+not rest in sentiment, must have demonstration, and
+never stopped till he reached the ultimate ground
+of truth as he regarded it. Ideas, when he found
+them, were usually, not always, expressed in symbolical
+forms. His alert fancy detected likenesses
+that would have been concealed from common eyes;
+and often the splendor of the exposition hid the
+keenness of the logical temper, as a sword wreathed
+with roses lies unperceived. But the tempered steel
+was there and they who examined closely felt its
+edge.</p>
+
+<p>He was a man of undaunted courage, being an
+idealist who lived out of the world, and a living
+soul animated by overwhelming convictions, which
+he was anxious to convey to others as of immense
+importance. He believed, with all his heart, in the
+doctrines he had arrived at, and, like a soldier in
+battle, was unconscious of the danger he incurred or
+of the wounds he received, being unaware of his
+own daring or fortitude. He was an anti-slavery
+man from the beginning. At a large meeting held
+in Waltham in 1845, to protest against the admission
+of Texas as a slave State, Mr. Weiss, then a
+minister at Watertown, Mass., delivered a speech in
+which he said: "Our Northern apathy heated the
+iron, forged the manacles, and built the pillory,"
+declared that man was more than constitutions (borrowing
+a phrase from James Russell Lowell), and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+that Christ was greater than Hancock and Adams.
+To his unflinching devotion to free thought in
+religion, he owed something of his unpopularity
+with the masses of the people, who were orthodox
+in opinion, though his failure to touch the general
+mind was probably due to other causes. The class
+of disbelievers was pretty large in his day and very
+self-asserting. Boldness never fails to attract; and
+brilliancy, if it be on the plane of ordinary vision,
+draws the eyes of the multitude, who are on the
+watch for a sensation.</p>
+
+<p>The chief trouble was that his brilliancy was not
+on the plane of ordinary vision, but was recondite,
+ingenious, fanciful. He was too learned, too fond
+of allusions&mdash;literary, scientific, historical,&mdash;too
+swift in his mental processes. His addresses
+were delivered to an audience of his friends, not
+to a miscellaneous company. They were of the
+nature of soliloquies spoken out of his own mind,
+instead of being speeches intended to meet the
+needs of others. His lectures and sermons were
+not easy to follow, even if the listener was more
+than usually cultivated. Shall it be added that his
+sincerity of speech, running into brusqueness, startled
+a good many? He was theological and philosophical,
+and he could not keep his hands off when
+what he considered as errors in theology or philosophy
+came into view. His wit was sharper than he
+thought, while the laugh it raised was frequently
+overbalanced by the sting it left behind in some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+breasts. It was too often a "wicked wit," barbed and
+poisoned, which one must be in league with to enjoy.
+They who were in sympathy with the speaker were
+delighted with it, but they who were not went off
+aggrieved. No doubt this attested the earnestness
+of the man, who scorned to cloak his convictions;
+but it wounded the self-love of such as were in
+search of pleasure or instruction, and interfered with
+his general acceptableness. A broad, genial, good-natured,
+truculent style of ventilating even heresies
+may not be repulsive to people of a conventional,
+believing turn; in fact, it is not, as we know. But
+the thrusts of a rapier, especially when unexpected,
+are not forgiven. Mr. Weiss drew larger audiences
+as a preacher on religious themes than he did as a
+lecturer on secular subjects, where one hardly knew
+what to look for, because he was known to be outspoken
+and capable of introducing heresies on the
+platform.</p>
+
+<p>Then he was in all respects unconventional. His
+spontaneous exuberance of animal spirits, which led
+him to roll on the grass, join in frolicsome games,
+play all sorts of antics, indulge in jokes, mimicry,
+boisterous mirthfulness, was inconsistent with the
+staid, proper demeanor required by social usage.
+How he kept himself within limits as he did was a
+surprise to his friends. Ordinary natures can form
+no conception of the weight such a man must have
+put upon his temperament to press it down to the
+level of common experience. Temptations to which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+he was liable every day do not visit average minds
+in their whole lifetime, and cannot by such minds
+be comprehended. The stiff, upright, careful old
+man cannot understand the jocund pliability of the
+boy, who, nevertheless, simply expends the superfluity
+of his natural vigor, and relieves his excess of
+nervous excitability. On thinking it all over,
+remembering his appetite for life, his joy in existence,
+his nervous exhilaration, his love of beauty, his
+passionate ardor of temperament, I am surprised that
+he preserved, as he did, so much dignity and soberness
+of character. I have seen him in his wildest
+mood, yet I never saw him thrown off his balance.
+With as much brilliancy as Sydney Smith, he had, as
+Sydney Smith had not, a breadth of knowledge, a
+depth of feeling, a soaring energy of soul that kept
+him above vulgar seductions, and did for him, in a
+nobler way, what ambition, love of place, conventional
+associations did for the famous Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>The difficulty was that he was too far removed
+from the common ground of sympathy. He could
+not endure routine, or behave as other people behaved,
+and as it was generally fancied he should. If
+Sydney Smith's jocularity interfered with his promotion,
+how much more did he have to contend with
+who to the jocularity added an enthusiastic devotion
+to heresy, a partiality for metaphysical speculation,
+and a poetic glow that removed him from ordinary
+comprehension! With an unworldliness worthy of
+all praise, but fatal to the provision of daily bread,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+he left the ministry, a fixed income, a confirmed
+social position, ample leisure for study and for literary
+pursuits, and launched forth on the uncertain
+career of lecturer. He was not the first who failed
+in attempting to harness Pegasus to a cart, in the
+hope of making him useful in mundane ways. Neither
+discharged his full function. The cart would
+not run smoothly, and the steed was not happy.
+The old profession has this advantage: that to all
+practical purposes, the wagon goes over the celestial
+pavement where there is no mud nor clangor, and
+Pegasus can seem to be harnessed to a chariot of the
+sun.</p>
+
+<p>Weiss simply disappeared from view. His books
+were scattered; his lectures and sermons were
+worked over and over, the best of them being published
+in his several volumes. A few relics of the
+author remain in the hands of his widow, who is
+grateful for any recognition of his genius, any help
+to diffuse his writings, and tribute to his memory.
+They who knew him can never forget him. Perhaps
+the very vividness of their recollection makes them
+indifferent to the possession of visible memorials of
+their friend.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Johnson should be known as the apostle
+of individualism. The apostle I say, for this with
+him was a religion, and the preaching of individualism
+was a gospel message. He would not belong
+to any church, or subscribe to any creed, or connect
+himself with any sect, or be a member of any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+organization whatever, however wide or elastic,
+however consonant with convictions that he held,
+with beliefs that he entertained, with purposes that
+he cherished, with plans that were dear to him.
+He never joined the "Anti-Slavery Society," though
+he was an Abolitionist; or the "Free Religious
+Association," though its aims were essentially his
+own, and he spoke on its platform. He made it a
+principle to act alone, herein being a true disciple
+of Emerson, whose mission was to individual minds.
+He wrote a long letter to me on the occasion of
+establishing the "Free Religious Association," of
+which I wished him to become a member, that recalls
+the letter written by Mr. Emerson in reply to
+George Ripley when asked to join the community
+of Brook Farm, and whereof the following is an
+extract:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My feeling is that the community is not good for me, that
+it has little to offer me which with resolution I cannot procure
+for myself.... It seems to me a circuitous and operose
+way of relieving myself to put upon your community the
+emancipation which I ought to take on myself. I must
+assume my own vows.... I ought to say that I do not
+put much trust in any arrangements or combinations, only in
+the spirit which dictates them. Is that benevolent and divine,
+they will answer their end. Is there any alloy in that, it will
+certainly appear in the result.... Nor can I insist with
+any heat on new methods when I am at work in my study on
+any literary composition.... The result of our secretest
+attempts will certainly have as much renown as shall be due
+to it.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Johnson ended by discarding the church entirely.
+In 1881 he wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>For my part, every day I live the name <i>Christian</i> seems less
+and less to express my thought and tendency. I suspect it
+will be so with the Free-thinking world generally.</p></div>
+
+<p>In a sermon, "Living by Faith," he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>There is no irony so great as to call this "flight out of
+nature" and the creeds that come of it, "faith." The purity
+of heart that really sees God will have a mighty idealization
+of humanity at the very basis of its creed, and act on it in all
+its treatment of the vicious, the morally incapable and diseased.
+It is time Christendom was on the search for it.</p></div>
+
+<p>In the paper on "Transcendentalism," he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Christianity inherited the monarchical idea of a God separate
+from man, and a contempt for natural law and human
+faculty which crippled its faith in the spiritual and moral
+ideal. It became more and more a materialism of miracle,
+Bible, church. Even its essay to realize immanent Deity yielded
+a more or less exclusive, mediatorial God-man; and it treated
+personality as the mere consequence of one prescriptive, historical
+force, just as philosophical materialism treats it as
+mere product of sensations.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Johnson abhorred the monarchical principle.
+It was his endeavor to track it from its origin,
+through all its forms of institution, ceremonial,
+dogma, symbol, from the earliest times to the latest,
+through the whole East to the farthest West. This
+was the burden of his studies in Oriental religions,
+the sum of his criticism, the aim of his public teaching.
+He was profoundly, intensely, absorbingly
+religious, but the form of his religion was not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+"Christian" in any recognized sense, Romanist,
+Protestant, or Unitarian. The most radical thought
+did not altogether please him. His was a worship
+of Law, Order, Cause, Harmony, impersonal, living,
+natural; a recognition of mind as the supreme power
+in the universe; a cosmic, eternal, absolute faith in
+intellectual principles as the substance and soul of
+the world. God was, to him, a spiritual being, alive,
+vital, flowing in every mode.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>All power of growth and service depends, know it or not
+as we may, on an ideal faith in somewhat all-sufficient, unerring,
+infinitely wise and tender, inseparable from the inmost of
+life, bent on our good as we are not, set against our failures as
+we cannot be. It means that there can in fact be no philosophy
+of life, no law of good, no belief in duty, no aspiration, but
+must have such in-dwelling perfection, as being alone reliable
+to guarantee its word. This only is my God; infinite ground
+of all finite being; essence of reason and good.... When
+you see a function of memory, or a law of perfection, let your
+natural piety recognize it as wise and just and good and fair.
+Be loyal to the moral authority that affirms it ought to be, and
+somehow must be. Let your <i>soul</i> bring in the leap of your
+mind to grasp it. Then, if you cannot see God in perfect,
+absolute essence, you will know the Infinite and Eternal in
+their relation to real and positive existence; feel their freedom
+in your own; know their inseparableness from every movement
+of your spiritual being.... The love we feel, the truth
+we pursue, the honor we cherish, the moral beauty we revere,
+blend in with the eternity of the principles they flow from, and
+then, glad as in the baptism of a harvest morning, expanding
+towards human need and the universal life of man, our souls
+walk free, breathing immortal air. That is God,&mdash;not an object
+but an experience. Words are but symbols, they do not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+define. We say "Him," "It" were as well, if thereby we mean
+life, wisdom, love.... Must we bind our communion with
+the just, the good, the true, the humanly adequate and becoming
+to some personal life, some special body of social circumstances,
+some individual's work in human progress and upon
+human idealism? How should that be, when the principles
+into which the moral sense flowers out in its maturity as
+spiritual liberty, essentially involve a freely advancing ideal
+at every new stage revealing more of God, whom nothing but
+such universal energy can adequately reveal?... If then,
+we cannot see the eternal substance and life of the universe, it
+is not because Deity is too far, but because it is too near. We
+can measure a statue or a star, and look round and beyond it;
+but the Life, Light, Liberty, Love, Peace, whereby we live
+and know, and are helpful and calm and free, which measures
+and surrounds and even animates us, is itself the very mystery
+of our being, and known only as felt and lived. God stands
+in all ideal thought, conviction, aim, which ever reach into the
+infinite; and thence, as if an angel should stand in the sun,
+come attractions that draw forth the divine capabilities within
+us, as the sun the life and beauty of the earth. God is the
+inmost motive, the common path, the infinite import of all
+work we respect, honor, purely rejoice in, and fulfil; of art,
+science, philosophy, intercourse,&mdash;whatsoever function befits
+the soul and the day.</p></div>
+
+<p>These quotations, which might be multiplied indefinitely,
+in fact, which it is difficult not to multiply,
+are probably enough to satisfy any who really
+wish to know that here was a truly religious man, a
+really devout man, the possessor of a living faith;
+one who held fast to more Deity than the multitude
+cherished, and welcomed him in a much more cordial,
+comprehensive, natural manner; one who fairly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+drenched the world and man with a divine spirit,
+but who was all the more spiritual on this account,
+as a man attests his vigor by his ability to lay aside
+his crutches, and put the medicine-chest, bottles,
+and boxes on the shelf, to walk in cold weather
+without an overcoat, or lie naked on the ice and
+melt it through.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the only justification of a pretension of
+this kind is the actual vitality necessary for such a
+feat, the sanity demanded by one who would stand
+or go alone. In Samuel Johnson's case there was
+no question of this. Spiritually, he was a whole
+man, self-poised, self-contained, strong, clear, alert,
+a hero and a saint. His conversation, his bearing,
+conduct, entire attitude and manner indicated the
+most jubilant faith. He never faltered in his confidence,
+never wavered in his conviction, never
+abated a jot of hope that in the order of Providence
+all good things would come. There was something
+staggering to the ordinary mind, in his assurance
+of the divine wisdom and love. There was
+something altogether admirable in the elevation of
+his character above the trials and vexations that are
+incident to the human lot, and that seemed heaped
+upon him. For his own was not a smooth or fortunate
+life, as men estimate felicity. His health
+was far from satisfactory. He was not rich or
+famous or popular or sought after. He lived a life
+of labor, in some respects, of denial and sacrifice.
+Not until after his death was the full amount of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+renunciation apparent even to those who thought
+they knew him well.</p>
+
+<p>He was a Transcendentalist&mdash;that is to say, he
+believed in the intuitive powers of the mind; he was
+sure that all primary truths, such ideas as those of
+unity, universe, law, cause, substance, will, duty, obligation,
+permanence, were perceived directly, and are
+not to be accounted for by any data of observation
+or inference, but must be ascribed at once to an
+organic or constitutional relation of the mind with
+truth.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>That the name "Transcendentalism" was given, a century
+ago, to a method in philosophy opposed to the theory of Locke&mdash;that
+all knowledge comes from the senses,&mdash;is more widely
+known than the fact that what this method affirmed or involved
+is of profound import for all generations. It emphasized
+Mind as a formative force behind all definable contents
+or acts of consciousness&mdash;as that which makes it possible to
+speak of anything as <i>known</i>. It recognized, as primal condition
+of knowing, the transmutation of sense-impressions by
+original laws of mind, whose constructive power is not to be
+explained or measured by the data of sensation; just as they
+use the eye or ear to transform unknown spatial notions into
+the obviously human conceptions which we call color and
+sound. All this the Lockian system overlooked&mdash;a very
+serious omission, as regards both science and common-sense.</p></div>
+
+<p>And again, in the same article&mdash;that on "Transcendentalism,"
+first printed in the <i>Radical Review</i>
+for November, 1877, and afterwards included
+in the volume of "Lectures, Sermons, and Essays":</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>What we conceive these schools to have misprized is the
+living substance and function of mind itself, conscious of its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+own energy, productive of its own processes, active even in
+receiving, giving its own construction to its incomes from the
+unknown through sense, thus involved in those very contents
+of time and space which, as historical antecedents, <i>appear</i> to
+create it; mind is obviously the exponent of forces more
+spontaneous and original than any special product of its own
+experience. Behind all these products must be that substance
+in and through which they are produced.</p></div>
+
+<p>And again, for we cannot be too explicit on this
+point:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It is certain that knowledge involves not only a sense of
+union with the nature of that which we know, but a real participation
+of the knowing faculty therein. When, therefore, I
+have learned to conceive truths, principles, ideas, or aims
+which transcend life-times and own no physical limits to their
+endurance, the aforesaid law of mind associates me with their
+immortal nature. And this is the indubitable perception or
+intuition of permanent mind which no experience of impermanence
+can nullify and no Nirvana excludes.</p></div>
+
+<p>It will be observed that Mr. Johnson does not
+make himself answerable for specific articles of belief
+on God or immortality, but confines his faith to
+the persuasion of indwelling mind, sovereign, eternal,
+imperial. "Immortality," he says, "is immeasurable
+chance for all. In its light, all strong, blameless,
+heroic lives&mdash;divine plants by the wayside&mdash;tell
+for the nature they express. God has made no
+blunder in our spiritual constitution. Power is in
+faith." This intense belief in the soul, in all the
+native capacities of our spiritual constitution, in the
+supremacy of organic feelings, ideas, expectations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+over merely private desires, this burning confidence
+in divinely implanted instincts, this absolute certainty
+that every promise made by God will be fulfilled,
+explains the tone of exulting hope in which he
+writes to bereaved friends.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I wish I could tell you how firmly I believe that feelings
+like these (that the absent one cannot be dead), so often
+treated as illusion, are <i>true</i>, are of God's own
+tender giving; that in them is the very heart of his teaching through the
+mystery that we call death. Our affections are <i>forbidden by
+their maker</i> to doubt their own immortality.... Immortal
+years, beside which our little lives are but an hour&mdash;what
+possibilities of full satisfaction they open! And we sit in
+patience, knowing that they must bring us back our holiest
+possessions&mdash;those which have ever stood under the shield of
+our noblest love and conscience and so are under God's blessing
+forever.</p></div>
+
+<p>How far such a declaration as this comports with
+the demand for general immortality made in behalf
+of those who are conscious of no noble love, who
+have attained to no conscience, and have no holy
+possessions, we are not told. Perhaps Mr. Johnson
+would seize on the faintest intimations of mind as
+evidencing the presence of moral being, as Mr. Weiss
+does. But he did not dwell on that side of the
+problem. Plainly he ascribed little value to mere
+personality, viewed abstractly and apart from its
+spiritual development. He wrote to those whom he
+knew and loved, to remarkable people.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it would not be fair to conclude that immortality
+was denied to the basest. If immortality is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+"opportunity," a "chance for all," it is for those who
+can profit by it or enjoy it. If any are debarred, the
+cause must be their own incompetence. They simply
+decease. There is no torment in store for them; no
+hell is possible.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Johnson was an enthusiastic evolutionist,
+but of mind itself, not of matter as ripening into
+mind. The ordinary conception of evolution,&mdash;that
+the higher came from the lower,&mdash;was exceedingly
+repugnant to him. Every kind of materialism he
+abhorred as illogical and irrational. The theories of
+Comte,&mdash;that "mind is cerebration;" of Haeckel,&mdash;that
+it is a "function of brain and nerve;" of
+Strauss,&mdash;that "one's self is his body;" of Taine,&mdash;that
+a man is "a series of sensations," were to him
+as absurd, in science or philosophy, as they were
+fatal to aspiration and progress.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The crude definition of evolution as production of the
+highest by inherent force of the lowest is here supplanted by
+one which recognizes material parentage as itself involving,
+even in its lowest stages, the entire cosmic <i>consensus</i>, of whose
+unknown force mind is the highest known exponent.</p></div>
+
+<p>He is alluding to Tyndall's statement that mind is
+evolved from the universe as a whole, not from inorganic
+matter. For himself, he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Ideas were not demonstrated, are not demonstrable. No
+data of observation can express their universal meaning....
+What else can we say of ideas than that they are wondrous
+intimacies of the soul with the Infinite and Eternal, its contacts
+with universal forces, its prophetic ventures and master<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+steps beyond any past!... The grand words, "I ought"
+refuse to be explained by dissolving the notion of right into
+individual calculation of consequences, or by expounding the
+sense of duty as the cumulative product of observed relation
+of succession.... How explain as a "greater happiness
+principle," or an inherited product of observed consequences,
+that sovereign and eternal law of mind whose imperial edict
+lifts all calculations and measures into functions of an infinite
+meaning? And how vain to accredit or ascribe to revelation,
+institution, or redemption, this necessary allegiance to the law
+of our being, which is liberty and loyalty in one?</p></div>
+
+<p>This is absolute enough. It is plain that to this
+writer the notion of extracting intellect from form is
+ridiculous.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time the method of evolution is the
+one adopted by the supreme Mind in its endeavor to
+awaken in man religious ideas. The exposition of
+the original faiths&mdash;Indian, Chinese, Persian&mdash;is a
+long and eloquent argument for this thesis. All
+criticism, all thinking, all analysis, all study of history,
+all investigation of phenomena, point in this
+direction. This is the rule of creation; this is the
+solution of the problem of the universe. The successive
+degrees of this divine ascent, he maintains,
+are distinctly traceable in the records left for our
+reading. The threads are fine, of course, but what
+have we eyes for? It is not necessary that everybody
+should see them, and the few who can are
+amply rewarded for the trouble they take in putting
+their fingers upon the very lines of the heavenly
+procedure. His peculiar strain of genius admirably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+qualified him for this delicate task. It was serious,
+critical, earnest, and aspiring. At one period of his
+life he was a mystic, wholly absorbed in God, and
+he always had that tendency towards the more
+passionate forms of idealism which led him to
+mystical speculations. The search for God was ever
+the animating purpose of his endeavor. The law of
+the blessed life was never absent from his thought.
+He, all the time, lived by faith, and was naturally
+disposed to see the gain in all losses. His mind had
+that penetrating quality which loved to follow hidden
+trails, and appreciated the subtlest kinds of influence.
+In a striking passage he speaks of the</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>great mystery in these influences which thoughtless people
+little dream of, and which common-sense, so called, cares
+nothing about. In the wonderful manner in which, through
+books, the spirits of other men, long since dead, enter into and
+inspire ours; in the eloquent language of eye and lip which
+without words, merely by expression, conveys deepest feelings;
+in the presence in our souls of strange presentiments,
+intuitions of higher knowledge than science or learning can
+give, voices which seem the presence of other spirits in ours,
+which make us feel often that death, so far from removing our
+dear friends from us, brings them nearer to our souls so that
+they <i>cannot</i> be lost;&mdash;in all these wonderful ways we see dimly
+the unveiling of holy mysteries which the future is to fully
+open to us, mysteries which we can even now, in our sublimer
+and holier secret moments, feel trying to disclose themselves
+to us.</p></div>
+
+<p>This was written in a letter to his sister, on the
+occasion of a visit to the menagerie to see Herr<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+Driesbach, the horse-tamer. A man who could
+spring into the empyrean from such ground may be
+trusted to behold Deity where others behold nothing
+but dirt; and they who submit to his guidance are
+pretty certain to come out full believers in the
+spiritual powers.</p>
+
+<p>Johnson absolutely subordinated dogma to practice,
+holding fast to the idea involved in the declaration
+that he who doeth the will shall know the
+doctrine. He began with the ethics of the individual,
+the family, the social circle, seeing every
+principle incarnated there. How faithful he was in
+all domestic relations the world will never know,
+for there are details that cannot be divulged. But
+in all public affairs his constancy was perfect. Dr.
+Furness of Philadelphia used to say that the anti-slavery
+struggle in this country taught him more about
+the essential nature of the Gospel than he had learned
+in any other way. Samuel Johnson had the same conviction.
+In a private letter written in 1857 he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Everything in this crisis of American growth centres in the
+great conflict about this gigantic sin of slavery. That is the
+battle-field on which the questions are all to be fought out, of
+moral and spiritual and intellectual Freedom against the
+Absolutism of sect and party; of Love against Mammon; of
+Conscience against the State; of Man against Majorities; of
+Truth against Policy; of God against the Devil. It is really
+astonishing how everything that happens with us works directly
+into this fermenting conflict.</p></div>
+
+<p>They who remember his addresses during the war
+will not need any confirmation of this announcement,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+and they who heard or have read his sermon on the
+character and services of Charles Sumner will have
+the fullest assurance of the cordial appreciation with
+which every phase of the struggle was entered into.</p>
+
+<p>But though so ardent a follower of the doctrine
+that ideas lead the world, Johnson was not induced
+to go all lengths with the sentimentalists. While
+warmly espousing the cause of the workingman his
+papers on "Labor Reform" show how keenly critical
+he could be of measures proposed for his benefit.
+No one will accuse him of indifference to the claims
+of woman, but he spoke of "Woman's Opportunity"
+rather than of "Woman's Rights"; is inclined to
+think that it is not true that she is left out of political
+life from the present wish to do her injustice; that
+"on the whole, the feeling, if it were analyzed, would
+be found to be rather that of defending her right of
+exemption, relieving her from tasks she does not
+desire.... Among intelligent men at least,
+actual delay to wipe out the anomaly of the voting
+rule is not so much owing to a spirit of domination
+or contempt as is too apt to be assumed, as it is to a
+respect for what woman has made of the functions
+she has hitherto filled, and the belief that she holds
+herself entitled to be left free to work through them
+alone." He has nothing to say regarding the superiority
+of woman's nature; ventures no definition of
+her sphere; is not unconscious of feminine infirmities;
+doubts the efficacy of the ballot; confesses
+that the level of womanhood would be, at least<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+temporarily, depressed by the larger area of practical
+diffusion; is by no means certain that women would
+necessarily act for their own good, and is deeply
+persuaded of the inferiority of outward to inward
+influence. This is the one thing he is sure of; this
+and the principle that "liberty knows&mdash;like faith
+and charity&mdash;neither male nor female." In the war
+between Russia and Turkey he took the part of
+Turkey, not only because he respected the rights of
+individual genius and resented invasion, but for the
+reason that he distrusted the civilizing tendencies of
+Russia, and thought the interests of Europe might
+be trusted to the Ottoman as confidently as to the
+Russian. In a discourse entitled "A Ministry in
+Free Religion," delivered on the occasion of his
+resigning the relation of pastor to the "Free Church
+at Lynn," June 26, 1870, he said:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The pulpit has no function more essential than an independent
+criticism of well-meaning people in the light of larger
+justice and remoter consequences than most popular measures
+recognize. The truest service is, perhaps, to help correct the
+blunders and the intolerances of blind good-will and narrow
+zeal for a good cause; to speak in the interest of an idea where
+popular or organized impulse threatens to swamp its higher
+morality in passionate instincts and absolute masterships, to
+maintain that freedom of private judgment which cannot be
+outraged, even in the best moral intent, without mischievous
+reaction on the good cause itself.</p></div>
+
+<p>In this connection he speaks of temperance, the
+amelioration of the condition of the "perishing" or
+"dangerous" classes, the various schemes for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+benefiting the laboring men, plans for adjusting the relations
+of labor and capital, arrangements for diffusing
+the profits of production,&mdash;causes which he had
+at heart, but which should be discussed in view of
+the principle of individual freedom, which must be
+upheld at all hazards. He was a close reasoner as
+well as a warm feeler, and would not allow his sympathies
+to get the upper hand of his ideas. He
+hoped for the best; he had faith in the highest; he
+anticipated the brightest; but he tried to see things
+as they were. He was a student, not a sentimentalist,
+and while he was ready to follow the most advanced
+in the direction of spiritual progress, he was
+not prepared to take for granted issues that still
+hung in the balance of debate, or to prejudge questions
+that had not been answered, and could not be
+as yet.</p>
+
+<p>Such moderation and patience are not common
+with reformers, and few are independent enough to
+confess misgivings which are more familiar to their
+opponents than to their friends. Candor like this
+shows a genuine unconsciousness of fear, a sincere
+love of truth, an earnest postponement of personal
+tastes, ambitions, and connections to the axioms of
+universal wisdom and goodness; a loyalty to conviction
+that is very rare, that never can exist among
+the indifferent, because they do not care, and which
+is usually put aside by those who <i>do</i> care as an impediment
+if not as a snare. In courage of this noble
+kind, Johnson excelled all men I ever knew, for they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+who had it, as some did, had not his genius, and
+were spared the necessity of curbing ardor by so
+much as their temperament was more passive and
+their eagerness less importunate. Of course of the
+lower sort,&mdash;the courage to bear pain, loss, the misunderstanding
+of the vulgar, to face danger, to encounter
+peril, none who knew him can question his
+possession. In fact, he did not seem to suffer at all,
+so jocund was he, so much in the habit of keeping
+his deprivations from the outside world; even his
+intimates could but suspect his sorrows of heart.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Johnson was an extraordinary person to
+look at. He had large dark eyes; black, straight,
+long hair; an Oriental complexion, sallow, olive-colored;
+an impetuous manner; a beaming expression.
+His voice was rich, deep, musical; his gait
+eager, rapid, swinging; his style of address glowing;
+his aspect in public speech that of one inspired.
+He was fond of natural beauty, of art, literature,
+music; full of fun, witty, mirthful, social. He was
+attractive to young people, delightful in conversation,
+ready to enter into innocent amusements. His
+eye for scenery was fine and quick, his interest in
+practical science sincere and hearty, his concern for
+whatever advanced humanity cordial, and his freshness
+of spirit increased if anything with years.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XIV.<br />
+
+MY FRIENDS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It is impossible to mention them all, and to single
+out a few from a multitude must not be done. I
+should like to commemorate those who came nearest
+to me by their earnest work and faithful allegiance,
+but these cannot be spoken of, and I prefer to enumerate
+some of those with whom I was less intimate.</p>
+
+<p>Alice and Ph&oelig;be Cary came to New York in 1852,
+and were prominent when I was there; their famous
+Sunday evenings, which were frequented by the
+brightest minds and were sought by a large class of
+people, being then well established. These were
+altogether informal and gave but little satisfaction
+to the merely fashionable folks who now and then attended
+them. The sisters were in striking contrast.
+Ph&oelig;be, the younger, was a jocund, hearty, vivacious,
+witty, merry young woman, short and round; her
+older sister, Alice, was taller and more slender, with
+large, dark eyes; she was meditative, thoughtful,
+pensive, and rather grave in temperament; but the
+two were most heartily in sympathy in every opinion
+and in all their literary and social aims. Horace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+Greeley, one of their earliest and warmest friends,
+was a frequent visitor at their house. There I met
+Robert Dale Owen, Oliver Johnson, Dr. E. H. Chapin,
+Rev. Charles F. Deems, Justin McCarthy and
+his wife, Mrs. Mary E. Dodge, Madame Le Vert, and
+several others.</p>
+
+<p>Among my friends was President Barnard, of
+Columbia College, the only man I ever knew whose
+long ear-trumpet was never an annoyance; Ogden
+N. Rood, the Professor of Physics at Columbia, a
+man of real genius, whose studies in light and
+color were a great assistance to artists, himself
+an artist of no mean order and an ardent student
+of photography; Charles Joy, Professor of Chemistry,
+a most active-minded man, who received honors
+at Goettingen and at Paris, and contributed
+largely to the scientific journals; a man greatly
+interested in the union of charitable societies in
+New York; Robert Carter, then a co-worker in the
+making of Appleton's Cyclopedia; Bayard Taylor,
+novelist, poet, translator of Goethe, traveller; Richard
+Grant White, the Shakesperian scholar; Charles
+L. Brace, the philanthropist; E. L. Youmans a man
+fairly tingling with ideas, and peculiarly gifted in
+making popular, as a lecturer, the most abstruse
+scientific discoveries. The breadth of my range of
+acquaintances is illustrated by such men as Roswell
+D. Hitchcock, of Union Seminary, the learned student,
+the impressive speaker; Isaac T. Hecker, the
+founder of the Congregation of the Paulists; Dr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+Washburn, the model churchman of "Calvary";
+Henry M. Field, editor of the <i>Evangelist</i>, a most
+warm-hearted man, so large in his sympathies that
+he could say to Robert G. Ingersoll, "I am glad
+that I know you, even though some of my brethren
+look upon you as a monster because of your unbelief,"
+and welcomed as an example of "constructive
+thought," Dr. Charles A. Briggs' Inaugural Address
+as Professor of Biblical Theology at Union College;
+John G. Holland (Timothy Titcomb), a copious author.
+The <i>Tribune</i> company was most distinguished:
+There was, first of all, the founder, Horace Greeley,
+a unique personality, simple, unaffected, earnest, an
+immense believer in American institutions, a stanch
+friend of the working-man, and a brave lover of impartial
+justice; Whitelaw Reid, who was, according
+to George Ripley, the ablest newspaper manager
+he ever saw; and Mrs. Lucia Calhoun (afterward
+Mrs. Runkle), one of the most brilliant contributors
+to the <i>Tribune</i>. Of George Ripley I may speak
+more at length, as he was my parishioner and close
+friend. In my biography of him, written for the
+"American Men of Letters" series, I spoke of him
+as a "remarkable" man. One of my critics found
+fault with the appellation, and said it was not justified
+by anything in the book, as perhaps it was not,
+though intellectual vigor, range, and taste like his
+must be called "remarkable"; such industry is
+"remarkable"; no common man could have instituted
+"Brook Farm" and administered it for six or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+seven years; could have maintained its dignity
+through ridicule, misunderstanding, and fanaticism;
+could have cleared off its liabilities; could have
+turned his face away from it on its failure, with
+such patience, or in his later age, could have alluded
+to it so sweetly; no ordinary person could have
+adopted a new and despised career so bravely as he
+did. No journalist has raised literature to so high a
+distinction, or derived such large rewards for that
+mental labor. He deserves to be called "remarkable,"
+who can do all this or but a part of it, and,
+all the time, preserve the sunny serenity of his disposition.
+If the biography failed to present these
+traits it was, indeed, unsuccessful. Yes, Mr. Ripley
+was an extraordinary man. It is seldom that one
+carries such qualities to such a degree of perfection,
+and it may be worth while to look more closely at
+his character.</p>
+
+<p>George Ripley had a passion for literary excellence.
+From his boyhood he possessed a singularly
+bright intelligence, a clear appreciation of the rational
+aspect of questions. He was not an ardent,
+passionate, enthusiastic man, of warm convictions,
+vehement emotions, burning ideas. His feelings,
+though amiable and correct, were of an intellectual
+cast. They sprang from a naturally affectionate
+heart, rather than from a deeply stirred conscience,
+or an enchanted soul. If he had been less healthy,
+eupeptic, he would scarcely have been so gay; a
+vehement reformer he was not; a leader of men he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+could not be. He had not the stuff in him for
+either. The element of giving was not strong in
+him. He was not an originator in the sphere of
+thought; not a discoverer of theories or facts; not
+an innovator on established customs. But mentally
+he was so quick, eager, receptive, that he
+seemed a pioneer, an enthusiast, a saint; his quickness
+passing for insight, his eagerness for a passionate
+love of progress, his receptivity for charitableness.
+He appeared to be more of an image-breaker
+than he really was. In fact, the propensity
+to iconoclasm was not part of his constitution. But
+his mind was wonderfully alert. He had his antipathies,
+and they were strong ones, his likes and
+dislikes, his tastes and distastes, but these were instinctive
+rather than the expression of rational principle
+or a deliberate conclusion of his judgment. In
+one instance that I know of, he threw off a man
+with whom he had been associated for many years,
+and in connection with whom he labored daily for
+a time, a very accomplished and agreeable person
+to whom he was indebted for some services, because
+he thought that the individual in question had been
+unjust to some of his friends; but that this was not
+entirely a matter of conscience would seem to be
+indicated by the fact that he sent a message of affection
+to this man, as he neared the grave. In the
+main, so far as he was under control, intellectual
+considerations determined his course. He was prevailingly
+under the influence of mind; he acted in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+view, a large view, of all the circumstances; as one
+who takes in the whole situation, and has himself
+under command. This is not said in the least tone
+of disparagement, but entirely in his praise, for the
+supremacy of reason is more steady, even, reliable
+than the supremacy of feeling however exalted in
+its mood. He that is under the control of mind is
+at all times <i>under control</i>, which cannot be said of
+one who is borne along by the sway of even devout
+emotion. I have in memory cases where passion
+might have betrayed Mr. Ripley into conduct he
+would have regretted, had it not been for the restraining
+power of purely rational considerations.
+His early religious training may have produced some
+effect on his character, but this is more likely to
+have operated at first than at the later stages of his
+career. The love of old hymns, the habit of attending
+sacred services, the fondness for Watts' poems,
+a copy of whose holy songs always lay on his table,
+showed a lingering attachment to this kind of sentiment
+up to the end of his life; but it existed in an
+attenuated form, and at no period after his youth
+exerted much sway over him. His predominating
+bent was intellectual, and this caused a certain delicacy,
+fastidiousness, aloofness, which kept him in
+the atmosphere of love as well as of light.</p>
+
+<p>From his youth this was his leading characteristic.
+As a boy he was ambitious of making a dictionary,
+a sign of his carefulness in the use of words,
+and an omen of the value he was to set on definitions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+and on exactness in the employment of language.
+At school he was an excellent scholar, at
+college he stood second, but was graduated first
+owing to the "suspension" of a brilliant classmate
+who might have excelled him but for the mishap
+of a college "riot" in which he took part. In the
+languages and in literature he was unusually proficient,
+while in mathematics,&mdash;that most abstract,
+severe, precise of pursuits,&mdash;his success was distinguished.
+In later-life his devotion to philosophy
+marked the man of speculative tastes. His early
+letters to his father, mother, sister, reveal a consciousness
+of his own peculiarities. Here are extracts:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The course of studies adopted here [Cambridge], in the
+opinion of competent judges, is singularly calculated to form
+scholars, and moreover, correct and accurate scholars; to
+inure the mind to profound thought and habits of investigation
+and reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>The prospect of devoting my days to the acquisition and
+communication of knowledge is bright and cheering. This
+employment I would not exchange for the most elevated
+situation of wealth or power. One of the happiest steps, I
+think, that I have ever taken was the commencement of a
+course of study, and it is my wish and effort that my future
+progress may give substantial evidence of it.</p>
+
+<p>I know that my peculiar habits of mind, imperfect as they
+are, strongly impel me to the path of active intellectual effort;
+and if I am to be at any time of any use to society, or a satisfaction
+to myself or my friends, it will be in the way of some
+retired literary situation, where a fondness for study and a
+knowledge of books will be more requisite than the busy, calculating
+mind of a man in the business part of the community.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+I do not mean by this that any profession is desired but the
+one to which I have been long looking. My wish is only to
+enter that profession with all the enlargement of mind and
+extent of information which the best institutions can afford.</p></div>
+
+<p>These quotations are enough to show what was
+the prevailing impulse of the man. An intellectual
+nature like this, calm, studious, accomplished, eager,
+is subject to few surprises and experiences rarely,
+if ever, marked by crises, cataclysms, eruptions, in
+passing from one condition of thought to another at
+the opposite extreme of the spiritual universe. A
+process of growth, gradual, easy, motionless, takes
+the place of commotion and violent uproar such as
+passionate temperaments are exposed to. In 1821
+he writes to his sister from Harvard College: "We
+are now studying Locke, an author who has done
+more to form the mind to habits of accurate reasoning
+and sound thought than almost any other." On
+the 19th of September, 1836, the first meeting of
+the Transcendental Club was held at his house in
+Boston. In 1838 he replied to Andrews Norton's
+criticism of Mr. Emerson's Address before the
+Alumni of the Cambridge Divinity School. In
+1840 he said to his congregation in Purchase Street:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>There is a faculty in all&mdash;the most degraded, the most
+ignorant, the most obscure&mdash;to perceive spiritual truth when
+distinctly presented; and the ultimate appeal on all moral
+questions is not to a jury of scholars, a conclave of divines,
+or the prescriptions of a creed, but to the common-sense of
+the human race.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But this substitution of the intuitive for the
+sensational philosophy&mdash;a change which affected all
+the processes of his thought and actually caused a
+revolution in his mind&mdash;was made silently, quietly,
+without agitation, without triumph, in a sober, conservative
+manner, very different from that of his
+friend Theodore Parker, who carried the same doctrines
+a good deal further, and advocated them with
+more heat like the burly reformer he was.</p>
+
+<p>In religion, Mr. Ripley's position was the same
+that it was in philosophy. In fact the intellectual
+side of religion interested him more than the spiritual
+or experimental side. It was mainly a speculative
+matter, where it was not speculative it was
+practical; in each event it concerned the head
+rather than the heart, as being an opinion rather
+than a feeling. He was instructed in the school of
+orthodoxy, and, as a youth, was strict in his allegiance
+to the old system of belief; but he became a
+disciple of Dr. Channing, and later a rationalist of
+the order of Theodore Parker, a friend of Emerson,
+an adherent of what was newest in theology. Yet,
+in this extreme departure from the views of his
+early years, he betrayed no sign of agitation, no
+trace of internal suffering. He wished to go to
+Yale instead of Harvard, because "the temptations
+incident to a college, we have reason to think, are
+less at Yale than at Cambridge." He preferred
+Andover to Cambridge, being "convinced that the
+opportunities for close investigation of the Scriptures<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+are superior to those at Cambridge, and the
+spirit of the place, much relaxed from its former
+severe and gloomy bigotry is more favorable to a
+tone of decided piety." Still, he goes to Cambridge,
+is "much disappointed in what he had
+learned of the religious character of the school,"
+and, on more intimate acquaintance is impressed by
+"the depth and purity of their religious feeling and
+the holy simplicity of their lives"; "enough to
+humble and shame those who had been long professors
+of Christianity, and had pretended to superior
+sanctity." In 1824 a bold article in the <i>Christian
+Disciple</i>, a Unitarian journal, the precursor of
+the <i>Christian Examiner</i>, excited a good deal of
+comment, not to say apprehension. He writes to
+his sister about it as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>You asked me to say something about the article in the
+<i>Disciple</i>. For myself, I freely confess that I think it a useful
+thing and correct. The vigor of my orthodoxy, which is
+commonly pretty susceptible, was not offended. Now, if you
+have any objections which you can accurately and definitely
+state, no doubt there is something in it which had escaped
+my notice. If your dislike is only a misty, uncertain feeling
+about something, you know not what, it were well to get
+fairly rid of it by the best means.</p></div>
+
+<p>The same year he writes to his mother:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I am no partisan of any sect, but I must rejoice in seeing
+any progress towards the conviction that Christianity is indeed
+"<i>glad tidings of great joy</i>," and that in its original purity
+it was a very different thing from the system that is popularly
+preached, and which is still received as reasonable and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+scriptural by men and women, who in other respects are sensible
+and correct in their judgments. When shall we learn
+that without the spirit of Christ we are none of us His?
+I trust I am not becoming a partisan or a bigot. I have suffered
+enough, and too much, in sustaining those characters,
+in earlier, more inexperienced, and more ignorant years; but
+I have no prospects of earthly happiness more inviting than
+that of preaching the truth, with the humble hope of impressing
+it on the mind with greater force, purity, and effect than
+I could do with any other than my present conviction.</p></div>
+
+<p>In 1840 the ministry was abandoned forever, for
+more secular pursuits. After 1849 his activities
+were wholly literary; he had no connection with
+theology, and none who did not know his past suspected
+that he had once been a clergyman.</p>
+
+<p>The same cast of thought, not "pale" in his case,
+suffused his action at Brook Farm and made a
+Utopia quiet, calm, dignified, pervaded by the radiance
+of mind, the gentle enthusiasm of the intellect.
+The heat came in the main from other sources. He
+was receptive rather than original, inflammable
+rather than fiery, brilliant rather than warm. The
+heat was supplied by those near him, by those he
+trusted, and by those he loved. Not that he was
+deficient in concern for society; far from it; but
+his interest was more philosophical than philanthropic.
+The subject of an association that should
+combine intellectual and mechanical labor and should
+diminish the distance between the tiller of the ground
+and the educator was agitated among the thinkers
+he was intimate with. Dr. Channing had such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+project at heart. Mrs. Ripley burned with humane
+anticipations. Plans for social regeneration were in
+the air. It was impossible for one who lived in the
+midst of ardent spirits, or was sensitive to fine impressions,
+or was cultivated in an ideal wisdom that
+was not of this world, to escape the contagion of
+this kind of optimism; Emerson was saved by his
+belief in individual growth; Parker by his steady
+common-sense; others were protected by their conservatism
+of temperament or of association, by their
+want of courage, or their want of faith; but men
+and women of ideal propensities, like Nathaniel
+Hawthorne, W. H. Channing, J. S. Dwight, joined
+the community, which promised a new era for
+Humanity. Mr. Ripley would probably have left
+the ministry at any rate, for it had become distasteful
+to him, but it is not likely that he would have
+undertaken the management of Brook Farm unless
+he had been assured of its success; for he was a
+New England youth by birth and by disposition,
+prudent, careful, thrifty; his very enthusiasm was
+of the New England type, the product of theological
+ideas, a creation of the gospels, a desire to introduce
+the "Kingdom of Heaven," a continuance of the
+prophetic calling. New England is as noted for its
+fanaticism as it is for its theology. Its fanaticism
+is the offspring of its theology, and in proportion as
+its theology disappears its fanaticism decreases. In
+Mr. Ripley's case the theology had reached very
+near to its last attenuation and the fanaticism had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+tapered off into a gentle enthusiasm. He undertook
+to establish a kingdom of heaven on earth because
+he had given up the expectation of a kingdom of
+heaven in the skies; and he undertook to establish
+a kingdom of heaven on earth by rational, economic
+means, not by religious interventions. He was subject
+to that peculiar kind of excitement that comes
+to a few people in connection with the keen exercise
+of their intellectual powers, when they have laid
+hold of what seems to them a principle&mdash;an excitement
+that is easily mistaken for moral earnestness
+even by one who is under its influence, which, indeed,
+lies so close to moral earnestness as to feel
+quickly the effect of moral earnestness in others,
+notwithstanding the checks applied by practical
+wisdom. Mr. Ripley had struck on a theory of
+society, which at that time was passing from the
+phase of feeling into the phase of philosophy. The
+theory was in the air; the most susceptible spirits
+were full of it; all noble impulses were in its favor,
+it belonged to the order of thought he had attained;
+it was native to the aspirations that inflamed the
+men and women with whom he was most intimate;
+their feelings awoke his intellect, and he was carried
+away by a stream whereof he appeared to himself
+to be a tributary and whereof he appeared to
+others as the main current, on account of his impetuosity,
+and the vigor with which he proceeded to
+put the idea into practice. In his own mind he
+was realizing the dream of the New Testament, but,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+in fact, he was testing a principle of which the New
+Testament was quite unconscious, the modern principle
+of the equal destinies of all men. He had
+abandoned the New Testament ground of allegiance
+to Jehovah, and had adopted the human ground of
+fidelity to social law. He was still under the spell
+of religious emotions, but they had become merged
+in the abstractions of rationalism and merely lent
+an added glow to his ideas, so that he could readily
+imagine that he was actuated by spiritual convictions
+when, in fact, he was doing duty as a disciple
+of socialist philosophers. His own interest in Brook
+Farm was in the main speculative, though through
+his personal sympathies he was moved toward an
+enterprise that had moral ends in view.</p>
+
+<p>Once embarked in it, he gave his whole mind to
+its accomplishment,&mdash;all his industry, all his organizing
+talent, all his high sense of duty. He worked
+day and night; he wrote letters; he answered inquiries;
+he mastered the science of agriculture; he did
+the labor of a practical farmer; he maintained the
+supervision of the strange family that gathered
+about him. Very remarkable was his success in
+keeping the intellectual side uppermost, in keeping
+clear of the temptations to give way to instinctive
+leanings. His associations were with books and
+study and bright people. He brought the most
+brilliant men and women of the day to the place.
+He awakened the interest of the general community.
+He diffused an atmosphere of cheerful hope<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+around the experiment. It is easy to make sport of
+Brook Farm; to laugh at the odd folks who came
+there; to ridicule their motives and actions; to
+repeat stories of extravagant conduct; to tell of the
+eccentric behavior of men and maidens who were
+right-minded but impulsive; to follow spontaneousness
+to its results; to trace the course of unrestricted
+liberty. But it is not fair to remember these things
+as peculiarities of Brook Farm, as incidents of its
+conception, or as incidents that were agreeable to
+Mr. Ripley. He exerted the whole weight of his
+character against them. He watched and guarded.
+We do not hear of him in connection with the scandals,
+the laxities, or the frolics. His efforts were
+directed to the supremacy of ideas over instinct, the
+idea of a regenerated society, something very different
+from joyousness, or merriment, or the fun of
+having a good time. He, too, was gay; he felt the
+delight of freedom; but his gayety was born of
+happy confidence in the principle at stake, his delight
+was connected with the advent of a new method of
+intercourse among men. I remember hearing him
+once deliver a speech in Boston. In it he spoke of
+the "foolishness of preaching," and avowed his willingness
+to be a pioneer in the task of breaking out
+a new future for humanity, a ditcher and delver in
+the work of constructing the new building of God.
+He had the coming time continually in view. Others
+might enjoy themselves, others might grow tired of
+waiting, but he held smiling on his way, determined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+to carry out the idea to the end. There was something
+grand in the steady intellectual force with
+which he did his best to carry through a principle
+that commanded more and more the assent of his
+reason. When the demonstration of Charles Fourier
+was laid before him, no argument was required to
+persuade him to adopt it. He took it up with all
+his energy; his enthusiasm rose to a higher pitch
+than ever; the rationale of the movement was revealed
+to him, and apparently he saw for the first
+time the full significance of the scheme he had been
+conducting. The impelling power of an intellectual
+conviction was never more splendidly illustrated.
+Nobody discerned so clearly as he did the financial
+hopelessness of the experiment. Nobody felt the
+burden of responsibility as he felt it. Yet he did
+not flinch for a moment, and his patient assumption
+of the indebtedness at last had the stamp of real
+heroism upon it. His renewal of the most painful
+traditions of "Grub Street" until the liabilities of
+Brook Farm were cleared off is one of the noble histories,
+a history that cannot be told in detail because
+of the modesty which has left no record of toil undergone
+or duty done. The old simile of the sun
+struggling with clouds, and gradually clearing itself
+as the day wears on, best illustrates my view of this
+man's accomplishment. There were the clouds of
+orthodoxy which were burned away at Cambridge.
+Then came the clouds of Unitarian divinity, which
+were dispelled by the transcendental philosophy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+These were succeeded by the dark vapors of the
+ministry, and these by the sentimental philanthropy
+of New England rationalism. At length his intellect
+broke through these obscurations and showed
+what it truly was.</p>
+
+<p>On the failure of Brook Farm and the final dismissal
+of all plans for creating society anew, Mr.
+Ripley's faculties emerged in their full strength.
+The New England element was withdrawn. There
+was no longer thought for theology or reform, but
+solely for knowledge and literature. In Boston he
+had taken on himself every opprobrious epithet. In
+his final letter to his congregation he avows his interest
+in temperance, anti-slavery, peace, the projects
+for breaking down social distinctions; simply, it
+would seem, because his philosophy, falling in with
+popular sentiment, pointed that way; for he was
+never publicly identified with any of these causes,
+or ranked by reformers in the order of innovators.
+Indeed, one of the old Abolitionists told me that she
+had never associated him with the anti-slavery people,
+though her family went to his church. In New
+York there was no pretence of this kind. The devotion
+to literature absorbed his attention. His
+democratic concern for the workingmen continued,
+but in a theoretical manner, if we may judge from
+the fact that he took no part in domestic or foreign
+demonstrations, that he made no speech, attended no
+meeting, consorted with no social reformers, did not
+even keep up his intimacy with the original leaders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+of socialism in this country. When the sadness of
+his first wife's death was over, and the drudgery of
+toil was ended, he was happier than he had ever
+been. No time was wasted; no talent was misused.
+Mental labor was incessant, but in performing it
+there was pure delight. It is usual to think of his
+early life as his best, and there were some who regarded
+him as an extinct volcano; but I am of the
+opinion that his latter years were his most characteristic,
+and that he was most entirely himself when his
+intellectual nature came to its full play. In proportion
+as the "olden thoughts, the spirit's pall," fell off,
+he became peaceful and sweet; his view backward
+and forward became clear, his purpose steady, his
+will serene. The past was distasteful to him and
+he seldom alluded to it; but as one puts his childhood
+and his age together, a steady development is
+seen to run through both. His could not be a cloudless
+day, but he went on from glory to glory. His
+age more than justified the promise of his youth.
+In his latter years he befriended aspiring young
+men; he made literature a power in America; he
+threw a dignity around toil; he associated knowledge
+with happiness, and rendered light and love
+harmonious. His favorite author was Goethe, the
+apostle of culture. His familiarity with Sainte-Beuve,
+the master of literary criticism, was so great, that on
+occasion of that writer's decease, he sat down and
+wrote an account of him without recourse to books.
+Though without knowledge of art, destitute of taste<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+for music, and deficient in æsthetic appreciation, his
+sympathy was so large and true that these deficiencies
+were not felt. The intellectual sunshine was
+shed over the entire nature, and the book was so
+universal that it seemed to embrace everything.</p>
+
+<p>This is the property of pure mind, rarely seen in
+such perfection of lucidity. Such a mind is at once
+conservative and radical; conservative as treasuring
+the past, radical as anticipating improvement in
+the future. There is nothing like fanaticism, but a
+bright look in every direction, a place for all sorts
+of accomplishments, hospitality to each new invention,
+a radiant acceptance of all temperaments.
+The mind cannot be superstitious, for it cannot believe
+that divine powers are identified with material
+objects or occasional accidents; it cannot be ever
+sanguine as those are who indulge in abstract visions
+of good, for it knows that progress is very slow and
+gradual, and that the welfare of mankind is advanced
+by the process of civilization, by cultivation,
+acquirement, refinement, the gains of wealth, elegance,
+and delicacy of taste. It judges by rational
+standards, not by sentimental feelings, accepting
+imperfection as the inevitable condition of human
+affairs and bounded characters. It is not exposed
+to the convulsions that accompany even the most
+exalted moods, but calmly labors and quietly hopes
+for the future.</p>
+
+<p>I do not say that George Ripley was such a mind,
+merely that his tendency was in that direction. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+was limited by traditions; he had too many prejudices.
+The axioms of the transcendental philosophy
+clung to him. The shreds of religion hung about
+him. He could not divest himself of the ancient
+clerical memories and ways, nor wholly throw off
+the mantle of personal sympathy he had so long
+worn. He was not completely secular.</p>
+
+<p>That he was a perfect man is less evident still.
+His sunny quality was due in some degree to a
+happy temperament, and was subject to the eclipses
+that darken the blandest natures, and render sombre
+the most hilarious spirits. He lacked the steadfast
+courage of conviction, was somewhat over-prudent
+and timid, afraid of pain, of popular disapproval, of
+criticism and opposition. This may have been due
+in part to his frequent disappointments and the
+carefulness they forced upon him, to the distrust in
+his own judgment which he had occasion to learn,
+and the necessity of confining his action to the point
+immediately before him. But I am inclined to think
+that this apprehensiveness was constitutional. If
+it is suggested by way of objection that the bold
+experiment of Brook Farm, made in the face of
+obloquy and derision, indicated moral courage of a
+high stamp, I would remind the critic of the warm
+approbation of his friends, and the confident expectation
+of success on the part of those he was intimate
+with. His wife not merely gave him her
+countenance but stimulated his zeal, and surrounded
+him every day with an atmosphere of faith. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+had the applause of Dr. Channing, and the support
+of his brilliant nephew. Men like Hawthorne, Ellis
+Gray Loring, George Stearns, not to mention others,
+urged him on. His own well-beloved sister was one
+of his ardent coadjutors. He had hopes of Emerson.
+In short, so far from being alone, he stood
+in an influential company, and instead of his being
+altogether unpopular was encompassed by the good-will
+of those he prized most. It would have required
+courage to resist such influences. Besides,
+he was inflated by a momentary enthusiasm which
+carried him along in spite of himself and would not
+allow his judgment to work. A sudden storm
+struck him, lifted unusual waves, caused unexampled
+spurts of foam, made the ordinarily quiet water
+boisterous and dangerous, and threw long lines of
+breakers on the coast, so that what was a still lake
+became of a sudden a tempestuous sea. One must
+not hastily imagine that the water had become an
+ocean, or that it was really an Atlantic formerly
+supposed to be a pool.</p>
+
+<p>Then it must be said he loved money too well.
+This infirmity was not native to him, but must
+probably be imputed to early poverty, the necessity
+of working hard in order to pay debts not altogether
+of his own contracting, thus pledging the meagre
+income of the first sixty years of his life. His final
+income was large, but it was earned by incessant
+literary toil, which naturally rendered him avaricious
+of the rewards that might come to him. His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+generosity did not have a fair chance to show itself
+outside of his family. There it was lavish, but
+there it was too much mixed up with affection, duty,
+and pride to be credited to his manhood. He did
+not live long enough, either, to attain complete
+superiority over his accidents. He was already an
+old man before he had money for his wants. I
+remember meeting him on Broadway in 1861, the
+year of his wife's death, and he said: "My grief is
+embittered by the thought that she died just as I
+was getting able to obtain for her what she needed."
+He was then fifty-nine years of age. It cannot be
+expected that any impulse of generosity will overcome
+the habits of a life-time at so advanced a period
+as this. That they showed themselves at all is remarkable,
+and establishes as well their power as their
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, this man was too heavily weighted by
+circumstances to do his genius full justice. He
+seemed to be two individuals, with little in common
+between them. As one looked at his past or at
+his present, his real character was differently judged.
+The most plausible account of him was that which
+supposed the experiences to be buried in a deep
+grave, which was seldom uncovered even by the
+man himself, who lived in the day before him, and
+rarely glanced back save to mourn over or to make
+sport of his former career. The only way of establishing
+a unity in his history is to concede the supremacy
+of the intellectual quality over the moral in his first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+endeavors. The prejudice in favor of the moral was
+and is so strong that to maintain this supremacy will
+seem like a condemnation of him, though meant in
+his praise. He probably would so have considered
+it, especially when carried away by the flood of
+memories. It was easy for him to be mistaken.
+His merit consists in the energy of the reason which
+made headway against a host of disadvantages and
+achieved something resembling a victory in the end.
+Some time hence, when the homage paid to sentiment
+shall have yielded to the worship of knowledge,
+George Ripley will be regarded as one of the earliest
+apostles of the light.</p>
+
+<p>All these greatly enriched my life in New York,
+opened new spheres of activity, and enlarged my
+whole horizon, both intellectually and socially. Their
+variety, elasticity, and vigor in many fields of intellectual
+force added much to the extension of my
+view, and acted, not merely as a refreshment, but
+also as a stimulus.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XV.<br />
+
+THE PRESENT SITUATION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The progress of mind is continuous. Strictly
+speaking, there are no periods of transition, no crises
+in thought. The history of ideas presents no gap.
+Every stage begins and ends an epoch. One is
+often reminded of the common notion that the year
+begins and ends at a particular moment. Every
+day begins and ends a year; every hour is equally
+sacred. Yet solemn thought, worship, self-examination,
+are precious, and these can be secured only by
+the observance of times and seasons; so that we
+fall on our knees and pray when the old year ends
+and the new one begins.</p>
+
+<p>So, as a point of time must be fixed upon, we will
+begin with Thomas Paine. It is not easy to speak
+fully and justly of Paine, because in so doing we
+must speak of the misapprehensions and mis-statements
+of which he has been the victim; and even if
+we refute these, the bare mention of them leaves a
+stain on his fame. No doubt his method&mdash;application
+of common-sense to religion&mdash;was essentially
+vicious. Common-sense is an admirable quality in
+practical affairs, quite indispensable in the management<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+of business of all kinds, but it has no place in
+the discussion of works of the higher imagination&mdash;of
+poetry, art, music, or faith. But such was the
+man's genius, such was the demand of his age. It is
+easy to speak of his ignorance, his coarseness, his
+impudence, his vanity; but it must be remembered
+that his education was very imperfect, for he was
+utterly ignorant of any language but his own, and
+he did not, apparently, read even the English deists;
+that he was a man of the people; that he lived
+in an age of revolutions; that he stood for the
+rights of common humanity. It must be remembered
+also that, in the first place, he brought the
+human mind face to face with problems which had
+been appropriated by a special class that considered
+itself exempt from criticism. In the next place he
+was in dead earnest; not attacking the Bible or
+religion out of flippancy or brutality, but because
+he really hated the interpretations that were usually
+given of sacred things; his attack was against orthodoxy,
+not against faith. "His blasphemy," says
+Leslie Stephen, "was not against the Supreme God,
+but against Jehovah. He was vindicating the ruler
+of the universe from the imputations which believers
+in literal inspiration and dogmatical theology had
+heaped upon him under the disguise of homage.
+He was denying that the God before whom reasonable
+creatures should bow in reverence could be the
+supernatural tyrant of priestly imagination, who
+was responsible for Jewish massacres, who favored<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+a petty clan at the expense of his other creatures,
+who punished the innocent for the guilty, who
+lighted the fires of everlasting torment for the
+masses of mankind, and who gave a monopoly of
+his favor to priests or a few favored enthusiasts.
+Paine, in short, with all his brutality, had the conscience
+of his hearers on his side, and we must
+prefer his rough exposure of popular errors to the
+unconscious blasphemy of his supporters." Then
+Paine <i>did love his kind;</i> he abhorred cruelty, and
+desired, after his fashion, to elevate his race.</p>
+
+<p>Examples of this are numerous. At the time
+when the "Common Sense" and "Crisis" were
+having an enormous sale, the demand for the former
+reaching not less than one hundred thousand copies,
+and both together offering to the author profits that
+would have made him rich, Paine freely gave the
+copyright to every State in the Union. In his
+period of public favor and of intimate friendship
+with the founders of the government, Paine declined
+to accept any place or office of emolument, saying:
+"I must be in everything, as I have ever been, a
+disinterested volunteer. My proper sphere of action
+is on the common floor of citizenship, and to honest
+men I give my hand and heart freely." The State
+of Virginia made a large claim on the general government
+for lands. Thomas Paine opposed the
+claim as unreasonable and unjust, though at that
+very time there was a resolution before the legislature
+of Virginia to appropriate to him a handsome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+sum of money for services rendered. In 1797, Paine
+was the chief promoter of the society of "Theophilanthropists,"
+whose object was the extinction of
+religious prejudices, the maintenance of morality,
+and the diffusion of faith in one God. "It is want
+of feeling," says this <i>heartless blasphemer</i>, "to talk
+of priests and bells, while infants are perishing in
+hospitals, and the aged and infirm poor are dying in
+the streets." In 1774, Paine published in the <i>Pennsylvania
+Journal</i>, a strong, anti-slavery essay.
+While clerk in the Pennsylvania Legislature he
+made an appeal in behalf of the army, then in extreme
+distress, and subscribed his entire salary for
+the year to the fund that was raised. Towards the
+close of his life, he devised a plan for imposing a
+special tax on all deceased persons' estates, to create
+a fund from which all, on reaching twenty-one
+years, should receive a sum to establish them in
+business, and in order that all who were in the decline
+of life should be saved from destitution. It is
+not generally known that Paine often preached on
+Sunday afternoons at New Rochelle. In England
+he spoke in early life from Dissenting pulpits, and to
+him we owe this exquisite definition of religion: "It
+is man bringing to his Maker the fruits of his heart."
+All this is evidence that honorable considerations
+were at the bottom of his own belief. He was, according
+to his view, the friend of man, and in this
+interest wrote his books. He introduced kindness
+into religion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He certainly repeated the ideas of Collins and
+Toland, and the conceptions that were floating in
+the air, breathed by Voltaire and Diderot; but he
+did give them voice. The English deists were dead,
+and would have continued so but for him. He was
+essentially a pamphleteer, the master of a very rich,
+simple style that went directly to the hearts of the
+people. His best performances were unquestionably
+political, but all his works were marked by the same
+peculiarities. His mistake was in supposing that
+the power that could animate an army could pull
+down a church.</p>
+
+<p>Paine was no saint, but he was no sinner above all
+that dwelt in Jerusalem. He drank too much; he
+took too much snuff; he was vulgar; he was a vehement
+man in a vehement age; he went to dinner
+in his dressing-gown; and he certainly did not bring
+his best convictions to bear on his private character;
+but he did wake up minds that had been dumb or
+oppressed before. The "Age of Reason" went
+everywhere, into holes and corners, among back-woodsmen
+and pioneers, and did more execution
+among plain moral men than many a book that was
+more worthy of acceptance. It is a pity that his
+disciples should be content with repeating his denials,
+instead of building on the rational foundations
+which he laid. For instance, they might, while
+adding to his criticism of the Scriptures, have shown
+their high moral bearing and their spiritual glow.
+They might have carried out further his "enthusiasm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+for humanity," showing that man had more in him
+than Paine suspected. They might have justified by
+more scientific reasons his belief in God and in immortality.
+They might have been truly rationalists
+as he wanted to be, but could not be at that period.
+But they were satisfied with saying over and over
+again what he said as well as he could, but not as
+well as they can. He was simply a precursor, but
+he was a precursor of such men as Colenso and
+Robertson Smith, and a large host of scholars beside.</p>
+
+<p>Paine's best exponent in America is perhaps Robert
+G. Ingersoll. He is a sort of transfigured Paine.
+He has all Paine's power over the masses, being perhaps
+the most eloquent man in America; more than
+Paine's wit; more than Paine's earnestness; more
+than Paine's love of humanity; more than Paine's
+scorn of deceit and harshness,&mdash;for he extends his
+abhorrence of cruelty even to dumb beasts. He has
+great power of sympathy, a tender feeling for misery
+of all kinds. He is a poet, as is evident from these
+words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>We do not know whether the grave is the end of this life or
+the door of another, or whether the night here is somewhere
+else a dawn. The idea of Immortality, that like a sea has
+ebbed and flowed into the human heart with its countless waves
+beating against the shores and rocks of time and faith, was not
+born of any book or of any creed or of any religion. It was
+born of human affection, and it will continue to ebb and flow
+beneath the mists and clouds of doubt and darkness as long as
+love kisses the lips of death. It is the rainbow, Hope, shining
+upon the tears of grief.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Paine's simple childlike belief in God and Immortality,
+Ingersoll remands to the cloudy sphere of
+agnosticism, as Paine probably would now; but it
+is my opinion that if evidence which he regarded as
+satisfactory&mdash;that is, legal evidence&mdash;could be given,
+he, too, would accept these articles; for he has none
+of the elements of the bigot about him. His detestation
+is simply of hell and a priesthood; for pure,
+spiritual religion, he has only respect. Like Paine,
+he attacks the ecclesiasticism and theology of the
+day, and is satisfied with doing that; and, like
+Paine, he has convictions instead of opinions, and his
+character is all aflame with his ideas.</p>
+
+<p>In his private life, in his family relations, in his
+public career, there is no reproach on his name&mdash;nothing
+that he need be ashamed of.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Ingersoll does not worship the Infinite under
+any recognized form or name, but that he adores the
+<i>substance of deity</i> is beyond all doubt; he worships
+truth and purity and sincerity and love,&mdash;everything
+that is highest and noblest in human life. One word
+more I must say,&mdash;that his motive is essentially religious.
+It is his aim to lift off the burden of superstition
+and priestcraft; to elevate the soul of manhood
+and womanhood; to promote rational progress in
+goodness; to emancipate every possibility of power in
+the race; and this is the aim of every pure religion,&mdash;to
+open new spheres of hope and accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>The disintegration of the popular orthodoxy goes
+on very fast, and always under the influence of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+moral sentiment. This is very prettily put by Miss
+Jewett, in one of her short stories, entitled "The
+Town Poor." Two ladies, jogging along a country
+road, fall to talking about an old meeting-house
+which is being <i>improved</i> after the modern fashion.
+One of them laments the loss of the ancient pews
+and pulpit, and the substitution of a modern platform
+and slips. The other says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>When I think of them old sermons that used to be preached
+in that old meeting-house, I am glad it is altered over so as not
+to remind folks. Them old brimstone discourses! you know
+preachers is far more reasonable now-a-days. Why, I sat an'
+thought last Sabbath as I listened, that if old Mr. Longbrother
+and Deacon Bray could hear the difference, they'd crack the
+ground over 'em like pole beans, and come right up 'long side
+their headstones.</p></div>
+
+<p>In Chicago, some years ago, orthodox preachers
+begged a pronounced radical to stay and help them
+fight the matter out on the inside; and a minister of
+one of the principal churches there distinctly said
+that he did not believe in the infallibility of the
+Bible or an everlasting punishment. A Congregational
+minister in Connecticut expressed himself as
+thoroughly in sympathy with the advanced party in
+theology. An orthodox clergyman in New England
+declared that he did not know of an orthodox minister
+in the whole range of his acquaintance who
+believed in the old doctrine. A minister in Rhode
+Island, who occupied a high position in the orthodox
+church, while declining to make an open statement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+on account of social and political reasons,
+avowed his willingness to write a private letter
+disclaiming all belief in the accepted views. The
+Rev. Howard MacQueary, the Episcopal rector of
+Canton, Ohio, who has recently published a book,
+entitled the "Evolution of Man and Christianity,"
+has been convicted of heresy against his own protest
+and the popular sentiment. The successor of Henry
+Ward Beecher, in Brooklyn, N. Y., recently published
+the essentials of his creed. There is no fall
+in it, no trinity, no miracle in the old sense, no eternal
+punishment. He declares, frankly, that there is
+no difference <i>in kind</i> between man, Jesus, and God,
+but only a difference <i>in degree</i>. The same man
+recently preached in King's Chapel, and lectured
+in Channing Hall. The Andover controversy distinctly
+reveals the decay of the ancient theology.
+In England dissent has gone very far, as is evident
+from a book called "The Kernel and the Husk,"
+written by the Rev. Dr. E. A. Abbott, the author of
+the article on "The Gospels," in the last edition of
+the "Encyclopædia Britannica." In this article the
+fall is repudiated, the trinity, miracles, the virgin
+birth, the physical resurrection of Jesus, and eternal
+punishment; yet even his bishop has not rebuked
+him. Yes, the moral sentiment is certainly coming
+to its rights.</p>
+
+<p>Of Unitarianism, after what has been said, it is
+unnecessary to speak. That there should be a difference
+between the East and the West is natural.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+The East holds fast, in large sense, to the ancient
+theological traditions. The West never had them,
+and can therefore declare that its fellowship is conditioned
+on no doctrinal tests, and can welcome all
+who wish to establish truth and righteousness and
+love in the world. The West will ultimately prevail;
+the temper of the East is rapidly wasting
+away, and the breach will soon be closed up. The
+new Unitarian churches will be founded on a practical
+basis, the only requirement being that the minister
+should be deeply in earnest about religious
+things. The characteristic of all churches, of whatever
+name, is an urgent interest in social reform, a
+deep concern for the disfranchised and oppressed,
+and a warm feeling towards the elevation of mankind.
+The universal prayer is, to borrow the pithy
+language of Dr. F. H. Hedge: "May Thy kingdom
+come on earth!" not "May we come into Thy
+kingdom."</p>
+
+<p>If it was hard to do full justice to Thomas Paine, it
+is harder to do full justice to the Broad Churchman.
+There is no authoritative account of his position to
+which appeal can be made, and the great variety of
+opinion on incidental points makes it difficult to
+frame any description which the leaders would accept.
+A great deal depends on the change of circumstances,
+the ruling spirit of the time, the prevailing tendencies
+of thought in the period,&mdash;whether scientific,
+critical, or social,&mdash;and a great deal depends, too, on
+the peculiarities of individual temperament, but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+fundamental doctrines are the same. The ordinary
+observer can see the largeness, sympathy, inclusiveness,
+devotion to actual needs. But the ordinary
+observer cannot see the real basis of faith in human
+nature; the manifestation of the Divine Being in the
+highest possibilities of man; the trust in a living,
+active, communicating God.</p>
+
+<p>These are cardinal points, and must be insisted
+on. The inherent depravity of man; his essential
+corruption; his absolute inability to receive any portion
+of the divine life, is naturally repudiated. But
+his feebleness, crudeness, imperfection, his dearth
+and deficiency, his sensuality, hardness, love of material
+things, is insisted on, and cannot be exaggerated.
+Still there is a germ of the divine nature in him, a
+spark of the divine flame which can be kindled.
+The familiar language of Longfellow expresses this
+idea exactly:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who have faith in God and Nature,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who believe that in all ages<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Every human heart is human,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That in even savage bosoms<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There are longings, yearnings, strivings<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For the good they comprehend not,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That the feeble hands and helpless,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Groping blindly in the darkness,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Touch God's right hand in that darkness<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And are lifted up and strengthened:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Listen to this simple story."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>To this nature, thus receptive, God addresses
+Himself. He is the Father, the absolute Love, and
+his desire is to lead men upward towards the height<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+of divine perfection. In all ages, in every way, he
+has been trying to do this; and all nature, all art,
+all literature is full of this affection for his child.
+Even the Pagan myths express this striving of God
+with man. The existence of what we call evil is
+assumed, but there is no attempt to explain it or
+theorize about it or reconcile it with any mode of
+philosophy. To us it may be simply the divine effort
+to startle the soul into a consciousness of itself.
+Even the worst forms of doubt, of denial, of atheism
+may be parts of this divine effort; even men like
+Strauss and Feuerbach may be witnesses for truth, because
+they drive men back in horror from the pit of
+disbelief, and compel them to take refuge through
+tears and prayers in the supreme love. Of absolute
+evil we cannot be sure that there is any; so many
+ways must the infinite spirit have to awaken men to
+a sense of their own destiny.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot better convey my thought than by recounting
+the essence of two sermons that I heard
+some years ago from eminent preachers in different
+American cities; the first was on the death of
+Charles Darwin. After a very ornate service, the
+minister dwelt enthusiastically on the merits of
+Darwin as a philosopher, described his system, and
+declared that his own belief in the Deity of Christ,
+was confirmed in large measure by Darwin's theory
+of the Selection of the Fittest. The statement was
+startling at first, for the two doctrines seemed to
+point in opposite directions, but the speaker probably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+meant that the Christ expressed all the potentialities
+of human nature; that he was the Fittest;
+not a miracle, not an exception to humanity, but the
+perfection of man; in other words, a divine person.
+The other sermon turned on the murder of Sisera
+(Judges iv, 18), as contrasted with a statement in the
+first epistle of John (iv, 8), "God is love." The rector
+spoke of the assassination of Sisera in terms of extreme
+abhorrence; called it treacherous, cruel, base,
+and then said: "See what progress the human mind
+has made from this period to that when John was
+written." The common impression is that the <i>human</i>
+mind had nothing to do with it, it being the <i>divine</i>
+mind that was alone in question. But what the
+preacher meant was evidently this,&mdash;either that the
+divine mind dropped thoughts into the human mind
+as fast as they could be appreciated, or that the
+human mind, imperfect in development, apprehended
+all that it could of the perfect mind. Whichever
+case we assume, the integrity of the divine mind is
+secured, and at the same time the growth of the
+human.</p>
+
+<p>At this point, the conception of the Broad Churchman's
+idea of the inspiration of the Scripture must
+be dwelt upon, for the doctrine is very remarkable,
+and throws a flood of light upon his whole conception
+of the aim and purpose of Christianity. According
+to the common notion, the Bible is literally
+the word of God, and men have nothing to do but
+to submit themselves to its authority. They must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+suppress all natural desires, all dictates of their
+moral sense, to this supreme standard of truth and
+rectitude. According to this notion, the whole of
+man, as a thoroughly corrupted being, is <i>subject</i>, in
+obedience to this law. The second theory, adopted
+by the American Broad Churchman, holds that the
+Bible <i>contains</i> the word of God; and this implies
+that there may be a part of the Bible that is not the
+word of God, and opens the way to an indefinite
+amount of criticism, speculation, and doubt. The
+English Broad Churchman holds, as I understand it,
+the common doctrine, but with this immense difference.
+That whereas, according to the common notion,
+the Bible is the word of God, he maintains that
+the whole object of the Bible is to educate and uplift
+man. The word is a minister to human needs.
+Through it, God is trying in various ways, by
+history, biography, tale, and song, to warn, persuade,
+teach, inspire the human soul. Sometimes he can
+do nothing but startle, shame, provoke; and the
+very things we find fault with may be designed
+for moral education. The Bible, itself, encourages
+this idea. Does not Paul preach reconciliation?
+Does not John speak of God as love? God hardened
+the heart of Pharaoh in order that he might
+show that He was stronger than Pharaoh. Jacob was
+not altogether a lovely character, but the Lord wrestled
+with him and lamed him, thus showing his own
+disapproval of the patriarch's temper. David was a
+seducer, adulterer, and murderer, but he <i>repented</i>, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+ashamed, was sorrowful, and this repentance made
+him a man after God's own heart. It was not that
+God <i>approved</i> of his conduct, but that he wanted to
+make us <i>disapprove</i> of it. In like manner Luther
+based his faith on the Bible, because it convicted
+him of sin, and drove him to seek refuge for himself
+in Christ. The Church as an organization has always
+this one purpose in view&mdash;to minister to the soul
+of man. The "Articles" fairly throbbed with this
+conception. The outrage committed by the "Evangelicals,"
+men who insist upon everlasting punishment
+and talk of doom, consists in their overlooking
+this divine purpose towards humanity.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>doctrines</i> of the Church&mdash;the Deity of Christ,
+the Incarnation, the Resurrection, the Ascension&mdash;bear
+this testimony, and are inexplicable without it.
+But these doctrines simply convey one thought.
+The Christ must be God, otherwise he could not
+exemplify the perfect love; he must be Incarnate,
+otherwise he could not mingle with men. His Resurrection
+teaches his absolute triumph over death; his
+Ascension is a pledge of his union with God and his
+perpetual intercourse with God's children.</p>
+
+<p>The two <i>rites</i>, Baptism and Communion, give the
+same idea. Baptism imports a recognition of the duty
+to lead a Christian life; and Communion imports
+a wish, on the part of all who partake of it, to enter
+into the privilege of a perfect harmony with Christ.
+None of these points are reached by criticism, or any
+array of texts, though passages may be cited in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+confirmation of them. But the proof is derived from
+experience, from the felt need of enlightenment and
+inspiration, from prayer and the yearning after eternal
+life. No doubt it is taken for granted that neither
+the Bible nor the Church expresses the <i>whole</i> word
+of God. The word is as large as the divine love,
+and this is infinite. The complete word of God
+includes all nature, all history, and all life.</p>
+
+<p>It will be understood that the Broad Church notion
+is only a theory and rests entirely on its reasonableness.
+It is simply a modification of Episcopalianism,
+and none but an Episcopalian would be likely
+to adopt it. Its interest for us consists in its <i>human</i>
+character, in its earnestness for social reform, in its
+passionate desire to make conscience and justice and
+freedom of the Spirit supreme in all human affairs.
+It is essentially an ethical system with an ecclesiastical
+addition and a heavenly purpose.</p>
+
+<p>There is certainly a great difference between the
+Broad Church in America and the Broad Church in
+England; there are no Thirty-Nine Articles in this
+country; there is no National Church. The Broad
+Churchman here is still a Churchman, but the system
+is much more elastic and much more intellectual.
+The Church is to him also a divine institution, but
+not a final establishment; and it becomes divine by
+virtue of its helpfulness in imparting the divine life
+and its power of human service. The sacraments
+have become symbols, venerable from their antiquity,
+but more venerable from their use. The Broad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+Churchman is an orthodox believer, but he accepts
+only the simplest creeds, and he interprets them in
+accordance with the rational principles of thought,
+and with his fundamental conception of Christianity,
+holding not to the written letter, but to the real
+meaning of the Confession. This meaning is, he
+maintains, easily reconcilable with the idea that all
+revelation is made to a living mind,&mdash;whether that
+of a race or an individual,&mdash;and that the Bible is
+merely the record of it. No <i>book</i>, in his estimation, can
+be inspired. This, coupled with a belief in the unlimited
+progress of the natural conscience, brings the
+system within the category of modern arrangements.</p>
+
+<p>The idea that man is <i>developed</i> into the divine
+life, not <i>converted</i> to it, seems to be the heart of the
+system. The writings of F. D. Maurice are full of
+it. He said that he did not know what the Broad
+Church was, and disclaimed any position in it; yet
+he is its reputed father, and certainly held its cardinal
+doctrine. This was the soul of his teaching;
+this dictated his likes and his dislikes; this animated
+his dissent from the Evangelicals on the one hand
+and the Rationalists on the other; this made him
+cling to the "Articles"; this made him love the
+Church. I cannot better convey my notion of the
+Broad Churchman's credence than by quoting some
+passages from Maurice:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I think that the <i>ground-work of this thought</i> and this
+humanity <i>is laid bare</i> in the Thirty-nine Articles;
+<i>that for</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+<i>that ground-work</i> [namely, the living God, the living Word] all
+our different schools are trying to produce feeble and crumbling
+substitutes; that we must recur to it if we would pass
+the narrow dimensions of Calvinism, Anglicanism, Romanism;
+if we would learn what a message we have for Jews, Mahometans,
+Brahmins, Buddhists, for all the nations of the earth, as
+well as our poor people at home.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot doubt that this belief [the confession of a God,
+who was, and is, and is to come] is latent in every man now;
+that we are all living, moving, having our being in this God,
+and that He does reveal Himself to His creatures gradually,
+before He is revealed in His fulness of glory.</p>
+
+<p>I do perceive that if I have any work in the world, it is to
+bear witness of this name [the name of the Father, the Son,
+and the Holy Ghost], not as expressing certain relations, however
+profound, in the divine nature, but as the underground
+of all fellowship among men and angels, as that which will at
+last bind all into one, satisfying all the craving of the reason
+as well as of the heart, meeting the desires and intuitions that
+are scattered through all the religions of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The Church must either fulfil its witness of the redemption
+for mankind or be cut off. And I cannot help thinking
+that a time is at hand when we shall awaken to this conviction,
+and when we shall perceive that what we call our individual
+salvation means nothing, and that our faith in it becomes
+untenable when we separate it from the salvation which Christ
+wrought out for the world by His incarnation and sacrifice,
+resurrection and ascension.</p>
+
+<p>He has been pleased to reveal to me in His Son the
+brightness of His glory, His absolute love. On that point I
+have a right to be certain; he who says I have not, rejects the
+Bible and disbelieves the incarnation of the Lord. I will not
+give up an inch of this ground; it is a matter of life and
+death.</p>
+
+<p>By baptism we claim the position which Christ has claimed
+for all mankind.... More and more I am led to ask<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+myself what a Gospel to mankind must be, whether it must
+not have some other ground than the fall of Adam and the
+sinful nature of man.... No doctrine can be so at
+variance as this, with the notion that it is a Gospel which
+men have need of, and in their inmost hearts are craving for.</p></div>
+
+<p>Why is not this system sufficient? Simply because
+the claim that Christ is God, does not seem made
+out to severely critical minds. Such as these must
+hold even the Broad Church to be a mythology,
+beautiful and innocent, but still a mythology.
+The word "mythology" implies no disparagement.
+A mythology is simply the poetical form of an idea,
+and takes its character from the nature of the ideas
+it represents. The pagan mythology is on this
+account very different from the Christian, and a
+mythology that has universal love as its basis may
+well be called innocent and beautiful. To the
+doctrine of trinity, philosophically considered, even
+Unitarian scholars make no objection. What they
+cannot accept is the deity of Jesus as an historical
+person. The Christ is not, in their opinion, an
+historical person, but a doctrine, not identical with
+the man of the New Testament. The Divine Being
+has never, in their estimation, appeared on earth.
+They only who can put aside criticism, can suppress
+it, can regard it but as one of many manifestations
+of mind, can fix their eyes on a church for society at
+large and not for individuals, will be likely to accept
+it, and they will on the ground that it is altogether
+human, a church for mankind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The last phase in the development of the moral
+sentiment is represented by the "Ethical Societies."
+It is natural that the origin of these should be
+Jewish, for the Jews are unencumbered by the mysteries
+of the Christian theology; their genius is for
+social organization, and the moral element is very
+large in their religion. It is natural, too, that the
+system should be purer here than in England. Some
+of the members of the "Cambridge Ethical Society"
+are members of the Church of England, and have to
+be warned not to set themselves needlessly in opposition
+to the work of the Christian churches. The
+"Edinburgh Ethical Club" is mainly a debating
+society. In America it is usual to have a lecturer,
+and stated services on Sunday. But these services are
+very simple, nay, even bare; there is no prayer, and no
+scripture, no architecture or art or poetry; but there is
+an intense earnestness, nay, enthusiasm, for social reform.
+There are kindergartens for the poor children
+of the streets, there are classes for the untaught,
+libraries for the workingmen, plans for better lodging
+and employment for the families of artisans. There is
+no fixed doctrine in regard to the origin of the moral
+sentiments, lest any should be alienated; the object
+being to combine all who have at heart the moral
+interests of mankind. The peculiarity of these societies
+is not so much that they lay emphasis on the
+moral as distinct from the spiritual interests, or aim
+to break down the dividing line between Religion
+and Ethics, as it is that they rest upon conscience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+as the supreme authority, that they assume its practical
+function, build upon it as the one and only thing
+absolutely known. There is no pretence of following,
+even at a distance, the charities of the old
+churches with their vast funds, their immense organizations,
+their heaps of tracts, their legions of missionaries,
+all employed in calling unbelievers into
+the fold. The object is to elevate all mankind by
+appealing to their moral instincts, on the ground of
+their inherent ability to rise in the scale of being.</p>
+
+<p>To make their position clear let me quote the
+words of the founder of these societies, contained in
+an article entitled "The Freedom of Ethical Fellowship,"
+in the first number of the <i>International
+Journal of Ethics</i>:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It is the aim of the Ethical Societies to extend the area of
+moral co-operation so as to include a part, at least, of the
+inner moral life; to unite men of divers opinions and beliefs
+in the common endeavor to explore the field of duty; to gain
+clearer perceptions of right and wrong; to study with thoroughgoing
+zeal the practical problems of social, political, and
+individual ethics, and to embody the new insight in manners
+and institutions....</p>
+
+<p>It would be a wrong and a hindrance to the further extension
+of truth to raise above our opinions the superstructure of
+a social institution. For institutions in their nature are conservative;
+they dare not, without imperilling their stability,
+permit a too frequent inspection or alteration of their foundations....
+The subject part of mankind, in most places,
+might, with Egyptian bondage expect Egyptian darkness, were
+not the candle of the Lord set up by himself in men's minds,
+which it is impossible for the breath or power of man wholly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+to extinguish. It is to this "candle of the Lord set up in
+men's minds" that we look for illumination. It is in the light
+which it sheds that we would read the problems of conduct
+and teach others to read them. We appeal directly to
+the conscience of the present age, and of the civilized portion
+of mankind. There remains as a residue a common deposit
+of moral truth, a common stock of moral judgments, which
+we may call the common conscience. It is upon this common
+conscience that we build.... The contents of the common
+conscience we would clarify and classify, to the end that
+they may become the conscious possession of all classes; and
+in order to enrich and enlarge the conscience, the method we
+would follow is to begin with cases in which the moral judgment
+is already clear, the moral rule already accepted; and
+to show that the same rule, the same judgment, applies to other
+cases, which, because of their greater complexity, are less
+transparent to the mental eye....</p>
+
+<p>And here it may be appropriate to introduce a few reflections
+on the relations of moral practice to ethical theory in
+religious belief. To many it will appear that the logic of our
+position must lead us to underestimate the value of philosophical
+and religious doctrines in connection with morality, and
+that, having excluded this from our basis of fellowship, we
+shall inevitably drift into a crude empiricism. I may be permitted
+to say that precisely the opposite is at least our aim, and
+that among the objects we propose to ourselves, none are
+dearer than the advancement of ethical theory and the
+upbuilding of religious conviction. The Ethical Society is
+a society of persons who are bent on being taught clearer
+perceptions of right and wrong, and being shown how to
+improve conduct. At least, let us hasten to add, the ideal
+of the society is that of a body of men who shall have this
+bent. Is it vain to hope that there will in time arise those who
+will render them the service they require....</p>
+
+<p>It is safe to say that every step forward in religion was due
+to a quickening of the moral impulses; that moral progress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+is the condition of religious progress; that the good life is the
+soil out of which the religious life grows. The truths of religion
+are chiefly two,&mdash;that there is a reality other than that of
+the senses, and that the ultimate reality in things is, in a sense
+transcending our comprehension, akin to the moral nature of
+men. But how shall we acquaint ourselves with this super-sensible?
+The ladder of science does not reach so far. And
+the utmost stretch of the speculative reason cannot attain to
+more than the abstract postulate of an infinite, which, however,
+is void of the essential attributes of divinity. Only the
+testimony of the moral life can support a vital conviction of
+this sort....</p>
+
+<p>The Ethical Society is friendly to genuine religion anywhere
+and everywhere, because it vitalizes religious doctrines
+by pouring into them the contents of spiritual meaning....
+A new moral earnestness must precede the rise of larger religious
+ideals; for the new religious synthesis which many long
+for, will not be a fabrication, but a growth. It will not steal
+upon us as a thief in the night, or burst upon us as lightning
+from the sky, but will come in time as a result of the gradual,
+moral evolution of modern society, as the expression of higher
+moral aspirations, and a response to deeper moral needs.</p></div>
+
+<p>In his famous essay on "Worship," Emerson says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>There will be a new church founded on moral science, at
+first cold and naked, a babe in a manger again, the algebra
+and mathematics of ethical law, the church of men to come,
+without shawm or psaltery or sackbut; but it will have heaven
+and earth for its beams and rafters; science for symbol and
+illustration; it will fast enough gather beauty, music, picture,
+poetry.</p></div>
+
+<p>Is this the church that Emerson predicted? It
+looks like it. Already we seem to hear the shawms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+and sackbuts. Already there are desires after a
+more rich and melodious administration.</p>
+
+<p>The last number of the <i>International Journal of
+Ethics</i> contains two articles: one on "The Inner
+Life in Relation to Morality," the other on "The
+Ethics of Doubt," which suggest a transcendental
+ground for moral beliefs; and they who dissent from
+this position surround <i>action</i> with an ideal solemnity.
+At all events it is something to see, even at
+a distance, a city that hath foundations.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XVI.<br />
+
+THE RELIGIOUS FUTURE OF AMERICA.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the <i>Revue des Deux Mondes</i> of October 15,
+1860, M. Renan wrote a remarkable article on the
+"Future of Religion in Modern Society." This
+paper of course dealt largely with questions that
+were interesting at that time, but it also contains
+very acute observations on the whole subject, which
+are of universal concern. His conclusions are that
+neither Judaism nor Romanism nor the established
+forms of Protestantism will constitute the coming
+faith, which must be spiritual (that is, free of space
+and time), undogmatical, and enfranchised. "The
+religious question," he says, "finds its solution in
+liberty.... The liberal principle pre-eminently
+is that man has a soul, that he is to be reached only
+through the soul, that nothing is of value save as it
+effects a change in the soul. An inflexible justice,
+granting with inexorable firmness liberty to all, even
+to those who, were they masters, would refuse it to
+their adversaries, is the only issue that reason discovers
+for the grave problems raised in our time."
+This essay, along with that of Emile de Laveleye of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+Liège in Belgium, on the "Religious Future of Civilized
+Communities," written in 1876, sums up the
+whole question. It only remains to apply their principles
+to America.</p>
+
+<p>Many dread the prevalence of Roman Catholicism.
+I confess I never could share in that apprehension.
+For if there is anything certain it is the
+unchangeableness of the lines of division that separate
+the three great regions of the earth, each having
+its own faith. There is the Greek Church, which
+rules in Asia; the Latin Church, which is confined
+to the Latin races, and is strongest in Southern Italy,
+where the people are most ignorant and supine; and
+the Protestant Church, which prevails in Northern
+Europe among the Germanic nations. As Renan
+says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Nothing will come of the mutual struggle of the three Christian
+families; their equilibrium is as well assured as that of
+the three great races which share between them the world;
+their separation will secure the future against the excessive
+predominance of a single religious power, just as the division
+of Europe must forever prevent the return of that <i>orbis
+romanus</i>, that closed circle, which allowed no possible escape
+from the tyranny that unity has engendered.</p></div>
+
+<p>Moreover, the Roman Catholic faith is essentially
+<i>Italian</i>, and as such can have no permanent influence
+in Germany, England, or America. The great popes
+of the Middle Ages, whose genius raised the papacy to
+power and splendor, were Italians. Italy, until a few
+years ago, was isolated; not a great political power, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+it is now, among other powers of Europe, nor drawn
+by political affiliations into the schemes of other
+dominions. Besides, the Catholic Church had the
+advantages of the Italian genius for organization,
+command, wisdom in practical affairs. Then, too, it
+had the immense benefit of the old Roman treasures
+of art, which gave a glory to the system. These
+considerations alone would make it impossible that
+Romanism, in its foreign form, should ever become
+the religion of the United States. There may be
+another kind of ecclesiasticism, but without the ancient
+authority; an ecclesiasticism which stands for
+pomp, ornament, display, beauty, but not for anything
+more. There is evidence that every form of
+religion here is disposed to take on elements of decoration,&mdash;architecture,
+music, stained glass, drapery,
+pictures, and monuments; but this is only a sign of
+increasing wealth, not of increasing subjection.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to all this, the <i>genius</i> of the American
+people is strongly against anything like submission
+to authority. The love of liberty is exceedingly
+powerful. It is claimed that Romanism is not committed
+to any form of government, that it is as
+favorable to republican institutions as to monarchical;
+but this is not the opinion of Renan, who was born
+and trained in the church, and who is therefore
+entitled to speak with knowledge; nor is it the opinion
+of other scholars, Martineau for instance, who
+says in his article on the "Battle of the Churches"
+(<i>Westminster Review</i>, January, 1851):<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>We are convinced it cannot occupy the scope which English
+traditions and English usage have secured; that every step it
+may make is an encroachment upon wholesome liberty; that
+it is innocent only where it is insignificant, and where it is
+ascendant will neither part with power nor use it well, and that
+it must needs raise to the highest pitch the common vice of
+tyranny and democracy,&mdash;the relentless crushing of minorities.</p></div>
+
+<p>But whether this charge of absolutism be just or
+not, Romanism has been so long associated as a polity
+with monarchical governments that it has contracted
+a habit of domineering, and the people can never be
+persuaded that the papacy is democratic in its constitution.</p>
+
+<p>Americans are very suspicious, too, of any interference
+on the part of the government. If a system
+demands an army, a palace, lands, it must pay for
+them out of its own private means. A generation
+or more ago it was possible for an administration
+to give for a merely nominal sum, in the very heart
+of a large city, great estates to one denomination.
+This is possible no longer. Every sect must vindicate
+itself, and stand on its own feet; this alone
+would make it impossible for a church so poor as
+the Catholic to establish itself in this country on
+any terms of supremacy.</p>
+
+<p>The desire for change which is inherent in the
+American mind must also prove fatal in the end to
+any claim of absolute stability. Protestantism is
+therefore better for Americans than Romanism is,
+because it is more portable, more various, more accommodating
+to popular tastes and inclinations.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There is no disposition to undervalue the work of
+the Catholic Church. Its great saints, its heroic
+martyrs, its stupendous missions, its enormous philanthropy,
+its influence in educating and controlling
+masses of people, cannot be exaggerated; and still
+it is destined to wield an immense influence as a
+spiritual power over the human race; but it never
+again can be the absolute system it once was. However
+it may commend itself to certain classes in our
+population, it must always be simply one department
+in the universal church.</p>
+
+<p>But it will be said that the Catholic Church may
+<i>accommodate</i> itself to republican institutions. M.
+Renan doubts whether any radical change can be
+made. He says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Catholicism, persuaded that it works for the truth, will always
+endeavor to enlist the state in its defence or its spread....
+Catholicism is, in fact, the believer's country, far
+more than is the land of his birth. The stronger a religion
+is, the more effective it is in this way.... More and
+more have Catholics been brought to think that they derive
+life and salvation from Rome. It is especially worth remarking
+that the new Catholic conquests exhibit the most sensitiveness
+on this point. The old provincial Catholic, whose
+faith belonged to the soil, has less need of the Pope, and is
+much less alarmed at the storms that menace him, than the
+new Catholics, who are coming fresh to Catholicism, and regard
+the Pope, after the new system, as the author and defender
+of their faith.... Catholicism has been seduced
+into becoming a religion essentially political. The Pope becomes
+the actual sovereign of the church.</p></div>
+
+<p>But supposing that such an alteration is possible,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+that the church can abase its pretensions to
+supremacy over all other sects, that Romanism
+simply melts into our society,&mdash;in this case, the
+papacy, as usually understood, becomes simply a
+form of church government like Presbyterianism or
+Congregationalism or Episcopacy; Catholicism becomes
+a purely spiritual faith, and, as such, is not
+only harmless but beneficent.</p>
+
+<p>The religion, therefore, of America cannot be ecclesiastical;
+neither can it be dogmatic. I was on
+the point of saying <i>theological</i>; but there is a great
+difference between theological and dogmatical. Dogmatism
+is theology raised to power. Theology there
+always must be; some account of the Supreme
+Power in the world; some report of the contents
+of the Divine Mind. The present indifference to
+theology is hardly a good sign, unless it be an indifference
+to theology as usually regarded&mdash;that is,
+to the old systems of theology. The future religion,
+for this reason, cannot be Protestantism. For Protestantism
+is essentially dogmatical. It claims superiority
+to Romanism on the one hand and to infidelity
+on the other. Furthermore, it is identified
+with the Bible. Now, modern scientific criticism
+has so riddled the Bible, that it no longer can serve
+as a foundation. And this foundation being taken
+away, Protestantism must lose its corner-stone, and
+rest entirely on a rational basis. Likewise, Protestantism
+encourages sectarianism. It exists, in fact,
+only in numerous parties, each jealous of the rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+and seeking to build up its own establishment without
+regard to the well-being of opposing bodies.
+There is a dream of unity amid all this diversity.
+But such unity can be gained only by the sacrifice
+of the very peculiarity of division, and the admission
+of certain things which all have in common;
+and such a reconciliation, besides the tyranny it engenders,
+cannot be desired, as it would be fatal to all
+activity. Sectarianism itself, apart from the "hatred,
+malice, and uncharitableness" which accompany it,
+may not of necessity be an evil; but sectarianism as
+it exists now is an evil of very great moment, and
+yet, without something of this alienation between
+sects Protestantism would decline.</p>
+
+<p>Is Unitarianism then to be the coming religion?
+I cannot think so. Unitarianism is but a form of
+Protestantism; the most attenuated form. It is
+committed to the Bible; held to it indeed by a very
+fine thread, but still held to it. No doubt it has
+gained greatly in the last years. The annual circulation
+of its tracts has risen in twenty-five or thirty
+years from fifteen thousand to three hundred thousand
+copies. A quarter of a century ago there was
+but one Unitarian church on the Pacific coast, now
+there are eighteen. A generation since it had, in the
+whole region from the Alleghanies to the Rocky
+Mountains, only fourteen churches, now there are
+ninety; and in the same period, sixty-three new societies
+have come into being in the New England
+and Middle States. Still, as compared with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+great sects, it is very small, and never can be their
+rival. And this because, however interesting and
+precious it may be to some people, it lacks, and must
+ever lack, owing to its critical character, the elements
+of a great religion, the passionateness that charms
+the people, and the moral enthusiasm that catches
+up the few men of genius. The period of "pale
+negations" is past; but in proportion as the system
+becomes positive it tends more and more towards the
+principle that animates the ethical societies, namely,
+its supreme devotion to the moral law. Thus it
+stands at the beginning, not at the end, of the line
+of advance, and has all the work of building up to
+do, before it can grow in general influence.</p>
+
+<p>No, the religion of the future in America must be
+of the spirit; not merely as being independent of
+form and dogma, but as cherishing a great hope for
+the soul, and a great aspiration after perfection. No
+doubt every spirit must have a form of some kind,
+but it need not be a fixed, established, dominant
+imposition. M. Renan touched the matter exactly
+when commenting on the interview of Jesus with
+the woman of Samaria: "Woman, the hour is coming
+and now is, when men shall worship neither on this
+mountain nor at Jerusalem, but when the true worshippers
+shall worship the Father in spirit and in
+truth." Renan says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>When the Christ pronounced this word, he became really a
+Son of God, and for the first time spoke the word upon which
+eternal religion shall repose. He founded the worship without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+date, without country, which shall endure to the end of
+time. He created a heaven of pure souls, where one finds
+what one asks in vain for on the earth, the perfect nobleness
+of the children of God, absolute purity, total abstraction from
+the impurities of the world, the liberty which has its complete
+amplitude only in the world of thought.... The love of God
+conceived as the type of all perfection, the love of man, charity,
+his whole doctrine is reduced to this; nothing can be less
+theological, less sacerdotal, nothing more philosophical, more
+profound, or more simple.</p></div>
+
+<p>The coming religion must also be humane and
+social. Intellectual it must certainly be, but it must,
+too, be emotional and adoring. There are three implications
+in it&mdash;a spiritual nature in man, a living
+power in the universe, an eternal life of progress
+and attainment, and these are assured only by
+reason.</p>
+
+<p>The coming religion, we may add, must be Christian
+in name, because Christianity as an ideal faith
+has worked itself into our common life. It is the
+soul of our laws, of our customs, of our institutions.
+All assume its authority; all respect its sanction.
+The great thinkers of the world conspire in thinking
+so. Thus Goethe says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Let intellectual culture progress; let natural science extend
+our knowledge; let the human mind grow; it will never outstrip
+the grandeur of Christianity, nor its moral culture.</p></div>
+
+<p>Strauss, in his essay on "The Transient and Permanent
+in Christianity," declares that humanity
+never will be without religion; and Laveleye says:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It is Christianity which has shed abroad in the world the
+idea of fellowship, from which issue the aspirations after
+equality which threaten the actual social order; it is also the
+influence of Christianity which arrests the explosion of this
+subversive force, and its principles, better comprised and
+better applied, will bring back by degrees peace in society.</p></div>
+
+<p>Ours is a scientific age. There is a general demand
+for knowledge, a desire for demonstrated
+truth. Many will believe nothing that they cannot
+see with their eyes. In this sense, and in this sense
+alone, it is true that facts count for nothing in the
+domain of religion. But there are facts of the inner
+world that are quite as important as any facts in the
+outer world,&mdash;facts of the imagination; facts of love;
+facts of faith. Nothing is truer than that we are
+saved by hope. Science has enlarged the world; has
+beautified it; has made it look orderly, harmonious,
+poetic; but the realm of the known is very small indeed
+as compared with the realm of the unknown,
+and the more we discover, the more we find that there
+is to discover. The realm of the inner world is immensely
+large; and thousands of years must elapse
+before we discover its contents, if we ever do. The
+language of James Martineau is as true to-day as
+it was when the words were spoken, more than fifty
+years ago:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Until we touch upon the mysterious, we are not in contact
+with religion; nor are any objects reverently regarded by us,
+except such as, from their nature or their vastness, are felt to
+transcend our comprehension.... The station which
+the soul occupies when its devout affections are awakened, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+always this; on the twilight between immeasurable darkness
+and refreshing light; on the confines between the seen and
+the unseen; where a little is discerned and an infinitude concealed;
+where a few distinct conceptions stand in confessed
+inadequacy, as symbols of ineffable realities.... And if
+this be true, the sense of what we do not know is as essential
+to our religion as the impression of what we do know: the
+thought of the boundless, the incomprehensible, must blend
+in our mind with the perception of the clear and true: the
+little knowledge we have must be clung to as the margin of
+an invisible immensity; and all our positive ideas be regarded
+as the mere float to show the surface of the infinite deep.</p></div>
+
+<p>Shall I say that some form of theism will be the
+religion of America in the future? Not the literal
+theism of a generation or more ago, with its individual
+God, its contriving Providence, its supplicatory
+prayer, its future of retribution; nor yet the
+theism of Theodore Parker, of an infinite God revealed
+in consciousness, "the Being, infinitely powerful,
+infinitely wise, infinitely just, infinitely loving,
+and infinitely holy." It well may resemble the system
+described by Francis W. Newman in his book
+called "Theism," published in London in 1858. In
+this work he describes a religion based on conscience,
+without regard to any form of professed faith, yet
+covering in its theory and practice the whole region
+of ideal ethics. Different minds approach the problem
+from different directions. Mr. F. E. Abbot
+("Scientific Theism," 1885) appeals to science; Josiah
+Royce printed a volume in 1885 entitled "The Religious
+Aspect of Philosophy," wherein he pursues the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+line of sympathetic thought; James Martineau in
+his "Study of Religion" (1888), bases his system
+on the moral sense; but all three arrive at the same
+point&mdash;a supreme mind in creation.</p>
+
+<p>We must be careful not to confound Theism
+with Deism, for though both are the same word&mdash;one
+Greek and one Latin&mdash;and mean the same
+thing, yet they stand for entirely different conceptions.
+Deism is a purely negative system, weighed
+down with denials. It is content when it has rejected
+what it calls all supernatural adjuncts&mdash;miracles,
+revelations, an inspired Scripture. Its face is
+set towards the past, not toward the future, and it is
+simply what is left of the old systems of belief, having
+no positive philosophy of its own. But Theism
+is a positive, fresh, original faith. It gazes forward,
+and builds on the natural consciousness of man,
+making no criticism on previous modes of belief.
+It is full of hope and enthusiasm, looking towards
+something that is before it, not scorning but believing.
+All that it needs in order to become a
+popular faith is a poetical element, something imaginative,
+symbolical, picturesque. The intellectual
+requirements it already possesses. It is affirmative;
+it is universal.</p>
+
+<p>Neither must this kind of theism be identified
+with natural religion, unless natural religion be
+made to comprehend facts of the inner as well as
+the outer world&mdash;facts of psychology as well as
+of physiology; facts of mind as well as of body.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+Such a theism is not a mere reminiscence, either, of
+an ancient faith; for every form of mediatorial religion,
+however modified, simplified, "enlightened,"
+as it is called, leaves something of its temper behind
+it. The intellect is haunted by old modes of truth;
+the heart lingers around the ancient places of reverence;
+the conscience refers to some antique authority;
+the soul cannot pray except in the language of
+a pater-noster or a psalm. A scent as of roses may
+hang round the human mind; but the roses will be
+grown in some garden of the East, not in ours. Such
+a theism as I am thinking of will be grounded in
+Ethical Law. You may call it "Christian," if you
+will, because the word <i>Christian</i> expresses the highest
+form of the moral sentiment, and carries a supreme
+authority to the human conscience; but on the
+<i>human conscience</i> it must rest. It will be a noble,
+pure faith, giving a welcome to all knowledge,
+bright with anticipation, warm with enthusiasm.
+As John Weiss has said so much better than I
+can what I mean, I will quote a passage from him.
+It occurs in "American Religion" (page 67):</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Cannot the power which sustains, without budging from the
+spot, my personal vitality, sustain and nourish the immediate
+conscience of which that vitality makes me aware? I cannot
+hurt my health, nor tell a lie, nor commit a fraud, nor strike
+my brother, nor leave the beggar in the ditch, nor parade my
+superiorities, without knowing it by direct intimation. My
+pains are its rebukes, my delights its sympathies, my hopes its
+suggestions, my sacrifices its impost, my heavenly longings its
+apology for haunting me forever. There is a power in which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+I live and move and have my being, in which I eat, drink,
+breathe, sleep, wake, love and hate, marry, and protect a home.
+Is it incapable of sustaining all my functions of true religion
+on the spot as well as these? Do I have these without a
+mediator, and must I travel for the rest? When I undertake
+to breathe by tradition it will be time for me to get a sense of
+God in the same way.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Dignity of Human Nature must be our watchword;
+of human <i>nature</i>, not of human <i>character</i>.
+For human <i>nature</i> denotes the <i>capacities</i> of man,
+what he <i>ought</i> to be and <i>shall</i> be, not what he <i>is</i>.
+Human character expresses only the undeveloped
+condition of man, and is therefore not to be taken as
+a final stand. This doctrine does not belong to a
+sect or a church, but to all mankind. It assumes an
+entirely new conception of the basis of religious
+faith; it makes a new beginning; it starts a new
+system; it exactly reverses the ancient order of
+thought, and builds up from a completely original
+foundation.</p>
+
+<p>The weightiest objections proceed from the undeveloped
+character of man. For example, the common
+saying that conscience is crude, confused, either does
+not exist at all, or erects inconsistent standards of
+right and wrong. But if a high criterion of morality
+is established, as it is, it has an educating and sustaining
+power. Every saint attests it; all the bibles
+of the world voice it; revelation owes to it its authority.
+Great souls do but raise the common level
+on which common souls tread; as the discovery of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+the ancient pavements in the Forum at Rome opens
+to ordinary feet the way that statesmen and heroes
+went. When I was in Salem, a young man who was
+very much addicted to drink, being remonstrated
+with, urged that he could not help it, that he was
+born so, just as another was born to praise and pray.
+His appetite for ardent spirits was just as natural to
+him as the preacher's appetite for spiritual things.
+His argument could not be refuted, but I always
+thought that in his hours of reflection, if he had any,
+he must have despised himself. At all events, the
+outside observer would class him with a lower order
+of humanity; the fixed rule of conscience being a
+universal judge.</p>
+
+<p>Again, the slowness of moral advance is flung in
+our teeth; the stubbornness of vice and evil. But
+we must give time for improvement and cultivation.
+All good things must wait&mdash;coal, petroleum, gas,
+electricity; the fertilizing qualities of guano were
+known and announced a full generation before the
+industrial world acted on the discovery; now millions
+of dollars are made by its importation. We
+are so used to thinking of the globe as round, and of
+men as living at the antipodes just as we live here,
+that we cannot believe that once it was deemed impossible
+for human creatures to live with their heads
+downward and their feet upward, and to walk like
+flies upon a ceiling. None but hopelessly crazy or
+foolish people were supposed to entertain such a
+notion. So the time will come when it shall be as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+natural for men to do right as to breathe; when all
+kinds of injustice, cruelty, and tyranny will be instinctively
+abandoned. When that time does come,
+men will be unable to believe that the ages ever
+were when men could make brutes of themselves or
+brutally treat each other. An eminent divine, commenting
+on a passage in Matthew, xviii., 15&mdash;"Moreover,
+if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go
+and tell him his fault between him and thee alone;
+if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother.
+But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or
+two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses
+every word may be established. And if he shall
+neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he
+neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as a
+heathen man and a publican,"&mdash;said: "This is equivalent
+to saying, 'You must begin all over again;
+must start fresh from the beginning.'" This was
+very bad exegesis, but it was excellent morality;
+even the "heathen man and the publican" holds in
+his bosom all the possibilities of human nature; and
+we are bound to believe that in time the like of him
+may be saintly.</p>
+
+<p>The decline of faith in religion, the passion for
+material things&mdash;money, fame, luxury,&mdash;is often cited
+as a proof that man is going downward; but may
+not this be a simple return to honesty and a rudimental
+integrity; a disposition to depend on one's
+self, and not on any mediator or redeemer? Let us
+build then in hope and faith, for, after all, these are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+the great architects. A listener to an eminent divine
+once said that when he got up to speak a radiance
+seemed to grow round his head; the great walls of a
+temple seemed to rise above him; the audience was
+composed of all nations, all sorts and conditions of
+men, and a choir of seraphs made the music; and
+yet this man spoke in a small, low-browed hall to a
+scanty audience, and the hymns were badly sung by
+a voluntary company. Such power has a great conviction;
+and when a deep conviction like that is extended
+and confirmed, the visible church will match
+the invisible, and shepherds will again hear the
+songs of angels.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span></p>
+<h2>XVII.<br />
+
+CONFESSIONS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The course of spiritual advance is traced with difficulty
+and hesitation. It is the most obscure phase
+of the general problem of progress, which is almost
+insoluble. There are so many currents and counter-currents;
+so many tributaries; so many swift torrents
+and still bays; so many times the stream seems moving
+in the opposite direction&mdash;it is not surprising if some
+have concluded that there was no progress at all,
+that we only moved in a circle, went over the same
+ground again and again, and even marched backwards;
+what some counted gain others counted loss.
+A keen examination suggests that on the whole advance
+has been made, allowance being conceded for
+many a turn and variation.</p>
+
+<p>The law of evolution may be considered established,
+but the method of evolution is hidden. The
+law of hereditary descent may be admitted, and yet
+the lines of hereditary descent are by no means obvious.
+Tendencies may even run in parallel lines,
+may aid each other, may confuse each other, may
+neutralize each other, may go very far or lie close at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+hand, and in any individual instance it is almost impossible
+to find how they work.</p>
+
+<p>In my own case the inferences of temperament
+followed each other. During the first fifty years
+of my life I was mainly under the influence of my
+father's temperament. I sang, wrote hymns and
+poems, sent pieces to the papers, was sanguine,
+inclined to take a happy view of all experiences;
+but at the same time I was conscious of another
+train of thought which struggled fitfully with the
+first, acquiring more and more power until at last it
+gained the ascendency, and I found myself more
+inclined to conservatism, as it is called, to a grave,
+sober, serious regard for existing institutions and
+modes of opinion. It is said that this might have been
+the effect of years, inasmuch as after middle life one
+is very apt to experience a change of sentiment. But
+in my own case time will hardly explain the phenomenon,
+for long before I came to middle age I
+was aware of this less hopeful tendency in my constitution.
+It was my mother's influence succeeding my
+father's. And though it never entirely prevailed, I
+can see how it may have shadowed my visions of
+the future. And it makes me somewhat distrustful
+of the entire sanity of my criticism. I am afraid of
+not being hopeful enough.</p>
+
+<p>I have sometimes suspected myself of a too critical
+disposition, a propensity to discover defects in men
+and opinion, to look at the dark side of systems
+that were repudiated; and in the effort to correct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+the aberrations of a literal estimate I may have gone
+too far in the opposite direction, rendering more than
+justice to antagonistic doctrines. But this, if it was
+an error, was certainly not an error to be ashamed of.
+For say what we will, the partial man is not the
+whole man, nor is cold perception true perception.
+There must be sympathy in every act of judgment,
+as Dr. Diman wisely wrote ("The Theistic Argument,"
+p. 32): "In the pursuit of the highest truth
+not one faculty but all faculties need to be enlisted."
+Every system, however formal or dogmatical it may
+have become, had in the beginning its spiritual aspect;
+it was piously, if not humanely, meant;
+and in order to be rightly comprehended, should
+be surveyed from the inside. The most repulsive
+doctrine has something to urge in its favor, and it is
+the duty of the true rationalist to find out what it
+may be.</p>
+
+<p>If the inclination to take a common-sense view of
+opinions was derived from my mother's side, a strong
+democratic bent was primarily due to her. My
+grandfather was a poor boy who earned his fortune
+by the simple qualities of industry, integrity, perseverance,
+independence, faithfulness, honesty,&mdash;virtues
+which he bequeathed to his children. These inherited
+dispositions were encouraged by the social
+influences of the public school, which, in spite of
+its laborious method of imparting a knowledge of
+Latin and Greek, threw the lads together, thus
+breaking down artificial distinctions; and also by my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+experience at Harvard College, where scholarship
+was associated with mere manhood, and was cultivated
+by youth of all conditions. The anti-slavery
+agitation was a practical instructor in humanity,
+indicating as it did the widest sympathy of race.
+An assumption of the essential identity of all sorts
+of mind was a cardinal principle of transcendentalism,
+while my later experiences confirmed these early
+tendencies. My societies in Jersey City and New
+York were popular in their composition. The "Free
+Religious Association" was based on universal sentiments.
+The clerical profession was, in my day,
+broadly human, so that aristocratic proclivities
+had small hope of prevailing. In fact, the lessons
+which I learned from R. W. Emerson and Wendell
+Phillips sank deeply in, and became clearer as years
+went on.</p>
+
+<p>One can hardly say that learning is retrogressive
+when one thinks of Dr. Döllinger, of Germany;
+Ernest Renan, of France; Benjamin Jowett, Arthur
+P. Stanley, James Martineau, of England; but erudition
+must, as a rule, be conservative; for it associates
+the mind directly with the past, binds one
+down to facts of history, and lays great stress on
+the testimony of evidence. It still is true that
+abundance of luggage is a sign that one is far from
+home. And they who can move quickly with all
+this weight upon them must have extraordinary
+genius.</p>
+
+<p>An indifference to dogma is also characteristic of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+a speculative reformer; and I cannot recollect the
+time when I cared much for doctrinal differences.
+All questions were to me open questions. I had
+doubts about everything, and never suffered acute
+pain from such doubts. The influence of Jesus, the
+immortality of the soul, the existence of God, were
+always exposed to misgivings. Everything active
+was interesting to me, whether it looked toward
+"radicalism" or not. This was an advantage, not
+merely because it saved me from suffering, but because
+it enabled me to face all emergencies.</p>
+
+<p>But some one will say: Does not the love of truth
+count for anything? Yes, undoubtedly it does.
+But lovers of truth do not by any means belong to
+the same school, or look for light from the same
+quarter; some are Romanists, some Protestants;
+some have no religion at all. Lovers of truth are
+found in all denominations, from Calvinist to Unitarian,
+from Christian to Buddhist. Truth exists
+for us in layers. There are truths of the letter and
+truths of the spirit; there is truth to fact, and truth
+to fancy; there is truth to the individual soul, and
+truth to the public conscience; there is truth to the
+heart, to the moral sense, to the spiritual intuition:
+but it will not do to charge lack of truthfulness
+upon anybody simply because he does not hold the
+same opinion with ourselves. M. Renan somewhere
+says that in order to judge a system one must have
+been in it as a disciple, and outside of it as a critic.
+But then only a very extraordinary person can do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+this. As a disciple he must be earnest, intelligent,
+devoted; as a critic he must be without prejudice,
+without animosity, and without guile. Thus the
+point of view must of necessity be individual. There
+can be no general or absolute standard of judgment.
+One thing only is certain: the fact of spiritual progress;
+but what constitutes this progress nobody
+can tell. Since 1822 till now the change in <i>Unitarianism</i>
+has been immense, and it has consisted in the
+gradual supremacy of reason over tradition, but it
+has been almost too sudden and too swift. Progress
+had better be slow, in order that it may be sure.
+One step at a time, for the reason that only one
+step at a time can be taken safely. We must not
+jump at conclusions. There must be unbounded
+catholicity of thought, but it must not be made up
+of indifference, concession, and idle compliance.</p>
+
+<p>Experience has taught me many things&mdash;this
+among others, that there is no final criterion of
+truth, not criticism, or "science," or philosophy, or
+liberty. There is no question any more of "destructive"
+and "constructive." The Supreme Power
+is always constructive, and the Supreme Power is
+sure at last to prevail. There is an old Greek fable,
+that Apollo once challenged Jupiter to shoot. The
+sun-god shot an arrow to the very confines of the
+earth; then Jupiter, at one stride, reached the limits
+of creation, and said, "Where shall I shoot?" We
+are not Jupiters; we are not Apollos; but we can
+take our stand and shoot our arrows a little way into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+the dark. The utmost we can do is to be steadfast
+in our own places; be faithful to our own calling;
+draw our own shaft to the head. Father Hecker
+said a brave thing to me when, on declining my request
+that he would speak before the Free Religious
+Association, he took the ground that in a few weeks
+Catholicism would enter Boston in triumph. I honored
+the Broad Churchman, who said to me once
+that he always preached Christ as an historical
+person, and wished he had a church big enough to
+hold all humanity; and I admired the Presbyterian
+clergyman who commended the sincerity of Dr.
+Briggs, whom some regarded as a heretic. Fidelity
+to one's own word and gift is the one thing needful
+here.</p>
+
+<p>Whether it be the tendency of modern thought,
+or whether it be not, to abandon the Christian religion
+and cast discredit on every kind of faith held
+by the churches and professors throughout the
+world, cannot, in this generation, be decided. In
+any event, we shall not be left desolate. For nature
+will remain, with its unfathomable resources of use
+and beauty. The mind will remain, with its infinite
+faculties of reason and imagination. The heart will
+remain, with its insatiable affections and desires.
+Conscience will remain, with its sense of duty. The
+sentiments of awe, wonder, admiration, worship,
+will not expire. The reconstructive powers will
+still be active, and every creative quality will continue
+in full operation. Knowledge, literature, art,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+will live and flourish in new manifestations; and no
+original capacity will lie unemployed.</p>
+
+<p>We should have learned by this time that nothing
+dies before its hour has come; that processes of recuperation
+keep even pace with processes of decay;
+that forms alone perish while principles endure;
+that living things become more mighty and glorious
+as they throw off encumbrances; that strength always
+in the end accompanies simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of God has passed through several
+phases, and each new phase has been a gain. The
+deity who was an individual has become a person;
+the attributes of personality, as commonly understood,
+have disappeared, so that pantheism has succeeded
+to a mechanical theism; God has become a
+name for our most exalted feelings, so that instead of
+saying "God is Spirit," some read "Spirit is God";
+yet the ancient reverence more than persists, is on
+the increase. And if the course of disintegration of
+the old clumsy conception should go on, there need
+be no apprehension that loving veneration will
+decline.</p>
+
+<p>The future life is no longer associated with retribution,
+and immortality means opportunity instead
+of doom. Should the doctrine of moral influence
+follow upon the doctrine of spiritual progression, the
+essential significance of the tenet would be preserved,
+for that is ethical not individual.</p>
+
+<p>Prayer, too, is no more a begging for favors, or an
+act of intercession. Supplication for outward benefits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+has given place to petition for spiritual gifts, and
+this to pure aspiration, the desire for excellence;
+still the soul's passion is as deep as ever, perhaps
+deeper.</p>
+
+<p>If Mr. Tyndall's prophecy should be fulfilled, and
+we should come to "discover in that matter which we,
+in our ignorance, and notwithstanding our professed
+reverence for its Creator, have hitherto covered with
+opprobrium, the promise and potency of every form
+and quality of life," then what we call matter would
+simply assume new properties commensurate with
+novel tasks. The properties themselves will remain
+as they were, and will in nowise change their peculiarity.
+The ancient attributes of mind will persist,
+whatever theory of their origin be adopted. The
+old sanctities will endure, and the burden of responsibility
+will fall upon another pair of shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Thus every virtue will be maintained in complete
+vigor,&mdash;reverence, aspiration, trust, submission, confidence,
+serenity, patience, fortitude,&mdash;and nothing
+will be lost.</p>
+
+<p>Then there is the social world, in which we "live
+and move and have our being." This "encompasses
+us behind and before, and lays its hand upon us."
+There is not an hour in the day, hardly a moment of
+the hour, when the call of duty is not made upon us.
+None but the rarest spirits discharge the claims of
+mercy and brotherhood; people generally do not
+know what they are; repudiate them when presented.
+The preachers have more than they can do to induce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+practice of even the commonest virtues of good will.
+Humanity, in its grand aspects, is left to the writers
+of Utopias. Not a day passes that conscience is
+not over-worked, even when it is not perplexed by
+misgivings in regard to the amount or the kind of
+service it ought to render. Some have sought an
+escape in the immortal life from the demands of this;
+and some have denied the doctrine of another world
+because it drew attention away from this, and made
+the ills of the present seem light in view of some
+coming beatitude. In truth, the friends of that great
+hope will do well to remember that it is identical
+with moral attainment; that it is for great souls;
+that</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The life of heaven above,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Springs from the life below.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It is, to say the least, doubtful whether any future
+life can do more than ripen seeds that are sowed
+here, or whether spiritual perfection will owe anything
+essential to other events of time, while it is
+certain that nothing is sure to abide but what is
+born of love.</p>
+
+<p>Unless the doctrine of a future life can be used to
+reinforce the doctrine of moral attainment in the
+present state of existence, its power must depart.
+The cords of personal affection are not strong
+enough to hold the belief. The true inference from
+disbelief is not expressed in the words, "Let us eat
+and drink for tomorrow we die"; but in these, "I
+must work while it is day." This idea is a very old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+one. The air was full of it when I was a youth.
+It was the soul of all liberal faith. The <i>Westminster
+Review</i>, which was in full force in my early manhood,
+having begun in 1824, two years after my
+birth, was animated by it. The <i>Prospective Review</i>,
+the organ of the spiritual Unitarians, and edited by
+such men as James Martineau, John James Taylor,
+John Hamilton Thom, and Charles Wicksteed,
+a magazine aiming to "interpret and represent Spiritual
+Christianity in its character of the Universal
+Religion," was started about 1845. In its pages
+"spirituality" was intimately associated with "humanity."
+The books of F. W. Newman, "The
+Soul" (1849); "Phases of Faith" (1850); "Catholic
+Union" (1854), teemed with this conception. The
+charming verses of William Blake, published in
+his "Songs of Innocence," had somehow came to my
+knowledge.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To mercy, pity, peace, and love,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All pray in their distress;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to these virtues of delight<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Return their thankfulness.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For mercy, pity, peace, and love<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is God, our Father dear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And mercy, pity, peace, and love<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Is man, His child and care.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For mercy has a human heart;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pity, a human face;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And love, the human form divine<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And peace, the human dress.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Then every man of every clime<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That prays, in his distress,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Prays to the human form divine<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Love, Mercy, Pity, Peace.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And all must love the human form<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In Heathen, Turk, or Jew;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where mercy, love, and pity dwell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There God is dwelling too.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In this country the same idea prevailed in the
+early period of transcendentalism, and gradually
+worked its way into the common heart. Channing
+lent it an impulse. His brilliant nephew, William
+Henry Channing, exemplified it. The transcendental
+preachers all insisted on it. The "Dial" was
+charged with it. The most kindling literature of
+my growing days drew inspiration from it. Brook
+Farm, Fruitlands, and every other attempt at
+association was built upon it. Modern socialism
+owes to it the fascination it has for the heart; and
+we cannot listen to a sermon now that does not
+throb with the emotion it excites.</p>
+
+<p>For myself I must confess that I have no interest
+in another life, save as it encourages the endeavor
+after this human excellence. My mental constitution
+makes me insensible to sentimental considerations,
+to arguments addressed to private affections.
+As my first sermon was about the brotherhood of
+man, so my present hope is that love may increase,
+and that the reign of theology may be succeeded
+by that of charity.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This was the dream of Abbot Joachim, in the
+twelfth century, the Cistercian monk, founder of the
+monastery of Floris, author of "The Everlasting
+Gospel." It was his notion that the existing era of
+Christianity was passing away. According to him,
+there were three dispensations, corresponding to the
+three persons in the Trinity&mdash;that of the Father,
+that of the Son, that of the Spirit,&mdash;the dispensation
+of Awe, the dispensation of Wisdom, and
+the dispensation of Love. The first was represented
+by Peter, the organizer, the patron saint
+of Romanism; the second, by Paul, the preacher
+of the Word, the bulwark of Protestantism; the
+third by John, the seer, the beloved disciple, the
+apostle of love. How much the pious man meant
+by this we cannot tell. His own contemporaries
+were divided in opinion; but a pretty fair commentary
+is furnished, in the fact that his writing
+was condemned by two Councils&mdash;that of the Lateran
+in 1215, and of Arles in 1260,&mdash;and that he has
+ever since been classed among the mystics&mdash;that is,
+the unintelligible and the unbalanced in mind.</p>
+
+<p>True the prophecy has not been literally fulfilled,
+inasmuch as the first two dispositions are still in
+force, and are likely to be for many a day, but the
+essence of it has come to pass. Romanism has been
+deprived of its temporal authority, and is reduced
+to a picturesque form of faith; its disciples easily
+throw off its bondage, while its new professors never
+put it on. Protestantism is decomposing under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+influence of doubt and criticism. The thought of
+brotherhood is extending. I have small faith that
+the time will ever come when all people will worship
+under one form, or will accept the same mode
+of believing. I cannot think that at the name of
+Jesus every knee will bow, or that every tongue
+will make confession of his Lordship; but I do believe
+that the reign of justice and good-will shall be
+established. It is a great deal to hope for a time
+when the many will submit to the law of reason, becoming
+strong enough to withstand the force of
+authority in church or creed, and content with
+charity.</p>
+
+<p>We have gained much since Joachim's day. We
+have acquired knowledge, industry, civilization,
+freedom, enterprise, intelligence, the sense of mutual
+dependence. The bars of prejudice are being taken
+down. Class distinctions are being abolished.
+Newly discovered arts are bringing men nearer together,
+and weaving the ties of fraternity. All this
+is opportunity&mdash;opportunity that immediately precedes
+performance. When we see the road prepared
+for the Spirit, we may be sure that the Spirit itself
+is not far off.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+</p>
+<h2>INDEX.</h2>
+<div class='index'>
+<h4>A</h4>
+
+<p>Abbot, F. E., <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></p>
+
+<p>Abbott, E. A., <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></p>
+
+<p>Abolitionists, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></p>
+
+<p>Adler, Felix, quoted, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></p>
+
+<p>Alcott, A. B., <a href='#Page_52'>52</a></p>
+
+<p>Anti-slavery, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></p>
+
+<p>Arminians, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a></p>
+
+<p>Arnold, M., <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>B</h4>
+
+<p>Barnard, F. A. P., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Barnard, T., <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></p>
+
+<p>Bartol, C. A., <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></p>
+
+<p>Baur, F. C., <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
+
+<p>Beecher, H. W., <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></p>
+
+<p>Bellows, H. W., <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></p>
+
+<p>Blake, Wm., quoted, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></p>
+
+<p>Boston, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></p>
+
+<p>Brace, C. L., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Brazer, John, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></p>
+
+<p>Broad Church, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Brook Farm, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a></p>
+
+<p>Brown, John, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></p>
+
+<p>Browning, R., <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></p>
+
+<p>Brownson, Orestes, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>C</h4>
+
+<p>Calvinism, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a></p>
+
+<p>Carlyle, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></p>
+
+<p>Carter, R., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Cary, Alice, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></p>
+
+<p>Cary, Phoebe, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></p>
+
+<p>Chadwick, J. W., <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></p>
+
+<p>Channing, W. E., <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></p>
+
+<p>Channing, W. H., <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></p>
+
+<p>Clarke, J. F., <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></p>
+
+<p>Clerical Profession, The, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Colonization, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></p>
+
+<p>Communion Service, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Comte, A., <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
+
+<p>Conference, Unitarian, <a href='#Page_115'>115-117</a></p>
+
+<p>Curtis, G. W., <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>D</h4>
+
+<p>Darwin, C., <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></p>
+
+<p>Deists, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
+
+<p>Dewey, Mary, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></p>
+
+<p>Dewey, Orville, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Dillaway, C. K., <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></p>
+
+<p>Diman, J. L., quoted, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a></p>
+
+<p>Divinity Hall, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></p>
+
+<p>Divinity School, <a href='#Page_25'>25-34</a></p>
+
+<p>Dixwell, E. S., <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></p>
+
+<p>Dwight, J. S., <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>E</h4>
+
+<p>Eliot, George, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></p>
+
+<p>Emerson, R. W., <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, etc., <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></p>
+
+<p>Endicott, John, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304"></a>[Pg 304]</span></p>
+
+<p>Ethical Religion, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Europe, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></p>
+
+<p>Evolution, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>F</h4>
+
+<p>Field, H. M., <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+<p>Fourier, C., <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></p>
+
+<p>Francis, Convers, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></p>
+
+<p>Fraternity Club, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></p>
+
+<p>Free Religious Association, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, etc., <a href='#Page_124'>124-126</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></p>
+
+<p>Free Thought in America, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Frothingham, Ann G., <a href='#Page_14'>14-17</a></p>
+
+<p>Frothingham, N. L., <a href='#Page_2'>2-14</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>G</h4>
+
+<p>Gardner, F., <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></p>
+
+<p>Garrison, W. L., <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></p>
+
+<p>Greeley, H., <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+<p>Goethe, J. W. von, quoted, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>H</h4>
+
+<p>Haeckel, E., <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
+
+<p>Harvard College, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></p>
+
+<p>Hawthorne, N., <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></p>
+
+<p>Heath, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></p>
+
+<p>Hecker, I. T., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></p>
+
+<p>Hedge, F. H., <a href='#Page_257'>257</a></p>
+
+<p>Higginson, T. W., <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></p>
+
+<p>Hillard, G. S., <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></p>
+
+<p>Hitchcock, R. D., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Holland, J. G., <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>I</h4>
+
+<p>Independent Society, <a href='#Page_126'>126-131</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></p>
+
+<p>Ingersoll, R. G., <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, etc.</p>
+
+
+<h4>J</h4>
+
+<p>James, H., quoted, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></p>
+
+<p>Jersey City, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
+
+<p>Jewett, Sarah O., quoted, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></p>
+
+<p>Joachim (Abbot), <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></p>
+
+<p>Johnson, S., <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Joy, Charles, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>K</h4>
+
+<p>King, T. S., <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, note.</p>
+
+<p>Kirwan, R., <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>L</h4>
+
+<p>Latin School, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></p>
+
+<p>Laveleye, E. de, quoted, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></p>
+
+<p>Leverett, F. P., <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></p>
+
+<p>Longfellow, H. W., <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, quoted</p>
+
+<p>Loring, E. G., <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></p>
+
+<p>Lyric Hall, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>M</h4>
+
+<p>Mahomet, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></p>
+
+<p>Martineau, J., <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, quoted, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></p>
+
+<p>Masonic Temple, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></p>
+
+<p>Maurice, F. D., <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a></p>
+
+<p>McQueary, Rev. H., <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></p>
+
+<p>Minister, Office of, in War Time, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></p>
+
+<p>Ministry in New York, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></p>
+
+<p>Mott, Lucretia, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>N</h4>
+
+<p>National Conference, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></p>
+
+<p>Negroes, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></p>
+
+<p>Newman, F. W., <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></p>
+
+<p>New York, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></p>
+
+<p>"North Church," <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
+
+<p>Noyes, G. R., <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>O</h4>
+
+<p>Osgood, S., <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, etc.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h4>P</h4>
+
+<p>Paine, T., <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Parker, T., <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, etc., <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></p>
+
+<p>Phillips, W., <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></p>
+
+<p>Poe, E. A., quoted, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></p>
+
+<p>Prescott, W. H., <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></p>
+
+<p>Priests in the Riot, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></p>
+
+<p><i>Prospective Review</i>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></p>
+
+<p>Protestantism, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></p>
+
+<p>Putnam, Eleanor, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>R</h4>
+
+<p>Reid, Whitelaw, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+<p>Renan, J. Ernest, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272-274</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></p>
+
+<p>Riot in New York, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Ripley, George, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+<p>Romanism, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, etc.</p>
+
+<p>Rood, O. N., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Royce, J., <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></p>
+
+<p>Runkle, Mrs. Lucia, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>S</h4>
+
+<p>Salem, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, etc., <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
+
+<p>Sanitary Commission, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></p>
+
+<p>Scherb, E. V., <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
+
+<p>Schwegler, A., <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
+
+<p>Slavery, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></p>
+
+<p>Smith, S., <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></p>
+
+<p>Stearns, G., <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></p>
+
+<p>Stephen, Leslie, quoted, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></p>
+
+<p>Strauss, D. F., <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a></p>
+
+<p>Sumner, C., <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>T</h4>
+
+<p>Taine, H. A., <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
+
+<p>Taylor, Bayard, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Thackeray, W. M., <a href='#Page_8'>8</a></p>
+
+<p>Ticknor, G., <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></p>
+
+<p>Torrey, H. W., <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></p>
+
+<p>Transcendentalism, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135-137</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></p>
+
+<p>Tübingen School, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
+
+<p>Tyndall, J., <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>U</h4>
+
+<p>Unitarianism, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></p>
+
+<p>Unitarians, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>V</h4>
+
+<p>Voltaire, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>W</h4>
+
+<p>War, Civil, The, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></p>
+
+<p>Washburn, E. A., <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
+
+<p>Washington, George (Gen.), <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></p>
+
+<p>Washington, L. W., (Col.), <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></p>
+
+<p>Wasson, D. A., <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></p>
+
+<p>Webster, D., <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
+
+<p>Webster, J. W., <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></p>
+
+<p>Weiss, J., <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, etc., <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, quoted</p>
+
+<p><i>Westminster Review</i>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></p>
+
+<p>White, R. G. <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+<p>Williams, R., <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></p>
+
+<p>Winthrop, T., <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></p>
+
+<p>Wise, H. A. (Gov.), <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></p>
+
+<p>Woman, Rights of, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>Y</h4>
+
+<p>Youmans, E. L., <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
+
+
+<h4>Z</h4>
+
+<p>Zeller, E., <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div id='advertisement'
+style='border:4px double black;padding:6px;margin-top:2em;'>
+<h4>WORKS BY OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM.</h4>
+
+
+<p><b>The Religion of Humanity.</b> 4th edition, 12mo, pp. 338. $1.50</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"A profoundly sincere book, the work of one who has read largely, studied
+thoroughly, reflected patiently."&mdash;<i>Boston Globe.</i>
+</p><p>
+<b>Stories from the Lips of the Teacher.</b> Retold by a Disciple.
+Sixth edition, 16mo, pp. 193. $1.00</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"It is in style and thought a superior book, that will interest young and
+old."&mdash;<i>Zion Herald</i> (Methodist).
+</p><p>
+<b>Stories of the Patriarchs.</b> 3d edition. 16mo, pp. 232. $1.00</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The sublimest lessons of manhood in the simple language of a
+child."&mdash;<i>Springfield Republican.</i>
+</p><p>
+<b>The Child's Book of Religion.</b> For Sunday-Schools and Homes.
+New edition, revised. 16mo, pp. xii. 273. $1.00
+</p><p>
+<b>Transcendentalism in New England.</b> A History. Second
+edition. 8vo, pp. iv. + 394. $1.75</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The book is masterly and satisfying."&mdash;<i>Appleton's Journal.</i>
+</p><p>
+<b>The Cradle of the Christ.</b> A Study in Primitive Christianity.
+8vo, pp. x. + 234. $1.50</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"Scholarly, acute, and vigorous."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Tribune.</i>
+</p><p>
+<b>Theodore Parker.</b> A Biography. 8vo, pp. viii. + 588. $2.00
+</p><p>
+<b>Gerrit Smith.</b> A Biography. 8vo, pp. 371. $2.00</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"A good biography, it is faithful, sufficiently full, written with vigor,
+grace, and good taste."&mdash;<i>N. Y. Evening Post.</i>
+</p><p>
+<b>Belief of the Unbelievers.</b> 12mo, sewed $0.25</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">Speaking of Mr. Frothingham's Sermons, the <i>Springfield Republican</i>
+says: "No one of serious intellectual character can fail to be
+interested and taught by these most thoughtful discourses."
+</p><p>
+<b>Boston Unitarianism.</b> 1820-1840. A Study of the Life and Work
+of Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham. 8vo, pp. 272. $1.75</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">"The book, to a thoughtful reader, cannot fail to be elevating and suggestive
+of high ideals, high thinking, and noble living."&mdash;<i>Newark Advertiser.</i>
+</p><p>
+<b>Recollections and Impressions.</b> 1822-1890. 8vo. $1.50
+</p><hr style='width:6em;' />
+<p style='text-align:center;'>
+G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, <span class="smcap">New York and London</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections and Impressions, by
+Octavius Brooks Frothingham
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Recollections and Impressions, by
+Octavius Brooks Frothingham
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Recollections and Impressions
+ 1822-1890
+
+Author: Octavius Brooks Frothingham
+
+Release Date: October 13, 2011 [EBook #37744]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Miller, tallforasmurf and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
+
+
+This etext differs from the original in the following ways. Three minor
+typographical errors have been corrected that did not affect the sense
+of the text. The oe character is shown as [oe].
+
+
+
+
+ RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS
+
+ 1822-1890
+
+
+ OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM
+
+ AUTHOR OF "BOSTON UNITARIANISM, 1820-1850, A STUDY OF THE LIFE
+ AND WORK OF NATHANIEL LANGDON FROTHINGHAM,"
+ "THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY," ETC., ETC.
+
+ G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+ NEW YORK LONDON
+
+ 27 WEST TWENTY-THIRD ST. 27 KING WILLIAM ST., STRAND
+
+ The Knickerbocker Press
+
+ 1891
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1891 BY
+ OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM
+
+ The Knickerbocker Press, New York
+
+ Electrotyped, Printed, and Bound by G. P. Putnam's Sons
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ I PARENTAGE 1
+ II EDUCATION 19
+ III DIVINITY SCHOOL 25
+ IV SALEM 35
+ V THE CRISIS IN BELIEF 53
+ VI JERSEY CITY 65
+ VII NEW YORK 76
+ VIII WAR 104
+ IX THE FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION 115
+ X THE PROGRESS OF RELIGIOUS THOUGHT IN AMERICA 133
+ XI THE CLERICAL PROFESSION 146
+ XII MY TEACHERS 165
+ XIII MY COMPANIONS 190
+ XIV MY FRIENDS 225
+ XV THE PRESENT SITUATION 248
+ XVI THE RELIGIOUS FUTURE OF AMERICA 272
+ XVII CONFESSIONS 289
+ INDEX 303
+
+
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS.
+
+
+I. PARENTAGE.
+
+
+My father was, as I have said elsewhere, a clergyman in Boston,
+Massachusetts, a Unitarian minister to the First Church, standing in a
+long line of men, of whom the earliest was severely orthodox, while he
+abhorred orthodoxy. Yet he was ordained without hesitation, was more
+than acceptable to the best minds through a service of thirty-five
+years, and continued more and more unorthodox to the end; so gradually
+and insensibly did the Puritan tenets disappear one by one until the
+shadow of them only remained. We are assured that by 1780 nearly all the
+congregational pulpits were filled by Arminians. In 1815, the year of my
+father's ordination, they were well domesticated in New England,
+Calvinism having lost its hold on the minds of thinking people, and none
+but keen-eyed watchers on the tower seeing what course opinion was
+taking. How far the tendency towards the moral and practical view of
+religion as distinct from the speculative view had gone, is well
+illustrated in my father's case. He was a man of excellent education,
+one of the best scholars in a distinguished class at Harvard, an
+enthusiast for intellectual cultivation, singularly refined in
+perception, an acute critic, a careful, precise, elegant writer. His
+tastes were pre-eminently literary. This is said in full view of the
+fact that he was a learned theologian, a pungent disputant, a zealous
+student of biblical researches, a faithful pastor.
+
+He was essentially a man of letters. His passion was for the Latin
+classics. The best edition of Cicero was on his shelves; the finest copy
+of Horace graced his book-case. His knowledge of the Greek literature
+and language was fair. He was fond of poetry of a stately and romantic
+description; was, himself, a poet of a gentle, meditative, spiritual
+cast, especially eminent as a composer of hymns written for church
+occasions, the dedication of meeting-houses, the consecration of
+ministers, many of them of permanent and general value, as both
+"liberal" and "orthodox" collections attest; while he has done as much
+as any man in his generation to elevate, purify, and console delicate
+and serious natures.
+
+His library of about three thousand volumes was exceedingly
+miscellaneous, illustrating the breadth of his interests and the
+activity of his mind. There were Bibles of choice editions and in every
+tongue. There were biblical commentaries, dictionaries, grammars. The
+Church Fathers were well represented. Church history was presented by
+its best narrators. But the bulk of the collection was secular. It
+contained copies of Addison, Johnson, Bayle, Carlyle, Milton, Bacon,
+Dante, Dickens, Emerson, Grote, Shakespeare, Goethe, Schiller, Hugo,
+Heeren, Hume, Iriarte, Michelet, Lessing, Kingsley, Macaulay,
+Longfellow, Plutarch, Pindar, Pope, Scott, Rousseau, Racine, Rueckert,
+Rabelais, Tasso, George Sand, Thucydides, Theocritus, Virgil, Voltaire,
+Wieland, Pliny, Wordsworth, Wilkinson, Zschokke, Walt Whitman. They were
+very various. They commanded all extremes: Augustine and Anacreon;
+Aratus and _Annual Register_; AEschylus and Moliere; Aristotle and
+Herrick; Seneca and Horace; Antoninus and Almanacs; Burton and
+Boccaccio. There was no pure metaphysics--a compendium or two of
+philosophy, a bit of Spinoza, of Kant, of Cousin, of Jouffroy, of
+Malebranche, the "Dialogues" of Plato--nothing of Schelling or Hegel. I
+find Proclus, and Jamblicus, and Boehme, and dramatic literature in
+Greek, Latin, French, German. Here is Burlamaqui on Law, and Erasmus
+Darwin, and Godwin's "Memoirs of Mary Wollstonecraft," and the
+Hitopadesa, and the "Hymns" of Orpheus, and Palaephatus, together with
+many a forgotten book.
+
+The favorite language next to English was German, then came French,
+then Latin, which was pretty well represented in its literature. Dr.
+Frothingham was a wide reader, but his finest gift was a power of
+penetrating to the heart of an author, a power that was akin to genius.
+He called himself a _taster_. But every taster must take into his mouth
+some things that are unpleasant, and he did. He nibbled at Heine, but
+Heine's philosophy disgusted him. He nibbled at Browning, but Browning's
+lack of sensuous music did not satisfy his idea of poetry. His mind,
+trained in the old school, could not adapt itself to the new style of
+expression.
+
+He gladly turned his back on doctrines he did not like. He was
+spiritually minded, but soberly so, as if to be spiritually minded
+belonged to a special temperament; a Christian theist in all respects,
+though indifferent to many details of Christian doctrine; an optimist on
+principle as well as from instinct, inclined to put the most cheerful
+construction on the ways of divine Providence, and to look patiently on
+the moral conditions of human life; an unquestioning believer in Christ,
+immortality, the need of revelation, the supremacy of the religious and
+moral nature, the demand for the steady influence of the spiritual world
+to enlighten mankind on the truths of conscience no less than on the
+mysteries of faith. He was no seer, gazing on things unseen with the
+penetrating, inward eye; no prophet possessed by an overwhelming
+conviction of the absolute law; no regenerator believing that men must
+be lifted up from the earth by an interior renewal of soul; no reformer
+bent on changing the circumstances of society. He was an apostle of air,
+sunshine, and the mild, enticing summer shower which covered the wintry
+ground with the smiling grass and the sweet-smelling flowers. Reformers,
+of whatever school, were not to his taste, partly because their methods
+seemed to him violent, but partly also because their primary assumption
+that the world was out of joint did not command his sympathy. He could
+not think that the established institutions of the age ought to be
+subverted, even though they might be improved under enlightened
+teaching. Socially he was conservative, although by no means
+reactionary; disposed to see the soul of good in things evil, though not
+always as studious as one must needs be to "search it out." Rather he
+took it for granted, and was often impatient with those who felt keenly
+the evil but could not discover the good.
+
+High-minded he was rather than deep-souled; devout in sentiment,
+chivalrously moral in principle and in practice; ideal, poetic, delicate
+of sensibility, but not soaring of spirit; certainly not a spiritual
+enthusiast, as little a prosaic plodder; no mystic but no disciple of
+"common-sense." For the dignity, decency, purity, propriety of the
+clerical profession he had great regard, but as much on account of its
+social position as on account of its sanctity. It indicated the highest
+type of gentlemanliness, the finest style of personal character, a kind
+of exquisite courtliness of manhood, humanity of a finished stamp of
+elegance; and he resented everything like an admixture of ordinary
+philanthropy. It was in his view a descent to enter the arena of strife
+even for the purpose of removing an evil. Thence his dislike of
+Channing; his disapproval of Pierpont, otherwise a particular favorite
+of his; his disagreement with Parker, of whom he was fond. When the
+"Miscellanies" were published the writer sent a copy to his friend, who
+acknowledged the volume by a letter in which expressions of personal
+affection were curiously blended with antipathy towards the class of
+speculations with which Mr. Parker was identified. George Ripley and
+R. W. Emerson won and held his attachment to the end, but he never
+visited Brook Farm, and was deaf to solicitations to join the
+Transcendental Club.
+
+His friends were many and various--Emerson, Ripley, Francis, Hedge,
+Bartol, Stetson, Parkman, Longfellow, Felton, Hillard,--the list is
+long, for the sunny temper of the man drew all hearts to him and his
+warm affectionateness of disposition made him tenacious of good-will. He
+was interested in men as individuals not as members of a clique or
+party, and was not repelled by differences of opinion where his heart
+was engaged. On the whole, his sympathies were with conservatives like
+George Ticknor and W. H. Prescott, and the literary spirit mainly kept
+him in association with those. Where this spirit was wanting and there
+was divergence of sentiment there was no attempt at intimacy.
+
+Of interest in the denomination, the sect, the party name, he was
+absolutely devoid. He never attended the conventions or conferences of
+the Unitarian body or spoke in their deliberations. On anniversary week
+it was for many years his custom to visit New York, where no
+professional responsibility rested upon him, and where he could find
+recreations of a purely social kind. But at the "Boston Association"
+where he met friends one by one, and could talk half confidentially,
+with perfect freedom, in a conversational tone, he delighted to be
+present.
+
+For the rest, he was a man universally respected, admired, and beloved,
+mirthful and sportive, more than tolerant of gaiety, as a rule in
+excellent spirits, though subject, as such temperaments usually are, to
+moods of depression. Without private ambition and utterly destitute of
+vanity, his uneventful days were spent among his friends and his books.
+The round of clerical duties was even and monotonous; his calling had
+few excitements; even poverty had limits, and social iniquity was
+manageable in those times when relations were simple. The routine of
+parochial service was such as a friendly man of quick sympathies and
+ready speech could easily discharge in a few hours of each week, nor was
+the transition violent from it to the quiet library, the companionship
+of Cicero, Shakespeare, Milton, Walter Scott, Herder, Rueckert. The love
+of art, society, literature, was not inconsistent with a love of the
+Saviour; and though as a matter of taste he would not have spoken of a
+sonata of Beethoven in a sermon, there was nothing in his philosophy to
+render secular allusions improper.
+
+His literary predilections were somewhat at the mercy of his sense of
+beauty, as if he had an eye to artistic effect quite as much as to
+intellectual justice, as if the firm lines of logical discernment were
+blurred by the passion for poetic or scenic grace. Of the two famous
+German writers about whom opinions were divided, he greatly preferred
+Schiller to Goethe, probably because the former was glorious, ardent,
+declamatory. Of the two eminent English novelists whom all the world was
+reading, Dickens was his choice far above Thackeray, perhaps for the
+reason that Dickens had color and warmth of sentiment, while Thackeray
+seemed to him cold, skeptical, and cynical. The flow of eloquence, the
+charm of dramatic style made him relish authors as radically unlike as
+Carlyle, Ruskin, and Macaulay, rendering him unmindful of qualities in
+their cast of thought which he might have disapproved of if less
+seductively presented. When a lady objected to Macaulay on the score of
+his material ethics, Dr. Frothingham was too much captivated by
+Macaulay's manner to criticise his philosophy, and he let the philosophy
+go. It sometimes looked as if the way in which things were said was of
+more importance in his view than the things themselves; but it was not
+so, for he could respond to ideal sentiments when they offered
+themselves fairly to his mind, and his moral indignation against an act
+of flagrant turpitude was quick and hot.
+
+With politics, whether speculative or practical, he gave himself small
+concern, for in his day politics were hardly an honorable calling. He
+belonged to the Whig party, as it was then called, because it comprised
+the greater number of educated men--scholars, divines, lawyers,
+physicians, judges, and people of consideration from their position in
+society. The Republican party in Massachusetts was not formed till his
+public life was nearly ended, and we may doubt whether he would in any
+case have connected himself with it, for its aims and purposes were
+hardly such as he could have gone along with. The well-known sentiment,
+ascribed to Wendell Phillips, "Peace if possible, Truth at any rate," he
+would in all probability have reversed so as to read, "Truth if
+possible, Peace at any rate"; not because the search for truth was
+difficult, and peace furnished the most promising conditions for finding
+it, but because peace was preferable in itself as being stable and
+quiet. He was not a fighter; he disliked the noise of battle; his horror
+of anti-slavery agitation, as of all other, was constitutional; and even
+if he had been convinced of the slave's degradation, no mode of redress
+that was proposed commended itself to his gentle, apprehensive mind. To
+him the chief interest of society was enlightenment associated with
+refinement; the needed influence was that of education. He was a
+delicately organized, sensitive man, fond of repose, happy in his
+temperament, in his tastes, in his occupation, in his social position,
+in his relationships, in his home. He had his disappointments and
+sorrows like other men, but he did not repine. His latter years were
+afflicted with total blindness, accompanied by constant distress and
+steadily increasing pain; but his friends never failed to find him
+cheerful; the companion who ministered to his daily necessities and
+culled from books and periodicals the materials for his entertainment,
+seldom had reason to complain of his petulance; the visitor could with
+difficulty be brought to believe that the man was living in the presence
+of death, and was exposed to frightful phantoms due to a slowly
+decomposing brain.
+
+His aesthetic tastes were active, as may be supposed, and would have
+been keen if there had been opportunity for cultivating them, and
+leisure to pursue them. The pictures that adorned his parlor walls were
+not distinguished as works of art, but they were pure in sentiment, they
+showed a love of color, and of the highest truth. There was not much
+fine painting at that time in America, and what there was required for
+its fair appreciation more training and experience than was possessed by
+one immersed in the cares of an exacting profession and interested also
+in literary pursuits. Mr. Frothingham's artistic taste was, besides, so
+much controlled by moral feeling that he could not be critical of form.
+Of art for its own sake he had no conception, and could have none, for
+that cry which voices the demands of technical execution had not been
+raised; but even if it had been he would have felt no sympathy with any
+kind of excellence that was not directly associated with the moral
+sentiment.
+
+His taste in music was much like his taste in painting,--that is to say,
+it was uneducated and unscientific. To the great music,--that of the
+intellect and the soul,--the compositions of the masters, of Bach,
+Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, he was indifferent; but the music of the
+heart, of feeling, emotion, elevated passion,--the Scotch songs, the
+Irish melodies, the English lays, madrigals, glees, was his delight. He
+was especially fond of religious airs. The oratorios of "The Creation"
+and "The Messiah" he was never tired of hearing. His voice was
+melodious, and he was fond of using it. His organist taught him the
+principles of his own art, and hours were spent at a parlor-organ in
+playing favorite hymn-tunes, the melody of which he sang as he played.
+He amused his children by trilling nursery ditties, and joined his boys
+as they performed glees from the "Orphean Lyre," sometimes singing with
+the heart quite as much as with the understanding. His joyous nature
+expressed itself instinctively in song. His whole nervous system
+responded to it. He was transported out of himself by sweet strains, and
+fairly trembled under the influence of divine harmonies.
+
+Mr. Frothingham's love of dramatic art amounted to a passion, but the
+art must be high as well as pure. Tragedy he did not like. All of the
+Shakespearian plays he was critically familiar with, but he loved "The
+Tempest" best, as uniting poetry with cheerfulness in fullest measure.
+The lines he wrote on the restoration of the Federal Street Theatre
+expressed the depth of his interest. A religious society, afterwards the
+"Central Church" in Winter Street, was gathered here. Of this kind of
+enterprise the poet says:
+
+ More reverence than befits us here to tell,
+ We yield to courts where sacred honors dwell.
+ But have not they their places? Have not we?
+ Has not each liberal province leave to be?
+
+The "Lecture-Room" he had little respect for, none at all for the
+"Variety Show." To every device he wishes a cordial farewell,
+exclaiming:
+
+ Restored! Restored! Well known so long a time,
+ These buried glories rise as in their prime.
+ Our tastes may change as fickle fashions-fly,
+ But art is safe: the Drama cannot die.
+ More than restored! Whate'er the pen since wrought
+ Of loftiest, sprightliest, here that wealth has brought.
+ Whate'er the progress of the age has lent
+ Of purer taste and comelier ornament,--
+ To this our temple it transfers its store,
+ And makes each point shine lovelier than before.
+
+But the drama must be clean:
+
+ But more yet,--and how much! We claim a praise
+ The Playhouse knew not in the ancient days.
+ Own us, ye hearts with moral purpose warm!
+ Our word Renewal adds the word Reform.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Come, friends of Virtue! Share the feast we spread.
+ It loads no spirits, and it heats no head.
+ But rouses forth each power of mind and soul
+ With food ambrosial and its fairy bowl.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Hearts are improved by Feeling's play and strife;
+ Refined amusement humanizes life.
+ So wrote the Sages, whom the world admired;
+ So sang the Poets, who the world inspired;
+ Why in New England's Athens is decried
+ What old Athenian culture thought its pride?
+
+Thus Righteousness and Peace are made to kiss each other. Art and
+Virtue walk hand in hand. The sole condition is that art shall be
+virtuous and that virtue shall be artistic. There was a singular
+blending in his mind of the sacred and the secular. Perhaps Matthew
+Arnold's definition of religion as "morality touched with emotion" comes
+as near expressing Dr. Frothingham's conception as any. There must be
+morality; that is cardinal; that lies at the foundation of all systems;
+that must be strict and high. But emotion is indispensable also. This
+runs into praise, the love of goodness, the worship of the highest. This
+imparts warmth, glow, passion, the upward lift that inspires. Morality
+alone is cold, emotion alone is apt to be visionary. But the two united
+propel the ship, one serving as ballast to keep it steady, and one as
+sails to catch the winds of heaven.
+
+My mother was an example of pure character. She laid no claim whatever
+to literary talent. Indeed she had none. I cannot associate her with
+books of any special description, but I can always associate her with
+goodness, with humility, sincerity, duty, kindness, pity, and
+simplicity. Truthfulness was her great virtue, and was saved from
+bluntness only by her delicate feeling for others and her inborn
+politeness. The severest rebuke I ever received from her was on account
+of a sharp arraignment of merchants in a youthful sermon, which to her
+seemed presumptuous. Her household cares, the nurture of her children
+(she had seven, five sons and two daughters, all of whom she trained
+most carefully like a devoted mother), the family visitings, the parish
+calls, missions among the poor, occupied the day. She would sit for
+hours knitting or sewing, or in an armchair before the coal fire
+silently musing. She was quiet, reserved, old-fashioned in her
+sentiments, but with a great fund of inward strength, which came out on
+emergencies. I shall always remember her ceaseless solicitude for an
+unfortunate elder brother of mine who had for years been an anxiety and
+a trouble. When he died in early manhood, after nursing him tenderly,
+she softly closed his eyes, and preserved the memory of him in her
+heart. Her chamber window in the country looked upon his distant grave,
+the little white stone over which kept him before her eye who was always
+in her thoughts.
+
+She accepted the existing order of things because it was established,
+disliking experiments, however humane, for the reason that they had not
+been tested; and if she had misgivings, she kept them to herself not
+daring to set up her private feelings in opposition to the will of the
+Supreme, the question whether the existing order expressed the will of
+the Supreme never being raised by her.
+
+She was Unitarian, having so been taught, but speculative matters were
+out of her reach as well as uncongenial with her sphere. Her faith was
+of the heart, and all the reason for it she had to give was an uplifted
+life, "unspotted from the world." Of creeds she knew nothing, not that
+she was deficient in mind, but because they seemed to her to be affairs
+of criticism, with which she had nothing to do. Her concern was with
+practical things, and conduct was, with her, more than seven eighths of
+life. Even the very mild decoction of theology that was administered
+from Sunday to Sunday in Chauncy Place was sometimes too much for her.
+She was a practical Christian, if there ever was one.
+
+Her love of nature was genuine. As a young woman she could distinguish
+the colors of a flying bird. When she had a house of her own in the
+country, she preferred a spot remote from the world of society; went
+there as early as possible in the spring, and stayed as late in the
+autumn as she could. She delighted in the place; loved the air, the
+trees, the smell of the ground. She enjoyed her garden; liked to see
+plants grow. Every morning after breakfast she went out to inspect the
+grounds, and came back laden with modest flowers; in the fall with pine
+cones, the flame of which she enjoyed. On her last evening, quite
+unaware of her coming end, she sat on the piazza, and looked at the
+sunset, wrapped in shawls, though it was midsummer, for she was weak and
+emaciated but patiently tranquil.
+
+Her habits were simple, not from parsimony but from taste. She cared
+nothing for decoration or display. She spent no more than was necessary
+on dress or furniture. She was fond of old-fashioned, solid things. In
+the midst of abundance, her appetite was for plain food, yet she was no
+ascetic or prude, but a largehearted, sensible woman, sober and serious
+but genial too.
+
+Browning makes Paracelsus say:
+
+ 'T is only when they spring to heaven that angels
+ Reveal themselves to you; they sit all day
+ Beside you, and lie down at night by you,--
+ Who care not for their presence,--muse or sleep,
+ And all at once they leave you and you know them.
+
+This is in a measure true. Death is a great revealer. Unfortunately it
+is a great deceiver also, putting wings on very earthly bodies. But in
+this instance, the qualities were all there in the living form, and all
+clearly visible to those who sat all day beside my mother. Death did but
+brush away a little film that hung before distant eyes.
+
+Until near middle life I had the example and advice of these dear
+spirits. It is my privilege to have their blood in my veins. That was my
+best endowment, and kept me always hopeful of a better future in the
+time to come. The dream of a nobler age for literature, art, science,
+humanity, came directly from my father. The desire to do something to
+make the dream an actual fact, to prove myself as of some service in the
+world, came from my mother. His was the love of intellectual liberty.
+Hers was the passion for practical accomplishments. He was a scholar.
+She was a worker.
+
+Both had thoughts deeper than they could express. Both were utterly
+sincere in their calling, and the limitations of their age alone
+confined their advance. The times were quiet then; the world was small
+and disconnected; Boston was a little place and shut off even from
+American cities by difficulties of travel and by exorbitant rates of
+postage. Thus responsibility was mainly confined to individuals. There
+were no wearing duties; no perplexing cares; even railroad disturbances
+did not worry, for there was no railroad speculation, and no railroad
+system. Hours were early, dinner was at two or half-past, tea at six or
+seven, the evening ended at ten, and was spent with books, melodious
+music, or playful games of amusement, not of instruction. There were few
+social gatherings; balls were very rare, seldom lasting later than
+eleven o'clock. There was an occasional concert, and here and there a
+theatre, but there were no great dinner parties. Social problems were
+exceedingly simple; the classes were divided by lines that nobody
+attempted to pass over. Socialism was unborn, and labor agitations were
+unknown. In a word, there was such a thing as leisure, and this was used
+chiefly for the cultivation of the mind.
+
+My father was greatly interested in the education of his boys; watched
+all their attainments; taught them French; encouraged their learning how
+to box, and fence, and swim; while my mother shed an atmosphere of peace
+over the whole household. She made one joke only, as far as my memory
+serves me,--and I mention it here lest any one should suppose there was
+a lack of sunshine in her nature. My father was very fond of "voeslauer,"
+an Austrian red wine. When the last bottle was produced my mother, said
+archly, "your _face_ will _lower_ when it is all drunk up." It was not
+much of a joke, but a small jest will show the spirit of fun quite as
+well as a large one.
+
+There was a singular combination of aspiration with peace at that time.
+Probably there is as much aspiration now as there was then, perhaps
+more; but it is associated with social reform rather than with personal
+perfection; there is peace, too, at the present day, but it is harder to
+get at and needs to be sought most often in private homes; the inward
+peace is found in all periods.
+
+How the principles then formed would bear the strain of a later age or
+a larger sphere remained to be proved. Fifty years ago the modern era
+with its complications and perplexities could not even be suspected. The
+foundations alone could then be laid.
+
+
+
+
+II. EDUCATION.
+
+
+Of the primary schools it is unnecessary to speak. They were of the same
+kind that were established in Boston at that period. Indeed I can
+recollect but two, one, a child's school of boys and girls, kept by a
+Miss Scott, at the corner of Mt. Vernon Street and Hancock; the other a
+boys' school kept by a Mr. Capen, a poor hump-backed cripple who could
+not get out of his chair, but wheeled himself about the room, and kept
+on his table a cowhide, which was pretty generously exercised. The
+school was on Bedford Street behind the "Church of Church Green." A
+little alley-way ran along in the rear of the church through which I
+used to go to the school-house.
+
+The Latin School was an old institution brought hither by Rev. John
+Cotton, who remembered the Free Grammar School founded in Lincolnshire,
+England, by Queen Mary, in which Latin and Greek were taught. It was
+established here, in 1635, five years after the landing of Winthrop, two
+or three years before Harvard College. When I was there, it stood on
+School Street, opposite the Franklin statue. It had a granite front and
+a cupola. The head-master was Charles K. Dillaway, an excellent scholar,
+a faithful teacher, an agreeable man. He had to resign in consequence of
+ill-health. The tutors were Henry W. Torrey and Francis Gardner, who
+afterwards became head-master. Both were pupils of the school. Mr.
+Frederick P. Leverett, author of the Latin Lexicon, was chosen to
+succeed Mr. Dillaway, but died before assuming the office. The next
+head-master, during my course, was Epes Sargent Dixwell, a most
+accomplished man, an elegant scholar, a gentleman of the world, very
+much interested, as I remember, in the plastic art of Greece. He is
+still living, and amuses himself by writing Greek. Mr. Dixwell held
+office till 1851, when he established a private school. The discipline
+of the Latin School was strict but mild. Corporal punishment was the
+unquestioned rule, but it was never harshly administered, though the
+knowledge that it might be undoubtedly did a good deal toward
+stimulating the ambition of the scholars. Here and there no doubt a boy
+exasperated the teacher by idleness or disorder; possibly at moments the
+teacher was nervous and irritable. I recollect a single instance in
+which he was over-sensitive, too prone to take offence, which fastened
+suspiciously upon some individual scholar; but injustice was a very rare
+occurrence. We learned Greek and Latin, the rudiments of algebra,
+writing and declamation; but the best part of the education I received
+in those days was an atmosphere of elegant literature, derived from
+friends of my father. I used to see William H. Prescott taking his walk
+on Beacon Street, in the sun, and have often sat in his study in his
+tranquil hours, and heard him talk. The beautiful library of George
+Ticknor, at the head of Park Street, was open to me, and I can see his
+form now as he walked on the Common. George S. Hillard, the elegant man
+of letters, was a familiar figure on the street. Charles Sumner, then a
+young law student, strode vigorously along, his manner even then
+suggesting the advent of a new era.
+
+In 1846, I listened to his oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of
+Harvard University on the Scholar [Pickering]; the Jurist [Story]; the
+Artist [Allston]; the Philanthropist [Channing]; and his bold
+declamation was strangely in contrast with the academical gown that he
+wore. Daniel Webster used to stalk by our house, the embodiment of the
+Constitution, the incarnation of law, the black locomotive of the train
+of civilization. Ralph Waldo Emerson often sat at my father's table
+diffusing the radiance of serene ideas, and heralding the diviner age
+that was to come.
+
+From the Latin School to Harvard College was an easy transition. There
+existed an impression that Latin-School boys might take their ease for
+the first year at Cambridge, because they were so well prepared, but I
+found enough to do; there was the great library, there were the advanced
+studies, there was the more perfect training. The President was Josiah
+Quincy, the elder. Henry W. Longfellow was professor of modern
+languages; Cornelius C. Felton, the ardent philhellene, taught Greek;
+Charles Beck, a German, taught Latin; Benjamin Peirce was professor of
+mathematics; James Walker was an instructor in intellectual and moral
+philosophy; Joseph Lovering, teacher in chemistry. Among the tutors were
+Bernard Roelker, in German; Pietro Bachi, in Italian; Francisco Sales,
+in Spanish.
+
+The new buildings now in the college yard were not erected; Holworthy
+(1812), Stoughton (1804-1805), Hollis (1763), Harvard (1766), Holden
+(1734), Massachusetts Hall (1720), University Hall (1812-1813) were in
+existence. There were no athletics; there was no gymnasium; there was no
+boating; there was little base-ball. There were few literary societies;
+so that we were driven back mainly upon intellectual labor. The
+professors' houses were always open, and there was choice society in the
+town. I recollect particularly well going to the house of John White
+Webster, who was executed later for the murder of Dr. Parkman. He was
+very fond of music and had a daughter who sang finely, besides being
+handsome. She afterwards married Mr. Dabney, of Fayal. The Doctor was a
+nervous man, high strung, but good-natured and polite. His fatal
+encounter with Dr. Parkman I always attributed to a sudden outbreak of
+passion.
+
+Within the grounds of the college we were quite studious, companionable
+among ourselves. There was no rioting, no excess of any kind. Walking
+and swimming in the river Charles were our chief recreations. Connection
+with Boston was infrequent and difficult, as there was no railroad. The
+Sundays could be passed in the city if the student brought a certificate
+that he went regularly to church; otherwise it was expected that the
+First Church, or one of the others, should be frequented. The
+instruction was of a cordial, friendly, courteous, and humane kind; the
+professors were enthusiastic students in their departments. I well
+recollect Professor Longfellow's kindness; Professor Felton's ardor (I
+visited Pompeii with him in 1853). Charles Beck was a burning patriot in
+the war. Pietro Bachi's great eyes lighted up and glowed as he talked
+about Dante. Bernard Roelker afterwards became a lawyer in New York.
+Charles Wheeler and Robert Bartlett, tutors, both rare spirits, died
+young. On the whole, life at Harvard College was exceedingly pleasant,
+and a real love of learning was implanted in young men's bosoms.
+
+The corner-stone of Gore Hall was laid in 1813. The books were moved
+into the library in the summer vacation of 1814. There were forty-one
+thousand volumes at that time.
+
+In the early part of my career, I took my meals in Commons, at an
+expense of two dollars and a quarter a week, the highest price then
+paid. Commons was abolished for a time in 1849, it being found difficult
+to satisfy the students, who for some years had boarded in the houses in
+the neighborhood.
+
+There were excitements too. Though there was no gymnasium, or boating,
+and little foot-ball, base-ball, or cricket (these games were all very
+simple and rudimentary), there were the clubs, the "[Greek: Alpha Delta
+Phi]," still a secret society, and occupying a back upper room, to which
+we mounted by stealth,--the same room serving for initiations and
+sociables,--was exceedingly interesting in a literary point of view.
+There were papers on Scott, Byron, Wordsworth, delightful conversations,
+anecdotes, songs.
+
+The "Institute of 1770" taught us elocution, and readiness in debate;
+the "[Greek: Phi Beta Kappa]," no longer a secret society, and no longer
+actively literary, hung over us like a star, stimulating ambition and
+inciting us to excellence in scholarship.
+
+Altogether it was a delightful life; a life between boyhood and
+manhood; of purely literary ambition, of natural friendship. There was
+no distinction of persons, no affected pride. We found our own level,
+and kept our own place. Money did not distinguish or family, only
+brains. There was no care but for intellectual work; there was no excess
+save in study. Expenses were small, indulgences were few and simple. The
+education was more suited to those times than to these, when culture
+must be so much broader, and social expectations demand such varied
+accomplishments.
+
+
+
+
+III. DIVINITY SCHOOL.
+
+
+To enter at once the Divinity School was to start on a predestined
+career. From childhood I was marked out for a clergyman. This was taken
+for granted in all places and conversations, and my own thoughts fell
+habitually into that groove. There was nothing unattractive in the
+professional career as illustrated by my father. I was the only one of a
+large family of brothers who pursued the full course of studies at
+Cambridge, or who showed a taste for the scholastic life. An appetite
+for books rather than for affairs pointed first of all to a literary
+calling, while a fondness for speculative questions, a leaning towards
+ideal subjects, and a serious turn of mind naturally suggested at that
+time the pulpit. An inward "experience of religion," which in some other
+communions was regarded as essential to the character of a minister of
+the gospel, was not demanded. Religion was rather moral and intellectual
+than spiritual, a matter of mental conviction more than of emotional
+feeling. The clerical profession stood very high, higher than any of the
+three "learned professions," by reason of its requiring in larger
+measure a tendency towards abstract thought, an interest in theological
+discussions, and a steady belief in doctrines that concerned the soul.
+Literature was not at that period a profession; there was no Art to
+speak of except for genius of the first order like that of Allston or
+Greenough. Men of the highest intellectual rank, whatever they may have
+become afterwards, tried the ministry at the start. The traditions of
+New England favored the ministerial calling. The great names, with here
+and there an exception, were names of divines. The great books were on
+subjects of religion; the popular interest centred in theological
+controversy; the general enthusiasm was aroused by preachers; the
+current talk was about sermons. The clergy was a privileged class,
+aristocratic, exalted.
+
+Divinity Hall had been dedicated in August, 1826. It was situated on an
+avenue about a quarter of a mile from the college yard. It contained,
+besides thirty-seven chambers for the accommodation of students, a
+chapel, a library, a lecture-room, and a reading-room; it stood opposite
+the Zooelogical Museum. Before it was a vacant space used for games.
+Behind it was meadow land reaching all the way to Mr. Norton's. Just
+beyond it was Dr. Palfrey's residence. George Rapall Noyes, D.D., was
+elected in May, 1840, with the title of "Hancock Professor of Hebrew and
+Oriental Languages, and Dexter Lecturer on Biblical Literature." He had
+already translated the poetical books of the Old Testament, and it was
+his eminence as a translator which had won him fame while a minister at
+Petersham. It was his duty also to explain the New Testament, and in
+addition to give lectures in systematic theology. Besides all this he
+was to preach in the college chapel a fourth of the year. He steadily
+grew in the respect and attachment of the young men; his authority in
+the lecture-room was very great; his opinions were carefully formed and
+precisely delivered; and his shrewd, practical wisdom was long
+remembered by his pupils. Convers Francis, D.D., appointed to the
+"Parkman Professorship," after the resignation of Henry Ware, Jr., was
+his associate. The branches assigned to him were ecclesiastical history,
+natural theology, ethics, the composition of sermons, and instruction in
+the duties of a pastor; besides all this he was to preach half of the
+time in the college chapel. Dr. Francis was an accomplished scholar and
+a faithful teacher. The best man, too, for his position, at a time when
+in an unsectarian school it was exceedingly desirable that the
+professors should harmonize all tendencies; for with a strong sympathy
+with "transcendentalism," as it was then called, he had been a most
+successful parish minister, a very acceptable preacher, and a man in
+whom all the churches had confidence.
+
+At Cambridge, owing to the influence of Buckminster, Ware, and Norton,
+Unitarian opinion prevailed, though the controversial period had passed
+by when I was there. The clouds of warfare no longer discharged
+lightning; there was no roll of thunder; only a faint muttering betrayed
+the former excitement; and the memory of old conflicts hovered round the
+spots where the fights had been hottest. Marks of strife were still
+visible on texts, and chapters were scarred with wounds. Comment still
+lingered near the passages where polemics had raged, and the blood
+burned as we read the tracts or studied the essays of the champions we
+admired.
+
+It was impossible to forget the interpretations that had been given to
+words or phrases. A strictly scientific study, either of the Bible or
+the creed, was therefore out of the question. But the course of
+exercises was broad, generous, inclusive, as far as this was feasible.
+The bias was decidedly unorthodox, yet without the bitter temper of
+opposition. The old system was rather set aside than attacked. It was
+assumed to have been vanquished in the fair field. The professors were
+liberal in their views. A small but serviceable library furnished the
+students with a certain amount of needed material, the college library
+was freely opened to them, and the collections of the professors were
+gladly placed at their disposal. The days were fully occupied with
+lectures, recitations, discussions, exercises in writing out and taking
+of notes. Once a week there was a debate on some general theme not
+connected with the topics of the class-room; and at the latter part of
+the course there was special training in the composition and delivery of
+sermons, accompanied by a brief experience of extemporaneous speaking.
+The Unitarian ministry was alone contemplated; no wide divergence from
+it was encouraged, and the conservative methods of interpretation were
+the ones recommended. Some knowledge of Greek and Latin being
+presupposed, the study of Hebrew was made the one study of language, and
+this was pursued with the best available helps. Biblical criticism
+naturally took a prominent place in the current curriculum, under the
+guidance of the most distinguished authorities; books of every school
+were recommended, whether old or new, Catholic or Protestant,
+"conservative" or "liberal," Horne, Tholuck, De Wette being consulted in
+turn. The New Testament and "Historical Christianity" were taken for
+granted; and these meant belief in miracles, which were defended against
+rising objections of the Strauss and Paulus schools, the former holding
+by the "mythical" theory, the latter favoring the notion of a natural
+explanation of some sort. The hostility towards rationalism was decided.
+This was forty years ago, before the "historical method," as it was
+called, instituted by Baur, Schwegler, Zeller, Sneckenburger, and the
+_Theologische Jahrbuecher_, had any expositor in this country, long
+before the Dutch school, the later French school--Kuenen, Reville,
+Reuss, Nicolas, Renan,--came out. The great issue was the credibility of
+the miracles of the Old and New Testaments. The half-monastic life we
+led at Divinity Hall cut us off a good deal from social amenities,
+reform agitations, attempts to change institutions, and even from the
+deeper currents of religious sentiment. None but the very observant took
+note of Brook Farm, or heeded the movements in behalf of Association
+that were going on in other communities. Whatever was outside of the
+"Christian" ministry concerned us but little. The professors did not
+direct our eyes to the mountain tops or call attention to the bringers
+of good tidings from other quarters than the Christian Revelation, as
+explained by its scholars and writers. Even such a phenomenon as Emerson
+did not make a profound impression on the average mind.
+
+A tone of old-fashioned piety pervaded the establishment. A weekly
+prayer-meeting, always attended by one of the professors, though
+officially rather than as a stimulator, was much in the manner and
+spirit of similar exercises at Andover. The students were cautioned
+against excessive intellectualism. Several of them spent their Sundays
+in teaching classes of the young in the neighboring towns, in
+ministering to the sick in hospitals, or in carrying the monitions of
+conscience to the criminals in the prison at Charlestown. The aims of a
+practical ministry were thus kept in view as well as the circumstances
+of the time permitted. Of course the school could not be a philanthropic
+institution any more than it could be independent or scientific. It was
+committed to a special purpose, which was the supply of Christian
+pulpits with instructed, earnest, devoted men. That they should be
+Unitarians was expected; that they should be Christians in belief was
+demanded. There were two ever-present spectres, "orthodoxy" and
+"rationalism," the one represented by Andover, the other by Germany.
+Audacity of speculation when unaccompanied by practical piety was
+discountenanced, and in flagrant instances rebuked.
+
+The literal form of the orthodox creed, it need hardly be said, was made
+more prominent than its imaginative aspect. This was inevitable, for the
+object was to assail it rather than to understand it. To be perfectly
+fair to all sides was, under the circumstances, not to be expected at a
+period so near the era of controversy. An earnest, ingenuous youth could
+find at Cambridge all the courage and impulse he needed, for the
+atmosphere of the place was neither chilling nor depressing. The less
+emotional, more intellectual scholar was left to pursue his studies
+undisturbed, the wind of spiritual feeling not being strong enough to
+carry him away.
+
+In a word, the institution was all that could have been looked for in a
+time when ecclesiastical and doctrinal traditions were fatally though
+not confessedly broken, and naked individualism was not avowedly
+adopted. The task of the professors, conscientious, hard working,
+utterly faithful men, was laborious, difficult, and thankless. The
+Unitarian public, fearing a tendency to unbelief, gave them a grudging
+confidence; the students, I am afraid, were not considerate of
+them,--the zealous finding them lukewarm, the cold-blooded blaming them
+for stopping short of the last consequences of their own theory. It is
+wonderful that the school went on at all. The single-minded devotion of
+the teachers alone preserved it. Looking thoughtfully back across a wide
+gulf of years, the writer of these pages feels that he owes this tribute
+to Convers Francis and George R. Noyes. How often he has wished he could
+take them by the hand and ask their forgiveness for his frequent
+misjudgment of them, misjudgment the remembrance of which makes his
+heart bleed the more as he can only think of their generous forbearance.
+Their influence was emancipating and stimulating. They were friendly to
+thought. Under their ministration the mind took a leap forward towards
+the confines of the Christian system of faith. What the divinity school
+of the future may be able to accomplish it would be hazardous to
+conjecture. It could hardly then have done more than it did.
+
+The study of comparative religions, so zealously prosecuted within a
+few years, together with a desire to do perfect justice to orthodox
+doctrines, may render practical a scientific review of theological
+systems, but in this event a predilection in favor of a separate
+"Christian" ministry can be no longer characteristic of a divinity
+school which proposes to prepare young men for the clerical calling.
+
+The three years of secluded life passed quickly away. The trial sermon
+in the village church was delivered and criticised. The President of the
+college then was Edward Everett, my uncle. The next morning I went to
+his office; he spoke warmly of my sermon, but advised me henceforth to
+commit sermons to memory as he did. This I tried two or three times, but
+the effort to write the sermons so fatigued me that the task of
+committing them to memory was too great, and for years I wrote my
+discourses, until for convenience' sake I learned to preach without
+notes. The diploma was bestowed, the actual ministry was begun. The term
+of preaching as a candidate did not last long. By the advice of friends
+an invitation was accepted to an old established conservative parish in
+Salem, Mass. Ordination and marriage soon followed, and public life was
+inaugurated under the most promising conditions. I had the best wishes
+of the conservative portion of the community to which I was, properly,
+supposed to belong, and the hopes of the radical portion who anticipated
+a change of view as time went on, and I was brought into sharper
+collision with prevailing habits of thought than was possible at
+Cambridge, where the student was in a great measure cut off from
+intercourse with the world.
+
+At the "Divinity School" I was known as a young man with conservative
+ideas. I remember now discussions, essays, criticisms, in which the
+opinions in vogue among old-fashioned Unitarians were defended somewhat
+passionately against the more daring convictions of my companions. In
+especial my faith was in direct opposition to the spiritual philosophy;
+Strauss was a horror; Parker was a bugbear; Furness seemed an innovator;
+Emerson was a "Transcendentalist," a term of immeasurable reproach. All
+this was soon to pass away, and I was to go a great deal beyond even
+Parker. The word "Transcendentalist" ceased to be a synonym for
+"enthusiast." The philosophy of intuition was first literally adopted,
+then dismissed, and I came out where I least expected. But I well
+remember, one evening as I was walking out from Boston, presenting to
+myself distinctly the alternative between the adoption of the old and
+the new. I am afraid that the old commended itself by its venerableness,
+the solidity of its traditions, and the authority of its great names,
+while the new was still vague and formless. I then and there decided to
+follow in the footsteps of my fathers, a course more in sympathy with
+the prevailing temper of the age and with the current of thought at
+Divinity Hall, though Emerson had delivered his address some years
+before, and the New Jerusalem was even then coming down from heaven.
+
+
+
+
+IV. SALEM.
+
+
+Old Salem was a city of the imagination. History does it no justice.
+The "Essex Institute," founded in 1848, by the union of the "Essex
+County Historical Society" and the "Essex County Natural History
+Society," has a very fine collection of books, pamphlets, manuscripts,
+an invaluable museum, relics, pictures, so that in no locality in the
+country has so much been accomplished in exhuming the treasures of
+municipal and civil history, and in bringing to light antiquities.
+Hurd's "History of Essex County," published in 1888, with its monographs
+on commerce, religion, literature, newspapers, etc., written by
+thoroughly competent men, throws a flood of light on the past of the
+place. Mr. Upham's "Memoir of Francis Peabody," published in 1868, gives
+an admirable account of the literary eminence of the old town. Colonel
+Higginson's article in _Harper's Monthly_ on "Old Salem's Sea Captains,"
+published in September, 1886, gives something of its romantic character.
+But best of all as illustrating this feature are the articles written by
+"Eleanor Putnam" (Mrs. Arlo Bates), and republished after her death
+under the title of "Old Salem," in 1887. She was about thirty years old
+when she died; but if she had lived she would have presented the old
+city in its quaintest aspect. Her love of antiquarian research, her
+taste, her devotion to Salem qualified her in an eminent degree for her
+self-appointed task.
+
+There can hardly be a doubt that the origins of the town were
+religious; that a religious purpose, deep though undefined and
+undeclared, animated the emigrants before Winthrop. The very name,
+Salem, the Hebrew for peacefulness, instead of "Naumkeag" (the old
+Indian name), adopted in 1628, to commemorate the reconciliation between
+the company of Roger Conant and that of John Endicott, was already
+suggestive of spiritual qualities. Eminent forms loom up in the
+distance: Francis Higginson, the first minister of Massachusetts Bay;
+Roger Williams, whose name is identified with "soul freedom"; Hugh
+Peters, his opponent. John Endicott was a most imposing figure; hasty,
+rash, choleric (as was shown by his striking a man in early life),
+imperious, but brave and bold. He was a stern Puritan, hating popery so
+much that he cut out the image of the king from the English banner,
+because it was an image, while at the same time he persecuted the
+Quakers, because they advocated obedience to the "inner light" and were
+disturbers of the established peace. But he had sweeter
+qualities--gentleness, generosity, and kindness. An old scripture
+(Ecclesiasticus xi., 28) says: "Judge none blessed before his death; for
+a man shall be known in his children." The descendants of John Endicott
+are graceful, elegant, refined people, lovely in manners, gentle in
+disposition. The root of these qualities must have been in the
+forefather two centuries and a half ago. The intellectual history of the
+city is very illustrious and began early. A strong intellectual bent
+characterized the early settlers, who were persons of inquisitive minds,
+addicted to experiments and enterprises, exceedingly ingenious. Near the
+middle of the last century there was in existence in Salem a social
+evening club, composed of eminent cultivated and accomplished citizens.
+On the evening of Monday, March 31, 1760, a meeting was held at the
+Tavern House of a Mrs. Pratt for the purpose of "founding in the town of
+Salem a handsome library of valuable books, apprehending the same may be
+of considerable use and benefit under proper regulations." The books
+imported, given, or bought, amounted to four hundred and fifteen
+volumes. This society, which may be regarded as the foundation of all
+the institutions and agencies established in this place to promote
+intellectual culture, was incorporated in 1797. In 1766, the famous
+Count Rumford was an apprentice here. In 1781, Richard Kirwan, LL.D., of
+Dublin, an eminent philosopher of the period, had a valuable library in
+a vessel which was captured by an American private armed ship and
+brought into Beverly as a prize. The books were given by Dr. Kirwan, who
+would accept no gratuity and was delighted that his volumes were put to
+so good a use. The books were sold to an association of gentlemen in
+Salem and its neighborhood, and formed the "Philosophical Library." This
+and the "Social Library" were afterwards consolidated into the "Salem
+Athenaeum," which was incorporated in March, 1810.
+
+Among the distinguished men were William H. Prescott, Benjamin Peirce,
+Nathaniel Hawthorne, John Lewis Russell, Charles Grafton Page, and Jones
+Very. Here lived Edward Augustus Holyoke, president of the Massachusetts
+Medical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Timothy
+Pickering, Rev. John Prince, Rev. William Bentley, Nathaniel Bowditch,
+author of the "Practical Navigator" and translator of the "Mecanique
+Celeste"; John Pickering, Joseph Story, of the Supreme Bench; Daniel
+Appleton White, Leverett Saltonstall, Benjamin Merrill, and many another
+man of accomplishments and learning. Even the uneducated, and those
+engaged in the common occupations of everyday life, gratified their love
+of knowledge, and followed up, for their private enjoyment, researches
+in intellectual and philosophical spheres; apothecaries and retail
+shopkeepers distinguished themselves as writers; one of them--Isaac
+Newhall by name--was reputed the author of the famous "Junius Letters,"
+thus enjoying companionship with Burke, Gibbon, Grattan, Camden,
+Chatham, Chesterfield, and other distinguished writers.
+
+Its commercial history was exceedingly brilliant. In its palmy days it
+had more trade with the East Indies than all the other American ports
+put together. Its situation by the sea encouraged maritime adventure.
+From its very infancy its inhabitants sent vessels across the Atlantic
+of forty to sixty tons, and followed up the trade with Spain, France,
+Italy, and the West India Islands. In the war of the Revolution it sent
+out one hundred and fifty-eight armed ships, mounting at least two
+thousand guns, and carrying not less than six thousand men. In 1785,
+Salem sent out the first vessel to the Isle of France, Calcutta, and
+China; she began also the trade to the other ports of the East Indies
+and Japan; to Madagascar and Zanzibar, Brazil and Africa. In the south
+seas, Salem ships first visited the Fiji Islands; they first opened up
+to our commerce New Holland and New Zealand. In the war of 1812 she had
+two hundred and fifty privateers. When the war was over, these vessels
+were engaged in the merchant service. Mr. E. H. Derby, one of the great
+merchants, said to be the richest man in America, sent out thirty-seven
+vessels in fourteen years, making a hundred and twenty voyages. The
+names of the great merchants, E. H. Derby, N. Silsbee, William Gray,
+Peabody, Crowningshield, Pickman, Cleveland, Cabot, Higginson, are of
+universal celebrity. Then Derby Street was alive with sea-captains, the
+custom-house was active, the tall warehouses were full of treasures, the
+great East Indiamen fairly made the air fragrant as they unloaded their
+merchandise. To quote the language of "Eleanor Putnam": "There was
+poetry in the names of the vessels--the ship _Lotus_, the _Black
+Warrior_, the brig _Persia_, the _Light Horse_, the _Three Friends_, and
+the great _Grand Turk_. There was, too, a charm about the cargoes. They
+were no common-place bales of merchandise, but were suggestive in their
+very names of the sweet, strange odors of the East, from which they
+came. There was food for the imagination in the mention of those
+ship-loads of gum copal from Madagascar and Zanzibar; of hemp and iron
+from Russia; of Bombay cotton; of ginger, pepper, coffee, and sugar from
+India; of teas, silks, and nankeens from China; salt from Cadiz; and
+fruits from the ports of the Mediterranean."
+
+Miss Putnam speaks of the gorgeous fans, the carved ivory, the blue
+Canton china, the generous tea-cups, the tureens, the heavy tankards,
+the Delft jars, the ancient candle-sticks, the heavy punch bowls, the
+strange beads, suggestive of the Hindoo rites, Nautch dances, and women
+with dusky throats. Then the very air was weighty with romantic
+adventures. We read with awe of cashmere shawls hanging on clothes
+lines, of jars full of silver coin, of the gilded fishes on the side of
+each stair, of the grand staircase in the front hall of Mr. Pickman's
+house on Essex Street, of logs of sandal-wood. The museum of the East
+India Marine Society contains sceptres from the Fiji Islands; a musical
+instrument from New South Wales, another from Borneo; a carved statue of
+a rich Persian merchant of Bombay; an alabaster figure of a Chinese Jos;
+a copper idol from Java; a mirror from Japan; fans from Maraba, the
+Marquesas Islands, Calcutta; cloth from Otaheite; an earthen patera from
+Herculaneum; two dresses of women from the Pelew Islands; sandal-wood
+from the Sandwich Islands; a parasol from Calcutta; nutmegs from
+Cayenne; thirty-six specimens of Italian marble; cement from the palace
+of the Caesars at Rome; white marble from Carthage; porphyry from Italy;
+beads worn by the Pundits and Fakirs in India; a glass cup from Owyhee;
+Verde Antico from Sicily; sandal-wood tapers from China; wood images of
+mummies from Thebes; a silver box from Soo-Soo; porphyry from
+Madagascar; a piece of mosaic from ancient Carthage; silk cocoons from
+India; marble from the temple of Minerva at Athens; piece of pavement
+from the site of ancient Troy; and polished jasper from Siberia.
+
+When I was in Salem, from 1847 to 1855, this splendor had departed.
+Derby Street was deserted, the great warehouses were tenements for
+laborers. Hawthorne has described the custom-house in his famous preface
+to the "Scarlet Letter." The sailors had disappeared; the commerce,
+owing mainly to the shallowness of the water in the harbor, had gone to
+Boston and New York. But traces of the old glory still lingered. Here
+and there a great merchant was seen on the streets. Some of the old
+houses remained: the Pickering House on Broad Street, built in 1651; the
+Turner House; Roger Williams' house, at the corner of Essex and North
+Streets, built before 1634; and Mr. Forrester's house.
+
+As the chairman of the Salem Lyceum, it was my privilege to entertain
+such men as R. W. Emerson, George W. Curtis and others. Thomas Starr
+King, when he lectured in Danvers, drove over to my house, and spent the
+rest of the evening. Nathaniel Hawthorne I used to meet frequently on
+the street. I often saw Mrs. Hawthorne leading her children by the hand.
+Mr. Hawthorne, who was in Salem from 1846 to 1849, was remarkable for
+his shyness. His favorite companions were some Democratic politicians,
+who met weekly at the office of one of them, where he occupied himself
+in listening to their talk, but he avoided cultivated people. On one
+occasion a friend of mine asked us to meet him at dinner; twice he went
+to remind his guest of the engagement. The hour arrived, the dinner was
+kept waiting half an hour for Mr. Hawthorne to come. He said but little
+during the dinner, and immediately afterward got up and went away; his
+reluctance to meet people overcoming his sense of propriety.
+
+My church, the "North Church," as it was called, was a handsome
+building on the main street, a stone structure with a tower, and a green
+before it. It was founded in 1772 by people who had left the First
+Parish by reason of great dissatisfaction. The first minister, called in
+1773, was Thomas Barnard. He was a broad-minded, liberal man, and left
+the church substantially Unitarian. His successor was J. E. Abbot,
+called in 1815, whose ministry, from ill-health, was very short. My
+predecessor, John Brazer, a cultivated, scholarly, sensitive man, a good
+preacher, an excellent pastor, was settled in 1820. My ministry there
+was exceedingly pleasant and tranquil for several years. There were long
+hours for studying; the parish work was not hard; the people were
+honest, quiet, sober, some of them exceedingly refined and gentle; it
+was as if the old Puritan spirit, modified by time, still lingered about
+the old town. Family life was beautiful to see; the homes were charming;
+there was luxury enough; there was great intelligence, singular activity
+of mind; and I remember well the bright conversations, the
+entertainments, the teas, the dinners, the receptions, the social
+meetings. The women, especially, were distinguished for interest in
+literary matters. Many interesting people still lived in the town,
+Daniel Appleton White, for instance, Dr. Treadwell, Benjamin Merrill,
+Thomas Cole; some of these were my parishioners and all were my friends.
+But the life was almost too quiet for me, as circumstances presently
+proved.
+
+At the same time, as if to render impossible my further ministration in
+this first place of service, the anti-slavery agitation was at its
+height, dividing churches, breaking up sects, setting the members of
+families against each other, detaching ministers from their
+congregations, and arraying society in hostile camps. The noise of the
+conflict filled the air. It was impossible to evade the issue. Those who
+had fixed positions in the community, were of a tranquil temperament, or
+of an easy conscience, might survey the battle calmly, or be vexed only
+by the confusion in the social world; but they who had the future still
+before them could not but feel the necessity of taking sides in the
+quarrel. When Garrison, the incarnate conscience, was enunciating the
+moral law and illustrating it by flaming texts from the Old Testament;
+when the intrepid Phillips was throwing the light of history on
+politics, and putting statesmanship in the face of humanity, judging all
+men by the maxims of ethical philosophy; when Parker was proclaiming the
+absolute justice, and Clarke was applying the truths of the eternal
+love; and many others, men and women, were thundering forth the divine
+vengeance on iniquity; when facts were set out for everybody's reading,
+and tongues were unloosed, and fiery messages proceeded from all mouths,
+and conviction was deep, and eloquence was stirring, it was impossible
+to be still.
+
+Now the situation is changed; the evil is removed; the wound has
+healed; the surgeon's knife has been put up in its case. A new
+philosophy is disposed to blame the action of the anti-slavery
+champions. Some critics have doubted whether the conduct of the
+abolitionists was wise; whether their primary assumption of the
+political equality of all men was correct; whether a race that had never
+founded a government or contributed to the advance of civilization could
+add any weight to the cause of liberty. But then such misgivings could
+not be raised. The abolitionists seemed to have on their side the
+precepts of the New Testament, the teachings of the Sermon on the Mount,
+the character and example of Jesus, the burning language of prophecy,
+the inspiring traditions of primitive Christianity, the humane instincts
+of the heart, the moral sentiments of equity, pity, compassion, all
+reinforced by the growing democratic opinion of the age, and by the
+tenets of the intuitive philosophy then coming to the front. The glowing
+passages from Isaiah and from Matthew: "Let the oppressed go free; break
+every yoke"; "Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the least of these, ye
+did it unto me," shone in our eyes. To the anti-slavery people belonged
+the heroic virtues, courage, faithfulness, and sacrifice. Theirs was the
+martyr spirit; the readiness to surrender ease, position, and success
+for an idea. It would have been strange if, at such a time, a young man,
+a clergyman, too, had been a champion of vested interests. The doctrine
+of a higher law than that of the State commended itself to his idealism,
+and pledged him to oppose what he regarded as legalized wrong. The
+doctrine of legal rights for all men made him a firm enemy of organized
+inhumanity. It was a period of passionate war. In every department of
+the Church and State the irrepressible conflict went on. It was no time
+for the calm voice of the loving spirit of wisdom to be heard. It was no
+time to propose that the local laws respecting slavery should be
+remodelled, and the relation between whites and blacks readjusted on
+more equitable principles. The science of anthropology had no weight in
+America or anywhere else. No exhaustive study of race peculiarities
+could be entered on. The combatants had the whole field, and between the
+combatants there seemed to be no room for choice by a minister of the
+Gospel, an enthusiastic friend of humanity, a democrat, and a
+transcendentalist.
+
+On one occasion, after a brutal scene in Boston attending the return of
+a slave to his master, feeling that the larger part of his congregation
+were in sympathy with the government, and approved of the act of
+surrender, the excited minister declined to give the ordinance of
+communion, thinking it would be a mockery. This action brought the
+growing disaffection to a head. The feeling of the parish was divided.
+Bitter words were exchanged. The situation on both sides became
+uncomfortable, and he accepted an invitation to another city, where he
+could exercise his independence without check or limit.
+
+The position in regard to slavery which was taken thirty years ago
+there is no room to regret. It was taken with perfect sincerity, and
+under an uncontrollable pressure of conviction. The part performed by
+the abolitionists was predestined. The conduct of their opponents looks
+now as irrational as it did then. American slavery was so atrocious a
+system, so hideous a blot, that no terms were to be kept with it.
+Probably nothing but the surgeon's knife would have availed in dealing
+with such a cancerous mass. The cord had become so fatally twisted that
+the knot, too closely drawn to be untied, must be cut with the sword.
+The abolition of slavery was inevitable; it came about through a great
+elemental upheaval. The situation had become intolerable and was past
+reforming. Long before the war, it had become impossible to get along
+with the slaveholders, except on the most ignoble principles of trade or
+fashion. All manly acquiescence was out of the question. The Unitarians,
+as such, were indifferent or lukewarm; the leading classes were opposed
+to the agitation. Dr. Channing stood almost alone in lending countenance
+to the reform, though his hesitation between the dictates of natural
+feeling and Christian charity towards the masters hampered his action,
+and rendered him obnoxious to both parties,--the radicals finding fault
+with him for not going further, the conservatives blaming him because he
+went so far. The transcendentalists were quite universally
+abolitionists, for their philosophy pointed directly towards the
+exaltation of every natural power. Wherever they touched the earth--as
+they did not always, some of them soaring away beyond terrestrial
+things--flowers of hope sprang up in their path. In France, Germany, and
+England, they were friends of intellectual and social progress, of the
+ideal democracy. The spiritual philosophy was in the air; its ideas were
+unconsciously absorbed by the enthusiastic spirits. They constituted the
+life of the period; they were a light to such as dwelt in darkness or
+sat under the shadow of death.
+
+In this country Mr. Emerson led the dance of the hours. He was our
+poet, our philosopher, our sage, our priest. He was the eternal man. If
+we could not go where he went, it was because we were weak and unworthy
+to follow the steps of such an emancipator. His singular genius, his
+wonderful serenity of disposition inherited from an exceptional ancestry
+and seldom ruffled by the ordinary passions of men, his curious felicity
+of speech, his wit, his practical wisdom, raised him above all his
+contemporaries. His infrequent contact with the world of affairs, his
+seclusion in the country, his apparitions from time to time on lecture
+platforms or in convention halls, gave a far-off sound to his voice as
+if it fell from the clouds. Some among his friends found fault with him
+for being bloodless and ethereal, but this added to the effect of his
+presence and his word. The mixture of Theism and Pantheism in his
+thoughts, of the personal and the impersonal, of the mystical and the
+practical, fascinated the sentiment of the generation, while the lofty
+moral strain of his teaching awakened to increased energy the wills of
+men. His speech and example stimulated every desire for reform, turning
+all eyes that were opened to the land of promise that seemed fully in
+sight. How much the anti-slavery conviction of the time, along with
+every other movement for the purification of society, owed to him we
+have always been fond of saying with that indefiniteness of
+specification which communicates so much more than it tells. This must
+be said, that, in the exhilaration of the period, they that worked
+hardest felt no exhaustion, and they that sacrificed most were conscious
+of no self-abnegation, and they that threw their lives into this cause
+had no sentiment but one of overflowing gratitude and joy. The
+anti-slavery agitation was felt to be something more than an attempt to
+apply the Beatitudes and the Parables to a flagrant case of
+inhumanity--it was regarded as a new interpreter of religion, a fresh
+declaration of the meaning of the Gospel, a living sign of the purely
+human character of a divine faith, an education in brotherly love and
+sacrifice; it was a common saying that now, for the first time in many
+generations, the essence of belief was made visible and palpable to all
+men; that Providence was teaching us in a most convincing way, and none
+but deaf ears could fail to understand the message.
+
+It was, indeed, a most suggestive and inspiring time. Never shall I
+forget, never shall I cease to be grateful for, the communion with noble
+minds that was brought about, the moral earnestness that was engendered,
+the moral insight that was quickened. Then, if ever, we ascended the
+Mount of Vision. I was brought into close communion with living men, the
+most living of the time, the most under the influence of stimulating
+thoughts; and if they were intemperate in their speech, extravagant in
+their opinions, absolute in their moral judgments, that must be taken as
+proof of the depth of their conviction. They loved much, and therefore
+could be forgiven, if forgiveness was necessary. They sacrificed a good
+deal, too, some of them everything in the shape of worldly honor, and
+this brought them apparently into line with the confessors and saints.
+They made real the precepts of the New Testament. Their clients were the
+poor, the lowly, the disfranchised, the unprivileged, against whom the
+grandeurs of the world lifted a heavy hand. They were champions of those
+who sorrowed and prayed, and this was enough to win sympathy and disarm
+criticism. It was a great experience; not only was religion brought face
+to face with ethics, but it was identified with ethics. It became a
+religion of the heart: pity, sympathy, humanity, and brotherhood were
+its essential principles. At the anti-slavery fairs all sorts and
+conditions of men met together, without distinction of color or race or
+sex. There was really an education in the broadest faith, in which
+dogma, creed, form, and rite were secondary to love; and love was not
+only universal, but was warm.
+
+Salem was the home of story and legend. There Puritanism showed its best
+and worst sides, for there Roger Williams preached, and there the
+witches were persecuted. The house where they were tried and the hill
+where they were executed were objects of curiosity. There were the wild
+pastures and the romantic shores, and broad streets shaded by elm trees,
+and gardens and greenhouses. There were spacious mansions and beautiful
+country-seats and pleasant walks. There was beauty and grace and
+accomplishment and wit. There were quaint old buildings, and ways once
+trodden by pious and heroic feet. On the whole, this was the most
+idyllic period in my ministry. Thither came Emanuel Vitalis Scherb, the
+native of Basel, an exile for opinion's sake, a man full of genius,
+learning, enthusiasm. Young, handsome, hopeful, his lectures on German
+literature and poetry attracted notice in Boston, whence he came to
+Salem to talk and be entertained. The best houses were open to him; the
+best people went to hear him. Alas, poor Scherb! His day of popularity
+was short. He sank from one stage of poverty to another; he was indebted
+to friends for aid, among the rest to H. W. Longfellow, who clung to him
+till the last, and finally died from disease in a military hospital
+early in our Civil War.
+
+I remember, in connection with Samuel Johnson, collecting an audience
+for Mr. A. B. Alcott, the most adroit soliloquizer I ever listened to,
+who delivered in a vestry-room a series of those remarkable
+"conversations"--versations with the _con_ left out--for which he was
+celebrated. It was, in many respects, a happy time.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE CRISIS IN BELIEF.
+
+
+I was in Salem when this came. It happened in the following way: A woman
+in my choir, a melancholy, tearful, forlorn woman, asked me one day if I
+knew Theodore Parker. I said I did not, but then, seeing her
+disappointment, I asked her why she put that question. She replied that
+her husband had abandoned her some months before and with another woman
+had gone to Maine. There he had left the woman and was living in Boston,
+and was a member of Mr. Parker's Society; and she thought that if I knew
+Mr. Parker I might find out something about him, and perhaps induce him
+to come back to Salem. I told her I was going to Boston in a day or two,
+and would see Mr. Parker.
+
+My visit, again and again repeated, resulted in an intimacy with that
+extraordinary man which had a lasting effect on my career. His personal
+sympathy, his profound humanity, his quickness of feeling, his
+sincerity, his courage, his absolute fidelity of service, even more than
+his astonishing vigor of intellect and his earnestness in pursuit of
+truth, made a deep impression on my mind. To be in his society was to be
+impelled in the direction of all nobleness. He talked with me, lent me
+books, stimulated the thirst for knowledge, opened new visions of
+usefulness. As I recall it now, his influence was mainly personal, the
+power that comes from a great character. He communicated a moral
+impetus. Faith in man, love of liberty in thought, institution, law,
+breathed in all his words and works. His theological ideas were somewhat
+mixed, as was inevitable then. His gift of spiritual vision, especially
+as shown in his interpretation of the Old-Testament narratives, may have
+been imperfect; his moral perspective may have been incomplete; his
+learning was copious, rather than discerning. But his single-mindedness
+was perfect, and his devotion to his fellow-men was almost superhuman.
+It was a privilege to know such a man, so simple-hearted and brave. The
+slight disposition to put himself on his omniscience, to strike an
+attitude, was not strange considering his enormous force, his
+consciousness of power, his singular influence over men, and his
+conviction (in large measure forced on him by his advocates) that he was
+a religious reformer, a second Luther, the inaugurator of a new
+Protestantism. His three doctrines, to which he constantly appealed, and
+in proof of which he adduced the testimony of the human soul,--the
+existence of a personal God, the immortality of the individual, and the
+absoluteness of the "moral law" might have been untenable in the
+presence of modern knowledge under the form in which he stated them. His
+vast collection of materials in attestation of Theism may have been
+valuable chiefly as a curiosity; but the man himself was all of one
+piece, genuine through and through. The mingling of fire and moderation
+in him was very remarkable, the blending of consuming radicalism with
+saving conservatism puzzled his more vehement disciples; but his
+character interested everybody; his firmness was visible from afar, and
+his warmth of heart was felt through stone walls. There were no two
+ministers in Boston who did as much for the inmates of hospitals and
+prisons as he did. His ministry ceased a quarter of a century ago, but
+the effect is vital yet, and will last for years to come. At this
+distance the heart leaps up to meet him. His chief work was done, for it
+consisted mainly in the adoption of a type of character, and length of
+days is not needed for this, while it is apt to be impaired by the
+infirmities of age. His long, wearisome illness, full of weakness and
+pain, tested the strength of his fortitude, patience, hopefulness, and
+trust, and was interesting as showing the passive, acquiescent side of
+heroism, all the more impressive in view of his love of life, his desire
+to finish his course, his sense of accountability (stronger in him than
+in anybody I ever met), and his wish to serve his kind. It was my
+happiness, more than ten years after he went away from men, to dwell for
+months in his atmosphere, while writing his biography, and all my old
+impressions of him were confirmed. And five years later, reviewing his
+life in the _Index_, I was again struck by his greatness. I may be
+excused for quoting the closing passage from the _Index_, of July 5,
+1877, in which I stated the claims of Theodore Parker to the honor of
+posterity. The paragraph sums up the qualities that have been ascribed
+to him--integrity, catholicity, outspokenness; to these might have been
+added warmth of heart, but this last attribute lay on the surface, and
+could be easily appreciated by ordinary observers--in fact, was seen and
+acknowledged by his enemies, and by those who knew him least.
+
+ On the whole, then, I should say that _manliness_ was Theodore
+ Parker's crowning quality and supreme claim to distinction. That he
+ had other most remarkable gifts is conceded as a matter of course.
+ Everybody knows that he had. But this was his prime characteristic.
+ The other gifts he had in spite of himself--his thirst for
+ knowledge, his love of books, his all-devouring industry, his
+ unfailing memory, his natural eloquence or power of affluent
+ expression; but character men regard as less a gift than an
+ acquisition,--the fruit of aspiration, resolve, fidelity,--the
+ product of daily, nay, of hourly, endeavor. Hence it is that
+ intellectual greatness does not impress the multitude; even genius
+ has but a limited sway over the masses of mankind. But character
+ goes to the roots of life. In fact, Theodore Parker's eminence as a
+ man of thought and expression in words has concealed from the world
+ at large the intrinsic quality of the person. His reputation as
+ theologian, preacher, controversialist, has concealed the real
+ greatness which comes to light as the dust of controversy subsides.
+ The very causes in which the heroism of his manliness was
+ displayed--as, for example, the anti-slavery cause, to which he
+ devoted so much of his time and vitality--rendered inconspicuous
+ the contribution he made to the treasury of humane feeling. Now
+ that that great conflict is over, now that its agitations have
+ ceased and its heats have cooled, the character of which this
+ conflict revealed but a portion, the career in which this long
+ agony was but an episode, loom up into distinctness. The greatest
+ of all human achievements is a manly character--guileless, sincere,
+ and brave; that he by all admission possessed. He earned it; he
+ prayed for it; meditated for it; worked for it;--how hard, his
+ private journals show. And for this he will not be forgotten. For
+ this he will be remembered as one of the benefactors, one of the
+ emancipators, of his kind.
+
+From a shelf in his library, I took Schwegler's "Nachapostolische
+Zeitalter," a work which threw a flood of light on the problems of
+New-Testament criticism. This led to a study of the writings of F. C.
+Baur, the founder of the so-called "Tuebingen School." A complete set of
+the _Theologische Jahrbuecher_, the organ of his ideas, was imported from
+Germany, and carefully perused. These volumes contained full and minute
+studies on all the books of the New Testament--Gospels, Epistles, the
+writing termed "The Acts of the Apostles," with incidental glances at
+the "Apocalypse." The calm, consistent strength of these expositions
+commended them to my mind. The author was a university professor, a man
+of practical piety, a Lutheran preacher of high repute, simple,
+affectionate, faithful to his duties, quite unconscious that he was
+undermining anybody's faith, so deeply rooted was the old Lutheran
+freedom of criticism in regard to the Bible. In the German mind,
+religion and literature, Christianity and the Scriptures, were entirely
+distinct things. The scholar could sit in his library in one mood and
+could enter his pulpit in another, preserving in both the
+single-mindedness that became a Christian and a student.
+
+Other theories have arisen since, but none that have taken hold of such
+eminent minds have appeared. Theodore Parker accepted it; James
+Martineau adopted its main proposition in several remarkable papers
+written at various times, last in the Unitarian magazine _Old and New_.
+In the brilliant lectures delivered in London, during the spring of
+1880, on the Hibbert Foundation, Ernest Renan's striking account of
+early Christianity owed its force to the assumption of the fundamental
+postulate of the Tuebingen School. In the latter years of his life, Baur
+summed up the results of his criticism in a pamphlet that was designed
+to meet objections; and in 1875-1877 his son-in-law, the learned Edward
+Zeller, one of his ablest disciples, an eminent professor of history at
+Berlin, published an earnest, carefully considered, masterly report of
+the writings of the now famous teacher, in the course of which he paid a
+merited tribute to his character, vindicated his views from the charge
+of haste and partisanship, and predicted for them a triumphant
+future.[*]
+
+ [*] "Vortraege und Abhandlungen," von E. Zeller, 2 vols., Leipzig.
+
+The adoption of these opinions, so opposed to the views current in the
+community, compelled the adoption of a new basis for religious
+conviction. Christianity, in so far as it depended on the New Testament
+or the doctrines of the early Church, was discarded. The cardinal tenets
+of the Creed--the Deity of the Christ, the atonement, everlasting
+perdition--had been dismissed already, and I was virtually beyond the
+limits of the Confession. But Theism remained, and the spiritual nature
+of man with its craving for religious truth. Without going so far as
+Theodore Parker did, who maintained that the three primary beliefs of
+religion--the existence of God, the assurance of individual immortality,
+the reality of a moral law--were permanent, universal, and definite
+facts of human nature, found wherever man was found; without going so
+far as this, I contended that man had a spiritual nature; that this
+nature, on coming to consciousness of its powers and needs, gave
+expression to exalted beliefs, clothing them with authority, building
+them into temples, ordaining them in the form of ceremonies and
+priesthoods. In support of this opinion, appeal was made to the great
+religions of the world, to the substantial agreement of all sacred
+books, to the spontaneous homage paid, in all ages, to saints and
+prophets; to the essential accord of moral precepts all over the globe,
+to the example of Jesus, to the Beatitudes and Parables, to the respect
+given by rude people to the noblest persons, to the credences that
+inspire multitudes, to the teachings of Schleiermacher, Fichte,
+Constant, Cousin, Carlyle, Goethe, Emerson, in fact, to every leading
+writer of the last generation. All this was so beautiful, so consistent
+and convincing, so full of promise, so broad, plain, and inspiring that,
+with a fresh but miscalculated enthusiasm, over-sanguine, thoughtless,
+the young minister undertook to carry his congregation with him, but
+without success; so he went elsewhere. This action proceeded from the
+faith that Parker instilled. Parker was pre-eminently, to those who
+comprehended him, a believer.
+
+In the words of D. A. Wasson, his successor in Music Hall:
+
+ Theodore Parker was one of the most energetic and religious
+ believers these later centuries have known. This was the prime
+ characteristic of the man. He did not agree in the details of his
+ unbelieving with the majority of those around him, because it was
+ part of his religion to think freely, part of their religion to
+ forbear thinking freely on the highest matters. But he was not only
+ a powerful believer in his own soul, but was the believing Hercules
+ who went forth in the name of divine law to cleanse the Augean
+ stables of the world.... This, I repeat, and can not repeat with
+ too much emphasis, was the characteristic of the man--sinewy,
+ stalwart, prophetic, fervid, aggressive, believing.... The Hercules
+ rather than the Apollo of belief, it was not his to charm rocks and
+ trees with immortal music, but to smite the hydra of publicity,
+ iniquity, and consecrated falsehood with the club or mace of
+ belief; if this might not suffice, then to burn out its foul life
+ with the fire of his sarcasms.
+
+To quote my own words, written in 1873 (see "Life." p. 566):
+
+ With him the religious sentiment was supreme. It had no roots in his
+ being wholly distinct from its mental or sensible forms of
+ expression. Never evaporating in mystical dreams nor entangled in
+ the meshes of cunning speculation, it preserved its freshness and
+ bloom and fragance in every passage of his life. His sense of the
+ reality of divine things was as strong as was ever felt by a man of
+ such clear intelligence. His feeling never lost its glow, never was
+ damped by misgiving, dimmed by doubt, or clouded by sorrow. Far from
+ dreading to submit his faith to test, he courted tests; was as eager
+ to hear the arguments against his belief as for it; was as fair in
+ weighing evidence on the opponent's side as on his own. "Oh, that
+ mine enemy had written a book!" he was ready to cry, not that he
+ might demolish it, but that he might read it. He knew the writings
+ of Moleschott, and talked with him personally; the books of Carl
+ Vogt were not strange to him. The philosophy of Ludwig Buechner, if
+ philosophy it can be called, was as familiar to him as to any of
+ Buechner's disciples. He was intimate with the thoughts of Feuerbach.
+ He drew into discussion every atheist and materialist he met, talked
+ with them closely and confidentially, and rose from the interview
+ more confident in the strength of his own positions than ever.
+ Science he counted his best friend; relied on it for confirmation of
+ his faith, and was only impatient because it moved no faster. All
+ the materialists in and out of Christendom had no power to shake his
+ conviction of the Infinite God and the immortal existence, nor would
+ have had had he lived till he was a century old, for, in his view,
+ the convictions were planted deep in human nature, and were demanded
+ by the exigencies of human life. Moleschott respected Parker; Dessor
+ was his confidential friend; Feuerbach would have taken him by the
+ hand as a brother.
+
+There can be no greater mistake than to call Theodore Parker a Deist;
+than to class Theodore Parker with the Deists. He was utterly unlike
+Chubb or Shaftesbury, Herbert of Cherbury or Bolingbroke. Even the most
+philosophical of them had nothing in common with him. Hume and Voltaire,
+for instance, were utterly unlike him. They, it is true, believed in _a_
+God, the "First Cause," the "Author of Nature," the "Supreme Being," and
+in a future life. But their belief was merely logical and mechanical,
+his was vital; he believed in the real, living, immanent Deity. They
+thought that religion was an imposition, a policy of the priests, who
+played upon the fears of mankind; he believed that religion was a
+working power in the world, the origin of the highest achievement, the
+soul of all aspiration. They had no faith in the direct communication of
+the "Supreme Mind" with the soul of man; he believed in the infinite
+genius of man, and in the direct communication of the absolute
+intelligence. They thought of justice as a contrivance for securing
+happiness; he thought of it as the law of life. One of Mr. Parker's
+friends ascribed to him a gorgeous imagination; if he had it, it is a
+surprise that it should have been so completely suppressed as it was,
+for his taste in pictures and in poetry was very questionable. His want
+of speculative talent probably helped him with the people. Whether he
+formulated his thoughts is uncertain. Such was not his genius. He was a
+constructive, not a destructive. It was his faith that he criticised the
+Bible in order that he might release its piety and righteousness; that
+he tore in pieces the creeds in order to emancipate the secrets of
+divinity.
+
+It is useless to conjecture what Parker might have been had he lived.
+That he would have held to his primary convictions is almost certain; it
+is quite certain that he would have loved mental liberty. He would have
+been a great power in our Civil War; he would probably have been a
+leader in the free religious movement. Parker, when I first knew him,
+was in full life and vigor. He had gone to Boston a short time before my
+ordination in 1847, and had before him a long future of usefulness. All
+the exigencies in which he might have been conspicuous were distant.
+That the effect of such a man on me and my connections was exceedingly
+great is not strange. It would have been strange had it been otherwise.
+In sermon, prayer, private conversations my convictions came out. That
+the people were disappointed may be assumed, but they were kind,
+generous, and patient. The congregations did not fall off; there was
+little violence or even vehement expostulation. But the position was not
+comfortable, and when an invitation came from Jersey City to found a new
+Society, I accepted it at once. It had been a dream of Dr. Bellows to
+establish a Society at that place, and, learning that I was in search of
+another sphere of activity, he asked me to undertake the work. This was
+seconded by a cordial representation from Jersey City itself, on the
+part of some who were Dr. Bellows' own parishioners. The uprooting was
+not easy, for Salem had become endeared to me as the first scene of my
+ministry, a place where I could be useful in many ways, and which
+contained a delightful society; an established, well-furnished town,
+with historic associations; a country centre, an agreeable situation.
+But the waters were getting still there, and the sentiment of the past
+was getting to over-weigh the promises of the future.
+
+
+
+
+VI. JERSEY CITY.
+
+
+Jersey City, to which I went directly from Salem, was a very different
+place from what it is now; smaller and perhaps pleasanter. Where now is
+a large city, a few years ago was but a village. Now it is a
+manufacturing place, with great establishments, foundries,
+machine-shops, banks, insurance companies, newspapers, more than forty
+schools, and more than sixty churches. Then it was a large town, though
+it was nominally a city (incorporated in 1820), with a population of
+about twenty thousand, the increase being chiefly due to the annexation
+of suburbs, not to its own vital growth. It was substantially rural in
+character, with extensive meadows, broad avenues; a place of residence
+largely, the gentlemen living there and doing business in New York.
+There were a few Unitarians, a few Universalists, but there was no
+organized Unitarian society before I went there. A great many cultivated
+people resided in this place. There was wealth, culture, and interest in
+social matters. A meeting-house was built for me and dedicated to a
+large, rational faith.
+
+The chief peculiarity of my ministry there was the disuse of the
+communion service. This rite I had thought a great deal about in Salem.
+There had been, then, a well-meant proposal on the part of the pastor to
+make an alteration in the form of administering the communion service.
+The custom had been (quite an incidental one, for the usage was by no
+means the same in all the churches of the denomination) to thrust the
+rite in once a month, between the morning worship and dinner time, and
+to offer it then to none but the church-members, who composed but a
+small part of the congregation. As a consequence of this arrangement,
+the observance became formal, dry, short, and tiresome. To the majority
+of the Society it seemed a mystical ceremony with which they had no
+concern, while those who stayed to take part in it, wearied already by
+the preceding exercises, and hungry for their mid-day meal, gave to it
+but half-hearted attention. The observance was thus worse than thrown
+away; for, in addition to the loss of an opportunity for spiritual
+impression, a dangerous kind of self-righteousness was encouraged in the
+few church-members, who regarded themselves as in some way set apart
+from their fellow-sinners, either as having made confession of faith or
+as being subjects of a peculiar experience. To impart freshness to the
+rite, and at the same time to extend its usefulness as a "means of
+grace," the minister proposed to celebrate it less frequently (once in
+two or three months), to substitute it in place of the usual afternoon
+meeting, to make special preparation for it by the co-operation of the
+choir, and to throw it open to as many as might choose to come, be they
+church members or not. The suggestion met with feeble response, and that
+chiefly from young people who had hitherto stayed away out of a laudable
+feeling of modesty, not wishing to remain when their elders and betters
+went out, and not thinking themselves good enough to partake of a
+special privilege. The "communicants," as a rule, set their faces
+against the innovation, perhaps because they were secretly persuaded
+that the change portended the secularizing of Christianity by a removal
+of the barrier that divided the church from the world, possibly because
+they wished to retain an exclusive prerogative which had always marked
+the "elect."
+
+The matter was not pressed; the routine went on as before; the
+minister did his best to render the service impressive and interesting.
+But his studies and meditations led him to the conclusion that the
+observance had no place in the Unitarian system; that it was a mere
+formality, without an excuse for being; that it contained no idea or
+sentiment that was not expressed in the ordinary worship; that it was a
+remnant of an otherwise discarded form of Christianity, where it had a
+peculiar significance; that it was the last attenuation of the Roman
+sacrament of transubstantiation; that it ought to be dropped from every
+scheme of liberal faith as an illogical adjunct, a harmful excrescence,
+a hindrance, in short. No whisper of these doubts was breathed at the
+time, but the pastor's silence allowed the scepticism to strike the
+deeper root in his mind. Mr. Emerson's departure from his parish, on the
+ground that he could no longer administer the communion rite according
+to the usage of the sect, had occurred many years before this, but was
+still remembered in discussion and talk. Theodore Parker had no
+communion; but he was an established leader of heresy, and did not
+furnish an example. Many, agreeing with Emerson's reasoning, disapproved
+of his course in resigning his pulpit rather than continue to administer
+the bread and wine. He himself advised others to hold on to the
+observance, if they could, hoping for the time when it might be
+universally vivified by faith. Some might do it as it was. The
+congregations would, it is likely, without exception, have decided as
+his did, to lose their minister sooner than their "Supper." Some years
+later, on passing through Boston on my way to another scene of labor, I
+called on a distinguished clergyman who had taken a part in my
+ordination, and was asked by him what I intended to do in my new parish
+with regard to the communion. I replied that it was not my purpose to
+have it, "You cannot give it up," he said; "it is stronger than any of
+us. I should drop it if I dared, for there is nothing real in it that is
+not in the general service, but I am afraid to try. I shall watch your
+experiment with interest, but without expectation of its success." "Very
+well," I replied, "we shall see." The experiment was tried and
+succeeded. For four years I had no communion, and not a word was said
+about it. On leaving for New York, several of my friends, who had been
+accustomed to the ceremony all their lives, were asked if they did not
+think it would be wise to reinstate the rite. To my surprise, they with
+one voice said that there was no need of it, that the Society got along
+perfectly well without it. It is needless to say that in New York the
+observance was never celebrated.
+
+The ceremony was justified among Unitarians by various reasons which,
+in the end, seemed apologies. With the old-fashioned, semi-orthodox
+members of the congregations it was a precious heirloom, prized for its
+antiquity; a link that still held them in the bond of fellowship with
+the universal church; a last relic of the supernaturalism to which they
+clung without knowing why; the pledge of a mystical union with their
+Christ. Any change in the administration of it was regarded as a
+desecration; the suggestion of its complete discontinuance could, they
+thought, arise in no mind that was not fatally poisoned by infidelity.
+It was not, in their opinion, a symbol of doctrine, but a channel of
+divine influence, which no intellectual doubts could touch, which
+spiritual deadness alone could dispense with. Tenets might be abandoned,
+forms of belief might be discredited, but this citadel of faith must not
+be assailed or approached by irreverent feet. Mr. Emerson's example was
+not followed by his contemporaries. His fellows did not so soon reach
+his point of conviction. Even radicals, like George Ripley, did not. In
+my own case it was the growth of time. At the moment there was no
+disposition to abandon the observance, simply a desire to reanimate it.
+It was not perceived till much later that the changes proposed implied a
+virtual abandonment of the rite itself; that the communion is regarded
+as a sacrament, that as a sacrament it might be presumed to be
+supernaturally instituted for the communication of the divine life;
+that, when faith in the supernatural declines, the sacrament no longer
+has a function as a medium, and must be omitted; that no attempts to
+revive it as a sentimental practice could be justified to reason; that
+all endeavors to awaken interest in it by assuming some occult efficacy
+must be futile because groundless. The "memorial service" can in no
+proper sense be called a sacrament. It may be a pleasing expression of
+sentiment, somewhat over-strained and fanciful, but capable of being
+made attractive. The task of reproducing the emotions of the early
+disciples as they sat at supper with their Master, nearly two thousand
+years ago, is too severe for the ordinary imagination, and when
+persisted in from a sense of duty may become a dull, creaking
+performance, against which the sensitive rebel and the witty are tempted
+to launch the shafts of their sarcasm. The only way of saving it from
+gibes is to ascribe to it some mystical efficacy for which there is no
+logical excuse. The Roman Catholic doctrine of Transubstantiation had a
+foundation in the philosophy of the Church. The Lutheran doctrine of
+Consubstantiation, which recognized the presence of Christ on the
+occasion, but not the literal change of the substance of his flesh, was
+legitimate. But the Sabellian theory, which the Unitarians inherited,
+was in no respect justified, save as a tradition.
+
+The sole alternative at that time for me, when the Communion service
+was made a test question between the "conservative" and the "radical,"
+was to drop it. At present the situation is altered. It is no longer a
+ceremony or a tradition, but a means of spiritual cultivation. It stands
+for fellowship and aspiration, not for a communion of saints, but of all
+those who desire to share the saintly mind, of all who aim at
+perfection. The rite is one in which all may unite who wish, however
+fitfully, for goodness; _all_, whether Romanist or Protestant, and
+Protestant of whatever name; _all_, in every religion under the sun,
+Eastern or Western, Northern or Southern, old or new, every dividing
+line being erased. I once attended the Communion service of a Broad
+Churchman. The invitation was large and inclusive, comprehending
+everybody who, though far off, looked towards the light, everybody who
+had the least glimmer of the divine radiance; and none but an absolute
+infidel was shut out. There was a recognition of a divine nature in
+men,--
+
+ Like plants in mines which never saw the sun,
+ But dream of him, and guess where he may be,
+ And do their best to climb and get to him.
+
+The idea of spiritual communion is a grand one. It is universal too; it
+is human in the best sense. The symbols were ancient when Jesus used
+them, the Bread signifying Truth, the Wine signifying Life. Originally
+the symbols referred to the wealth of nature, as is evident from an
+ancient prayer. It was the custom for the master of the Jewish feast to
+repeat this form of words: "Blessed be Thou, O Lord, our God, who givest
+us the fruits of the vine," and then he gave the cup to all.
+
+Leaving out the personal application which is purely incidental, and
+discarding the sacramental idea which is a corruption, throwing the
+service open to the whole congregation as an opportunity, a great deal
+may be accomplished in the way of spiritual advancement. True, the
+ceremony contains no thought or sentiment that is not expressed in the
+sermon or the prayer, but it puts these in poetic form, it addresses
+them directly to the imagination, it associates them with the holier
+souls in their holiest hours, and brings people face to face with their
+better selves in the tenderest and most touching manner, teaching
+charity, love, endeavor after the religious life. The rite is full of
+beauty when confined within the bounds of Christianity, but when
+extended to the principles of other faiths, it is rich in meaning, and
+may be used with effect by those who wish to educate the people in the
+highest form of idealism, who desire comprehensiveness. A symbol often
+goes further than an argument, and a symbol so ancient and so
+consecrated ought to be preserved. A friend of mine included all
+religious teachers in his commemoration. This was a step in the right
+direction, but if the people are not ready for this yet, they may
+welcome an extension of the reign of spiritual love among the disciples
+whom theological hatred has kept apart. But this was not suspected then.
+
+It will be remarked that my reasons were not those of Emerson. His
+argument was solid and sound, but his real reason was personal. He said
+in his sermon: "If I believed it was enjoined by Jesus and his disciples
+that he even contemplated making permanent this mode of commemoration,
+every way agreeable to an Eastern mind, and yet on trial it was
+disagreeable to my own feelings, I should not adopt it.... It is my
+desire in the office of a Christian minister to do nothing which I
+cannot do with my whole heart. Having said this I have said all.... That
+is the end of my opposition, that I am not interested in it." My ground
+was different; I had no objection to the symbol, none to an Oriental
+symbol, and the mere fact that I was not interested in it seemed to me
+not pertinent to the case. My objection was that it divided those who
+ought to be united; that it encouraged a form of self-righteousness;
+that it implied a "grace" that did not exist. For the rest, my form of
+religion was of sentiment. It was scarcely Unitarian, not even Christian
+in a technical sense or in any other but a broad moral signification. It
+was Theism founded on the Transcendental philosophy, a substitute for
+the authority of Romanism and of Protestantism. This was an admirable
+counterfeit of Inspiration, having the fire, the glow, the beauty of it.
+It most successfully tided over the gulf between Protestantism and
+Rationalism. Parker used it with great effect. It was the life of
+Emerson's teaching. It animated Thomas Carlyle. It was the fundamental
+assumption of the Abolitionists, and of all social reformers.
+
+I had perfect freedom of speech in Jersey City; there was no
+opposition to the doctrine announced. The Society there was large and
+flourishing, and its influence in the town was on the increase. But
+Jersey City was, after all, a suburb only of New York. Some of my most
+devoted hearers came from New York, and urged me to go there. Dr.
+Bellows was anxious to found a third Society in the great city, and
+added his word to their solicitations, so that in the spring of 1859 I
+went thither. My church in Jersey City was continued for a short time,
+but I had no settled successor; the congregation did not grow; some of
+my most earnest supporters had either died or left the town. The war
+broke out and was fatal to institutions that had not a deep root. The
+building was sold soon after, for business purposes I think, and the
+society was never renewed. This may appear singular considering that
+there are Unitarian churches elsewhere in New Jersey, at Camden, Orange,
+Plainfield, Vineland, and Woodbury. The changed condition of the town
+may have had something to do with the failure to revive, after the war,
+the Unitarian Society. The Catholic, Presbyterian, Orthodox
+Congregationalist communions were more suited to the new population than
+the Unitarian was. Possibly, too, the "radical" complexion of the parish
+had something to do with the disrepute that fell upon it. However this
+may have been, the cause did not seem to prosper. Mr. Job Male, who died
+recently at Plainfield, was one of my most zealous supporters and
+exerted himself to keep the enterprise alive, but in vain. It is
+understood that the flourishing Unitarian church in Plainfield was
+largely due to his efforts.
+
+
+
+
+VII. NEW YORK.
+
+
+For the first year in New York I lived with Dr. Bellows at his
+parsonage. Mrs. Bellows and the children were at Eagleswood, New Jersey,
+the children being at school with Mr. Weld. And this is the place to say
+something about Henry Whitney Bellows. He was a very remarkable man,
+most extraordinary in his way; an original man, a peculiar individual;
+of mercurial temper, various, quick, sympathetic, brave, whole-hearted,
+generous, but all in his own fashion. More Celtic than Saxon, more
+French than English, prone to generalize, something of a _doctrinaire_,
+indifferent to personalities, but of warm affections where he was
+interested; loyal, as knights always are, where his honor was concerned,
+but impatient of dictation, restless, nervous, impetuous, dashing from
+side to side, always consistent with himself, yet rarely consistent with
+ordinary rules of conventional society. Such a man is best described in
+detail.
+
+Dr. Bellows, as we called him, had a singular gift of _expression_.
+This was the soul of him, his most prominent feature, the trait that
+explains every other. His appearance indicated as much. He had a mobile
+mouth, flexible features, a ringing voice, a cordial manner. He was fond
+of talking, brilliant in conversation, attractive in social intercourse,
+a charming companion, full of wit, rapid in repartee, ready with
+anecdote, illustration, allusion. He was a great favorite at the
+dinner-table, at friendly gatherings, at the club, where a circle always
+collected round him and were delighted with the endless versatility of
+his discourse. In fact, he was a man of society rather than a clergyman,
+though he occupied a pulpit from the beginning, and was faithful to all
+the duties of his profession. Still they were not altogether to his
+taste, and he got away from them whenever he conscientiously could. His
+best deliverances were half-secular addresses on some theme of immediate
+popular interest, speeches, orations, ethical talks, ever on a high
+plane of sentiment, but looking towards the urgent preoccupations of the
+time. He was not a student in any direction; not a deep, patient,
+exhaustive thinker; not a scholar in any school, but an immense reader
+of current literature, of magazines, papers, memoirs, and an eloquent
+reproducer of thoughts as he found them lying on the surface of the
+intellectual world. His brain was exceedingly active, and reached forth
+in all directions; his pen was fluent, facile, and busy; language exuded
+from all his pores. As a preacher he was conventional, restrained, and,
+it must be confessed, not engaging as a rule, but as a talker he was
+delightful, copious, entertaining, kindling, attractive to old and
+young, and crowds thronged the house when he spoke about what he had
+seen or felt, while his pulpit discourses did not fill the pews. Like
+many men of remarkable talents, he imagined his strong points to be
+those in which he was most deficient, not being gifted with much power
+of self-knowledge, and perhaps aspiring after accomplishments he did not
+possess. He prided himself more than he should have done on his insight
+as a theologian, his depth as a philosopher, his skill as an
+administrator, his practical success as an organizer; whereas his
+consummate ability consisted in exposition, not in original discovery.
+He was not a theologian, not a philosopher, not a builder, but a most
+persuasive advocate, perhaps the most adroit I ever met with. His range
+was wide, his exuberance infinite, his sway over his listeners absolute.
+It is no marvel that such a man was persuaded that he could achieve all
+things.
+
+He was the only speaker I ever knew who could talk himself into ideas.
+Many, by dint of talking, can work themselves into an implicit faith in
+doctrines they were indifferent about at starting; but this man had the
+dangerous gift of being able, not merely to think on his feet, but to
+set his faculties in motion by the action of his tongue. Again and again
+he has gone to a public meeting, at which he was expected to speak, with
+no preparation at all, or none but a very general one, depending upon
+some impulse of the moment to set him a-going. A word dropped by a
+previous speaker, the mere presence of the audience, a suggestion
+awakened in his mind as he sat awaiting his turn, would excite him
+sufficiently; and when he stood up one idea started another, an
+illustration opened a new field of thought, till the torrent, growing
+deeper and more tumultuous as it flowed, carried the hearers away in
+ecstasy. One who did not know him found it hard to believe that he had
+not meditated his address beforehand. He has gone into the pulpit with a
+written sermon, and being struck by a sentence in the Scripture he was
+reading, has laid his manuscript aside and delivered an extemporaneous
+discourse on an entirely different theme.
+
+The reason why he did not preach habitually without notes was that this
+fatal facility of speech excited him too much, carried him too far,
+rendered him discursive, led him on to inordinate length, and wearied
+his congregation. He needed the restraint of the paper, the calm dignity
+of the closet meditation; he needed also to spread his thoughts over a
+larger expanse of time, and thus to secure quiet for his brain. At the
+risk, therefore, of being dull, he spared himself, as well as his
+parishioners, the stimulating fervor of the extemporaneous address. He
+may have felt, too, that his was not the quality of mind for this
+method. It required a less fluent talent, a less ready loquacity, a less
+mercurial temperament, a more reserved habit. There are those whose
+constitutional reticence preserves them from aberration; who can see the
+end from the beginning; can cling closely to the matter in hand; can
+walk a thin plank; and have too few ready ideas to be in any peril of
+going astray. Such are the most successful extemporaneous preachers. Dr.
+Bellows' genius was better adapted to an address, therefore, than to a
+sermon.
+
+The secular view of things was more attractive to him than the
+spiritual. His defence of the drama in 1857 (an oration delivered in the
+Academy of Music, and which was very bold for that time); his vigorous
+conduct of the _Christian Inquirer_, a Unitarian paper, which he managed
+and for which he wrote constantly for four years, advocating an unwonted
+liberality of sympathy, maintaining, for example, the substantial
+identity of the Unitarian and the Universalist confessions; his interest
+in questions of social and philanthropic concern; his lectures before
+the Lowell Institute in 1857,--all attest his desire to effect a
+reconciliation between science and religion, between this world and the
+next. His oration before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard, in 1853,
+is an admirable specimen of his treatment of similar themes. The subject
+of the oration was "The Ledger and the Lexicon, or Business and
+Literature in Account with American Education"; and its purpose was to
+assert the claims of popular life against those of scholarship,--to
+state the case of natural instincts and practical intelligence as the
+controlling force of our destiny. He says, most truly, at the outset,
+"Speaking purely as a scholar, I should unaffectedly feel that I had
+nothing to offer worthy this audience or occasion," and then he goes on
+with a full, earnest, eloquent plea for the intellectual character of
+our political and commercial activity. Here is an extract:
+
+ What History asks from us is not Literature and Art. The world is
+ full of what can never grow old in either. _American_ Literature,
+ _American_ Art! Heaven save us from them! Let us freely use what is
+ so much better than anything one nation can make, the Literature
+ and Art of the whole past and the whole world. History implores us,
+ first of all, to be true to humanity. She begs to see the
+ education, the taste, the sensibility of this great people turned
+ to the serious, vital, universal interest of thoroughly vindicating
+ _Man_ from the scorn of _men;_ of establishing man on his throne as
+ man,--free because man, happy because man, noble and religious
+ because man! Literature and Art will take care of themselves; high
+ education and scholarship will come in their own time; and so,
+ thank God, will everything humanity needs. But for ourselves and
+ the immediate generation, there is no work so worthy as confirming
+ the faith of our people in their own principles; encouraging
+ devotion to Liberty as the supreme interest of Man;--of man sacred
+ in his own eyes, with duties, rights, aims, that are bounded
+ neither by color, nationality, nor law. The love of the race, the
+ liberation of humanity from complexional, material, political, and
+ moral disfranchisements; the elevation of the individual and of
+ every individual; the prostration of all partition-walls that
+ separate our kind; the tumbling of the artificial pedestals that
+ elevate the few, into the unnatural pits that bury the rest; the
+ affiliation of the foreigner, and the emancipation of the slave;
+ the subjugation of rebellious matter and reluctant wealth to the
+ wants and desires of man; the establishment of beautiful and
+ independent homes, of high and free and noble lives;--this is
+ American scholarship, this American art. A country that sacrifices
+ even its nationality, that proudest of all prejudices, to its
+ humanity, will be the first to pay that tribute to man, which
+ Christ waits to welcome as the final triumph of his kingdom. And,
+ finally, here in America, where for the first time universal
+ comfort and general abundance reign, the race looks to us to
+ pronounce the banns between the spiritual and material interests
+ and pursuits of man,--his worldly well-being, and his heavenly
+ prosperity,--a union that shall not be a miserable compromise of
+ which both shall be ashamed and which neither shall keep, but an
+ honorable, hearty, and intelligible alliance, on the highest
+ grounds.
+
+This is very fine and brave, and similar in tone was all he said
+about American life and destiny. He tried to exalt common things, and in
+this way he more than made amends for his lack of scholastic equipment.
+His mission was to encourage and fortify and console actual men and
+women, not to solve deep problems of fate. A good but commonplace man
+spoke to me with tears in his eyes of his endless gratitude to Dr.
+Bellows because on one New Year's Day he preached a doctrine of promise,
+and said that men did their best, and that the world was as good as
+could be expected; not an extraordinary doctrine certainly, but one that
+is seldom announced with so much cordial, human sympathy. This same
+ardor he threw into his ordinary lectures, carrying audiences away with
+a flood of conviction. When our Civil War broke out and it became
+evident, as it soon did, that the conflict would be a long one,
+necessitating large armies in a region of country unused to military
+needs and ignorant of military exigencies, Dr. Bellows' attention was
+drawn to the questions involved in the maintenance of a vast number of
+men in the field, their protection, discipline, and comfort; the proper
+supply of food, clothing, medicine; the best kind of tent, the best kind
+of hospital, the duty of keeping up the home associations by means of
+correspondence and missives. He talked over the situation with a few
+friends; societies were formed, organizations instituted, the means of
+relief set in motion. Out of this grew the Sanitary Commission, of which
+he was the mouthpiece and the inspiring soul. The work was immense, but
+the task of awakening the country to the necessity of endeavor was,
+beyond all ordinary power of conception, arduous. Such was the blind
+faith in the government,--a government inexperienced in similar
+matters,--such was the indifference of multitudes who were far removed
+from actual danger, such the unconsciousness of the magnitude of the
+peril, such the insensibility to the demands of the hour, the serene
+confidence that all was going well, the jaunty sense of complacency in
+having raised the regiments, that nothing less than a trumpet call was
+required to rouse the country to a feeling of obligation. Afterwards
+when the magnitude of the strife was self-evident, when the dangers of
+camp-life were understood, and the temptations to infidelity of many
+kinds were painfully apparent, other forces came in to carry forward the
+work; but at first prescience was needed, and zeal, and faith in
+principles, and a sense of the gravity of the situation. It is hardly
+too much to say that but for the energy shown by the Sanitary Commission
+in the early part of the war, the issue might have been indefinitely
+postponed. That the Commission itself flourished to the end was due in
+the main to Henry Bellows. Of course he did not do everything, but he
+did his part. The labor of organization was discharged by other orders
+of genius. The duties of treasurer devolved upon men differently
+constituted still; there were many hands employed, many heads busy with
+planning. But his was the potent voice. He sounded the clarion; East,
+West, North, and as far South as he could go, he argued, remonstrated,
+pleaded, exhorted, interpreted, inspired, and wherever he was heard he
+filled veins with patriotic fire. He was never daunted, never
+disheartened, never depressed. His tones always rang out clear, strong,
+decisive. The bugle never gave an uncertain sound. In Washington he
+addressed the highest authorities and was so urgent, not to say so
+imperious, that President Lincoln asked him which of the two ran the
+machine of government. He possessed in a singular degree the power of
+making people work, and work gladly,--all sorts of people, men and
+women, the sensible and the enthusiastic, the practical and the
+sentimental, the low-toned and the high-strung; and they toiled day
+after day at scraping lint, packing garments, raising money, organizing
+fairs. In the meantime he travelled to and fro, lecturing, addressing
+crowds in the meeting-houses, halls, theatres; writing letters to
+committees, visiting men of influence, inspecting hospitals and camps,
+making himself acquainted with the newest methods of dealing with
+sanitary problems, and imparting ideas as fast as they came to him. His
+activity was prodigious. He was one of the most conspicuous figures in
+the country. He brought the Commission into universal repute. Under his
+spell it lost its local character and became a national concern. He was
+a Unitarian preacher; his immediate co-operators were Unitarians; yet so
+broad and mundane was he that no savor of sectarianism mingled with his
+zeal, nor could it be suspected, except for his aims, that he was a
+clergyman. As long as the war lasted this energy continued, the
+enthusiasm did not abate, the outpouring did not slacken. It was not
+till the struggle was over that the over-tasked brain craved repose.
+Then the reaction was purely nervous, not in the least moral or
+intellectual. He sprang up again and threw himself into new enterprises
+with the old fervor and the old brilliancy of speech, striving to awaken
+a desire for religious unity, as he had promoted national concord. The
+establishment of the National Conference of Liberal Churches, which was
+to supplement the more local Unitarian Associations, was his suggestion.
+The scheme did not entirely meet his expectations, but this shows how
+large his expectations were, and how comprehensive were his purposes of
+good. As has been intimated already, his desires were in advance of his
+practical ability. He was a man of wishes rather than of expedients. His
+plans often failed, but his aspirations were always pure and lofty, and
+it was characteristic of him to impute the failure of the special plan
+to some stubbornness in the materials he attempted to manipulate, rather
+than to any deficiency in his own faculty. Thus his confidence in
+himself was sustained, and he went on trying experiments and believing
+in his talent to set anything, even communities and States, on their
+feet.
+
+People used to say that his advocacy was very uncertain; that it was
+impossible to tell in advance whether he would take a liberal or a
+conservative view of a party or dogma; in short, he had the reputation
+of being somewhat of a chameleon, of catching his line from the last
+person he talked with. One of his parishioners remarked, jestingly, that
+the hearers of Dr. Bellows were taught in perfection one lesson,--that
+of self-reliance. This was probably true, as it was a general
+impression; and it illustrates the warmth of his sympathy, the
+impressionableness of his temperament, the readiness of his adaptation,
+the facility of his discourse, as well as the want of depth in his
+speculative intellect and his lack of hold on fundamental principles. He
+was an advocate by nature, not a theologian, a philosopher, or a critic;
+an adept in speech, not a subtle or profound thinker. He saw the
+effective points in either doctrine, and chose the one that was most
+captivating at the time. His eclecticism was simply ease of
+transference, not a keen perception of the grounds of identity. His
+logic was the skilful accommodation to circumstances, not absolute
+fidelity to the laws of reason. His affluence of diction and his
+profusion of thoughts covered up his essential poverty of insight, and
+persuaded some that he looked farther than he did; but still it remains
+true that he was not a sure guide in matters of opinion. He was a most
+adroit, subtle, engaging talker, and as such was of incalculable value;
+a fountain of entertainment, and a source of influence. A decided vein
+of Bohemianism ran through his character. He was light-hearted, gay,
+versatile, fond of fun, restless, addicted to society, abhorrent of
+solitude, darkness, confinement; a friend of artists, musicians, wits; a
+club-man; could smoke a cigar, and drink a glass of wine, and tell a
+merry story; a man of quick emotions, volatile some would call him,
+though of unquestioned and unquestionable loyalty when any principle was
+at stake, or any person he loved and trusted was in trouble. Otherwise
+he forgot unpleasant things and went to something else, dropping the
+individual, but holding fast to the elements of charity. This faculty of
+changing rapidly from one interest to another saved him from a vast deal
+of fatigue, and enabled him to pursue his almost incredible labors with
+less wear and tear than would have been possible under other
+circumstances. The formation of roots, and the necessity of pulling them
+up frequently with a feeling of loss and pain, is sadly weakening and
+disabling. This fosters a disposition to stay at home, to form few ties,
+to remain quietly where one is placed by destiny, to expose one's self
+to no more disruptions than are appointed, to hide one's self in a
+corner of existence, to avoid the wind. The scholar hugs his library,
+reads books, meditates, cultivates his mind, appears in public only when
+he is prepared. The man of society dashes out and deems the time wasted
+that is passed in the house. Dr. Bellows once expressed his wonder that
+a friend should have no desire to go abroad, but should be content in
+his study.
+
+He was a knight-errant, a Norman gentleman, ever ready to succor the
+oppressed, but satisfied when he had unhorsed the oppressor, though the
+victim lay helpless on the ground. He derived his name from "Belles
+Eaux." He was not a democrat as implying one that had affinities with
+the people. On the contrary, he was at bottom an aristocrat, looking
+down on the people; but he was humane in idea, holding it to be the part
+of a gentleman to relieve the unfortunate. The motto, "_Noblesse
+oblige_" applied to him exactly, with the understanding that he belonged
+to the _Noblesse_, and was privileged to patronize. This tendency was
+prominent in him. He would not allow a companion to pay his car fare,
+because he would not borrow so small a sum, but he confronted the man to
+whom he had lent fifty dollars, and who had forgotten the payment, as
+people often do. Meeting the defaulter in the street, he reminded him of
+the transaction, taxed him with infidelity to his engagements, and had
+the satisfaction of receiving his money and relieving his mind at the
+same time. Magnanimous he was by nature. I will give a single instance
+of it, out of several I could detail if personalities did not forbid.
+When I first came to New York to found a parish, there was a woman in my
+congregation,--an angular, brusque woman, not sunny or agreeable,--whose
+husband, being unfortunate, had, to repair his fortune, gone to San
+Francisco; she stayed in New York and kept school, for the purpose of
+educating her children, and of eking out the family expenses. One day,
+complaining to me of her lot and labor, she spoke of certain prejudices
+against her as interfering with her success, and accused Dr. Bellows of
+being one of her enemies. Having satisfied myself of the injustice of
+the impression about her, and of her worthy deserving, I took occasion
+at once to speak to Dr. Bellows on the subject. Reminding him of the
+circumstances in which the woman was placed, I asked him if he did not
+think she ought to be helped instead of being hindered. He acknowledged
+that he knew her, that he did not like her, that he had spoken harshly
+of her under the impression that she was not deserving of moral support.
+On my presentation of her case, and conviction that he was wrong, he,
+being persuaded of his heedlessness, offered to do everything in his
+power to repair any mischief he might have caused. In my excitement, I
+became audacious and suggested the drawing up and signing of a
+paper,--about the most disagreeable thing that could be proposed. But he
+assented, prepared the paper, affixed his signature, and from that hour
+did his utmost to befriend the woman whom he took no pleasure in
+thinking of. This was noble, even great. He could put his personal
+tastes aside when a principle was involved.
+
+It used to be urged against him that he dropped people when he had done
+with them, and felt no scruple in sacrificing them to his views of
+policy. But it cannot be proved that he was false to anybody, and his
+notion of the absolute unfitness of the individual for his place, or of
+the man's unreliability, was probably the real cause of his opposition.
+Probably, in each instance of his withdrawal of confidence, there were
+excellent reasons for his conduct, though it was natural that those who
+were suddenly neglected or displaced should feel indignant and
+aggrieved. Dr. Bellows was not one to act on a private prejudice or a
+personal pique. His affections were strong and would have led him to
+make any concession that was consistent with what he regarded as his
+public duty. No doubt he was somewhat imperious in judging what his duty
+was; he lacked the useful faculty of remaining in the background; he was
+impetuous and forward; but he never was or could be insincere, and he
+always had a sufficient explanation of the course he pursued,--an
+explanation perfectly satisfactory to one who bore his temperament in
+mind and considered what he could do and what he could not.
+
+A most lovable, cordial, faithful man I always found him,--a man to be
+depended on in difficult and trying times, high-minded, courageous,
+daring, ready to enter the breach, happiest when leading a forlorn hope,
+straight-forward, inspiring, easily lifted beyond himself, and imparting
+nervous vigor to his followers. Followers he must have, for he was not
+content to obey any behest; but then his leadership was so hearty and
+wholesome, so free from superciliousness, so abundant in expressions of
+loyalty, that it was a joy to go with him. He was more than willing to
+do his share of hard work, and to indulge his servants. If one could
+forbear to cross him, he was friendliness itself; a warm advocate of
+liberty, only insisting that liberty and progress should march hand in
+hand; that private idiosyncrasies should not stand in the way of
+practical advance. He was a very different man from Dr. Dewey, yet he
+loved Dr. Dewey devotedly while life lasted. He was an entirely
+different man from me in temperament and in gifts,--quite opposite in
+fact,--yet he was one of the best of my friends as long as he lived,
+seldom resenting my radicalism, never impatient of my slowness, but
+warm, sunny, helpful to the end, the man to whom I instinctively
+resorted for sympathy in the most painful passages of my career.
+
+In a word, the foundation of his character was impulse. He was a man of
+fiery zeal, of moral passion, of vast enthusiasm, and when a storm of
+spiritual power came sweeping down from some unseen height, he was
+easily carried away. This impulsive character explains his chivalry of
+disposition, his magnanimity, his self-abnegation; for though he was
+self-asserting, he could at once forget himself, and sink his own
+individuality entirely when some cause he had at heart strongly appealed
+to him. This impulsiveness explains, too, his theological inconsistency,
+for when the popular feeling struck him, he was carried away in a
+different direction from what he had first proposed. For instance,
+once--I think it was at Buffalo--he gave a most eloquent plea for
+individualism, having determined to speak in favor of institutions; and
+in Boston when he had been expected to uphold a creed, he was so borne
+away by the opposite sentiment that, when he ended, a creed seemed
+absolutely impossible.
+
+A very different person from the foregoing was Dr. Samuel Osgood, the
+successor of Dr. Dewey in the Church of the Messiah on Broadway, and the
+close associate of the pastor of "All Souls," which name he suggested
+when the new edifice on the corner of Fourth Avenue and Twentieth Street
+was christened. He was a lover of ecclesiasticism, of forms, usages,
+ceremonials, though he was not unmindful of the ideas that lay beneath
+them, and too good a New Englander, too good a Unitarian, too staunch a
+friend of free thought to be anything but a liberal Protestant; a man of
+names and dates, and instituted observances, not "electric," "magnetic,"
+or a leader either of thought or action; not a man of deep emotions, or
+moving eloquence in or out of the pulpit; not a man of long reach or
+wide influence, but conspicuous in his way, unique, worth studying as a
+figure in his generation.
+
+He was devoted to books, of which he read and produced many, and might
+have been called learned, yet he was not a closet man, not a recluse; on
+the contrary, he knew about public affairs, talked about what was going
+on in the world, attended political, social, and literary meetings, was
+a member of the prominent clubs, like the "Century" and the "Union
+League," was for years the Corresponding Secretary of the "Historical
+Society," rather prided himself, in fact, on the number and intimacy of
+his outside relations. With all this, he was a diligent pastor, an
+excellent denominationalist, a dependence on all church occasions within
+his sect, a speaker at conventions, a worker of the ecclesiastical
+machinery, a man much relied on for denominational work.
+
+His writings were numerous. In fact he always seemed to have the pen
+in his hand. Besides the books which are known,--"Studies in Christian
+Biography," "The Hearthstone," "God with Men," "Milestones in Our Life
+Journey," "Student Life,"--all popular once,--he contributed frequently
+to the _Christian Examiner_, the _North American Review_, the
+_Bibliotheca Sacra_, and other important magazines; delivered orations,
+printed theological discourses, especially a famous one before the
+theological school at Meadville, Pennsylvania, on "The Coming Church and
+its Clergy," and for several months, during Mr. Curtis' illness,
+prepared the essays in the "Easy Chair" for _Harper's Monthly Magazine_.
+His interest in matters of education and literature was incessant,
+active, and useful. He made speeches, served on committees, prepared
+reports, in every way tried to serve the cause of rational knowledge.
+Yet with all his industry and all his ability--for he possessed ability
+of no mean order,--he had a mind singularly destitute of vitality. His
+ingenuity, his pleasantry, his sententiousness, his versatility, could
+not conceal this lack of organic power. His vivacity did not exhilarate,
+his happy expressions did not create the sense of life in the mind, but
+were like artificial flowers that had no perfume, and reminded one more
+of the perfection of art than of the involuntary sweetness of nature. He
+was destitute of genius to inspire. It is the more wonderful that he
+could persevere, as he did, without the popular recognition that his
+talents merited, or the applause his endeavors deserved. He had praise,
+to be sure, but it was not hearty or effusive, and they who rendered it
+probably wondered why they could not put more soul into their laudation.
+The address was brilliant, but not warming. One must come within arm's
+length of him to feel the beating of his heart, to be sensible of his
+force. He was unable to project himself far, and relied upon incidental
+advantages of occasion for effects which he could not produce by genius.
+
+He was a most affectionate man, dependent, clinging, always ready to
+serve, obliging, docile, patient, without hardness and without guile. He
+was devoted to his family, faithful to his friends, never allowing
+differences of opinion to interfere with his duty towards those who
+might expect support from him, but fulfilling disagreeable offices when
+he felt that loyalty made perfect truthfulness incumbent. There was
+something touching in his fidelity towards men who gave him nothing but
+outside recognition, and who were willing to abandon him when he could
+no longer be useful. There was something plaintive in his readiness to
+work for men who accepted his labor as a matter of course, and allowed
+him to throw away his love. He, for his part, asked no reward, but was
+quite satisfied if his service was accepted kindly by those to whom he
+rendered it. Not that he did not like recognition; he did, and the more
+public it was the better he liked it. For he was fond of notoriety, had
+a craving for publicity, and was happiest when a multitude applauded.
+This may have grown out of his affectionateness, for he reached forth
+his arms as widely as possible, and wanted to hear the sound of many
+approving voices, needing sympathy and the assurance that he was
+conferring pleasure, the noise of plaudits reassuring his heart. Still
+he could do without this, if he was certain of the attachment of a
+single warm friend. Recognition of some sort was essential to his peace,
+for he did not possess independence enough to stand alone, and he cared
+too much for individuals to be easy if they were displeased. He gave
+himself a great deal of pain, worried, took infinite trouble about
+imaginary sorrows, not being able to feel or to affect indifference, and
+being destitute of the robustness of character necessary to throw off
+unpleasant things; for his ambition, not springing from vitality of
+mind, was no guard against griefs of the spirit. He that cannot lose
+himself in his studies fails to derive from them their best
+satisfaction,--that of consolation and refuge. He stands naked to the
+wind, and, if his skin is tender, suffers acutely.
+
+Dr. Osgood was intensely self-conscious, self-regarding,
+self-referring. Not vain in the ordinary sense, though he seemed so from
+his countenance, attitude, manner, for all of which, I am persuaded,
+nature was more responsible than disposition, his physical formation
+producing a certain carriage that suggested superciliousness and
+conceit. If he were forth-putting, it was, in most instances at least,
+because he lacked self-reliance, and wished to be _seen_, knowing that
+he could not be _felt_. In reality he was a modest, timid, shrinking
+man, with an inordinate desire for distinction, which impelled him
+continually to make a demonstration in public. Mere vanity--the love of
+appearances--he was destitute of, for he was too tender-hearted and too
+conscientious to make victims. One must be self-centred to be vain, as
+he was not. I recollect his coming one day into the office of the
+_Christian Inquirer_, with his head up as usual, and calling out in a
+loud voice: "Where do you think I went on my way down town?" Of course
+none of us knew or could guess. "Well," he went on to say, with an air
+of complacency, "I stopped at Fowler & Wells' and had my head examined."
+"Ah!" exclaimed one of the impudent, "did they find anything, Sam?"
+"What they did _not_ find," he said, "will interest you more. They
+declared that I was deficient in self-respect, and it is true." And it
+_was_ true. Samuel Osgood assumed a brave air, for the reason that he
+could not trust himself in the open field. He needed the protection of a
+rampart. He wore a showy uniform, because he was not valiant. He had too
+much self-esteem to forget himself, and too little courage to assert
+himself; the consequence was that he said and did numerous things that
+looked vainglorious and were absurd, but which were intended to conceal
+his impuissance. It was an innocent kind of bravado, like poor Oliver
+Proudfute's, in Scott's romance, "The Fair Maid of Perth." Nobody was
+hurt by it, though to him the passion for notoriety was fatal. He liked
+to see his name in a newspaper, coveting the kind of reputation that
+came in that way, and comforting his heart with the thought of lying on
+the broad bosom of the community. His restless desire for public notice
+brought ridicule on him, for ordinary people ascribed it to his conceit,
+whereas it rather indicated an absence of self-confidence. It was a
+cloak to hide his depreciation at the same time that it made him look
+larger in the general eye. It was, therefore, more touching than
+despicable, and if it excited mirth there was nothing bitter in the
+smile which could not break into laughter. Selfish he could not be
+called, for he was always serving others, and disinterestedly too; but
+on a charge of complacency he could hardly be acquitted. This was the
+manner in which he took his reward, and, as I said, it cost nothing to
+anybody, while the public received a great deal of service very
+ungrudgingly bestowed.
+
+The change from Unitarianism to Episcopacy is very easily explained.
+His craving for sympathy was boundless. He was necessarily isolated in
+New York, nor had he the solace of a great popular success. In fact his
+following was small; his church was dwindling; his reputation was
+certainly not increasing; and he became persuaded, I think without
+sufficient reason, that he was the victim of adverse influences. In
+London, he was charmed with the blended freedom and sanctity of the
+"Broad Church" represented by Stanley, Kingsley, Jowett, and a host of
+cultivated men; by its unity amid diversity; its sympathy and fellowship
+and large scholarship. Here was a church indeed; wide, holy, liberal,
+devout, with articles admitting of various interpretations, sacraments
+tender and elastic, forms that did not constrain, and usages that did
+not bind, an unlimited range of speculation, and a spirit of reverence
+that kept the most widely separated together. Here was something very
+different from the sectarianism he had, all his life, been accustomed
+to, and, all his life, had loathed. He joined this Communion not so much
+on account of its _creed_ as of its _creedlessness;_ not as another form
+of denominationalism, but as an escape from denominationalism; a real,
+living, comprehensive church, where there was room for all Christian
+souls, whatever their special mode of belief; a Protestant church with a
+truly catholic temper, cordial, humane, courteous; with a respect for
+literature, and a love for knowledge; with no jealousy or ill-will, or
+fear of thought. His heart was warmed, his fancy fired. Shortly after
+his return, as he sat in my study, I asked him if he had materially
+changed his theology. He replied that he had not, he had simply altered
+the _emphasis;_ as much as to say that in substance it remained what it
+was before, essentially Unitarian, as he understood that designation. In
+fact, his sermons were to all intents and purposes the same; they never
+abounded in doctrine, they did not now; they were always "sentimental,"
+in the sense of dealing with sentiment, they were so still. He was not a
+prime favorite with Episcopalians in America. He was not narrow or
+strict enough for the orthodox; he was not "sensational" enough for the
+liberals; he was too ecclesiastical for the Low Churchmen; too
+rationalistic for the High Churchmen; and his failure to communicate
+warmth was not favorable to his attractiveness. There were not many
+Broad Church ministers in New York, so that his circle of fellowship was
+small; and on the whole the reception was a disappointment. He longed
+for recognition, which he found among many of his old associates, as he
+did not find it among his new friends. He was always a churchman when he
+was a Unitarian; he was no more of a churchman now, and the sympathy he
+sought he might have found in his former connection. Probably had he
+lived elsewhere than in New York, where the competition was sharp, and
+where individuality alone without distinguished power counted for
+nothing, he would have continued Unitarian, and been happy, but he was
+ambitious of eminence; he wanted to live in a great city, to be minister
+of a metropolitan parish, to be a Doctor of Divinity, and for all this
+he lacked the force. There was a perpetual conflict between his
+aspirations and his vigor. He joined the Episcopal fraternity, hoping
+for what none but those born into it attain without energy of an exalted
+kind. His ancient comrades fell away, as was natural; he could not win
+other comrades, and his later years became lonely. He cared more for
+Christian fellowship than for any other; and he had not the power to
+secure this. Thus his affectionateness was against him. He was a loyal
+man, true to his convictions, faithful to the bent of his mind. He could
+not be a deceiver or a renegade, and his heart was not strong enough or
+wide enough to push him forward.
+
+Some thought him deficient in common-sense, and this is, in a sense,
+true. He had not the force to carry projects through, nor had he the
+hearty accord with the people of his generation that would give him an
+instinctive insight into their wishes and enable him to strike into the
+current of their designs. His self-reference always stood in the way of
+his sympathy with other men; yet he often took practical views of
+speculative questions, and curbed a propensity to moral enthusiasm on
+the part of some of his associates. This, however, was due to his
+timidity, to his absence of vigor, to his want of vital conviction,
+rather than to any clearness of perception. He had no humor, no sense of
+the incongruous, the incompatible, or the absurd. He named rocks,
+groves, arbors, on his summer estate, after the famous poets, and used
+to sit in turn on the seats he had thus immortalized. He said things
+that no man of taste would have uttered, and did things that no man of
+judgment would have been guilty of. But all this was owing to the
+absence of sensible qualities rather than to the presence of visionary
+ones. He was not perverse, stubborn, or wrong-headed, did not outrage
+common opinion, or fly in the face of established prejudice. His want of
+good sense was negative, not positive; innocent, not harmful.
+
+Such men have their uses and their place, and neither is small or low.
+His love of learning, his devotion to duty, his friendliness, his
+fidelity, his kindliness, were rare gifts, particularly rare in
+communities like ours. His child-like conceit, very different from the
+aggressive vanity that offends the sensitive soul, was not offensive or
+noxious, and was a source of harmless amusement. His guilelessness was
+more than touching; it was admirable as an example and as a lesson, in
+an age that honors knowledge of the world beyond its deserts; and his
+simplicity of nature, his trustingness, his ingenuousness, rendered him
+a confiding friend, dear to those whose hearts were sore. Few men living
+have so small a number of enemies. He did not provoke the hostility he
+received. It was possible to be sorry for him; it was impossible to bear
+him malice.
+
+As I think of him, the vision arises of a complacent man, with a loud
+greeting, a metallic voice, an outstretched hand, a consequential
+manner. All this is dust and ashes, but his singleness of intention is
+not dead. When everything else is forgotten, his faithfulness will be
+remembered.
+
+Both these men gave me a warm welcome; in fact, my relations were most
+friendly among the other Unitarian ministers in the neighborhood. It was
+anticipated, no doubt, that I would establish a third Unitarian Society
+"up town," of a liberal type; but a wide departure from the existing
+order was not suspected. The expectation was that the usual doctrines
+were to be proclaimed; that the sacraments were to be administered; that
+the regular order was to be observed. Perhaps my willingness to
+undertake such an enterprise was regarded as a sign of concession on my
+part; perhaps it was supposed that the conservative tone of the city,
+together with the attitude of the other churches, would repress the
+radical tendencies of the young clergyman; perhaps the trials incident
+to a new society and the confusions of the time concealed somewhat the
+real bearing of the undertaking. However this may be, there was no
+opposition, no criticism, no dictation, no proscription of radical
+leanings. My congregations were composed of all sorts of people. There
+were Unitarians, Universalists, "come-outers," spiritualists,
+unbelievers of all kinds, anti-slavery people, reformers generally. But
+this, as being incidental to the formation of every liberal society, was
+not objected to. It need not have been; for if there had been no
+interruption, no check, everything might have gone smoothly, as in
+similar societies since.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. WAR.
+
+
+Hardly had I got warm in my place when the mutterings of war were in
+the air. During the autumn of 1859, on the 16th of October, John Brown
+planned his attack on Harper's Ferry. His was a portentous figure. His
+position in history--greater than his achievements would warrant--was
+due partly to his position as herald of the coming strife, but mainly to
+his personal qualities. These were colossal; however much one may
+criticise his particular deeds, or the details of his motive, these
+qualities can not be exalted too highly. His courage, heroism, patience,
+fortitude, were most extraordinary. Even Governor Wise, the man whose
+duty it was to see him tried and executed as a felon, said of him; "They
+are mistaken who take Brown to be a madman. He is a bundle of the best
+nerves I ever saw; cut and thrust and bleeding and in bonds. He is a man
+of clear head, of courage, fortitude, and simple ingenuousness. He is
+cool, collected, indomitable; and it is but just to him to say that he
+was humane to his prisoners, and he inspired me with great trust in his
+integrity as a man of truth." Colonel Washington, another Virginia
+witness, testified to the extraordinary coolness with which Brown felt
+the pulse of his dying son, while he held his own rifle in the other
+hand, and cheered on his men. His character made his prison cell a
+shrine. On the day of his execution, December 2, 1859, he stood under
+the gallows with the noose round his neck for full ten minutes while
+military evolutions were performed; he never wavered a moment, and died
+with nerves still subject to his iron will. He was a Calvinistic
+believer in predestination; a real Covenanter, more like the Scotch
+Covenanters of two centuries ago than anything we know of to-day. He was
+an Old-Testament man, and like all fanatics was indifferent to death,
+either that of other men or his own. His anti-slavery zeal began in his
+youth. He early took an oath to make war against slavery, and, it is
+said, called his older sons together on one occasion and made them
+pledge themselves, kneeling in prayer, to the anti-slavery crusade. This
+purpose he always bore in mind, whatever else he was doing; he even
+chose the spot for his attempt--the mountains which Washington had
+selected as a final retreat should he be defeated by the English. Nearly
+nine years before his own death, he exhorted the members of the "League
+of Gileadites" to stand by one another and by their friends as long as a
+drop of blood remained and be hanged, if they must, but to tell no tales
+out of school.
+
+Then came the war. Though its physical aspect,--the loss of treasure and
+of blood--was most affecting, I cannot but think that its mental and
+moral aspect has been underrated. Its whole justification lay in its
+moral character, and I must believe that full justice has never been
+done to those who were obliged to stay at home and uphold this feature.
+The preacher of the Gospel of Peace had as much as he could do to
+overcome the horrors of war; and the preacher of Righteousness was
+engaged all the time in promoting the cause of justice. They who went to
+the front had the excitement of battle, the pleasures of camp-life, the
+assistance of comradeship, the comfort of sympathy. The preacher had
+none of these. Every day rumors were reaching his ears; "extras" were
+flying about in the silence; he had to comfort people under defeat, to
+humble them in hours of victory; to interpret the conflict in accordance
+with the principles of equity; to keep alive the moral issues of the
+struggle. This was an incessant weariness and anxiety; to fight foes one
+could not see, and to uphold a cause that was discredited, fell to his
+portion; it is no wonder that when the war was over he was spent and
+aged.
+
+An illustration of a part of what he had to contend with is found in
+the riot of the summer of 1863. This was an anti-abolitionist riot, a
+fierce protest against the conscription, and at the same time an
+uprising against the government, which was supposed to maintain a war of
+the blacks against the whites. The riot was directed against the negroes
+and the abolitionists, and was pitiless and ferocious in the extreme. It
+was my lot to be in New York in that dreadful week in July. I was
+visiting friends in the upper part of the town when the uproar began. As
+I walked home down Madison Avenue a group of rough men met me; one of
+them snatched at my watch chain, and I should have been maltreated had
+not more attractive game in the shape of people in a buggy drawn away
+the attention of my assailants. I reached my home in safety. The next
+morning, as I walked about the city, there were groups of men standing
+idle, or armed with missiles, in almost every street. Had the mob been
+organized then it might have done more mischief than it did, for the
+inhabitants of the city were unprepared and unprotected. As I stood at
+night on my roof, I could see the fires in different parts of the town,
+and hear the shots. An arsenal stood on Seventh Avenue, near my house,
+full of arms and ammunition which the insurgents wanted. When the United
+States troops arrived, they defended this arsenal. Cannons were pointed
+up and down the street, guards were posted, officers with their clanking
+swords marched up and down before my door. The riot lasted three
+days,--from the 13th to the 16th. On the following Sunday a sermon was
+preached which gives expression to the better thoughts of the wisest
+people, and from which accordingly extracts are made:
+
+ Of all the dreadful and melancholy passages in the history of human
+ progress, none, to a thoughtful man, are more dreadful or
+ melancholy than those which tell how men have resisted, pushed
+ away, reviled, cursed, beaten, mobbed, crucified their benefactors.
+ It does seem, as we read them, as if the most dreaded thing on
+ earth had been the personal, the domestic, the social welfare; as
+ if the deepest anxiety on the part of men of all sorts was an
+ anxiety to escape from their health and salvation; as if the
+ profoundest dread was a dread of mending their estates, and their
+ utmost horror was a horror of heaven! It does seem, as we read, as
+ if happiness, prosperity, success, were the pet aversion of
+ mankind; as if the signs that were looked for with the most
+ agonized apprehension were the signs that the kingdom of heaven was
+ at hand.... We saw this conspicuously and dismally exemplified in
+ the events of the past week. The one man who, before and above all
+ others, was a mark for the rage of the populace, the one man whose
+ name was loud in the rabble's mouth, and always coupled with a
+ malediction, the one man who was hunted for his blood as by wolves,
+ who would have been torn in pieces had the opportunity been
+ afforded, and on whose account the dwelling of a friend was
+ literally torn in pieces, was a man who had been the steadfast
+ friend of these very people who hungered for his blood; their most
+ constant, uncompromising, and public friend; thinking for them,
+ speaking for them, writing for them; pleading their cause through
+ the press, in the legislature, from the platform; excusing their
+ mistakes and follies, asserting and reasserting their substantial
+ worth and honesty and rectitude, advocating their claims as working
+ people, vindicating their rights as men; proposing schemes for the
+ safety of their persons, the healthfulness of their houses, the
+ saving and increase of their earnings, the education of their
+ children, the exemption of their homesteads from seizure in cases
+ of debt, the enlargement of their sphere of labor, the transferring
+ of their families from the crowded city, where they could do little
+ more than keep themselves alive by arduous toil, to the fruitful
+ lands of the West, where they could become noble and
+ self-respecting men and women. This was the man whose blood was
+ hungered for. I need not speak his name,--you know whom I mean,
+ Horace Greeley,--a man whom some call visionary, but whose visions
+ are all of the redemption of the people; whom some call "fool," but
+ who, if he seem a fool, is foolish that the people may be wise;
+ whom some call "radical," but whose radicalism is simply a
+ determination that the popular existence shall have a sound, sure,
+ and deep root in natural law and moral principle; at all events, a
+ man who has lived for the people and suffered for the people, and
+ been laughed at when he suffered and because he suffered. _This_
+ was the man whose blood was hungered for. And yet the most
+ moderate, kind, considerate of all the papers, the last week, was
+ his paper. And I believe he, even had he fallen into the hands of
+ his enemies, would have said, "Forgive them, they know not what
+ they do."
+
+ Indulge me in one more personality. I said that the dwelling of a
+ friend was pillaged by the mob, under the impression that Mr.
+ Greeley lived there. What was this dwelling? Who was this friend?
+ The dwelling was one the like of which is rare in any city, a
+ dwelling of happiness and peace, a home of the tenderest domestic
+ affections, a house of large friendliness and hospitality, a refuge
+ and abiding-place for the unfortunate and the outcast. There was no
+ display of wealth there--there was no wealth to display; yet the
+ house was full of things which no wealth could buy. It was crowded
+ with mementos. The pieces of furniture in the rooms had family
+ histories connected with them; chairs and tables were precious from
+ association with noble and rare people who had gone. Pictures on
+ the walls, busts in the parlor, engravings, photographs, books,
+ spoke of the gratitude or love of some dear giver. One room was
+ sacred to the memory of a noble boy, an only son, who had died some
+ years before. There was his bust in marble, there were his books,
+ there were the prints he liked, the little bits of art he was fond
+ of, and all the dear things that seemed to bring him back. The
+ whole house was a shrine and a sanctuary.
+
+ And who were the inmates? The master, a man whose sympathies were
+ always and completely with the working-people, a man of steady and
+ boundless humanity; the mistress, a woman whose name is familiar to
+ all doers of good deeds in the city of New York, and dear to
+ hundreds of the objects of good deeds. To the orphan and friendless
+ and poor, a mother; to the unfortunate, a sister; to the wretched,
+ the depraved, the sinful, more than a friend. In the city prison
+ her presence was the presence of an angel of pitying love; at
+ Blackwell's Island she was welcome as a spirit of peace and hope.
+ The boys at Randall's Island looked into her face as the face of an
+ angel. Again and again had she rescued from the life of shame the
+ countrywoman, and possibly the kindred of these very people who
+ plundered her house. For the better part of a year and more she has
+ been in camp and city hospitals, nursing their brothers and sons,
+ performing every menial office. At this moment she is at Point
+ Lookout, doing that work, amid discomforts and discouragements that
+ would daunt a less resolute humanity than hers, giving all she has
+ and is to the _people_, to the wounded, crippled, bleeding, and
+ broken people; giving it for the sake of the people--giving it that
+ the people may be raised to a higher social level! And she,
+ forsooth, must be selected to have her house pillaged! She must be
+ stabbed to her heart of hearts, stabbed through and through, in
+ every one of her affections, by these people for whom her life had
+ been a perpetual process of dying! Why, if they had but known this
+ that I have been telling you, or but a tenth part of it, those men
+ would have defended with their bodies every thread of carpet she
+ trod on. But so it was, and so it must be! Only the best names are
+ ever taken in vain on human lips, and they are so taken because
+ they are the best, and best is worst to those who cannot understand
+ it. Theodore Winthrop was shot by a negro. Did he know what he
+ did?... In thinking of it one's bosom is torn with distracting
+ emotions, and between feeling for the persecuted and feeling for
+ the persecutors, one almost loses the power of feeling. Could
+ anything be more pitiful? Yes, one thing more pitiful there
+ was--the savage hunting down and persecution of the negroes, as if
+ they, too, were the enemies of these working-people. The poor,
+ inoffensive negroes, most innocent part of the whole population!
+ Most quiet, harmless, docile people, who could not stand in the way
+ of the white people if they would, and who never thought of
+ anything but of keeping out of their way! These the enemies of
+ white labor! As if they had not, for these very white people, borne
+ the burden and heat of the tropical day, raising the cotton by
+ which we are clothed, and the rice by which we are fed! As if to
+ these and the like of these, the white people did not owe a large
+ share of the manufacturing towns where they get their bread! As if
+ the lowest foundation stones of this very New York of ours were not
+ cemented by their bloody sweat! As if there were too many of them
+ in the country now for the country's needs, supposing the country
+ ever to fall into a settled and civilized condition again! As if
+ all there are might not by and by be _required_ to do the work
+ which white labor can not for a long time, if it can ever, safely
+ undertake! Strange complications of things! Strange cross-purposes
+ of human nature! The Southern people would revive the slave trade,
+ because they have not black laborers enough, and their allies among
+ ourselves would banish or kill all the black people, because they
+ interfere with white labor! A mutual stabbing at each other's
+ hearts! And on each side a stabbing to its own heart!... It is a
+ very mysterious thing in history, this alliance between the most
+ turbulent and the most tyrannical, the most depraved and the most
+ despotic portions of society. The most undisciplined, barbarous,
+ savage members of a community are ever in a league with the most
+ overbearing, insolent, imperious, and domineering members of it.
+ They who are under the least self-control bow most deferentially
+ before those who rule others with the most cruel rod. The people
+ who were proudest of having turned out to a man, in London, for the
+ maintenance of law and order, on the day of the great Chartist
+ demonstration there, were the most immoral class in the
+ city--proved by the criminal returns to be nine times as dishonest,
+ five times as drunken, and nine times as savage as the rest of the
+ community. (See Spencer's "Social Statics," p. 424.)
+
+ In Boston, on the occasion of the rendition of Anthony Burns, all
+ the thieves, burglars, cut-throats, swarmed from their dens and
+ volunteered with alacrity to enforce the fugitive-slave law. And
+ now the leaders of the Southern Confederacy count, and count
+ securely, on the Northern populace. The fiercest allies of the only
+ absolutely despotic class in the country are the outlaws of
+ society. The men who are fighting for the privileges of the
+ extremest tyranny, the privileges not of ruling merely, but
+ literally of owning the laboring class, these men have the
+ implicit, unquestioning, fanatical loyalty of the people who are at
+ the opposite end of the social scale--the people who own nothing
+ either of fortune, position, influence, or character, and whose
+ sole relation towards the despots they worship is that of mad,
+ savage slaves.
+
+ In Europe this alliance between the despotic and the lawless may
+ be fortunate for the peace of the community. In our Southern States
+ it is eminently conducive to the tranquillity they desire. But when
+ the lawless are here and the despotic are there, when the barbarism
+ is in New York and the tyranny in Richmond, when the elements of
+ discord and turbulence in our Northern cities fly to support their
+ iron-handed rulers in the seceded States, there ensues a state of
+ things, especially in time of war, that is calculated to shake
+ society to its foundations, and fill every loyal heart with dread.
+ The unruly, as if they felt instinctively their lack of
+ self-control, seek a ruler--fly to the strongest to save them from
+ themselves, worship the sternest, the most high-handed, the
+ cruellest, and by that natural sympathy with brutality are
+ maintained in subjection to law.
+
+ Heaven speed the time when these heedless, reckless, licentious
+ children of humanity may feel sensible of the weight of power
+ without its brutality, may reverence authority when it is neither
+ beastly nor cruel, may yield obedience to Order, whose symbol is
+ not the sword, and to Law, whose badge is not the bayonet. But till
+ that time comes, we, with thoughtful minds and sad hearts and sober
+ consciences, and souls full as we can make them of human charity
+ and good-will, must hold in our hands those terrible symbols, and
+ in the Christian spirit do the ruler's part.
+
+The insurrection did not last long. As soon as the United States troops
+appeared the trouble was over and order was restored. There was
+fighting; there was pillage; but how many lives were lost and how much
+property was destroyed was never exactly known. On the whole, the riot
+strengthened the hands of the government, increased pity for the victims
+of outrage, and excited sympathy for the negroes and the abolitionists.
+The priests, as I well remember, helped in the work of pacification. On
+the second day of the uprising, as I was visiting a friend in his studio
+on Fifth Avenue, the mob came along, shouting, yelling, brandishing
+clubs, on their way to the archbishop's palace, to hear an address by
+him. The prelate appeared on the balcony dressed in full canonicals, in
+order to impress the people, and delivered a most ingenious and
+persuasive address. Beginning "Men of New York," he flattered their
+self-esteem, paid a tribute to their sense of power and exalted
+influence, and advised them against cruelty and anarchy. The effect of
+this speech was surprising in soothing and quieting the crowd. They had
+come there in a mood of tumult--they separated peacefully and went to
+their own homes, satisfied. From that hour the soul of the riot was
+broken.
+
+The incidents of the war cannot be detailed here. The story has been
+told too often, and is altogether too long for my space. And after all
+the moral issues of the war were the most interesting though not the
+most pathetic. The sentiment of union, the establishment of the national
+supremacy, the authority of the reign of law, the emancipation of a
+degraded race, the new inspiration imparted to a great people, and the
+advent of a universal republicanism were most significant. It is quite
+likely that the modern uprising of labor and the urgent claims of women
+for recognition and civil power were aided, if not suggested, by this
+overwhelming triumph of order and enlightenment. It is more than likely
+that the position of the United States, as a power among the nations of
+the earth, was due mainly to the victory that was achieved by the powers
+of liberty.
+
+
+
+
+IX. THE FREE RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION.
+
+
+The happy ending of the war stimulated, as has been said, the
+sentiment of Unity. The success of the government in putting down the
+rebellion filled the air with the spirit of union. The restoration of
+political harmony suggested a deeper harmony, when divisions should
+cease. At this moment, in April, 1865, the indefatigable Dr. Bellows,
+who had been the soul of the Sanitary Commission, summoned all Christian
+believers of the liberal persuasions to a convention in his church for a
+more complete organization. The invitation was most generously
+interpreted, and was hailed by some who could be called Christians only
+under the most elastic definition of the term. A prominent layman of the
+Unitarian body brought an elaborate creed which he wished the convention
+to adopt; and a distinguished minister of the West was of the opinion
+that the work of perfect organization could best be done by the adoption
+of stringent articles of faith. But the minimum of belief was imposed.
+The preamble of the constitution, the work of reconciling minds, reads
+thus: "Whereas the great opportunities and demands for Christian labor
+and consecration, at this time, increase our sense of the obligations of
+all disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ to prove their faith by
+self-denial and by the devotion of their lives and possessions to the
+service of God, and the building up of the kingdom of his son,
+Therefore." Then follow the articles. It was this phrase, "Lord Jesus
+Christ," that provoked discussion. The struggle was renewed at Syracuse
+on October 8th of the next year, 1866, and an attempt was made to
+explain away the force of the declaration by announcing that while the
+preamble and articles of the constitution represented the opinions of
+the majority, yet they were not to be considered an authoritative test
+of Unitarianism, or to exclude from fellowship any who though differing
+in belief "are in general sympathy with our purpose and practical aims."
+But this was not considered by the radicals as satisfactory. For in the
+first place the title of "Lord" seemed to contain by implication a
+doctrine which could not be subscribed to, as the "Lordship" of Jesus
+was supposed to be supernatural. Here seemed to be a fundamental
+difference between those who held to the old world's idea of a spiritual
+kingdom, and those who proclaimed the new world's idea of a spiritual
+democracy. In fact, one of the leaders--Dr. Bellows--plainly said if
+there was to be any change it must be made in the other direction; "we
+are to consider not only the few on the one side, who may or may not
+care to unite with us, but the great body of Christians of all
+denominations, the Universal Church of Christ; I demand liberality to
+them, the liberality which acknowledges their Lord and Leader, and
+welcomes them to a household whose hearth glows with faith in and
+loyalty to the personal Saviour." It was plainly declared by him that
+Unitarians assumed the name of liberal Christians, because they allowed
+liberality of inquiry and opinion _within the pale of Christian
+discipleship_. This of itself was enough to create a palpable division,
+but it was felt besides that freedom of interpretation did not imply
+freedom of rejection. The phrase _Lordship of Jesus_, although as little
+of a creed as could be devised, was hostile to freedom, besides not
+being altogether true, as Jesus never claimed to be infallible. The
+radicals, under the lead of Francis E. Abbot, attempted to introduce a
+substitute for the original preamble, inculcating unity of spirit and of
+work as the basis of the "National Conference of Unitarian and
+Independent Churches." This substitute was not carried, and a final
+breach between the Independents and the Unitarians was thus established.
+This was inevitable twenty-five years ago; it could not happen to-day,
+when both wings are united in one body.
+
+For my part I did not go to Syracuse, having foreseen what eventually
+occurred, namely, the intended solidification of the Unitarian body by
+the strengthening of the bonds of organization. My own personal
+experience, which other radicals knew nothing of, led me to this
+conclusion. My church edifice on 40th Street was begun in the spring of
+1863. The two ministers in New York were present at the informal service
+of laying the corner-stone. The walls were going up during the summer;
+on the week of the riot the mob called the workmen off, threatening to
+destroy what was built if the masons did not leave. The building was
+finished in the winter, and dedicated on Christmas Day. To the warm
+personal invitation which was sent to all the Unitarian clergy in New
+York and Brooklyn--there were but three then--no response was returned;
+and when my father and I went to the church there were no ministers on
+the platform. We went through the service, my father offering the prayer
+and I preaching the sermon. No remark was made at the time beyond an
+expression of surprise at the non-appearance of the "brethren." The next
+day my father, who had come from Boston on purpose to attend the
+dedication, and whose blindness was approaching fast, went to make a
+friendly visit on Dr. Bellows. On his return, when asked if any reason
+was assigned for the failure to participate in the proceedings of the
+day before, he said that the duties of Christmas were alleged as the
+cause. I was sure there was another explanation behind; and as soon as I
+had put my father in the train for home wrote to Dr. Bellows, taxing him
+among the rest with discourtesy. It was evident that such a charge was
+anticipated and prepared for; that the ministers had met and had agreed
+on a course to be pursued in my case. For at once there came a reply to
+my note, accusing me of studiously neglecting all the usual observances
+of the denomination. My invitation had not been official; there was no
+"church"; there had never been any sacrament; the allegiance to
+fundamental doctrines of the sect had been slack. All this was true, and
+no attempt at exculpation was made, but it was felt that a breach
+existed. The excitements of the war overshadowed everything else at this
+period, and nothing more was said. My Society was duly represented at
+the first conference; but as soon as our side was argued,--as it was by
+D. A. Wasson,--it was plain that the spirit of organization prevailed
+and was against us. A division was inevitable. The "Independents" must
+form a separate party.
+
+This virtual exclusion occasioned the formation of the Free Religious
+Association. A meeting was held on the 5th of February, 1867, at
+Dr. C. A. Bartol's, in Boston, to consider a plan for creating a new
+association on the basis of free thought. Very strong words were spoken
+on that occasion. One man, I recollect, spoke of all churches, all
+ministers, and all religion as being outgrown. But the majority were of
+the opinion that religion was an eternal necessity, and the
+administration of it an absolute demand. Dr. Bartol himself was always a
+warm friend of the Association, appearing on the platform, speaking
+always hopefully, one of the most welcome of its supporters. The
+Association was formed in the spring of that same year. In the plan of
+organization it was distinctly announced that the aim of the Association
+was to "promote the interest of pure religion, to encourage the
+scientific study of theology, and to increase fellowship in the spirit;
+and to this end all persons interested in these objects are cordially
+invited to its membership." Thus the object of the Association was
+exceedingly broad. It proposed to remove all dividing lines and to unite
+all religious men in bonds of pure spirituality, each one being
+responsible for his own opinion alone, and in no degree affected in his
+relations with other associations. If the movement had been in the hands
+of orthodox and well-reputed people, it would have seemed not only large
+but noble and beneficent. Being, as it was, in the hands of a few
+radical clergymen and laymen, it was supposed to be "infidel" in its
+character; and was misrepresented and abused accordingly.
+
+At first, the dissensions of the sects were rebuked. Afterwards, the
+scope of the idea was extended; all the religions of the world being put
+on an equality of origin and purpose. The spiritual nature of man was
+assumed; the universality of religious feeling; the inherent tendency to
+worship, aspiration, prayer, being taken for granted as an element in
+the best minds; all churches and confessions of faith being looked upon
+as achievements of the soul; Jesus being classed among the leaders of
+humanity; the Bible being accepted as a record of spiritual and moral
+truth; and the church being regarded as an organization to diffuse
+belief. The foundation, therefore, was a pure Theism, and the effort
+contemplated the elevation of all mankind to the dignity of children of
+the Highest. That this aim was always borne in mind is not pretended.
+The negative side was made too conspicuous. Now and then there was a
+lurch in the direction of denial. There was too much criticism, and it
+was not always just. There was too much speculation, and it was not
+always wise. The plan of letting each sect tell its own story was a
+little confusing at the start. Still, on the whole, the object was
+pretty faithfully kept in view. Lucretia Mott suggested that the word
+"religion" should be substituted for the word "theology," but the word
+"religion" was too vague to afford ground for discussion, and it was
+felt that the phrase "scientific" sufficiently explained, through the
+substitution of the scientific for the theological method, the purpose
+of the association. Moreover, the purpose was to remove _theological_
+differences, the only differences that existed.
+
+There were names of distinguished men and women on our list of
+officers, members, speakers, and friends--Ralph Waldo Emerson, Amos
+Bronson Alcott, Gerrit Smith, George William Curtis, Edward L. Youmans,
+Nathaniel Holmes, William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, Rowland G.
+Hazard, Lucretia Mott, Lydia Maria Child, Ednah D. Cheney. Thomas W.
+Higginson was one of our most effective speakers; John Weiss read on our
+platform his most brilliant paper on "Science and Religion"; David
+Atwood Wasson lent us the light of his countenance.
+
+Our greatest want was the want of a leader,--a man not only of competent
+learning and spiritual enthusiasm, but of natural impulse and vigor; a
+man of the people, a man of rugged speech, a man of vivacity and humor.
+If Theodore Parker had been alive he might have taken this position, and
+distinguished himself as a leader in this movement; as it was, there was
+no one who could take his place, and the enterprise flagged accordingly,
+lacking the popular zeal which would give it currency. The speculative
+character of the association was always against it and rendered it
+somewhat dry; but this under the circumstances was inevitable, because
+we were forced to deal with technicalities of credence, and had not
+power enough to get beyond them into the universalities of faith.
+
+There was an expectation in many quarters that the association would
+devote itself to beneficent projects; and this was natural, because it
+seemed as if those who gave up the bond of belief must adopt the bond of
+work. Mr. Emerson seems to have had a similar desire. "I wish," he said,
+"that the various beneficent institutions which are springing up like
+joyful plants of wholesomeness all over this country, should all be
+remembered as within the sphere of this committee,--almost all of them
+are represented here,--and that within this little band that has
+gathered here to-day should grow friendship." But in the first place,
+ours was not a philanthropic institution; its aim was religious
+entirely, as it attempted to substitute the universality of religion for
+the one faith of Christendom. The chief workers in several forms of
+charity presented their schemes for our consideration, and at one time
+it looked as if we must be borne away into some philanthropic
+enterprise. The current, however, which carried us towards "religious"
+unity was too strong.
+
+And then, at that time there was little scientific philanthropy. The
+word _charity_ was more or less associated with patronage and pity, the
+very things that we wanted to avoid; they who were bent on wiping out
+distinctions could not countenance these, and it was safer not to let
+our hearts get the better of our reason. But even if there had been a
+scientific treatment of humane questions, we were afraid of the danger
+of becoming too much absorbed in this kind of work, and so of losing
+sight of our chief end.
+
+At present the idea of our Association is pretty well domesticated in
+Christendom. It was not, after all, entirely new. In 1845 and 1846
+Frederick Denison Maurice, lecturing on the Boyle Foundation in London
+on "The Religions of the World and their Relations to Christianity,"
+attempted to do justice to the ancient faiths of India, Persia, Egypt,
+Greece, and Rome. In 1882, in Edinburgh, eminent men discussed the same
+problems under the title of "The Faiths of the World." In 1871 James
+Freeman Clarke published his "Ten Great Religions." The study of
+comparative religion has been going on for many years. When Mozoomdar
+came to this country a few years ago, there was such a rush for him
+among American orthodox Christians that the Free Religious Association
+could not get at him at all, though it had tried in vain to get a real
+Brahmin on its platform. True, there were differences of opinion among
+the orthodox students of the old-world systems. Some regarded the
+ancient religions as effete; some denied that Christianity touched them
+at more than one or two points; some treated them simply as preparations
+for the crowning faith of Christ. Still, whatever their differences, all
+agreed that the religious instinct was universal; that there was a
+ground for revelation in the human heart; since Carlyle's famous lecture
+in "Heroes," delivered in 1840, it was impossible to regard Mahomet as
+an impostor, or to look upon religion as a fabrication of the priests,
+as an attempt to practise upon human ignorance and fear.
+
+Among the Unitarians our conception is familiar. At the convention that
+was held in Philadelphia, in October, 1889, both parties, the most
+conservative and the most radical, sat side by side. A manager of the
+Free Religious Association delivered one of the addresses, and said: "I
+never believed one tithe as much as I believe to-night. Never did I have
+such faith in God; never did I so believe in man; never did I see such a
+glorious outlook for the Church; never did I hold such a glad theory of
+human hope for the future." The secretary of the American Unitarian
+Association was full of joy. The secretary of the Western Unitarian
+Conference quoted the opinion of the Western churches, assembled at
+Chicago in May, 1887, and declared "our fellowship to be conditioned on
+no doctrinal tests, and welcomes all who wish to join us to help
+establish truth and righteousness and love in the world." A prominent
+leader of Unitarianism in Illinois uttered himself thus: "Whatever its
+traditions, whatever its present positions, or its prospects, this
+spiritual commonwealth is extra-Unitarian, extra-American,
+extra-Christian; it is human, and on that account it is universal, and
+it is divine." Another speaker at this convention declared that "the
+hand that shall hold this master key is Christ, as the modern mind
+conceives him,--Christ healing the sick, raising the dead, cleansing the
+leper, casting out devils from society and business, from politics and
+religion; Christ, the friend of Lazarus and of Mary Magdalen; Christ
+robed in absolute justice and also in transcendant love, and embracing
+the whole world."
+
+It is not claimed that this extraordinary change in ecclesiastical
+fellowship and sympathy is due to the Free Religious Association. That
+was one of the signs of the times, and is an effect rather than a cause;
+but it is a sign of the grander unity. When the portrait of Theodore
+Parker is hanging on the walls of Channing Hall; when a cordial welcome
+is extended to all seekers for the light; when the East and West are
+ready to embrace in a fellowship of aspiration; when the young men are
+all alight with fresh hope and fresh endeavor, we may with confidence
+anticipate the time when there shall be but one fold, and the aim of the
+Free Religious Association be met.
+
+The emancipation from denominational trammels was of great service to
+the young minister. It is true that he was still in a "church" which
+kept him within ecclesiastical associations; but these fetters were not
+heavy, and they were soon to be thrown off. For in the spring of 1869,
+the church was sold to another congregation. This was done partly
+because the acoustic properties of the building were not favorable, and
+partly because the place was not suited to the genius of the new
+society. "There was no room in the inn," was the subject of the last
+sermon preached in that building. Lyric Hall, to which we removed, is
+situated on Sixth Avenue, between 40th and 41st streets. It is a large
+room fifty by one hundred feet. During the week it was used as a dancing
+hall, but on Sundays it was arranged for a religious service. A small
+organ was placed there, a platform was built, and seats were brought up
+from the cellar below. The first sermon preached there was on "Secular
+Religion," and it indicated the whole character of the services. The
+most remarkable thing, as regards myself, that happened in Lyric Hall,
+was the adoption of the habit of speaking without notes. The light from
+the avenue was too far off for reading, and the speaker was therefore
+obliged to dispense with a manuscript altogether. A theme was first
+chosen that admitted of subdivisions, so that as fast as the speaker
+exhausted one he could fall back on another. The habit soon became so
+familiar that no difficulty was experienced in handling the most
+complicated subject. Here we remained until the spring of 1875, when we
+removed to Masonic Temple, on Sixth Avenue and 23d Street.
+
+This building, which was very large and handsome, had just been erected
+by the Masons, who designed it for their own accommodation. The
+structure having cost, however, more than was anticipated, the owners
+were obliged, reluctantly, to let the large hall, which they did for
+literary and religious purposes only. We were the first to occupy it.
+The hall was spacious and stately, with fixed seats for about a thousand
+people. A fine organ stood at one end of the platform; at the other end
+there was a large reception room. The first sermon there was on
+"Reasonable Religion." The audience was never large--never more than
+eight or nine hundred, usually six or seven hundred. The form of service
+much resembled the form common in Unitarian churches, with the exception
+that Mr. Conway's "Sacred Anthology" was substituted for the Bible, and
+the other exercises were more universal in their character. It had long
+ceased to be a Unitarian congregation. There were people of Catholic
+training, many of Protestant training, some of no religious training
+whatever, materialists, atheists, secularists, positivists--always
+thinking people, with their minds uppermost. It was a church of the
+unchurched. George Ripley, the journalist, was always there; E. C.
+Stedman, the man of letters; Calvert Vaux, the architect; Sanford R.
+Gifford, the painter; Henry Peters Gray, the artist, was there until he
+died; C. P. Cranch, the poet, was a member of the Society as long as he
+was in the city. In the Lyric-Hall days, Judge Geo. C. Barrett had a
+seat in the audience. The secular character was always prominent. When
+we had a church on 40th Street, the large basement was used for music,
+dramatic performances, readings, festivities, social gatherings. In
+Lyric Hall, these were continued as far as they could be.
+
+The "Fraternity Club" was organized in 1869 by a devoted member of the
+Society for the entertainment and improvement of its members; and drew
+together very brilliant minds both within and without the immediate
+fellowship. The meetings were held once in two weeks, when an essay was
+read, a debate carried on, and a paper presented; all the performers
+being nominated in advance by the President. The work was mainly done by
+a few young men, who have since become eminent in various fields--as
+teachers, lawyers, literary critics, publishers,--and by witty women not
+a few. There were about seventy members, each one standing for some
+peculiar accomplishment. The subjects of the essays were such as these,
+illustrating the breadth of the intellectual interest: On "Taste"; on
+"Expressions"; on "The Coming Man"; on "Wordsworth"; on "The Tree of
+Life"; on "Spencer's Britomart as the Type of Woman"; on "Light and
+Laughter"; on "Successful People"; on "Culture"; on "The Cultivation of
+the Masses." The subjects for debate were equally varied: "Ought the
+sexes to be educated apart?"; "Does a house burn up or burn down?"; "Is
+the highest musical culture compatible with the highest intellectual
+development?"; "Is there a distinctly American literature as contrasted
+with that of England?"; "Should matrimonial union be contracted early or
+late?"; "Ought we to cultivate most those faculties in which we
+naturally excel, or those in which we are naturally deficient?"; "Does
+increase of culture involve decrease of amusement?"; "Is the existence
+of a 'Mute inglorious Milton' possible?"; "Will giving the franchise to
+women exert a beneficial influence on society?"; "Had you rather be more
+stupid than you seem, or seem more stupid than you are?"
+
+The "papers," of which there are some nine volumes existing, were
+receptacles for the fancy, imagination, sentiment, and humor of the
+editors or their co-editors; there were verses, stories, criticisms,
+jokes, illustrations, in them; each had its name: "The Bubble," "The
+Venture," "Bric-a-Brac," "Stuff," "The Rag-Bag." The club ceased soon
+after the Society disbanded, in 1880.
+
+The root idea of the Society, apart from its independence, was the
+mingling of the spiritual and the natural; the domestication of faith.
+With a view of making the idea more prevailing and complete, a
+children's service in the afternoon was substituted for the regular
+Sunday-school. A book was prepared, "The Child's Book of Religion," by
+the pastor, for this express purpose. There were responsive readings,
+recitations in unison, songs, and an address, simple and anecdotical, by
+the minister.
+
+The Society was never fashionable, or even popular. At one period--that
+of the Richardson-McFarland matter--there was a vast deal of
+misrepresentation, criticism, and abuse, but all this had no effect on
+the constituency of the parish. There was the same loyalty, the same
+interest, the same determination to sustain a thoroughly liberal
+ministry, by which every form of conviction was made conducive to a
+purely spiritual faith.
+
+It was never pretended that the Society was anything more than a
+beginning. A small and feeble beginning, but of something that was to
+grow and spread; the beginning of a faith that is as rational as it is
+wide. Its influence was more diffusive than concrete as an instituted
+thing. It is the pride and consolation of those who began it that they
+removed some of the barriers that divided the great brotherhood of
+believing men.
+
+My ministry in New York ended in the spring of 1879. Its close was due
+entirely to my ill-health. A year before the doctors had warned me not
+to continue longer than was necessary my rate of speed. They urged me to
+go slower, to "take in sail," and to withdraw as far as I could from all
+public demonstrations. Measures were taken against every emergency, and
+I sailed away in the French steamer, with the hope that in six months I
+might regain my nervous power, and return. There was first the
+exhilarating sea voyage; then the beautiful city hall of Rouen, the
+churches and famous buildings, the square where Joan of Arc suffered;
+then came Paris with its enchantments; after that Basel showed its great
+Holbeins, and its lovely promenade overlooking the river; this led to
+the celebrated baths at Ragatz in Switzerland, the placid waters of
+Pfeffers', the gorge, the hotel gardens, and the lovely walks; after
+this came the pass of the Spluegen, the Via Mala, the hotel at the summit
+of the pass among the snows, the pastures, the wild goats; then came
+Lake Como in Italy, Bellagio, the charming Villa Serbeloni, looking down
+upon the two lakes, Como and Lecco, the vineyards ripening in the sun,
+the terraces, looking across upon the mountains; then Milan opened its
+great cathedral, the gallery of the Brera, the ancient church of Saint
+Ambrose. Afterwards came Florence and its heavenly environs, its
+pictures and statues and public buildings, its groves and stately drives
+and lovely villas; Florence was followed by Siena, and there I saw the
+great cathedral, walked on the esplanade, enjoyed the public square, the
+palaces, the pictures of Sodoma. From there I went to Rome, in December.
+
+It was all in vain; I became satisfied that the complaint was not of a
+temporary nature, not owing to overwork or over-excitement, not easily
+cured--if curable at all,--but nervous and hereditary. Thereupon, I
+wrote a letter to my trustees absolutely resigning my office and
+declining to be a clergyman any longer, as I could not attempt to renew
+the same kind of labor. An attempt was made to secure a successor;
+several names were mentioned, and among men greatly my superiors in
+learning and eloquence, but none, it was thought, represented the
+precise form of speculation, the exact view of religion which my friends
+desired. The Society therefore was disbanded, and no attempt has been
+made since to reorganize it. The members were scattered, some among
+other churches, some among other cities, while some never joined any
+religious society whatever. Thus a thriving and growing organization is
+now simply a memory.
+
+
+
+
+X. THE PROGRESS OF RELIGIOUS THOUGHT IN AMERICA.
+
+
+An article in the _North American Review_ for April, 1885, on "Free
+Thought in America," is chiefly significant as showing how gradual and
+tentative the progress of thought in religion was. The comments on
+individuals are often wide of the mark, but the general drift is quite
+correct. The course was shadowy, but the main point was unmistakable. At
+this day, the wholesale abuse of religion is harmless, and can exert no
+wide influence. The friends of liberal thought are against it; and those
+who seek the old grim conclusion do so in another way, striving to
+substitute a new faith in nature for the old faith in divine
+inspiration, and to prove the latter to have been a growth rather than
+an imposition. The study of comparative religions has put a new face on
+the question, and the concern is now to discover the source of faith in
+the supernatural and not to make it appear a creation of priestcraft. No
+sooner had serious investigations into antiquity become known, than the
+method pursued by Voltaire and Dupuis was abandoned, and each generation
+since has confirmed the facts of historic development.
+
+That my own immediate predecessors were Emerson and Parker is most true.
+With the writings of the former I was familiar; the latter was my
+intimate friend. Perhaps my theological views are due to him more than
+to any other man, though the circumstances of his generation were
+peculiar, and determined, in a much greater degree than in my own case
+was possible, the cast of his thought. The Unitarian controversy, in
+which he played so prominent a part, and by stress whereof he was driven
+into some of his positions, is over. The anti-slavery struggle, into
+which he threw himself and as a result of which his religious
+antagonisms were sharpened, was ended many years ago.
+
+Poe said in the preface to "Eureka," that perfect beauty was a guaranty
+of perfect truth; so I felt--felt rather than reasoned--that a great
+character was sufficient proof of the truth of doctrine, and I accepted
+the teaching on the strength of the nobleness which was before my eyes.
+Later researches confirmed my opinions, but while I was under Parker's
+influence, his theological views were accepted without much
+consideration; his unique style of personality laying my heart as it
+were under a spell.
+
+Emerson was a man of colder temperament, thinner of blood, more spare
+in frame; of finer intellectual fibre, of more commanding intellectual
+supremacy; not a combatant on any field; a sweet, gracious, shadowy
+personality; calm, lucid, imperturbable; pursuing knowledge along the
+spiritual path of pure thought, although he was also a student of books;
+a regenerator of mind rather than a reformer of customs; a prophet,
+distinguished for penetration rather than for will. His ideas were
+substantially the same as Parker's, but he did not arrive at them in the
+same way, or hold them in the same spirit, or apply them with the same
+directness. He carried them out further, not being hindered, as his
+contemporary was, by the immediate necessities of the hour. In short, he
+was another sort of man entirely. Both were transcendentalists, but
+Parker shaped his philosophy to the working exigencies of his
+generation, while Emerson let his stream freely in the air. The writer
+of the article in question accuses Emerson of want of pathos, and
+declares that this was the lack of the transcendentalists, as a school.
+But he could hardly charge this on Parker, who was an ardent
+transcendentalist, but whose very language was vascular, who affected
+multitudes of men and women, and who held audiences by the heartstrings.
+Did Hopkins or Bellamy or Edwards melt people? Were the preachers of
+Calvinism priests of sorrow? This is a matter of temperament and not of
+creed. Extreme rationalists leave their congregations in tears, and
+extreme churchmen dismiss theirs unmoved, the humors of the men deciding
+the issues of their ministrations. The closer to the ground, the more
+abundant the sympathy. The question is whether one is more mundane or
+more ethereal by native gift and endowment.
+
+That transcendentalism was mainly speculative may be doubted, but if it
+was so this may be accounted an incidental circumstance to be explained
+by the prevailing theological temper of the age, and the duty imposed on
+it of transferring the body of doctrine to an ideal realm; a task which
+demands an intellectual effort of no common magnitude. And when with
+this task was joined the endeavor to sift out the purely spiritual ideas
+from the mass of dogmatical and ecclesiastical error, it is no wonder
+that it should have been speculative in its tendency. Certainly, Brook
+Farm was concrete enough, and the transcendentalists were, as a rule,
+interested in social reconstruction, though not in a way to touch
+popular emotion. One cannot, even at this distance, think of the
+quickening radiance shed by the transcendentalists over the whole region
+of religious belief and duty, without gratitude. The hymns, the sermons,
+the music, the Sunday-schools, the prayers, the charities, the social
+ministrations, breathed forth a fresh spirit. If there were fewer tears
+of woe, there was more weeping for joy. There was too much gladness for
+crying. Life was made sunny. Human nature was interpreted cheerfully.
+There was an unlimited future for misery, ignorance, turpitude. Sin was
+remanded to the position of crudity, and was banished from the heavenly
+courts. Violence was protested against in laws, customs, manners,
+speech. Harsh doctrines were criticised. Austere views were discarded.
+Intellectual barriers were removed. Spiritual channels were deepened and
+widened. Light was let into dark places. The brightest aspects of
+divinity were presented. Immortality was rendered native to the soul.
+The life below was regarded as the portal to the life above.
+
+In my own case, whatever of enthusiasm I may have had, whatever
+transports of feeling, whatever glow of hope for mankind, whatever ardor
+of anticipation for the future, whatever exhilaration of mind towards
+God, whatever elation in the presence of disbelief in the popular
+theology, may be fairly ascribed to this form of the ideal philosophy.
+It was like a revelation of glory. Every good thought was encouraged.
+Every noble impulse was heightened. It was balm and elixir to me. If
+transcendentalism did not appear as a sun illuminating the entire mental
+universe it was the fault of my exposition alone. Absolute faith in that
+form of philosophy grew weak and passed away many years since, and the
+assurance it gave was shaken; but the sunset flush continued a long time
+after the orb of day had disappeared and lighted up the earth. Gradually
+the splendor faded, to be succeeded by a softer and more tranquil gleam,
+less stimulating but not less beautiful or glorious. The world looks
+larger under the light of stars. I always loved Blanco White's
+magnificent sonnet to Night, but never appreciated its full significance
+until the scientific view had succeeded to the transcendental, and I
+began to walk by knowledge, steadily and surely, but not buoyantly any
+more. It would be a mistake to suppose that anything like pain, sadness,
+or sterility accompanies the departure of an old faith, when a new one
+takes its place and soon opens fresh prospects of good. The universe but
+grows larger: other methods are adopted, other hopes are entertained,
+other consolations are presented, and soon the mind adjusts itself to
+the altered conditions. The downcast mood of George Eliot, of the author
+of "Physicus," and of many another less distinguished unbeliever, may be
+due in part to temperament, in part to the first feeling of chill that
+ensues upon a transitional period, which brings in a different climate;
+but the allegation of lasting coldness, gloom, discontent, is wholly
+groundless. The old fable says that quails drop from the clouds, that
+even rocks quench the traveller's thirst. There is, in short, no
+wilderness.
+
+That the creed was "filmy," the foothold "unsteady," is altogether
+likely, for the ancient supports were removed, the pillars that replaced
+them were shaking, and tradition alone remained to hold by. But religion
+was still the Poetry of Life, and kept its place among the interests
+singly represented by art, music, literature, philosophy, those fine
+intimations of a higher state, those splendid foreshadowings of the
+future, those noble efforts to solve problems that must be forever
+insoluble. My creed did not pretend to be final or even definite. It was
+simply a study, a preliminary sketch, an essay towards truth. A claim to
+completeness, to logical consistency, would have been fatal. Still less,
+if possible, did it pretend to meet popular wants. It resolutely turned
+in the opposite direction, and took up positions which, it was
+understood, the general public could not occupy without abandoning all
+its works and retiring to other ground. No effort was made to commend it
+to common opinion; on the contrary, everything like concession was
+shunned, and the slightest signal of agreement with current beliefs was
+regarded as a warning against a compromise of principle. Nothing was
+assumed except the validity of the human faculties, including, of
+course, the higher reason, the insight of genius, and such feelings as
+were parts of the rational constitution, together with perfect liberty
+in their exercise. Every theological system was repudiated; even the
+doctrines of a conscious Deity and the individual immortality of the
+soul were left open to discussion, the atheist and the materialist being
+listened to with as much deference as any. These doctrines were
+accepted, yet not on the ground of authority or tradition, but simply
+considered as faiths, hopes, sentiments of the spiritual being; the
+existence of living mind, coupled with the demand for unity, seeming to
+guarantee the first, the fact of individual persistency appearing to
+demonstrate the second. But all definition was carefully avoided,
+conviction being confined to the main idea, and being purely spiritual
+in its character, not in the least dogmatical, or exclusive of
+knowledge. Of doctrine in the usual sense there was none. There was
+merely thought. The very teaching was more of the nature of suggestion
+than of final conclusion. For this reason no account of the "credo" can
+be given, all fixed expressions of views being discountenanced as
+premature, and therefore irrational. This should be distinctly
+understood by those interested in coming at the truth on this subject.
+The object was to disintegrate, to pulverize, to enable mind to float
+freely in the air of intellect, to the end that it might crystallize
+about natural centres. All dogmatism, that of the infidel as well as
+that of the believer, of the man of science as well as of the
+theologian, of the sensualist as well as of the spiritualist, was
+obnoxious. There was no sympathy with those who regarded the case as
+closed, either as the anti-Christian assailant or as the apologist did;
+either with the school of Paine or with the school of Calvin. Hereafter
+there may be articles of belief, at present there can be none. This, it
+may be said, was a temporary, incidental position, quite indeterminate
+and unsatisfactory. No doubt it was. That was all it pretended to be.
+The sooner it disappeared and was succeeded by a more stable one, so it
+was reasonable, the better, for that would indicate an advance in
+rational judgment.
+
+This task--the complete emancipation of the human mind from every form
+of thraldom--will occupy liberal teachers for a long time to come. All
+that can be said in defence of instituted religion, and all that can be
+urged on the other side, had been put forward again and again, but in a
+sectarian--that is, in a partisan--spirit. Now an even temper is
+demanded. Unfortunately, impartiality is apt to degenerate into
+indifference. Breadth of view is, as a rule, inconsistent with rapidity
+of motion. The fact that the Free Religious Association had a small
+constituency as compared with many an orthodox society is no evidence
+whatever that the orthodox society is nearer the truth. The former was
+broad enough to admit all religions, the latter shut out all save the
+Christians, thus making them a special community saved by their belief.
+The problem is to preserve and, if possible, deepen intellectual
+enthusiasm while opposing fanatical adherence to dogmas; to associate
+breadth with force, to unite freedom with earnestness, and to render the
+love of truth more intense in proportion as the horizon recedes and
+ideas multiply. Such ought to be the result of free thinking, and such
+it is when _thinking_ goes hand in hand with _freedom_.
+
+Critical studies must keep an even pace with philosophy, and both must
+conspire to push back the lines of credence as far as faith in the
+spiritual sentiment will permit. The latest investigations have
+substantiated liberal conclusions and carried them into regions which
+were inaccessible to the authorities of an early day. A certain amount
+of denial was necessary of course, but this was made in view of a larger
+affirmation which had to be brought forward, and was, moreover, confined
+to matters incidental, not directed at the substance of faith. The
+assumption of a spiritual nature in man guaranteed the inherent
+genuineness of all aspiration.
+
+No doubt the assumption of a creative religious nature in man lent aid
+to the endeavor to glorify the pagan faiths, and predisposed the mind to
+accept criticisms on Christianity; but scientific investigation of the
+world's bibles went on quite independently of this assumption. It was
+promoted by Catholics and Protestants, by Lutherans and Unitarians, by
+Germans, French, English, Americans. Certainly the alleged antiquity of
+a system is not in its favor; for ignorance, credulity, superstition,
+are much older than this; older than the ancient books, than the ancient
+thinkers. The oldest things are errors, delusions, falsities. The
+allegiance of great minds simply proves the limitations of intellect.
+Sir Thomas More believed in transubstantiation, and Samuel Johnson
+believed in ghosts. The wide reverence for the Scriptures is an
+impressive fact, until it is seen that no writings have been so guarded,
+nor have such pains been taken in regard to any other literature to
+create for it a habit of docile veneration. Fidelity is praiseworthy,
+but it is no pledge of wisdom. On the contrary it draws attention to the
+merits or demerits of the creed to which it is consecrated. Is
+witchcraft respectable? Yet it had its martyrs. Is demoniacal possession
+credible? Yet saints attested it. The fury of the fighter cannot vouch
+for the worthiness of the cause. If it could, the narrowest credence
+would be the truest as the world goes, and they who adhere to the
+"Christian" tradition would be consigned to the darkest cells of it. The
+newest thing is knowledge. This never paralyzes, and never is fanatical.
+Its heat is stimulating yet gracious. Its zeal does not scorch or
+consume. It awakens every faculty, keeps inquiry on the stretch, excites
+the noblest ambition, and at the same time rebukes the partisan temper
+in all its manifestations. Its reign is beneficent; its coming is full
+of hope. It is ever looking forward with sanguine anticipation, and if
+it is at times impatient, petulant, or imperious, it is because it is
+fretted by stubborn obstacles that prevent the full realization of its
+purpose to discover the truth. For a long time to come there will be
+controversy, but its violence will disappear, its acrimony will
+gradually cease, the passion for victory will yield to the love of
+knowledge, and all genuine seekers will unite in the search after light.
+
+In the last generation the progress of intelligent examination into
+nature's secrets has been exceedingly rapid. During my active ministry I
+was hardly aware of it, for though an assailant of the popular religion,
+a champion of the freest thought, I was a defender of the current
+religious ideas; since leaving the profession, the significance of the
+mental revolution that is taking place, has been more fully revealed to
+me. The advance has approached very near to the heart of the citadel.
+The questions under discussion are fundamental ones, the existence of a
+self-conscious deity, the fact of personal continuance beyond the grave,
+the line of distinction between "material" and "spiritual" things. The
+dispute hangs on invisible threads of logic. The conservatives occupy
+positions which radicals of thirty years back could not assume.
+
+The next step in the development of free thought must be toward the
+realization of all the ideal supports of mankind, the spiritualizing of
+the secular, the lifting into heavenly places of this world's activity,
+the transfiguration of our common life. If by religion is understood the
+striving after perfection in intellectual things by the untrammelled
+pursuit of knowledge, in social concerns by the exercise of fraternal
+kindness, in the spiritual world by aspiration towards a complete
+surrender to natural law, every free thinker will encourage that and
+will do what he can to promote it. That there is no final truth
+discoverable must be admitted, but such a confession need not trouble
+those who look manfully forward to a future of new discoveries, and gird
+themselves to remove all obstacles to the knowledge of the world they
+live in.
+
+Robert Browning in his "Paracelsus," published in 1835, anticipates the
+doctrine of evolution.
+
+ Thus He dwells in all,
+ From life's minute beginnings, up at last
+ To man--the consummation of this scheme
+ Of being--the completion of this sphere
+ Of life; whose attributes had here and there
+ Been scattered o'er the visible world before,
+ Asking to be combined.
+
+In 1836, Emerson in his "Nature," reiterated this grand prophecy:
+
+ A subtle chain of countless rings,
+ The next unto the farthest brings,
+ The eye reads omens where it goes,
+ And speaks all languages, the rose;
+ And striving to be man, the worm
+ Mounts through all the spires of form.
+
+In 1867, science had gone so far that it could announce the Unity of
+Creation; the absolute Order and Law; one continuous Force; Progress as
+the end of life. The eternal beauty existed for those who had eyes to
+see. On this foundation the human heart, with its qualities of mercy,
+pity, peace, and love, its sentiments of justice and equity, its hunger
+for advance, its idea of goodness, built up a very noble and benignant
+conception of deity and the sure hope of moral perfection.
+
+
+
+
+XI. THE CLERICAL PROFESSION.
+
+
+It is natural that the clerical profession should be an order by
+itself. Every other calling is--the lawyer's, the physician's, the
+artist's and the merchant's. There is an absurd notion that the clerical
+profession stands alone; that it has a supernatural origin, which takes
+it out of the circle of ordinary employments; that it is not to be
+compared with other institutions of society. But the real dignity of the
+profession consists in its filling its place among human arrangements. A
+certain temperament too, seems to belong to all employments. There is
+the legal temperament, the artistic, the dramatic, the mercantile. It is
+no disadvantage that one prefers solitude, likes abstract thoughts, has
+no taste for business enterprise, is fond of books and study. Indeed,
+this is an advantage for one whose office it is to amass learning, to
+weigh opinions in fine scales, to follow the spiritual laws, and to peer
+into the mystery that surrounds human life. The very misunderstandings,
+illusions, superstitions that gather around the calling may be
+recommendations, inasmuch as they prevent the intrusion of rude minds,
+and draw their attention towards subjects they would not otherwise be
+interested in.
+
+A certain amount of positiveness is necessary to ensure the worth of the
+profession. The Catholic priest has no doubt whatever of the
+providential establishment of the church in which he is a servant. This
+must be beyond question or misgiving. This is taken for granted by
+clergy and laity. All learning must be made to confirm it, all
+observation is compelled to favor it. The laws of society must have
+nothing to do with the kingdom of God; for society is to be redeemed,
+nature is to be supplanted by grace, secular life must therefore be
+excluded. The priest, such is the theory, dwells out of the world, and
+is encouraged to do so. He is poor, celibate, homeless, has no
+attachments, no affections, no terrestrial occupations. He must be to
+all intents and purposes dead to mortal affairs. One may find fault with
+earthly institutions; one is bound to find fault with them, but the
+church must be beyond criticism and must be accepted as a gift from
+heaven.
+
+The Protestant clergyman holds fast by his doctrine of faith as by
+divine appointment. His chief tenets must not be submitted to doubt.
+Whatever he may reject, there remains something he is not tempted to
+resign--namely, the presence of the Holy Spirit in his creed. Reason may
+carry the outworks--ceremonies, ordinances, incidental points of
+belief,--but the citadel is removed from assault. The world-spirit may
+hover around him, envious, expectant, watchful, applauding his boldness,
+cheering his progress towards negations, glad to see the gulf betwixt
+him and the age gradually diminishing, and pressing into every vacant
+position; society may claim interest in him more and more; but there are
+points he must not yield, and which he merely wishes to bring into
+prominence in surrendering others which he regards as secondary. So much
+may be necessary, but religion must practically take its place among the
+ideal pursuits of men and be exposed, as they are, to the full
+examination of the mind before any fair account of it can be given. And
+this cannot be so long as a region, however small, is shut off from
+investigation by supernatural powers.
+
+Moreover, it is the common impression that the office of the ministry
+is detrimental to the best interest of humanity, because it establishes
+another caste and thus destroys the unity that is so important in the
+integrity of the world. By it the priest is a person set apart, hedged
+about by the laws, held in peculiar reverence, habited in special
+garments. Some kinds of entertainments, such as dancing, the drama, are
+commonly forbidden to him. His presence on festive occasions used to be
+regarded as a gracious intrusion. He was not expected to take part in
+gayeties or to have any share in frivolities, which were much more
+hilarious when he was absent and the restraint of his presence was
+removed. He was thought to be somehow at war with nature, and his
+looking on at merrymaking was regarded by the polite as a piece of
+condescension on his part, an evidence of unusual liberality of
+sentiment. It was but the other day that a young physician, belonging to
+a Unitarian family, and himself an enthusiastic student of science,
+praised a minister for excusing his continual absence from church on the
+ground of his being so well employed. This was regarded as a long step
+in the direction of indulgence towards natural inclination. Even among
+rationalists, a symptom of the old idea appears in an expression of the
+face, the manner of address, the walk, or the general bearing. It is
+thought a great stretch of charity if he is kind to the atheist, the
+materialist, the infidel; and to take in the tempted child of nature,
+the drunkard, the victim of lust, avarice, is extreme good-will,
+benevolence amounting to saintliness. To abolish from it the pretension
+of superiority in the form of pity, as the high look upon the low, the
+good upon the bad, the moral upon the immoral, the virtuous upon the
+vicious, is, it is presumed, to overlook all recognized distinctions, to
+enthrone nature, to accept instinct as a safe guide, to renounce
+religion altogether and reject the saying that "the Christian church is
+immortal because its fundamental dogma involves a doctrine of God in
+nature so ample and clear as to satisfy every profoundest want of the
+heart and every urgent demand of the head towards God forever."
+
+There are distinctions enough among men at any rate, and to obliterate
+them as far as possible is the office of true religion and all real
+humanity; to increase love, to multiply the bonds of fraternity, to
+bring mankind to a social equality, to annihilate all that keeps mortals
+apart. Of course the safety of society must be preserved by laws,
+customs, prejudices, but care should be taken to make these simply
+protective in their function, and in no event should it be assumed that
+such distinctions, however radical, have any absolute value or go beyond
+the limits of this outward world. Save men, if you can, from
+intemperance, violence, covetousness, lasciviousness, cowardice,
+gluttony, laziness, from every vice that brutalizes them, renders them
+objects of hate, fear, suspicion, or jealousy; make their circumstances
+wholesome, their condition in life invigorating, but do it in the name
+of enlightenment, do it as members of the human brotherhood, not as
+members of a divine organization. Many ministers make great efforts to
+exorcise this demon of exclusiveness, but the effort is too severe for
+any but the few, and the success of it is of doubtful accomplishment.
+
+The Christian minister is a representative of humanity, pure and
+simple, without recognition of its division into classes. He is neither
+rich nor poor, high nor low, in society nor out of it, elevated nor
+obscure. He is democratic, the friend of everybody, the servant of all,
+on terms of charity and sincerity with all men. Sectarianism, with its
+manifold evils of violence, malignity, hatred, misrepresentation, is a
+standing evidence of the harm done to society by a priesthood, whether
+Catholic or Protestant, and ministers who have labored to overthrow its
+influence as being fatal to charity have been obliged to fight against
+the spirit of party, and to rely more upon their natural disposition
+than upon their professional training. In this respect the laity have
+been in advance of their so-called leaders. The people have always been
+opposed to dogmatical exclusiveness, and have welcomed every sign of
+generosity towards unbelievers. They have followed their instinct of
+sympathy, they have read the New Testament by the light of their human
+feeling, and setting common-sense against doctrinal narrowness, have
+rejoiced at every victory gained over intolerance. They have been
+friends of brotherhood; they have adopted the cause of liberty; and I
+must own with grief, the foes they have had to contend with have been,
+in too many instances, the ministers who would not see that charity was
+before faith.
+
+Everybody must have observed the unanimity and the persistency with
+which ministers of all denominations and of all ages have devoted
+themselves to the rich. In fact the devotion is so conspicuous that it
+is one of the commonplace criticisms on the profession. People in
+general assume that this kind of adulation, amounting often to toadyism,
+is characteristic of the clerical calling, so inseparable from it indeed
+that the majority of men are incredulous as to any departure from it,
+and look with unfeigned admiration, when there are no reasons for
+distrust, on the minister who knows no distinction of persons or
+conditions, but has regard to intellectual or spiritual considerations
+alone. Such a man is viewed as a wonder, an exception to all rules,
+singularly constituted, either extraordinarily humane or extraordinarily
+obtuse, either more or less than a man. The worship of wealth is so
+common that some explanation of it must be given. The sufferings,
+mishaps, troubles of the rich are reputed to be more serious than they
+are in the ordinary run of cases; their disappointments are more
+pitiable, their crosses heavier, their losses severer, their sorrows a
+graver imputation on Providence. They are looked on as the favorites of
+heaven, and the cotton-wool in which they are wrapped is spoken of as
+the provision that is made for them expressly by the Lord.
+
+This may be accounted for on grounds of material convenience. They who
+have money are of great importance, and that they should be interested
+in church affairs is of immense moment to all concerned, not to the
+ministers alone, but to the entire congregation, nay, to the whole
+community of believing men. There is always need of money, to build
+churches, pay officials, hire singers, furnish ornaments, support
+charities, maintain organizations for various ecclesiastical purposes;
+and it is much easier to get this in larger sums and with little
+trouble, than to obtain it in little driblets, with much pain, great
+expenditure of time, and constant vexation of spirit. The minister, from
+the nature of the case, is chargeable with this concern, which obliges
+him to visit frequently the wealthier members of his sect. To this end
+he must keep on good terms with them, must sit at their tables, eat
+their dinners, drink their wine, praise their pictures, compliment their
+tastes, commend their performances, flatter their self-esteem, admire
+their surroundings, take their side in controversy; and all such conduct
+is set down by kindly, thoughtful people, to the account of prudence
+which is more than pardonable in one situated as he is.
+
+This is quite true, but it is not the whole truth. By implication
+already, the duty of cultivating the rich as donors involves the
+qualities of manhood to an indefinite extent. The line of necessary
+courtesy is not decisively drawn; cannot be drawn by the rules of
+etiquette. This must be the result of a trained experience, of a
+delicacy and sensitiveness, of a pride of selfhood, of a loftiness or
+dignity of mind that are hardly to be looked for in any large class of
+human beings, however free from special temptation or particular
+seductions that may be. The influence of luxury, ease, comfort,
+elegance, is very insidious, so that even an unusual zeal for truth, an
+extraordinary passion for excellence, yields to the power of moral
+indifference, of intellectual superficialness, which is characteristic
+of those who do not do battle with circumstances. It is so much easier
+to do nothing than it is to do something; it is so charming to be
+deferred to, to be looked up to, to be flattered, to have one's opinion
+sought without being involved in discussion, or vexed by opposition, or
+confronted with scepticism; it is so delightful to the natural man to
+sit in an easy cushioned chair, and be treated with delicate courtesy
+and dainty refinement as an authority on matters theological,
+philosophical, literary, instead of being put on the defensive by keen
+questioners who submit awkward problems for immediate solution; it is so
+gratifying to one's self-esteem to be received as a superior being, that
+ordinary human nature generally succumbs to the temptation and finds
+ready excuse for acquiescence in the necessity of being on good terms
+with one's wealthier parishioners, and so securing their all important
+good-will. In short, a fastidious kind of flunkeyism is engendered that
+is quite inconsistent with the spiritual life. The rich become a refuge
+as well as a resource, and the inner man is weakened while the outer man
+is confirmed. A species of lethargy creeps over mind and conscience.
+Even the moral purpose faints and languishes, and charity ceases to be
+athletic, as elegance of form is substituted for pith of resolution. The
+prophet is induced to say smooth things, to announce easy principles, to
+gloze over hard interpretations, to keep out of sight unwelcomed truths;
+and extraordinary courage is required of those who would resist this
+tendency to complaisance. The rich are, from the nature of the case,
+easily persuaded of the excellence of existing institutions, ideas,
+observances. I had been in the pulpit five years before I saw Henry
+James' remarkable lecture on "Property as a Symbol," and learned for the
+first time that "Property symbolizes the perfect sovereignty which man
+is destined to exercise over nature"; that "Property as an institution
+of human society expresses or grows out of this instinct of sovereignty
+in man. While this instinct is as yet misunderstood or unrecognized by
+the individual, while its full issues are as yet unimagined by him,
+society lends all her force to educate it under this form of an
+aspiration after property, or a desire to appropriate to one's self,
+land, houses, money, precious stones, and whatsoever else evidences
+one's power over nature.... Thus the moral law is nothing more or less
+than an affirmation of the sacredness of private property. It virtually
+asserts an individuality in man superior to that conferred by his
+nature.... Such is the temper of mind which God begets in him, to subdue
+the whole realm of the outward and finite to himself, to the service of
+his proper individuality, and so vindicate the truth of his infinite
+origin.... The sole ground of our sovereignty over nature is inward,
+consisting in a God-inspired selfhood, instinct with infinite power."
+
+It would be comforting to believe that a felt consciousness of this
+infinitude, however dim, animates the attachment of the clergyman to the
+opulent of any congregation; but I, for one, must make the confession
+that the fact of property was taken literally, that the ideal,
+symbolical character of it was concealed, that the instinct of
+sovereignty was unrecognized and unimaginable, and that the divine
+intent was unsought for, the institution being held quite sufficient to
+itself and needing no authentication beyond its existence. And such, I
+apprehend, is the prevailing view among the clergy, whose worship of it
+is not identical with the adoration of the Infinite.
+
+One cannot undertake to speak with knowledge on a subject so complicated
+as this is with private motives, personal temperaments, social
+circumstances; but, as far as my memory goes, the clergy, as a class,
+have been too much engaged with matters ecclesiastical to be deeply
+interested in any cause of reform, and too timid to take the initiative
+in any matter involving disagreeable relations with controlling powers.
+
+While towards the rich the attitude of the clergy is one of allegiance,
+towards the poor it has been one of patronage. This is a danger. "The
+poor ye have always with you, and whenever ye will ye can do them good,"
+expresses their doctrine of charity. As if the poor were created in
+order that others might exercise beneficence; as if poverty was a
+providential institution, maintained in the interest of religion! It is
+hard in a so-called "Christian" community to get away from this view.
+The modern scientific theory and the "Christian" theory are thus at war;
+the former being intent on the well-being of society, the latter having
+in mind the cultivation of the individual in tenderness of sympathy; the
+former educating intelligence, the latter educating feeling. Still there
+was charity.
+
+The Catholic Church, to say nothing here of any ecclesiastical purpose
+in keeping masses of men and women out of the world, gathered those who
+could not help themselves into great buildings and took care of them. In
+the Protestant Church the care of the poor has been held to be a
+religious duty, and a large part of the efforts of Christian ministers
+is directed to the fostering of pity and generosity in the hearts of the
+wealthy. To give to those who had nothing was reckoned the chief of
+graces, and "charity"--interpreted as love for those in want--was placed
+above "faith" and "hope," even when money alone was given. Not long ago
+a Unitarian minister exhorted his congregation to set apart for the uses
+of the poor one tenth part of their annual income, and doubtless he had
+the consciences of nearly all his hearers with him, for the monstrous
+proposition has been so often asserted as to seem by this time a
+commonplace. Probably no man living does that or ever did, and the
+practice of it on a large scale would pauperize the community. Think of
+it! Five thousand dollars a year is not a great income, yet if every one
+who had as much bestowed a tenth part of it on charitable objects what a
+fund for human demoralization would be raised! And when the income is
+ten thousand, fifteen thousand, twenty thousand, the amount of
+imbecility created would be indescribable; inertia would be frightfully
+increased, and multitudes would sit with folded hands who otherwise
+would have lifted them to do some honest work. A moral lethargy would
+fall on the toiling masses; wealth-producing labor would shrink to
+narrower and narrower limits, and a paralysis of energy would steal over
+the will of those whose need of resolution is the sorest. Wealth would
+consequently decrease, and the number of the givers get smaller and
+smaller until accumulation, which is the life of the modern world as
+distinguished from the ancient, would be blighted. The industrial
+classes would be reduced to servitude, enormous fortunes would be
+gathered by fraud, speculation, cruelty, and progressive society would
+relapse into sterility. Fortunately the minister could not persuade
+people to adopt this fatal policy. Fortunately, in this particular,
+niggardliness went hand in hand with common-sense.
+
+That the churches, under the lead of the ministers, have done a vast
+deal in the direction of charity, so far from being denied or disputed,
+is cordially allowed and even maintained. Indeed, this has been their
+chief function, and they have discharged it with immense zeal and
+astonishing results.
+
+But that it was an "ideal" profession is, as I said, a recommendation
+to the ministry. It is a broad foundation for spiritual-mindedness, for
+unworldliness. True, the habit of dealing with abstract topics, of
+holding commerce with purely speculative themes, of entertaining mere
+theories which cannot be verified, of going back to what are called
+"first principles," imparts a curiously vague, dreamy, impersonal,
+impalpable character to the minister's intellect, rendering it unfit to
+treat concrete questions of life or morals; for this reason he is not
+often successful as a man of business, a practical politician, a manager
+of affairs, his cast of mind disqualifying him for close consideration
+of details.
+
+The duty of answering unanswerable questions, too, of solving problems
+that are insoluble, of replying positively to what, from the nature of
+things, he cannot know, gives him a kind of ingenuity which is not
+genuine insight, but consists in subtle turnings, windings, in making
+fine distinctions and splitting hairs, and inventing ingenious
+interpretations, rather than in keen insight or straightforward
+analysis. He must seek ways of escape from his pursuers, and, when no
+other offers, hide in the thicket of mystery or run up the tree of
+faith. He must, if possible, have an explanation ready, and, if he has
+none, he must fall back on authority, and be impressive, addressing the
+sentiment of awe which is usually alive in every bosom, or, in the last
+resort, asseverating the truth of revelation, and thus silencing the
+debate he cannot continue. If neither conscience is satisfied, his own
+or his interlocutor's, there is no remedy save in submission. He makes
+no attempt to clear up his conceptions, or, if he does, ends at last in
+vacuity or discontent. His neighbor, unconvinced, concludes that this is
+a clerical subterfuge, and so far loses confidence in a profession he
+cannot understand. Probably he does not do it justice, but the effect is
+the same,--a rooted depreciation such as would not be felt towards a
+layman who simply said that he had no answer.
+
+The minister, also, is generally committed to a conception of the
+universe as a product of the Supreme Will which, makes him an apologist.
+He is, after a fashion, in the secret of God. He is supposed to deliver
+messages and to utter oracles. His is the wisdom of the Eternal. His is
+the Bible. His are the testimonies. He must follow the ways of the
+Spirit and defend the divine economy in the constitution of the world.
+But in each case, every allowance being made for indefiniteness, for
+largeness of statement and broadness of exposition, the minister must be
+a champion of the Infinite Wisdom and Goodness, pledged to maintain it
+against all opponents; and however cordially he may choose that part,
+the consciousness of being bound may act as a fretting annoyance, not to
+say a galling restraint.
+
+A singular dogmatism often accompanies this claim to speak in the name
+of the Almighty; the minister must enunciate truths, not deliver
+opinions. An authoritative tone gets into his voice, pervades his
+manner, affects his whole expression of face, is conveyed by his gait
+and walk, so that he is known at once from afar. Men hush their voices
+in his presence, ventilate thoughts not natural to them, conceal their
+actual sentiments, from a feeling that he is to be deferred to, not
+argued with like another man. The tone of the pulpit animates his
+conversation and works into the very structure of his thought. He is
+always a preacher. The atmosphere of Sunday hangs about him. He carries
+the New Testament into the parlor; unconsciously to himself he uses the
+language of authority, and finds to his mortification that he is angered
+by dispute.
+
+The duty of administering consolation to the afflicted adds to this
+visionary frame of mind. Frequent intercourse with the suffering, sad,
+and bereaved, intimate commerce with sick-beds and graves, besides
+creating ghostly dispositions, deepens his cast of thought. To comfort
+people under disappointments, to smooth the rugged path, to quiet the
+perturbed heart, is a business to discharge which all the resources of
+faith are called into requisition, and any means that will accomplish
+the end in view are considered as justifiable. In the effort to find
+comfortable things to say, the temptation to say pleasant things, easy
+things, amiable things, to present the kindly aspect of Providence, and
+to indulge happy fancies in regard to human allotments and destiny, is
+exceedingly strong; so that one may come at last to believe himself what
+gives so much contentment to others in the severe crises of existence.
+The loving heart is in perilous proximity to the thinking head. All the
+sweetest feelings of our nature, the wish to console people, to make
+them patient, trusting, resigned, cheerful, are brought in to reinforce
+the faith in a benignant purpose on the part of the Creator, and an
+unquestioning disposition is encouraged in the spiritual physician as
+well as in the stricken patient.
+
+Mr. Henry James says ("Substance and Shadow," p. 214): "Protestant men
+and women, those who have any official or social consequence in the
+church, are apt to exhibit a high-flown religious pride, a spiritual
+flatulence and sourness of stomach which you do not find under the
+Catholic administration." This is strong language, but not too strong
+considering the author's abhorrence of exclusiveness, separation,
+Pharisaism, and his identification of this with official religion.
+
+If humility is the base of all the virtues, as it is commonly reported,
+then a profession that directly favors pride is not productive of the
+highest type of character. And if love,--kindness, brotherhood,
+fellowship,--is the fulfilment of the law, then a calling that puts
+desire in conflict with duty is not conducive to unity or peace, whether
+in the private mind or in the collective household. Character, as
+_naturally_ interpreted, consists of an innate superiority to one's
+fellow-men in the qualities that glorify humanity, purity,
+heavenly-mindedness, patience, earnestness, truthfulness, sincerity.
+Character, as _spiritually_ interpreted, consists of the cordial
+affiliation with one's fellow-men in the qualities that unite the atoms
+of humanity in love, compassion, humility, forgiveness, sympathy. But
+the higher view has not prevailed in my experience; let me repeat, in
+the most emphatic language at my command, my conviction that ministers
+as a body do not succumb to the temptations thus apparently incident to
+their profession.
+
+It is commonly supposed that the intellectual part of the minister's
+labor--the making of the sermons--is most severe. It is imagined that
+the task of addressing the same audience every Sunday must be
+exceedingly arduous. This is a mistake. There is a facility of work in
+every profession. The mind becomes accustomed to running in certain
+grooves, to going through the same process of thinking, to applying the
+same rules to many details of practice. The longer one's continuance in
+the ministry, the easier this becomes. Experience accumulates. Themes
+multiply. Novel suggestions occur. New thoughts arise. Fresh books are
+written. Singular questions are proposed. Problems present fresh
+aspects. The old interests remain in all their force. Men never tire
+hearing about God, Immortality, Destiny. In truth, the intellectual
+difficulties become less and less appalling until at last they
+disappear. The real effort is to keep alive the feelings of humanity; to
+overcome the inclination towards separation into classes; to avoid
+distinguishing between persons; to keep love glowing; to maintain the
+supremacy of soul; to identify spirituality with custom. The preaching
+is subordinate not to the private practice alone, but to the religious
+attitude towards mankind, which is conditioned on charity and the
+recognition of human worth and sonship. The most beautiful trait in the
+pastor is his universality, his simple, unaffected manhood.
+
+But enough of criticism. It is a privilege to belong to a profession
+occupied with things ethereal; to be interested in the grandest themes;
+to hold intercourse with the loftiest minds; to live aloof from the
+world; to put the happiest constructions on the events of human life; to
+interpret Providence beneficently. And it is my firm persuasion that in
+proportion as the profession throws off the thraldom of ecclesiasticism
+and dogmatism, it increases in power and is sure to recover its ancient
+superiority.
+
+
+
+
+XII. MY TEACHERS.
+
+
+Among Englishmen, I owe the most to James Martineau, at the time of my
+ordination (1847), a Unitarian clergyman in Liverpool. His lectures in
+the Unitarian controversy (1839) on "Christianity without Priest and
+without Ritual," on "The Christian View of Moral Evil," on "The Bible:
+What It Is and What It is Not"; his articles on "Distinctive Types of
+Christianity," on "Creeds and Heresies of Early Christianity," on "The
+Ethics of Christendom," on "The Creed of Christendom," on "St. Paul and
+His Modern Students," made a profound impression on my mind. One passage
+in particular, at the close of the essay on "The Ethics of Christendom,"
+still lingers in my memory:
+
+ The old antagonism between the world that now is and any other
+ that has been or is to come, has been modified, or has entirely
+ ceased.... _Here_ is the spot, _now_ is the time for the most
+ devoted service of God. No strains of heaven will wake man into
+ prayer, if the common music of humanity stirs him not. The
+ saintly company of spirits will throng around him in vain if he
+ finds no angels of duty and affection in his children, neighbors,
+ and friends. If no heavenly voices wander around him in the
+ present, the future will be but the dumb change of the shadow on
+ the dial. In short, higher stages of existence are not the refuge
+ of this, but the complement to it; and it is the proper wisdom of
+ the affections not to escape the one in order to seek the other,
+ but to flow forth in purifying copiousness on both.
+
+Martineau's intellectual fidelity, accurate learning, earnestness of
+feeling, were exceedingly fascinating.
+
+In this country Ralph Waldo Emerson was the great teacher. He gave an
+atmosphere rather than a dogma. He was air and light. He is best
+described, not as a philosopher, a man of letters, a poet, but as a
+seer. His gift was that of insight. This he tried to render
+comprehensive, searching, intelligent, accurate, by reading, study,
+meditation, the acquaintance of distinguished men; but he was never
+beguiled into thinking that learning, eloquence, wit, constituted his
+peculiarity. He had a penetrating, eager, questioning look. His head was
+thrust out as if in quest of knowledge. His gaze was steady and intense.
+His speech was laconic and to the purpose. His direct manner suggested a
+wish for closer acquaintance with the mind. His very courtesy, which was
+invariable and exquisite in its way, had an air of inquiry about it.
+There was no varnish, no studied grace of motion or demeanor, no
+manifest desire to please, but a kind of wistfulness as of one who took
+you at your best and wanted to draw it out. He accosted the soul, and
+with the winning persuasiveness which befits friendliness on human
+terms. There was a certain shyness which indicated the modesty which is
+born of the spirit.
+
+But a commanding doer he certainly was not; that is, he was no man of
+expedients, of practical resources, of merely executive will. He
+appreciated this kind of ability, as his lecture on Napoleon shows, but
+he possessed little of it, his Yankee ingenuity being more confined in
+its range. The moral courage belonged to him, the earnestness, the
+faith, but his ethereal qualities lacked driving force. His principles
+made him interested in every movement of reform, for he had a boundless
+hope which led him sometimes into extravagant anticipations of truth and
+benefit. Every sign of life, intellectual, moral, spiritual, caught his
+eye, and so long as it promised new developments of power his eager
+sympathy went with it, but when the creative period ceased he turned
+away. He early enlisted in the anti-slavery cause, not because he had
+entire confidence in the negro, or specially liked the abolitionists,
+but because he demanded the utmost liberty for all men in order that
+substantial advantages might be widely shared; but he was not prominent
+among the workers of that reform. His name stood foremost in the list of
+those who claimed the emancipation of woman from social or political
+disability, not that he was a worker in the woman's-rights phalanx, not
+that he looked for any immediate benefit from that agitation, or felt
+any particular interest in the leaders or in the success of that
+individual crusade, but that he was in favor of the largest opportunity
+for all human beings, and wished every particle of power to be used.
+From the first he welcomed the Free Religious Association as giving
+promise of original light, greater breadth, fresh vigor, new revelations
+of knowledge in that most ideal, but most deplorably limited, of all
+spheres; but when in his view that promise was unfulfilled, though his
+name still stood with those of its vice-presidents, he ceased to take
+any part in its proceedings or to feel any personal concern in its
+affairs. There was something theoretical, speculative, in his attitude
+as a reformer. His philosophy pledged him to the utmost individualism,
+and this called for the utmost liberty, that each might receive all he
+could of the divine fulness and be as much as his nature required. Hence
+his own limited expectation; hence his enthusiasm in behalf of
+individuals like Walt Whitman, John Brown, Henry Thoreau; hence the
+light that came into his eyes when he sat in some reform convention
+where high thoughts were spoken. His word was given, and it was always
+inspiring, emancipating, uplifting, heard in the valleys from the
+dizziest heights of vision; but force was not his to give. Such words
+were more than "half battles," to be sure, so invigorating were they to
+all the champions of good causes, but they were _words_ still, and
+seemed to proceed from some upper region of impersonal mind. They
+expressed convictions, feelings, desires, but there was lack of blood in
+them. They seemed made of air; there was soul behind them, but not as
+much body as many wished. In a word, all the ideal elements were
+present. He was a man who believed, felt, hoped, had vast resources of
+faith, but was a thinker more than an actor. Thinking is indeed doing,
+yet not in the same sphere of achievement.
+
+Emerson recognized the limitations of genius. "Life is a scale of
+degrees," he says in the lecture on the "Uses of Great Men."
+
+ Between rank and rank of our great men are wide intervals. Mankind
+ have in all ages attached themselves to a few persons who, either
+ by the quality of that idea they embodied, or by the largeness of
+ their reception, were entitled to the position of leaders and
+ lawgivers.... With each new mind a new secret of nature transpires;
+ nor can the Bible be closed until the last great man is born.... We
+ cloy of the honey of each peculiar greatness. Every hero becomes a
+ bore at last.... We balance one man with his opposite, and the
+ health of the state depends on the see-saw.
+
+Emerson looks forward to the time when all souls shall lie open to the
+heavenly influx, and he regards greatness as an earnest of that
+possibility. What disappointments he must have felt as he was forced to
+turn away from people who should have been saints and heroes, but were
+none! What bitter moments he must have known when he stretched out his
+arms to welcome a goddess and embraced only a cloud! But his
+expectations continued eager; no feature betrayed evidence that these
+practical refutations of his theory had effect on his heart.
+
+Whether Emerson's constant belief in the Over-soul, his stubborn theism,
+his persuasion of an immanent God, was an advantage or a disadvantage to
+his philosophical view of the universe may be doubted. On the one hand,
+we cannot question the fact that he owed to it his enthusiastic faith in
+the substantial unity of creation, his optimism, his assurance of future
+progress, his confidence in man, his moral earnestness, his elevation of
+soul, his buoyancy of spirit, his forwardness in all endeavors after
+reform. On the other hand, it can hardly be denied that it led him to
+take some things for granted, diverted his mind from the unprejudiced
+observation of phenomena, prevented his rendering full justice to the
+scientific method, was the cause of wide aberrations in his estimates of
+human character, and of a curious onesidedness in his judgments on human
+condition.
+
+Emerson was always profoundly religious, at heart a supernaturalist. The
+blood of centuries of pious ancestors was in his veins. His soul was
+uppermost, not his intellect nor his heart. He was a closet man, a
+minister at the altar. True, he rejected every form of the religious
+sentiment, and moved with entire freedom among dogmas however expressed
+in word or in rite. Every attempt at giving voice to spiritual emotion
+was disagreeable to him.
+
+ I like a church; I like a cowl;
+ I like a prophet of the soul;
+ And on my heart monastic aisles
+ Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles;
+ Yet not for all his faith can see
+ Would I that cowled churchman be.
+
+Theology had fallen from him like a shroud. He would not venture any
+definition of the spiritual laws. Doctrine had become faith; prayer was
+changed into aspiration; the speechless utterance was the only one he
+cordially listened to. But faith he held fast; aspiration he cherished;
+the inarticulate language of the eternal was ever in his ears.
+
+Ever and anon would come a burst of conviction. "Oh, my brothers, God
+exists!" he cries in an ecstasy of emotion. Some years ago Emerson
+seemed fascinated by the inductive method, so that some of his admirers
+thought he would become a convert to physical science. But the bent of
+his nature asserted itself, and he pursued the deductive system as
+before. His passion for "First Truths," as they were called, was
+irresistible. He could not abandon the philosophy of intuition, and all
+his studies--comprehensive, profound, and original as they were,--his
+insatiable thirst for knowledge, his inordinate appetite for details of
+fact, incidents, anecdotes, gleanings from literature of every kind,
+were subservient to this.
+
+Emerson's serenity is often spoken of as evidence of the power of his
+religious faith. It may allow of this construction, but it may be
+accounted for on other and different grounds which lie nearer at hand
+and proceed immediately from more obvious sources. How far may a long
+ancestral experience in devout meditations, practices, longings, worked
+into the system and producing a sedate, calm, interior temperament, go
+in explaining that almost imperturbable tranquillity? The piety of his
+forefathers was so genuine that it drove him from the church of his
+adoption, and rendered another calling sacred. Their descendant
+exhibited the same saintliness which they possessed but in a different
+fashion. And he was probably saintlier than they were, because he was
+their child. His brothers had the same characteristic of equanimity by
+virtue of the same parentage. His brother William, whom I knew
+intimately in New York, showed in his daily life a similar dignity, and
+tradition reports the same of Charles. It was the perfect fruitage of
+centuries of heavenly-minded men, not the peculiarity of an individual
+soul.
+
+This predisposition to inwardness was favored by the long seclusion of
+Concord, which kept Emerson aloof from the world and prevented the
+friction which is so damaging to serenity. He saw those only who
+respected, loved, honored, and revered him. He came into collision with
+none. Men of thought, unambitious men, students, farmers, were his
+fellow-townsmen. Several hours in each day he was alone with his books
+or his mind. When he visited the city it was for an intellectual or
+social purpose, as one who had dropped from a star and was soon to
+vanish. His contact was with men of letters, clergymen, publishers,
+friends, gentlemen interested in mental pursuits who had left their
+business in order to disport themselves in the fields of thought. These
+added to his stores of wisdom, and sent him home replenished rather than
+drained. The gains of his day were not dissipated either by business
+occupation or pleasure.
+
+Then, whether from disposition or philosophy we cannot tell, this man
+avoided everything dark, evil, unwholesome, unpleasant. Sickness of all
+kinds, complaint, depression, melancholy, was an abomination to him. He
+turned away from ugly sights and sounds, thus evading conflict. He never
+argued, never discussed, but said his word as well as he could, and
+encouraged others to say theirs, in this way hoping to get at the truth.
+By this course he escaped the usual provocations to ill-temper, and was
+forced upon an undisturbed equipoise of mind. Nothing helps serenity so
+much as avoidance of contest, and when one can thoroughly convince
+himself that there is no rooted evil in the world to be fought against,
+an even condition of soul is not hard to maintain; optimism is
+proverbially cheerful, but an optimism that is grounded in principle
+must be unconquerable by any force that circumstances can bring against
+it.
+
+It must be remembered that Emerson was not a man of warm temperament,
+not tropical in color or in heat; more like the morning, cool and
+breezy, than like the sultry noon-day, or the glowing evening; more like
+the dewy spring, than the effulgent summer or the fruit-bearing autumn;
+not a child of the sun, rather suggesting the still, white, imaginative
+moonlight. There was an air of remoteness about him. His remark to the
+inn-keeper,--"heat me red-hot," tells the story. Simple habits kept his
+frame wiry, and a New England nurture saved his mind from luxuriant
+uncleanness. By nature he was passionless. The beautiful "Threnody" on
+the death of his boy, reveals the sorrow of a soaring mind rather than
+the grief of a crushed heart. To command one's self enough for such an
+effort evinces a rare power of rising above mortal conditions. Such a
+constitution finds solitude congenial and is calm by force of
+inclination. Friendship seems an emotion better suited than love to that
+ethereal soul, which was always radiant but seldom burning, benignant,
+seldom craving, always gracious in imparting, seldom hungry for
+receiving. One might walk in his illumination, but one could hardly bask
+in his heat, or lie on his bosom, or nestle near his heart. They that
+knew him at home may speak more warmly of him, but thus he appeared to
+people outside; thus he appeared to many who had admired him as I did
+and tried to get close to him.
+
+The love of wild, untrimmed nature, the want of interest in cultivated
+gardens, was part of his theory of the universe as the expression of
+God; the richer, the less it was interfered with. He would approach as
+near to the Creator as possible, listening for the divine voice, which
+was most clearly heard in the wilderness. To the same source must be
+ascribed his partiality for wild, untrained men,--foresters, hunters,
+pioneers, trappers, back-woodsmen. He sought everywhere after
+originality, freshness, power, in individuals and in groups. He hailed a
+genius, however rough. Unconventionality excited his enthusiasm to such
+a degree that he could scarcely contain himself, but said the most
+extravagant things in the ecstasy of his hope. Men of polished outside
+he did not care for; mechanical men, however successful, politicians,
+however popular and adroit, were his aversion. Accomplishments, however
+great, scholarship however finished, he did not respect. He wanted the
+rough, uncut gem. Genius of whatever description, in whatever class,
+whatever its order or grade, was his joy. In him the love of truth
+predominated. He submitted to the inconvenience of imperfect opinion,
+but respected the highest law of his being. He believed in the eternal
+laws of mind, in the self-existence of right, in purity, veracity,
+goodness. He was one of the most honest of men, one of the cleanest, and
+he did his utmost to bring his life into correspondence with his best
+thought. That all created things must be imperfect was part of his
+creed; that this imperfection ran through human character he was as much
+convinced as any man; and his efforts were unceasing to turn men's eyes
+towards the beauty "ancient but ever new," which he in his moments of
+insight beheld. No one lives up to his most exalted faith. No one ever
+endeavored to do so more sincerely and humbly than Ralph Waldo Emerson.
+
+In my early ministry, the discourses of Dr. Orville Dewey on "Human
+Nature," "Human Life," "The Nature of Religion," seemed all-sufficing. I
+read them over and over again with increasing admiration, and his
+solutions of spiritual problems were accepted as final.
+
+Miss Mary Dewey, in the admirable memoir of her father, lays great
+stress on his affectionate qualities. These cannot be too emphatically
+asserted; yet they probably had more scope than even she suspected.
+Indeed, unless I am much mistaken, they formed the basis of his
+character. He was a most deep-feeling man. He loved his friends in and
+out of the profession, with a loyal, hearty, obliging, warm, and even
+tender emotion, expressing itself in word and deed. It was overflowing,
+not in any sentimental manner, but in a manly, sincere way. He was a man
+of infinite good-will, of a quite boundless kindness. His voice, his
+expression of face, his smile, the grasp of his hand,--all gave sign of
+it. He felt things keenly; his sensibilities were most acute; even his
+thoughts were suffused with emotion. He could not discuss speculative
+themes as if they were cold or dry. Nothing was arid to his mind. In
+prayer it was not unusual for his audience to discern tears rolling down
+his cheeks. One day, in his study, on speaking about the intellectual
+implications of the "Philosophie Positive," he dropped his head and
+seemed for a moment lost in reverie largely made up of devotion. In him,
+heart was uppermost; intellect, conscience, were of subordinate value
+when taken alone; in fact, they were incomplete by themselves, and
+wanted their proper substance. He said once that his skin was so
+delicate that the least soil on his hands was felt all through his
+system and prevented him from working. This excessive sensibility, which
+could not be understood by the world at large, was at the bottom of his
+likes and dislikes, of his personal fears and hopes. Excitement drained
+off his strength. He exhausted himself physically, and fell into
+ill-health by exertions that would not have taxed an ordinary
+constitution. It cost him a great deal to write sermons, to visit the
+sick or sorrowing, to conduct public services. At the same time, he was
+disqualified, by a certain want of steel in his blood, for any but the
+clerical profession, where qualities like his are of inestimable value,
+and of the rarest kind. He was a minister from the beginning, always
+profoundly interested in questions of the interior life, and though he
+early left the orthodox communion and became a preacher of Unitarian
+Christianity, making it his work to apply religious ideas to all the
+concerns of the natural world and the secular life, he retained all the
+fervor of spirit that charaterized the most devout believer. A vein of
+passionate feeling ran through all his discourses, and while his themes
+were taken from daily existence, his thoughts were fixed on eternity. He
+was absorbed in the destiny of the human soul, of the _individual_ soul,
+bringing all discussions to that point, and trying to make lasting
+impressions on the spiritual natures of men and women.
+
+When I first knew him he had the reputation of being a self-indulgent
+man. This was a great mistake. His way of life was exceedingly simple,
+and his habits were almost abstemious. In fact, neither his physical nor
+his mental constitution allowed of any indulgence in eating or drinking.
+Still the impression was a natural one, for a certain amount of ease,
+exemption from care, gayety, was necessary to him. The society of
+elegant, accomplished people was indispensable to his recreation and
+rest. His motive for seeking such was not the love of luxury so much as
+a demand for recreation and a craving for repose. He was not, in any
+sense, an earthy man or one who loved sensual delights. On the contrary,
+he was always mindful of his calling, always intent on high subjects,
+always ready to lead intercourse upwards, always, to the extent of his
+power, interested in the moral aspect of current discussions;
+over-anxious, if anything, to approach speculative themes. He possessed
+an eager, unresting, questioning mind. He was always thinking, and on
+great subjects of theology or philosophy, and he put into them an amount
+of feeling that is extraordinary with intellectual men.
+
+That he should have been so sensitive as he was to the words and
+suspicions of anti-slavery men who charged him with being an advocate of
+a fugitive-slave law, an apologist for slavery, a ready tool of the
+inhuman, reactionary party of the country, is not surprising. His dread
+of pain, his hatred of falsehood, his horror of injustice, his love of
+fair play, will sufficiently account for this; while the impossibility
+of explaining himself kept the wound open. That for thirty years the
+sore should have bled, shows the delicacy of his temperament and the
+shrinking nature of his will. To speak of him as a friend of slavery is
+absurd. No one can read his sermon on "The Slavery Question," preached
+shortly after the annexation of Texas and at a moment of great
+excitement at the North in regard to the advances of the slave-power,
+and not perceive that he was deeply moved.
+
+"_Are these people_ MEN?" he said; "that is the question. If they
+are _men_, it will not do to make them instruments for mere
+convenience,--for the mere tillage of the soil;--if they are _men_, it
+is not enough to say that they have a sort of animal freedom from care,
+and joyance of spirits. If they are _men_, they are to be cultivated;
+their faculties are to be regarded as precious; they are to be
+improved.... If he is a _man_, then he is not only improvable and ought
+to be improved, but he _will improve_ in spite of all we can do." And a
+great deal more to the same effect. He indignantly protested against
+treating "an intelligent creature, a fellow-being, a brother-man, a
+being capable of indefinite expansion and immortal progress," as one
+would treat a tree, a flower, an ox, or a horse. "Grant that the African
+of the present generation cannot be raised to our stature; yet if in the
+course of ages he may be, and if it is our policy systematically to
+arrest or to retard his growth, does the case materially differ from
+what I have supposed?" Namely that of a child. Dr. Dewey visited
+slave-States and talked with slave-holders in order to make himself
+fully acquainted with the condition of opinion and of feeling about the
+case, and he took occasion everywhere to argue the Northern side. This
+ought to be enough in the way of vindication of his personal sentiments.
+
+At the same time, he was a Unionist of the Webster school. His
+attachment to the Union was intense. Disunion in his judgment meant
+ceaseless discord, the end of republican institutions, the arrest of
+civilization, the indefinite postponement of progress, the hopelessness
+of education and uplifting for the slave, the withdrawal of Northern
+influence, the final overthrow of government by moral powers. A long
+reign of anarchy, in the course of which the lovers of the race must see
+their visions of good disappear, would supervene, and this he could not
+contemplate with equanimity.
+
+Then he was an old-fashioned enemy of war, especially of civil war. He
+was a sincere lover of peace, and a believer in the arts of peace, in
+industry, education, the diffusion of intelligence, the weaving of the
+ties of fraternity; and though he acknowledged the heroic mission of
+strife, he recoiled instinctively from it. War, in his estimation, was
+an inevitable necessity in the order of the world, but it was an awful
+element in the "world problem"; "a fearful scourge," a condition to be
+outgrown along with vice, passion, injustice, selfishness, ambition, a
+sign that is destined to disappear as intelligence and Christianity come
+in. It must be submitted to as an ordination of Providence, but it
+should never be precipitated by men, least of all should it be brought
+on hastily, by unreasonableness, malignity, or hate. The evils of war
+were precisely such as appealed most directly to his imagination; they
+were so personal, they were so domestic, they were so pitiable, they
+were so full of tears. He shrank from violence, from rage, from party
+ambition, from curses and cries. He loved his countrymen, and, so long
+as any reason remained, he could not bear to think of fighting. So long
+as any oil was left in the can, the troubled waters were not to be
+abandoned by the peace-makers. It was much for him to have patience with
+those who used angry words, even in a cause of righteousness. He, for
+his part, could not scold or overstate, or do anything in a harsh
+temper.
+
+Dr. Dewey believed in colonization; not necessarily in Africa, but in a
+separation between the white and black races, in the civilization of the
+negro. In the tenth lecture of the course on "The Problem of Human
+Destiny" (1864), he takes occasion to welcome "the great hope" that thus
+was opened "for purging our American soil from the stain of slavery.
+Many of us have long been asking how this is to be done. Look at Africa,
+surrounded by a wall of darkness, and filled with cruelty and blood,
+with no civilizing influence in herself, as the story of ages has
+proved; what now do we see? Britain sends to her borders the
+man-stealer, to tear her children from her bosom and transport them to
+the American colonies. It was a deed of unmingled atrocity, compared
+with which capture in war was generous and honorable; the African King
+of Dahomey grows white by the side of the Saxon slave-trader. But what
+follows? The African people in this country improve, and are now far
+advanced beyond their kindred at home. And now they begin to return;
+they are building a state on their native borders which promises to stop
+the slave trade with Africa and to spread light and civilization through
+her dark solitudes." At the close of his discourse on the slavery
+question, he said:
+
+ If I were to propose a plan to meet the duties and perils of this
+ tremendous emergency that presses upon us, I would engage the whole
+ power of this nation, the willing co-operation of the North and the
+ South, if it were possible, to prepare this people for freedom; and
+ then I would give them a country beyond the mountains,--say the
+ Californias,--where they might be a nation by themselves. Ah! if
+ the millions upon millions spent upon a Mexican war could be
+ devoted to this purpose,--if all the energies of this country could
+ be employed for such an end,--what a noble spectacle were it for
+ all the world to behold, of help and redemption to an enslaved
+ people! What a purifying and ennobling ministration for ourselves!
+
+The intimacy with Dr. Charming re-inforced the conclusions which were
+native to Dr. Dewey's temperament. The moderate view, the dread of
+overstatement, the fear of fanaticism, the faith in reason, the love of
+tranquillity, the desire after truth, were rooted in his mind. His
+constitutional conservatism was confirmed. Then he was a Unitarian, and
+therefore rational in his methods, inclined to judge by arguments, to
+sift opinions by the understanding. The abolitionists were, for the most
+part, either Calvinists or transcendentalists, people who followed an
+inward voice, who placed interior conviction before ratiocination, and
+encouraged moral sentiment to take the lead in action, blowing coals
+into a flame, and not content unless they saw a blaze. The Unitarians,
+as a class, were not ardent disciples of any moral cause, and took pride
+in being reasoners, believers in education, and in general social
+influence, in the progress of knowledge, and the uplifting of humanity
+by means of ideas. The habit of discountenancing passion may have been
+fostered in a school like this. Perhaps if young Dewey had continued in
+his old belief he would have been a more vehement reformer than he was.
+His natural glow was softened down into a mild effulgence, communicating
+warmth to his convictions, but not producing a burning zeal for any
+substance of doctrine.
+
+His power of emotion made him a powerful preacher but prevented his
+being a great philosopher. Dr. Bellows, who was his close friend for
+many years, described him as a man of "massive intellectual power," and
+then went on to impute to him the gifts that belong to the pulpit
+orator: "poetic imagination," a "rare dramatic faculty of
+representation." Perhaps by "massive" Dr. Bellows meant the power to
+throw thoughts in a mass, with cumulative effect. This power Dr. Dewey
+certainly possessed in an extraordinary degree. But of philosophical
+talent he had little. Indeed, he seemed to be conscious of this himself.
+At the end of his first lecture before the Lowell Institute he said:
+
+ I am not sorry that the place and occasion require me to make this
+ a popular theme. I am not to speak for philosophers, but for the
+ people. I wish to meet the questions which arise in all minds that
+ have awaked to any degree of reflection upon their nature and
+ being, and upon the collective being of their race. I have hoped
+ that I should escape the charge of presumption by the humbleness of
+ my attempt--the attempt, that is to say, to popularize a theme
+ which has hitherto been the domain of scholars.
+
+The lecture assumes the existence of a Personal God, the reality of a
+conscious soul, the freedom of the human will, the fact of a moral
+purpose in creation, the perfectibility of man, the idea of progress,
+the evidence of design in the universe attesting a divine intelligence.
+The treatment nowhere shows metaphysical acumen or speculative insight.
+On every page is brilliancy, eloquence, skilful manipulation of
+arguments, fervent appeal to conscience. Nowhere is subtilty or depth of
+intuition. Take for example the discourse on "The Problem of Evil," the
+most intellectually exacting of all subjects. It ends thus after a
+series of pictures:
+
+ Give me freedom, give me knowledge, give me breadth of experience;
+ I would have it all. No memory is so hallowed, no memory is so
+ dear, as that of temptation nobly withstood, or of suffering nobly
+ endured. What is it that we gather and garner up from the solemn
+ story of the world, like its struggles, its sorrows, its
+ martyrdoms? Come to the great battle, thou wrestling, glorious,
+ marred nature! strong nature! weak nature! Come to the great
+ battle, and in this mortal strife strike for immortal victory! The
+ highest Son of God, the best beloved of Heaven that ever stood upon
+ earth, was "made perfect through suffering." And sweeter shall be
+ the cup of immortal joy, for that it once was dashed with bitter
+ drops of pain and sorrow; and brighter shall roll the everlasting
+ ages, for the dark shadows that clouded the birth-time of our
+ being.
+
+This is not argument, but preaching--- very fine, stimulating, powerful
+preaching, but preaching nevertheless; quite different from James
+Martineau's treatment of the same theme, in the course of the Liverpool
+lectures (delivered in 1839). Mr. Martineau, too, addressed a popular
+assembly, and closed his discourse in a strain of exhortation. Still,
+the grave tone of the previous discussion sobered the rhetoric, and the
+background of the ancient debate made the moral lessons solemn.
+Philosophy yielded to the necessities of ethics, much as the "Kritik der
+Reinen Vernunft" gave place to the "Kritik der Practischen Vernunft" of
+Kant--the preacher and the reasoner standing indeed on different ground,
+but the moral instruction being tempered by the philosophical.
+
+Orville Dewey was a great preacher, perhaps the greatest that the
+Unitarian communion has produced; greater as a preacher than Dr.
+Channing, because more various and more sympathetic, nearer to the
+popular heart, less inspired by grand ideas, and for that reason more
+moving. He was imbued with Channing's fundamental thought--the "Dignity
+of Human Nature,"--and illustrated it with a wealth of imagination,
+enforced it by an urgency of appeal, quickened it by an affluence of
+dramatic representation all his own. His function was to apply this
+doctrine to every incident of life, to politics, business, art,
+literature, society, amusement, and he did this with a boldness, a
+freedom, a frankness unusual at any time, but without example when he
+was in the ministry. I shall never forget, in one of his sermons, an
+allusion to a symphony of Beethoven which gave me a new conception of
+the essential humanity of the pulpit's office, of the close association
+that there was between religion and art. His conversational style,
+impassioned but not stilted and never turgid, was exceedingly
+impressive, while his constant employment of the forms of reasoning
+added weight to his sentences. The discourse was plain, and yet from its
+copiousness it was ornate; and the affectionate tone assumed an air of
+grave remonstrance which was deepened in effect by the appearance of
+formal logic. The hearer seemed to be admitted to the secrets of a
+living, earnest mind, and to be listening to something more than the
+usual enunciations of ethical principle. At the same time his own will
+was consulted, he was taken into partnership with the orator and
+introduced to the processes of conviction. His state of feeling was
+considered, his objections were met, his scruples answered, his
+arguments confronted. He was, in short, treated like a rational being,
+to be reasoned with, not to be looked down upon.
+
+Dr. Dewey was always a friend of liberal thought. There are no more
+significant pages in his daughter's memoir of him than those which
+contain his correspondence with Mr. Chadwick, one of the most radical of
+Unitarian divines. He was himself a student of divinity at Andover,
+early converted to Unitarianism, became an assistant and warm friend of
+Dr. Channing, but instead of remaining stationary in dogmatic faith,
+took a rational view of all religious questions, favored the largest
+liberality, and welcomed every effort to adapt spiritual ideas to actual
+knowledge. He had no dogmatic prepossessions, and no professional fears.
+What he asked for was sincerity coupled with earnestness. This being
+given, conclusions, within certain limits, of course, were of little
+moment. Theodore Parker used to sadden and irritate him, but less on
+account of his opinions than on account of his pugnacious manner in
+expressing them. Parker rather despised him for what he regarded as his
+time-serving disposition, and could not understand his mental delicacy;
+but men who thought as Parker did were even then on the best terms with
+Dr. Dewey, whose mellowness, on the whole, increased instead of
+diminishing with age, and was greatest in his declining years.
+
+He was a man fond of personalities; even in his addresses on the
+greatest themes, he would if possible narrow the subject down to the
+measure of individual application. Thus when lecturing on "The Problem
+of Evil," after submitting various considerations, he adds:
+
+ Broad and vast and immense as that problem may appear, it is after
+ all, in actual experience, purely individual.... The truth is,
+ nobody has experienced more of it than you or I have, or might
+ have, experienced. With regard to all the intrinsic difficulties of
+ the case, it is as if one life had been lived in the world; and
+ since no man has lived another's life, or any life but his own,
+ there _has been_ to actual individual consciousness _but one life_
+ of thirty, seventy, or a hundred years lived on earth. The problem
+ really comes within that compass.... If I can solve the problem of
+ existence for myself, I have solved it for everybody; I have solved
+ it for the human race.... Do you and I find anything in this our
+ life that makes us prize it, anything that makes us feel that we
+ had rather have it than have it not? Doubtless we do and other men
+ do; all men do.
+
+This passage illustrates well the tendency to personal reference that
+distinguished the man. In a discourse on war delivered before the Peace
+Society he resolves its miseries into those of the individual, as if
+mass--affecting, as it does, nations, civilizations, humanity
+itself--counted for nothing. This tendency explains his fondness for his
+friends, his strength of sympathy, his tenacity of attachment, his love
+for people. It does not betoken a broad, deep, philosophic mind, but it
+does betoken a warm, clinging, affectionate nature.
+
+It made him too a charming feature in society, a delightful talker, an
+easy, graceful, delectable companion, an interested adviser and
+counsellor, a beloved person in his family, an excellent townsman.
+
+We should be grateful for this, that one has lived to irradiate a
+somewhat sad profession, to warm the bleak spaces of mortal existence,
+to throw a gleam of gladness upon the sunless problems of human destiny.
+It is a great deal to be assured that a living heart has walked with us,
+and that a living voice has proclaimed the heart-side of man's lot.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. MY COMPANIONS.
+
+
+These were many, but most of them are living and cannot, therefore, be
+spoken of. There is an advantage in writing about the dead, for they
+cannot protest against the handsome things you say, and they cannot
+remonstrate against the unhandsome things. I shall on this account
+choose but two, with whom I was very intimate, and who are very near to
+my heart. I shall give sketches of John Weiss and Samuel Johnson, and
+first of John Weiss.[*]
+
+ [*] Reprinted from the _Unitarian Review_ of May, 1888.
+
+This man was a flame of fire. He was genius unalloyed by terrestrial
+considerations; a spirit lamp always burning. He had an overflow of
+nervous vitality, an excess of spiritual life that could not find vents
+enough for its discharge. As his figure comes before me it seems that of
+one who is more than half transfigured. His large head; his ample brow;
+his great, dark eyes; his "sable-silvered" beard and full moustache; his
+gray hair, thick and close on top, with the strange line of black
+beneath it, like a fillet of jet; his thin, piping, penetrating, tenuous
+voice, that trembled as it conveyed the torrent of thought; the rapid,
+sudden manner, suggesting sometimes the lark and sometimes the eagle;
+the small but sinewy body; the delicate hands and feet; the sensitive
+touch, feeling impalpable vibrations and detecting movements of
+intelligence within the folds of organization (they say he could tell
+the character of a great writer by holding a sealed letter from his
+hand),--all indicated a half-disembodied soul. His spoken addresses and
+written discourses confirm the impression.
+
+I first met him at the meetings of the "Hook-and-Ladder,"[*] a
+ministerial club of which we both were members. At the house of Thomas
+Starr King, in Boston, he read a sermon on the supremacy of the
+spiritual element in character, which impressed me as few pulpit
+utterances ever did, so fine was it, so subtle, yet so massive in
+conviction. Illustrations that he used stay by me now, after the lapse
+of more than forty years. I next heard him in New Bedford, at the
+installation of Charles Lowe, when, in ill-health and feeble, he gave,
+in substance, the discourse on Materialism, afterwards published in the
+volume on "Immortal Life." It struck me then as exceedingly able; and it
+derived force from the intense earnestness of its delivery, as by one
+who could look into the invisible world, and could speak no light word
+or consult transient effects. Many years later, I listened, in New York,
+to his lectures on Greek ideas, the keenest interpretation of the
+ancient myths, the most profound, luminous, sympathetic, I have met
+with. He had the faculty of reading between the lines, of apprehending
+the hidden meaning, of setting the old stories in the light of universal
+ideas, of lighting up allusions. The lecture on Prometheus I remember as
+especially radiant and inspiring; but they were all remarkable for
+positive suggestions of a very noble kind.
+
+ [*] We copy from a private letter the following account of the
+ origin of this club and of its grotesque name, which has lost, alas!
+ its significance to the younger generation. "In the year 1844 (I
+ think it was) a few of us young ministers formed a club, including
+ Charles Brigham, Edward Hale, John Weiss, with one or two elders, as
+ Dr. Hedge and, later, O. B. Frothingham, Starr King, W. R. Alger,
+ William B. Greene, and others. We went long without a name, in spite
+ of my urgent appeals as Secretary, till one fine day, at George R.
+ Russell's house in West Roxbury, in an after-dinner frolic, Weiss
+ turned the garden-engine hose upon a fellow-member and drenched him
+ from head to foot; upon which escapade it was unanimously agreed to
+ call ourselves the 'Hook-and-Ladder,' by which name the memory of it
+ is fondly kept among us to this day. A similar older fraternity had
+ gone by the name of the 'Railroad Association,' and, in imitation,
+ when it was proposed to borrow a title from some like line of
+ industry we, on this sudden whim, chose the fire-department."
+
+His genius was eminently religious. Not, indeed, in any customary
+fashion, nor after any usual way. He belonged to the Rationalists, was a
+Protestant of an extreme type, an avowed adherent of the most "advanced"
+views, a speaker on the Free Religious platform, a writer for the
+_Massachusetts Quarterly_, and for the _Radical_. His was a purely
+natural, scientific, spiritual faith, unorthodox to the last
+degree,--logically, historically, critically, sentimentally so,--so on
+principle and with fixed purpose. The accepted theory of religion
+excited his indignation, his scorn, his amazement, and his mirth. He
+could brook no dogmatic limitations, even of the most liberal sect, but
+went on and on, past all barriers, facing all adversaries, confronting
+every difficulty, and resting only when there was nothing more to
+discover. He had an agonized impatience to know whatever was to be
+known, to get at the ultimate data of assurance. Nothing less would
+satisfy him. His cup of joy was not full till he could touch the bottom.
+Then it overflowed, and there was glee as of a strong swimmer who is
+sure of his tide. His exultation is almost painful, as he welcomes fact
+after fact, feeling more and more positive, with each new demonstration
+of science, that the advent of certainty was by so much nearer. Evidence
+that to most minds seemed fatal to belief was, in his sight,
+confirmatory of it, as rendering its need more clear and more imperious.
+"We need be afraid of nothing in heaven or earth, whether dreamt of or
+not in our philosophy." "The position of theistic naturalism entitles it
+not to be afraid of all the scientific facts that can be produced."
+"There is dignity in dust that reaches any form, because it eventually
+betrays a forming power, and ceases to be dust by sharing it." "It is a
+wonder to me that scholars and clergymen are so skittish about
+scientific facts." "We owe a debt to the scientific man who can show how
+many moral customs result from local and ethnic experiences, and how the
+conscience is everywhere capable of inheritance and education. He cannot
+bring us too many facts of this description, because we have one fact
+too much for him; namely, a latent tendency of conscience to repudiate
+inheritance and every experience of utility, to fly in its face with a
+forecast of a transcendental utility that supplies the world with its
+redeemers, and continually drags it out of the snug and accurate
+adjustment of selfishness to which it arrives." There is a great deal to
+the same purpose. In fact, Mr. Weiss cannot say enough on this head. He
+accepts the doctrine of evolution in its whole length and breadth. "Of
+what consequence is it whence the living matter is derived? We are not
+appalled at the possibility that organic matter may be made out of
+non-living, or, more properly, inorganic matter. We are nerved for such
+a result, whether it occur in the laboratory or in nature, by the
+conviction that the spiritual functions are no more imperilled by using
+matter in any way, than that the Creator hazarded his existence by
+originating matter in some way to be used by himself and by us."
+"Science does me this inestimable benefit of providing a universe to
+support my personal identity, my moral sense, and my feeling that these
+two functions of mind cannot be killed. Its denials, no less than its
+affirmations, set free all the facts I need to make my body an
+expression of mental independence. Hand-in-hand with science I go, by
+the steps of development back to the dawn of creation; and, when there,
+we review all the forces and their combinations that have helped us to
+arrive, and both of us together break into a confession of a force of
+forces."
+
+This cordial sympathy with science, this absence of all savor of a
+polemical spirit, this hearty welcoming of every fact of anatomy and
+chemistry, is very noble and inspiring. It is very wise, too, though the
+noble, hearty side was alone attractive to him. He had in view no other,
+being a single-minded lover of truth. But, nevertheless, he could not
+have adopted a more politic course. For thus he propitiated the
+scepticism of the age, struck in with the prevailing current, disarmed
+opposition, and erected his own principles on the eminence which
+scientific men have raised and which they cannot build too high for his
+purposes. He doubles on his pursuers, and fairly flanks his foes. This
+throws the labor of refuting him on the idealists, who may not care to
+become responsible for his positions, and may demur to conclusions he
+arrives at, while they cannot but applaud his general aims, and wish
+they could give positive assent to all his specific doctrines. There was
+always this discrepancy between his sentiment and his logic; but it came
+out most conspicuously in his elaborate arguments.
+
+The burden of his exposition was the existence of an ideal sphere,
+quite distinct from visible phenomena; facts of consciousness attesting
+personality, a moral law, an intelligent cause, an active conscience, a
+living heart; order, beauty, harmony, humanity, self-forgetfulness,
+self-denial. As he states it:
+
+ I claim, against a strictly logical empirical method, three classes
+ of facts: first, the authentic facts of the Moral Sense, whenever
+ it appears as the transcender of the ripest average utility;
+ second, the facts of the Imagination, as the anticipator of mental
+ methods by pervading everything with personalty, by imputing life
+ to objects, or by occasional direct suggestion; third, the facts of
+ the Harmonic Sense, as the reconciler of discrete and apparently
+ sundered objects, as the prophet and artist of number and
+ mathematical ratio, as the unifier of all the contents of the soul
+ into the acclaim which rises when the law of unity fills the scene.
+ Upon these facts, I chiefly sustain myself against the theory
+ which, when it is consistently explained, derives all possible
+ mental functions from the impacts of objectivity.
+
+If Mr. Weiss had stopped with this general thesis, he would
+probably have carried most Rationalists, certainly the mass of
+Transcendentalists, with him. They would have been only too glad to
+welcome so clear and brilliant a champion. But he insisted on gathering
+up these conceptions into two points of doctrine--God and Immortality.
+On these points his arguments become strained, and too subtle for
+ordinary minds. Indeed, many will be inclined to suspect his whole
+exposition, which would be a misfortune of a very grave character. Mr.
+Emerson avoided all definite assertion of personality carried beyond the
+limits of individuality in the present state of existence. Mr. Weiss is
+more daring, and proclaims a God who arranges creation _as it is_, and
+an immortality that drops what to most people constitutes their highly
+valued possessions--namely, their "animalities" of various kinds. What
+will most men think of a God who "takes his chances," who "in
+planet-scenery and animal life is at his play," who puts up in his
+divine laboratory "curare and strychnine," and cannot "recognize the
+word _disaster_," though he makes the thing? To how many will an
+immortality be conceivable that can "belong only to immutable ideas,"
+that only "springs from the vital necessity of their own souls," that is
+a clinging "to the breast of everlasting law"?
+
+To tell the truth, the arguments themselves for this rather questionable
+result of idealism are somewhat unconvincing, not to say fanciful. They
+are chiefly of a dogmatic kind, that may be met with counter
+affirmations, equally valid. Many of them are stated in a symbolical or
+poetical or illustrative manner, the most dangerous of all methods.
+Examples of this might be multiplied indefinitely. I had marked several
+for confirmation, but they were too long for quotation. One instance of
+his mode of reasoning may be given[*]:
+
+ It is objected that no thought and feeling have ever yet been
+ displayed independently of cerebral condition; they must have
+ brain, either to originate or to announce them. If brain be source
+ or instrument of human consciousness, what preserves it when the
+ brain is dead? But there would have been no universe on such terms
+ as that. What supplied infinite mind with its preliminary _sine qua
+ non_ of brain matter?
+
+ [*] It occurs in "American Religion," p. 149.
+
+But, surely, if this is an argument at all, if it does not beg the very
+question in debate--namely, whether there is an infinite mind,--is it
+not an argument for atheism? For either the existing universe fully
+expresses Deity, in which case Deity is something less than infinite; or
+Deity must be conceived as very imperfect, and a progressive, tentative
+Divinity is no better than none.
+
+To be sure, he says: "We attribute Personality to the divine Being,
+because we cannot otherwise refer to any source the phenomena that show
+Will and Intellect." That is to say, we yield to a logical necessity. To
+argue that materialism "reeks with immortality" because "the baldest
+negation is not merely a verbal contradiction of an affirmation, but a
+contribution to its probability,--for it testifies that there was
+something previously taken for granted,"--is really a play upon words,
+inasmuch as the denial is simply an affirmation of certain facts, and by
+no means a categorical declaration involving all the facts at issue. By
+claiming none but relative knowledge, the antithesis is removed.
+
+One is conscious of a suspicion that the author's tremendous overflow
+of nervous vitality had much to do with the vehemence of his
+persuasions. He himself countenances such a suspicion. "I confess," he
+declares, "to an all-pervading instinct of personal continuance, coupled
+with a latent, haunting feeling that there is a point somewhere in human
+existence, as there has been in the past, where animality controls the
+fate of men. Where is that point? We recoil from every effort to draw
+the line." He had a very strong sense of personality, with its
+inevitable reference of persistency. "To us, perhaps," he cries, in a
+kind of anguish, "no thought could be so dreadful, no surmise so
+harrowing, as that we might slip into nonentity. We impetuously repel
+the haunting doubt. We shut the eyes, and cower before the goblin in
+abject dread until it is gone. With the beauty-loving and full-blooded
+Claudio, we cry,--
+
+ Oh, but to die, and go we know not where."
+
+and he quotes the rest of the famous passage in "Measure for Measure,"
+adding for himself: "Put us anywhere, but only let us live; and we could
+feel with Lear, when he says to Cordelia,--
+
+ Come, let's away to prison.
+ We two alone will sing like birds i' the cage."
+
+ Then, too, there come to us the tender and overpowering moments
+ when we can no longer put up with being separated from beloved
+ objects, who tore at the grain of our life when they went away
+ elsewhere, with portions of it clinging to them. We must have them
+ again. Shall life be stabbed and no justice compensate these
+ sickening drippings of the soul in her secret faintness? The old
+ familiar faces have registered in our hearts a contempt for graves
+ and burials. Not so cheaply can we be taken in, when the lost life
+ lies quick in memory still, and cries against the insults which
+ mortality wreaks on love.
+
+Is not this an exclamation of temperament?
+
+John Weiss was essentially a poet. His pages are saturated with poetry.
+His very arguments are expressed in poetic imagery. To take two or three
+examples:
+
+ One who rides from South-west Harbor to Bar Harbor in Mt. Desert
+ will see a grove in which the pines stand so close that all the
+ branches have withered two-thirds of the way up the trunks, and are
+ nothing but dead sticks, broken and dangling. But every tree bears
+ close, each to each, its evergreen crown; and they seem to make a
+ floor for the day to walk on. This pavement for the feet of heaven,
+ more precious than the fancied one of the New Jerusalem, stretches
+ all round the world, above the thickets of our spiny egotism, where
+ people run up into the only coherence upon which it is safe for
+ Deity to tread.
+
+Or this about the poet's inspired hour:
+
+ Through flat and unprofitable moments, a poet is waiting for the
+ next consent of his imagination. The bed of every gift, that lately
+ sparkled or thundered as the freshet of the hills sent its
+ surprises down, lies empty, waiting for the master passion to open
+ the sluice when it hears the steps of coming waves. The poet's
+ nature strains against the dumb gates of his body and his mood.
+ With power and longing he hears them open, and is brim full again
+ with the rhythm that collects from the whole face of Nature,--the
+ hillside, the ravine, the drifting cloud, the vapors just arrived
+ from the ocean, the drops that flowers nod with to flavor the
+ stream, the human smiles that colonize both banks of it. All
+ passions, all delights hurry to possess his thought, crowd into the
+ precincts of his person, pain him with the tumult in which they
+ offer him obedience, remind him of his last joy in their
+ companionship, and will not let him go till he ennobles them by
+ bursting into expression. Relief flows down with every perfect
+ word; the congested soul bleeds into the lyric and the canto; the
+ poet's burden becomes light-hearted, and the supreme moment of his
+ travail, when it breaks in showers of his emotion, cools and
+ comforts him; he must die or express himself. All the blood in the
+ earth's arteries is running through his heart; all the stars in the
+ sky are set in his brain's dome. This light and life must be
+ discharged into a word, and the poet restored to health and peace
+ again.
+
+Or the following rhapsody about health:
+
+ What a religious ecstasy is health! Its free step claims every
+ meadow that is glad with flowers; its bubbling spirits fill the cup
+ of wide horizons and drip down their brims; its thankfulness is the
+ prayer that takes possession of the sun by day and the stars by
+ night. Every dancing member of the body whirls off the soul to
+ tread the measures of great feelings, and God hears people saying:
+ "How precious also are thy thoughts, how great is the sum of them!
+ When I awake, I am still with thee." Yes,--when I awake, but not
+ before; not while the brain is saturated with nervous blood, till
+ it falls into comatose doctrines, and goes maundering with its
+ attack of mediatorial piety and grace; not while a stomach depraved
+ by fried food, apothecary's drugs, and iron-clad pastry (that
+ target impenetrable by digestion) supplies the constitution with
+ its vale of tears, ruin of mankind, and better luck hereafter. When
+ all my veins flow unobstructed, and lift to the level of my eyes
+ the daily gladness that finds a gate at every pore; when the
+ roaming gifts come home from Nature to turn the brain into a hive
+ of cells full of yellow sunshine, the spoil of all the chalices of
+ the earth beneath and the heavens above,--then I am the subject of
+ a Revival of Religion.
+
+Or these passages about music, of which he was always a devoted lover,
+a passionate admirer, an excellent critic. My first extract is used to
+illustrate the doctrine of evolution, and suggests Browning's poem of
+"Abt Vogler." It should be said, by the way, that Weiss was a great
+student of Browning, whose lines in "Paracelsus," prophetic of the
+evolution doctrine, was often on his lips. He even understood
+"Sordello."
+
+ The divine composer, summoning instrument after instrument into his
+ harmony, climbed with his theme from those which offered but a
+ single note to those that exhaust the complexity of thought and
+ feeling, to combine them into expression, kindling through hints,
+ phrases, sudden concords, mustering consents of many wills,
+ releases of each one's felicity into comradeship, till the sweet
+ tumult becomes his champion, and bursts into an acclaim of a whole
+ world. "I ought--so then I will." The toppling instruments concur,
+ become the wave that touches that high moment, lifts the whole
+ deep, and holds it there.
+
+ When perfect music drives its golden scythe-chariot up the fine
+ nerves, across the bridge of association, through the stern
+ portcullis of care, and alights in the heart of man, there is
+ adoration, whether he faints with excess of recognition of one long
+ absent, and lies prostrate in the arms of rhythm, feeling that he
+ is not worthy it should come under his roof, or whether he mounts
+ the seat and grasps the thrilling reins; God's unity is riding
+ through his distraction, brought by that team of all the
+ instruments which shake their manes across the pavement of his
+ bosom, and strike out the sparks of longing.
+
+In calling Mr. Weiss essentially a poet, I am far from implying that
+he was not a thinker. Perhaps he was more subtle and more brilliant a
+thinker for being also a poet--that is, for seeing truth through the
+medium of the imagination, for following the path of analogy. At any
+rate, his being a poet did not in the least interfere with the acuteness
+or the precision of his thinking, as any one can see who reads his
+chapters--those, for example, which compose the volume entitled
+"American Religion." I had marked for citation so many passages that it
+would be necessary to quote half the book to illustrate my thesis. When
+I first knew him, he was a strict Transcendentalist. Dr. Orestes
+Brownson, no mean judge on such matters, spoke of him as the most
+promising philosophical mind in the country. To a native talent for
+metaphysics, his early studies at Heidelberg probably contributed
+congenial training. His knowledge of German philosophy may well have
+been stimulated and matured by his residence in that centre of active
+thought; while his intimacy, on his return, with the keenest intellects
+in this country may well have sharpened his original predilection for
+abstract speculation. However this may have been, the tendency of his
+genius was decidedly toward metaphysical problems and the interpretation
+of the human consciousness. This he erected as a barrier against
+materialism; and this he probed with a depth and a fearlessness which
+were truly extraordinary, and would have been remarkable in any disciple
+of the school to which he belonged. No one that I can think of was so
+fine, so profound, so analytical. His volume on "American Religion" was
+full of nice discriminations; so was his volume on the "Immortal Life";
+so were his articles and lectures. His "Life of Theodore Parker"
+abounded in curious learning as well as in vigorous thinking. He could
+follow, step by step, the great leader of reformatory ideas, and went
+far beyond him in subtlety and accuracy of mental delineation. He could
+not rest in sentiment, must have demonstration, and never stopped till
+he reached the ultimate ground of truth as he regarded it. Ideas, when
+he found them, were usually, not always, expressed in symbolical forms.
+His alert fancy detected likenesses that would have been concealed from
+common eyes; and often the splendor of the exposition hid the keenness
+of the logical temper, as a sword wreathed with roses lies unperceived.
+But the tempered steel was there and they who examined closely felt its
+edge.
+
+He was a man of undaunted courage, being an idealist who lived out of
+the world, and a living soul animated by overwhelming convictions, which
+he was anxious to convey to others as of immense importance. He
+believed, with all his heart, in the doctrines he had arrived at, and,
+like a soldier in battle, was unconscious of the danger he incurred or
+of the wounds he received, being unaware of his own daring or fortitude.
+He was an anti-slavery man from the beginning. At a large meeting held
+in Waltham in 1845, to protest against the admission of Texas as a slave
+State, Mr. Weiss, then a minister at Watertown, Mass., delivered a
+speech in which he said: "Our Northern apathy heated the iron, forged
+the manacles, and built the pillory," declared that man was more than
+constitutions (borrowing a phrase from James Russell Lowell), and that
+Christ was greater than Hancock and Adams. To his unflinching devotion
+to free thought in religion, he owed something of his unpopularity with
+the masses of the people, who were orthodox in opinion, though his
+failure to touch the general mind was probably due to other causes. The
+class of disbelievers was pretty large in his day and very
+self-asserting. Boldness never fails to attract; and brilliancy, if it
+be on the plane of ordinary vision, draws the eyes of the multitude, who
+are on the watch for a sensation.
+
+The chief trouble was that his brilliancy was not on the plane of
+ordinary vision, but was recondite, ingenious, fanciful. He was too
+learned, too fond of allusions--literary, scientific, historical,--too
+swift in his mental processes. His addresses were delivered to an
+audience of his friends, not to a miscellaneous company. They were of
+the nature of soliloquies spoken out of his own mind, instead of being
+speeches intended to meet the needs of others. His lectures and sermons
+were not easy to follow, even if the listener was more than usually
+cultivated. Shall it be added that his sincerity of speech, running into
+brusqueness, startled a good many? He was theological and philosophical,
+and he could not keep his hands off when what he considered as errors in
+theology or philosophy came into view. His wit was sharper than he
+thought, while the laugh it raised was frequently overbalanced by the
+sting it left behind in some breasts. It was too often a "wicked wit,"
+barbed and poisoned, which one must be in league with to enjoy. They who
+were in sympathy with the speaker were delighted with it, but they who
+were not went off aggrieved. No doubt this attested the earnestness of
+the man, who scorned to cloak his convictions; but it wounded the
+self-love of such as were in search of pleasure or instruction, and
+interfered with his general acceptableness. A broad, genial,
+good-natured, truculent style of ventilating even heresies may not be
+repulsive to people of a conventional, believing turn; in fact, it is
+not, as we know. But the thrusts of a rapier, especially when
+unexpected, are not forgiven. Mr. Weiss drew larger audiences as a
+preacher on religious themes than he did as a lecturer on secular
+subjects, where one hardly knew what to look for, because he was known
+to be outspoken and capable of introducing heresies on the platform.
+
+Then he was in all respects unconventional. His spontaneous exuberance
+of animal spirits, which led him to roll on the grass, join in
+frolicsome games, play all sorts of antics, indulge in jokes, mimicry,
+boisterous mirthfulness, was inconsistent with the staid, proper
+demeanor required by social usage. How he kept himself within limits as
+he did was a surprise to his friends. Ordinary natures can form no
+conception of the weight such a man must have put upon his temperament
+to press it down to the level of common experience. Temptations to which
+he was liable every day do not visit average minds in their whole
+lifetime, and cannot by such minds be comprehended. The stiff, upright,
+careful old man cannot understand the jocund pliability of the boy, who,
+nevertheless, simply expends the superfluity of his natural vigor, and
+relieves his excess of nervous excitability. On thinking it all over,
+remembering his appetite for life, his joy in existence, his nervous
+exhilaration, his love of beauty, his passionate ardor of temperament, I
+am surprised that he preserved, as he did, so much dignity and soberness
+of character. I have seen him in his wildest mood, yet I never saw him
+thrown off his balance. With as much brilliancy as Sydney Smith, he had,
+as Sydney Smith had not, a breadth of knowledge, a depth of feeling, a
+soaring energy of soul that kept him above vulgar seductions, and did
+for him, in a nobler way, what ambition, love of place, conventional
+associations did for the famous Englishman.
+
+The difficulty was that he was too far removed from the common ground
+of sympathy. He could not endure routine, or behave as other people
+behaved, and as it was generally fancied he should. If Sydney Smith's
+jocularity interfered with his promotion, how much more did he have to
+contend with who to the jocularity added an enthusiastic devotion to
+heresy, a partiality for metaphysical speculation, and a poetic glow
+that removed him from ordinary comprehension! With an unworldliness
+worthy of all praise, but fatal to the provision of daily bread, he left
+the ministry, a fixed income, a confirmed social position, ample leisure
+for study and for literary pursuits, and launched forth on the uncertain
+career of lecturer. He was not the first who failed in attempting to
+harness Pegasus to a cart, in the hope of making him useful in mundane
+ways. Neither discharged his full function. The cart would not run
+smoothly, and the steed was not happy. The old profession has this
+advantage: that to all practical purposes, the wagon goes over the
+celestial pavement where there is no mud nor clangor, and Pegasus can
+seem to be harnessed to a chariot of the sun.
+
+Weiss simply disappeared from view. His books were scattered; his
+lectures and sermons were worked over and over, the best of them being
+published in his several volumes. A few relics of the author remain in
+the hands of his widow, who is grateful for any recognition of his
+genius, any help to diffuse his writings, and tribute to his memory.
+They who knew him can never forget him. Perhaps the very vividness of
+their recollection makes them indifferent to the possession of visible
+memorials of their friend.
+
+Samuel Johnson should be known as the apostle of individualism. The
+apostle I say, for this with him was a religion, and the preaching of
+individualism was a gospel message. He would not belong to any church,
+or subscribe to any creed, or connect himself with any sect, or be a
+member of any organization whatever, however wide or elastic, however
+consonant with convictions that he held, with beliefs that he
+entertained, with purposes that he cherished, with plans that were dear
+to him. He never joined the "Anti-Slavery Society," though he was an
+Abolitionist; or the "Free Religious Association," though its aims were
+essentially his own, and he spoke on its platform. He made it a
+principle to act alone, herein being a true disciple of Emerson, whose
+mission was to individual minds. He wrote a long letter to me on the
+occasion of establishing the "Free Religious Association," of which I
+wished him to become a member, that recalls the letter written by Mr.
+Emerson in reply to George Ripley when asked to join the community of
+Brook Farm, and whereof the following is an extract:
+
+ My feeling is that the community is not good for me, that it has
+ little to offer me which with resolution I cannot procure for
+ myself.... It seems to me a circuitous and operose way of relieving
+ myself to put upon your community the emancipation which I ought to
+ take on myself. I must assume my own vows.... I ought to say that I
+ do not put much trust in any arrangements or combinations, only in
+ the spirit which dictates them. Is that benevolent and divine, they
+ will answer their end. Is there any alloy in that, it will
+ certainly appear in the result.... Nor can I insist with any heat
+ on new methods when I am at work in my study on any literary
+ composition.... The result of our secretest attempts will certainly
+ have as much renown as shall be due to it.
+
+Johnson ended by discarding the church entirely. In 1881 he wrote:
+
+ For my part, every day I live the name _Christian_ seems less and
+ less to express my thought and tendency. I suspect it will be so
+ with the Free-thinking world generally.
+
+In a sermon, "Living by Faith," he says:
+
+ There is no irony so great as to call this "flight out of nature"
+ and the creeds that come of it, "faith." The purity of heart that
+ really sees God will have a mighty idealization of humanity at the
+ very basis of its creed, and act on it in all its treatment of the
+ vicious, the morally incapable and diseased. It is time Christendom
+ was on the search for it.
+
+In the paper on "Transcendentalism," he says:
+
+ Christianity inherited the monarchical idea of a God separate from
+ man, and a contempt for natural law and human faculty which
+ crippled its faith in the spiritual and moral ideal. It became more
+ and more a materialism of miracle, Bible, church. Even its essay to
+ realize immanent Deity yielded a more or less exclusive,
+ mediatorial God-man; and it treated personality as the mere
+ consequence of one prescriptive, historical force, just as
+ philosophical materialism treats it as mere product of sensations.
+
+Mr. Johnson abhorred the monarchical principle. It was his endeavor to
+track it from its origin, through all its forms of institution,
+ceremonial, dogma, symbol, from the earliest times to the latest,
+through the whole East to the farthest West. This was the burden of his
+studies in Oriental religions, the sum of his criticism, the aim of his
+public teaching. He was profoundly, intensely, absorbingly religious,
+but the form of his religion was not "Christian" in any recognized
+sense, Romanist, Protestant, or Unitarian. The most radical thought did
+not altogether please him. His was a worship of Law, Order, Cause,
+Harmony, impersonal, living, natural; a recognition of mind as the
+supreme power in the universe; a cosmic, eternal, absolute faith in
+intellectual principles as the substance and soul of the world. God was,
+to him, a spiritual being, alive, vital, flowing in every mode.
+
+ All power of growth and service depends, know it or not as we may,
+ on an ideal faith in somewhat all-sufficient, unerring, infinitely
+ wise and tender, inseparable from the inmost of life, bent on our
+ good as we are not, set against our failures as we cannot be. It
+ means that there can in fact be no philosophy of life, no law of
+ good, no belief in duty, no aspiration, but must have such
+ in-dwelling perfection, as being alone reliable to guarantee its
+ word. This only is my God; infinite ground of all finite being;
+ essence of reason and good.... When you see a function of memory,
+ or a law of perfection, let your natural piety recognize it as wise
+ and just and good and fair. Be loyal to the moral authority that
+ affirms it ought to be, and somehow must be. Let your _soul_ bring
+ in the leap of your mind to grasp it. Then, if you cannot see God
+ in perfect, absolute essence, you will know the Infinite and
+ Eternal in their relation to real and positive existence; feel
+ their freedom in your own; know their inseparableness from every
+ movement of your spiritual being.... The love we feel, the truth we
+ pursue, the honor we cherish, the moral beauty we revere, blend in
+ with the eternity of the principles they flow from, and then, glad
+ as in the baptism of a harvest morning, expanding towards human
+ need and the universal life of man, our souls walk free, breathing
+ immortal air. That is God,--not an object but an experience. Words
+ are but symbols, they do not define. We say "Him," "It" were as
+ well, if thereby we mean life, wisdom, love.... Must we bind our
+ communion with the just, the good, the true, the humanly adequate
+ and becoming to some personal life, some special body of social
+ circumstances, some individual's work in human progress and upon
+ human idealism? How should that be, when the principles into which
+ the moral sense flowers out in its maturity as spiritual liberty,
+ essentially involve a freely advancing ideal at every new stage
+ revealing more of God, whom nothing but such universal energy can
+ adequately reveal?... If then, we cannot see the eternal substance
+ and life of the universe, it is not because Deity is too far, but
+ because it is too near. We can measure a statue or a star, and look
+ round and beyond it; but the Life, Light, Liberty, Love, Peace,
+ whereby we live and know, and are helpful and calm and free, which
+ measures and surrounds and even animates us, is itself the very
+ mystery of our being, and known only as felt and lived. God stands
+ in all ideal thought, conviction, aim, which ever reach into the
+ infinite; and thence, as if an angel should stand in the sun, come
+ attractions that draw forth the divine capabilities within us, as
+ the sun the life and beauty of the earth. God is the inmost motive,
+ the common path, the infinite import of all work we respect, honor,
+ purely rejoice in, and fulfil; of art, science, philosophy,
+ intercourse,--whatsoever function befits the soul and the day.
+
+These quotations, which might be multiplied indefinitely, in fact,
+which it is difficult not to multiply, are probably enough to satisfy
+any who really wish to know that here was a truly religious man, a
+really devout man, the possessor of a living faith; one who held fast to
+more Deity than the multitude cherished, and welcomed him in a much more
+cordial, comprehensive, natural manner; one who fairly drenched the
+world and man with a divine spirit, but who was all the more spiritual
+on this account, as a man attests his vigor by his ability to lay aside
+his crutches, and put the medicine-chest, bottles, and boxes on the
+shelf, to walk in cold weather without an overcoat, or lie naked on the
+ice and melt it through.
+
+Of course, the only justification of a pretension of this kind is the
+actual vitality necessary for such a feat, the sanity demanded by one
+who would stand or go alone. In Samuel Johnson's case there was no
+question of this. Spiritually, he was a whole man, self-poised,
+self-contained, strong, clear, alert, a hero and a saint. His
+conversation, his bearing, conduct, entire attitude and manner indicated
+the most jubilant faith. He never faltered in his confidence, never
+wavered in his conviction, never abated a jot of hope that in the order
+of Providence all good things would come. There was something staggering
+to the ordinary mind, in his assurance of the divine wisdom and love.
+There was something altogether admirable in the elevation of his
+character above the trials and vexations that are incident to the human
+lot, and that seemed heaped upon him. For his own was not a smooth or
+fortunate life, as men estimate felicity. His health was far from
+satisfactory. He was not rich or famous or popular or sought after. He
+lived a life of labor, in some respects, of denial and sacrifice. Not
+until after his death was the full amount of his renunciation apparent
+even to those who thought they knew him well.
+
+He was a Transcendentalist--that is to say, he believed in the intuitive
+powers of the mind; he was sure that all primary truths, such ideas as
+those of unity, universe, law, cause, substance, will, duty, obligation,
+permanence, were perceived directly, and are not to be accounted for by
+any data of observation or inference, but must be ascribed at once to an
+organic or constitutional relation of the mind with truth.
+
+ That the name "Transcendentalism" was given, a century ago, to a
+ method in philosophy opposed to the theory of Locke--that all
+ knowledge comes from the senses,--is more widely known than the
+ fact that what this method affirmed or involved is of profound
+ import for all generations. It emphasized Mind as a formative force
+ behind all definable contents or acts of consciousness--as that
+ which makes it possible to speak of anything as _known_. It
+ recognized, as primal condition of knowing, the transmutation of
+ sense-impressions by original laws of mind, whose constructive
+ power is not to be explained or measured by the data of sensation;
+ just as they use the eye or ear to transform unknown spatial
+ notions into the obviously human conceptions which we call color
+ and sound. All this the Lockian system overlooked--a very serious
+ omission, as regards both science and common-sense.
+
+And again, in the same article--that on "Transcendentalism," first
+printed in the _Radical Review_ for November, 1877, and afterwards
+included in the volume of "Lectures, Sermons, and Essays":
+
+ What we conceive these schools to have misprized is the living
+ substance and function of mind itself, conscious of its own energy,
+ productive of its own processes, active even in receiving, giving
+ its own construction to its incomes from the unknown through sense,
+ thus involved in those very contents of time and space which, as
+ historical antecedents, _appear_ to create it; mind is obviously
+ the exponent of forces more spontaneous and original than any
+ special product of its own experience. Behind all these products
+ must be that substance in and through which they are produced.
+
+And again, for we cannot be too explicit on this point:
+
+ It is certain that knowledge involves not only a sense of union
+ with the nature of that which we know, but a real participation of
+ the knowing faculty therein. When, therefore, I have learned to
+ conceive truths, principles, ideas, or aims which transcend
+ life-times and own no physical limits to their endurance, the
+ aforesaid law of mind associates me with their immortal nature. And
+ this is the indubitable perception or intuition of permanent mind
+ which no experience of impermanence can nullify and no Nirvana
+ excludes.
+
+It will be observed that Mr. Johnson does not make himself answerable
+for specific articles of belief on God or immortality, but confines his
+faith to the persuasion of indwelling mind, sovereign, eternal,
+imperial. "Immortality," he says, "is immeasurable chance for all. In
+its light, all strong, blameless, heroic lives--divine plants by the
+wayside--tell for the nature they express. God has made no blunder in
+our spiritual constitution. Power is in faith." This intense belief in
+the soul, in all the native capacities of our spiritual constitution, in
+the supremacy of organic feelings, ideas, expectations over merely
+private desires, this burning confidence in divinely implanted
+instincts, this absolute certainty that every promise made by God will
+be fulfilled, explains the tone of exulting hope in which he writes to
+bereaved friends.
+
+ I wish I could tell you how firmly I believe that feelings like
+ these (that the absent one cannot be dead), so often treated as
+ illusion, are _true_, are of God's own tender giving; that in them
+ is the very heart of his teaching through the mystery that we call
+ death. Our affections are _forbidden by their maker_ to doubt their
+ own immortality.... Immortal years, beside which our little lives
+ are but an hour--what possibilities of full satisfaction they open!
+ And we sit in patience, knowing that they must bring us back our
+ holiest possessions--those which have ever stood under the shield
+ of our noblest love and conscience and so are under God's blessing
+ forever.
+
+How far such a declaration as this comports with the demand for general
+immortality made in behalf of those who are conscious of no noble love,
+who have attained to no conscience, and have no holy possessions, we are
+not told. Perhaps Mr. Johnson would seize on the faintest intimations of
+mind as evidencing the presence of moral being, as Mr. Weiss does. But
+he did not dwell on that side of the problem. Plainly he ascribed little
+value to mere personality, viewed abstractly and apart from its
+spiritual development. He wrote to those whom he knew and loved, to
+remarkable people.
+
+Yet it would not be fair to conclude that immortality was denied to the
+basest. If immortality is "opportunity," a "chance for all," it is for
+those who can profit by it or enjoy it. If any are debarred, the cause
+must be their own incompetence. They simply decease. There is no torment
+in store for them; no hell is possible.
+
+Samuel Johnson was an enthusiastic evolutionist, but of mind itself, not
+of matter as ripening into mind. The ordinary conception of
+evolution,--that the higher came from the lower,--was exceedingly
+repugnant to him. Every kind of materialism he abhorred as illogical and
+irrational. The theories of Comte,--that "mind is cerebration;" of
+Haeckel,--that it is a "function of brain and nerve;" of Strauss,--that
+"one's self is his body;" of Taine,--that a man is "a series of
+sensations," were to him as absurd, in science or philosophy, as they
+were fatal to aspiration and progress.
+
+ The crude definition of evolution as production of the highest by
+ inherent force of the lowest is here supplanted by one which
+ recognizes material parentage as itself involving, even in its
+ lowest stages, the entire cosmic _consensus_, of whose unknown
+ force mind is the highest known exponent.
+
+He is alluding to Tyndall's statement that mind is evolved from the
+universe as a whole, not from inorganic matter. For himself, he says:
+
+ Ideas were not demonstrated, are not demonstrable. No data of
+ observation can express their universal meaning.... What else can
+ we say of ideas than that they are wondrous intimacies of the soul
+ with the Infinite and Eternal, its contacts with universal forces,
+ its prophetic ventures and master steps beyond any past!... The
+ grand words, "I ought" refuse to be explained by dissolving the
+ notion of right into individual calculation of consequences, or by
+ expounding the sense of duty as the cumulative product of observed
+ relation of succession.... How explain as a "greater happiness
+ principle," or an inherited product of observed consequences, that
+ sovereign and eternal law of mind whose imperial edict lifts all
+ calculations and measures into functions of an infinite meaning?
+ And how vain to accredit or ascribe to revelation, institution, or
+ redemption, this necessary allegiance to the law of our being,
+ which is liberty and loyalty in one?
+
+This is absolute enough. It is plain that to this writer the notion of
+extracting intellect from form is ridiculous.
+
+At the same time the method of evolution is the one adopted by the
+supreme Mind in its endeavor to awaken in man religious ideas. The
+exposition of the original faiths--Indian, Chinese, Persian--is a long
+and eloquent argument for this thesis. All criticism, all thinking, all
+analysis, all study of history, all investigation of phenomena, point in
+this direction. This is the rule of creation; this is the solution of
+the problem of the universe. The successive degrees of this divine
+ascent, he maintains, are distinctly traceable in the records left for
+our reading. The threads are fine, of course, but what have we eyes for?
+It is not necessary that everybody should see them, and the few who can
+are amply rewarded for the trouble they take in putting their fingers
+upon the very lines of the heavenly procedure. His peculiar strain of
+genius admirably qualified him for this delicate task. It was serious,
+critical, earnest, and aspiring. At one period of his life he was a
+mystic, wholly absorbed in God, and he always had that tendency towards
+the more passionate forms of idealism which led him to mystical
+speculations. The search for God was ever the animating purpose of his
+endeavor. The law of the blessed life was never absent from his thought.
+He, all the time, lived by faith, and was naturally disposed to see the
+gain in all losses. His mind had that penetrating quality which loved to
+follow hidden trails, and appreciated the subtlest kinds of influence.
+In a striking passage he speaks of the
+
+ great mystery in these influences which thoughtless people little
+ dream of, and which common-sense, so called, cares nothing about.
+ In the wonderful manner in which, through books, the spirits of
+ other men, long since dead, enter into and inspire ours; in the
+ eloquent language of eye and lip which without words, merely by
+ expression, conveys deepest feelings; in the presence in our souls
+ of strange presentiments, intuitions of higher knowledge than
+ science or learning can give, voices which seem the presence of
+ other spirits in ours, which make us feel often that death, so far
+ from removing our dear friends from us, brings them nearer to our
+ souls so that they _cannot_ be lost;--in all these wonderful ways
+ we see dimly the unveiling of holy mysteries which the future is to
+ fully open to us, mysteries which we can even now, in our sublimer
+ and holier secret moments, feel trying to disclose themselves to
+ us.
+
+This was written in a letter to his sister, on the occasion of a visit
+to the menagerie to see Herr Driesbach, the horse-tamer. A man who could
+spring into the empyrean from such ground may be trusted to behold Deity
+where others behold nothing but dirt; and they who submit to his
+guidance are pretty certain to come out full believers in the spiritual
+powers.
+
+Johnson absolutely subordinated dogma to practice, holding fast to the
+idea involved in the declaration that he who doeth the will shall know
+the doctrine. He began with the ethics of the individual, the family,
+the social circle, seeing every principle incarnated there. How faithful
+he was in all domestic relations the world will never know, for there
+are details that cannot be divulged. But in all public affairs his
+constancy was perfect. Dr. Furness of Philadelphia used to say that the
+anti-slavery struggle in this country taught him more about the
+essential nature of the Gospel than he had learned in any other way.
+Samuel Johnson had the same conviction. In a private letter written in
+1857 he says:
+
+ Everything in this crisis of American growth centres in the great
+ conflict about this gigantic sin of slavery. That is the
+ battle-field on which the questions are all to be fought out, of
+ moral and spiritual and intellectual Freedom against the Absolutism
+ of sect and party; of Love against Mammon; of Conscience against
+ the State; of Man against Majorities; of Truth against Policy; of
+ God against the Devil. It is really astonishing how everything that
+ happens with us works directly into this fermenting conflict.
+
+They who remember his addresses during the war will not need any
+confirmation of this announcement, and they who heard or have read his
+sermon on the character and services of Charles Sumner will have the
+fullest assurance of the cordial appreciation with which every phase of
+the struggle was entered into.
+
+But though so ardent a follower of the doctrine that ideas lead the
+world, Johnson was not induced to go all lengths with the
+sentimentalists. While warmly espousing the cause of the workingman his
+papers on "Labor Reform" show how keenly critical he could be of
+measures proposed for his benefit. No one will accuse him of
+indifference to the claims of woman, but he spoke of "Woman's
+Opportunity" rather than of "Woman's Rights"; is inclined to think that
+it is not true that she is left out of political life from the present
+wish to do her injustice; that "on the whole, the feeling, if it were
+analyzed, would be found to be rather that of defending her right of
+exemption, relieving her from tasks she does not desire.... Among
+intelligent men at least, actual delay to wipe out the anomaly of the
+voting rule is not so much owing to a spirit of domination or contempt
+as is too apt to be assumed, as it is to a respect for what woman has
+made of the functions she has hitherto filled, and the belief that she
+holds herself entitled to be left free to work through them alone." He
+has nothing to say regarding the superiority of woman's nature; ventures
+no definition of her sphere; is not unconscious of feminine infirmities;
+doubts the efficacy of the ballot; confesses that the level of womanhood
+would be, at least temporarily, depressed by the larger area of
+practical diffusion; is by no means certain that women would necessarily
+act for their own good, and is deeply persuaded of the inferiority of
+outward to inward influence. This is the one thing he is sure of; this
+and the principle that "liberty knows--like faith and charity--neither
+male nor female." In the war between Russia and Turkey he took the part
+of Turkey, not only because he respected the rights of individual genius
+and resented invasion, but for the reason that he distrusted the
+civilizing tendencies of Russia, and thought the interests of Europe
+might be trusted to the Ottoman as confidently as to the Russian. In a
+discourse entitled "A Ministry in Free Religion," delivered on the
+occasion of his resigning the relation of pastor to the "Free Church at
+Lynn," June 26, 1870, he said:
+
+ The pulpit has no function more essential than an independent
+ criticism of well-meaning people in the light of larger justice and
+ remoter consequences than most popular measures recognize. The
+ truest service is, perhaps, to help correct the blunders and the
+ intolerances of blind good-will and narrow zeal for a good cause;
+ to speak in the interest of an idea where popular or organized
+ impulse threatens to swamp its higher morality in passionate
+ instincts and absolute masterships, to maintain that freedom of
+ private judgment which cannot be outraged, even in the best moral
+ intent, without mischievous reaction on the good cause itself.
+
+In this connection he speaks of temperance, the amelioration of the
+condition of the "perishing" or "dangerous" classes, the various schemes
+for benefiting the laboring men, plans for adjusting the relations of
+labor and capital, arrangements for diffusing the profits of
+production,--causes which he had at heart, but which should be discussed
+in view of the principle of individual freedom, which must be upheld at
+all hazards. He was a close reasoner as well as a warm feeler, and would
+not allow his sympathies to get the upper hand of his ideas. He hoped
+for the best; he had faith in the highest; he anticipated the brightest;
+but he tried to see things as they were. He was a student, not a
+sentimentalist, and while he was ready to follow the most advanced in
+the direction of spiritual progress, he was not prepared to take for
+granted issues that still hung in the balance of debate, or to prejudge
+questions that had not been answered, and could not be as yet.
+
+Such moderation and patience are not common with reformers, and few are
+independent enough to confess misgivings which are more familiar to
+their opponents than to their friends. Candor like this shows a genuine
+unconsciousness of fear, a sincere love of truth, an earnest
+postponement of personal tastes, ambitions, and connections to the
+axioms of universal wisdom and goodness; a loyalty to conviction that is
+very rare, that never can exist among the indifferent, because they do
+not care, and which is usually put aside by those who _do_ care as an
+impediment if not as a snare. In courage of this noble kind, Johnson
+excelled all men I ever knew, for they who had it, as some did, had not
+his genius, and were spared the necessity of curbing ardor by so much as
+their temperament was more passive and their eagerness less importunate.
+Of course of the lower sort,--the courage to bear pain, loss, the
+misunderstanding of the vulgar, to face danger, to encounter peril, none
+who knew him can question his possession. In fact, he did not seem to
+suffer at all, so jocund was he, so much in the habit of keeping his
+deprivations from the outside world; even his intimates could but
+suspect his sorrows of heart.
+
+Samuel Johnson was an extraordinary person to look at. He had large
+dark eyes; black, straight, long hair; an Oriental complexion, sallow,
+olive-colored; an impetuous manner; a beaming expression. His voice was
+rich, deep, musical; his gait eager, rapid, swinging; his style of
+address glowing; his aspect in public speech that of one inspired. He
+was fond of natural beauty, of art, literature, music; full of fun,
+witty, mirthful, social. He was attractive to young people, delightful
+in conversation, ready to enter into innocent amusements. His eye for
+scenery was fine and quick, his interest in practical science sincere
+and hearty, his concern for whatever advanced humanity cordial, and his
+freshness of spirit increased if anything with years.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. MY FRIENDS.
+
+
+It is impossible to mention them all, and to single out a few from a
+multitude must not be done. I should like to commemorate those who came
+nearest to me by their earnest work and faithful allegiance, but these
+cannot be spoken of, and I prefer to enumerate some of those with whom I
+was less intimate.
+
+Alice and Ph[oe]be Cary came to New York in 1852, and were prominent
+when I was there; their famous Sunday evenings, which were frequented by
+the brightest minds and were sought by a large class of people, being
+then well established. These were altogether informal and gave but
+little satisfaction to the merely fashionable folks who now and then
+attended them. The sisters were in striking contrast. Ph[oe]be, the
+younger, was a jocund, hearty, vivacious, witty, merry young woman,
+short and round; her older sister, Alice, was taller and more slender,
+with large, dark eyes; she was meditative, thoughtful, pensive, and
+rather grave in temperament; but the two were most heartily in sympathy
+in every opinion and in all their literary and social aims. Horace
+Greeley, one of their earliest and warmest friends, was a frequent
+visitor at their house. There I met Robert Dale Owen, Oliver Johnson,
+Dr. E. H. Chapin, Rev. Charles F. Deems, Justin McCarthy and his wife,
+Mrs. Mary E. Dodge, Madame Le Vert, and several others.
+
+Among my friends was President Barnard, of Columbia College, the only
+man I ever knew whose long ear-trumpet was never an annoyance; Ogden N.
+Rood, the Professor of Physics at Columbia, a man of real genius, whose
+studies in light and color were a great assistance to artists, himself
+an artist of no mean order and an ardent student of photography; Charles
+Joy, Professor of Chemistry, a most active-minded man, who received
+honors at Goettingen and at Paris, and contributed largely to the
+scientific journals; a man greatly interested in the union of charitable
+societies in New York; Robert Carter, then a co-worker in the making of
+Appleton's Cyclopedia; Bayard Taylor, novelist, poet, translator of
+Goethe, traveller; Richard Grant White, the Shakesperian scholar;
+Charles L. Brace, the philanthropist; E. L. Youmans a man fairly
+tingling with ideas, and peculiarly gifted in making popular, as a
+lecturer, the most abstruse scientific discoveries. The breadth of my
+range of acquaintances is illustrated by such men as Roswell D.
+Hitchcock, of Union Seminary, the learned student, the impressive
+speaker; Isaac T. Hecker, the founder of the Congregation of the
+Paulists; Dr. Washburn, the model churchman of "Calvary"; Henry M.
+Field, editor of the _Evangelist_, a most warm-hearted man, so large in
+his sympathies that he could say to Robert G. Ingersoll, "I am glad that
+I know you, even though some of my brethren look upon you as a monster
+because of your unbelief," and welcomed as an example of "constructive
+thought," Dr. Charles A. Briggs' Inaugural Address as Professor of
+Biblical Theology at Union College; John G. Holland (Timothy Titcomb), a
+copious author. The _Tribune_ company was most distinguished: There was,
+first of all, the founder, Horace Greeley, a unique personality, simple,
+unaffected, earnest, an immense believer in American institutions, a
+stanch friend of the working-man, and a brave lover of impartial
+justice; Whitelaw Reid, who was, according to George Ripley, the ablest
+newspaper manager he ever saw; and Mrs. Lucia Calhoun (afterward Mrs.
+Runkle), one of the most brilliant contributors to the _Tribune_. Of
+George Ripley I may speak more at length, as he was my parishioner and
+close friend. In my biography of him, written for the "American Men of
+Letters" series, I spoke of him as a "remarkable" man. One of my critics
+found fault with the appellation, and said it was not justified by
+anything in the book, as perhaps it was not, though intellectual vigor,
+range, and taste like his must be called "remarkable"; such industry is
+"remarkable"; no common man could have instituted "Brook Farm" and
+administered it for six or seven years; could have maintained its
+dignity through ridicule, misunderstanding, and fanaticism; could have
+cleared off its liabilities; could have turned his face away from it on
+its failure, with such patience, or in his later age, could have alluded
+to it so sweetly; no ordinary person could have adopted a new and
+despised career so bravely as he did. No journalist has raised
+literature to so high a distinction, or derived such large rewards for
+that mental labor. He deserves to be called "remarkable," who can do all
+this or but a part of it, and, all the time, preserve the sunny serenity
+of his disposition. If the biography failed to present these traits it
+was, indeed, unsuccessful. Yes, Mr. Ripley was an extraordinary man. It
+is seldom that one carries such qualities to such a degree of
+perfection, and it may be worth while to look more closely at his
+character.
+
+George Ripley had a passion for literary excellence. From his boyhood
+he possessed a singularly bright intelligence, a clear appreciation of
+the rational aspect of questions. He was not an ardent, passionate,
+enthusiastic man, of warm convictions, vehement emotions, burning ideas.
+His feelings, though amiable and correct, were of an intellectual cast.
+They sprang from a naturally affectionate heart, rather than from a
+deeply stirred conscience, or an enchanted soul. If he had been less
+healthy, eupeptic, he would scarcely have been so gay; a vehement
+reformer he was not; a leader of men he could not be. He had not the
+stuff in him for either. The element of giving was not strong in him. He
+was not an originator in the sphere of thought; not a discoverer of
+theories or facts; not an innovator on established customs. But mentally
+he was so quick, eager, receptive, that he seemed a pioneer, an
+enthusiast, a saint; his quickness passing for insight, his eagerness
+for a passionate love of progress, his receptivity for charitableness.
+He appeared to be more of an image-breaker than he really was. In fact,
+the propensity to iconoclasm was not part of his constitution. But his
+mind was wonderfully alert. He had his antipathies, and they were strong
+ones, his likes and dislikes, his tastes and distastes, but these were
+instinctive rather than the expression of rational principle or a
+deliberate conclusion of his judgment. In one instance that I know of,
+he threw off a man with whom he had been associated for many years, and
+in connection with whom he labored daily for a time, a very accomplished
+and agreeable person to whom he was indebted for some services, because
+he thought that the individual in question had been unjust to some of
+his friends; but that this was not entirely a matter of conscience would
+seem to be indicated by the fact that he sent a message of affection to
+this man, as he neared the grave. In the main, so far as he was under
+control, intellectual considerations determined his course. He was
+prevailingly under the influence of mind; he acted in view, a large
+view, of all the circumstances; as one who takes in the whole situation,
+and has himself under command. This is not said in the least tone of
+disparagement, but entirely in his praise, for the supremacy of reason
+is more steady, even, reliable than the supremacy of feeling however
+exalted in its mood. He that is under the control of mind is at all
+times _under control_, which cannot be said of one who is borne along by
+the sway of even devout emotion. I have in memory cases where passion
+might have betrayed Mr. Ripley into conduct he would have regretted, had
+it not been for the restraining power of purely rational considerations.
+His early religious training may have produced some effect on his
+character, but this is more likely to have operated at first than at the
+later stages of his career. The love of old hymns, the habit of
+attending sacred services, the fondness for Watts' poems, a copy of
+whose holy songs always lay on his table, showed a lingering attachment
+to this kind of sentiment up to the end of his life; but it existed in
+an attenuated form, and at no period after his youth exerted much sway
+over him. His predominating bent was intellectual, and this caused a
+certain delicacy, fastidiousness, aloofness, which kept him in the
+atmosphere of love as well as of light.
+
+From his youth this was his leading characteristic. As a boy he was
+ambitious of making a dictionary, a sign of his carefulness in the use
+of words, and an omen of the value he was to set on definitions and on
+exactness in the employment of language. At school he was an excellent
+scholar, at college he stood second, but was graduated first owing to
+the "suspension" of a brilliant classmate who might have excelled him
+but for the mishap of a college "riot" in which he took part. In the
+languages and in literature he was unusually proficient, while in
+mathematics,--that most abstract, severe, precise of pursuits,--his
+success was distinguished. In later-life his devotion to philosophy
+marked the man of speculative tastes. His early letters to his father,
+mother, sister, reveal a consciousness of his own peculiarities. Here
+are extracts:
+
+ The course of studies adopted here [Cambridge], in the opinion of
+ competent judges, is singularly calculated to form scholars, and
+ moreover, correct and accurate scholars; to inure the mind to
+ profound thought and habits of investigation and reasoning.
+
+ The prospect of devoting my days to the acquisition and
+ communication of knowledge is bright and cheering. This employment
+ I would not exchange for the most elevated situation of wealth or
+ power. One of the happiest steps, I think, that I have ever taken
+ was the commencement of a course of study, and it is my wish and
+ effort that my future progress may give substantial evidence of it.
+
+ I know that my peculiar habits of mind, imperfect as they are,
+ strongly impel me to the path of active intellectual effort; and if
+ I am to be at any time of any use to society, or a satisfaction to
+ myself or my friends, it will be in the way of some retired
+ literary situation, where a fondness for study and a knowledge of
+ books will be more requisite than the busy, calculating mind of a
+ man in the business part of the community. I do not mean by this
+ that any profession is desired but the one to which I have been
+ long looking. My wish is only to enter that profession with all the
+ enlargement of mind and extent of information which the best
+ institutions can afford.
+
+These quotations are enough to show what was the prevailing impulse of
+the man. An intellectual nature like this, calm, studious, accomplished,
+eager, is subject to few surprises and experiences rarely, if ever,
+marked by crises, cataclysms, eruptions, in passing from one condition
+of thought to another at the opposite extreme of the spiritual universe.
+A process of growth, gradual, easy, motionless, takes the place of
+commotion and violent uproar such as passionate temperaments are exposed
+to. In 1821 he writes to his sister from Harvard College: "We are now
+studying Locke, an author who has done more to form the mind to habits
+of accurate reasoning and sound thought than almost any other." On the
+19th of September, 1836, the first meeting of the Transcendental Club
+was held at his house in Boston. In 1838 he replied to Andrews Norton's
+criticism of Mr. Emerson's Address before the Alumni of the Cambridge
+Divinity School. In 1840 he said to his congregation in Purchase Street:
+
+ There is a faculty in all--the most degraded, the most ignorant,
+ the most obscure--to perceive spiritual truth when distinctly
+ presented; and the ultimate appeal on all moral questions is not to
+ a jury of scholars, a conclave of divines, or the prescriptions of
+ a creed, but to the common-sense of the human race.
+
+But this substitution of the intuitive for the sensational philosophy--a
+change which affected all the processes of his thought and actually
+caused a revolution in his mind--was made silently, quietly, without
+agitation, without triumph, in a sober, conservative manner, very
+different from that of his friend Theodore Parker, who carried the same
+doctrines a good deal further, and advocated them with more heat like
+the burly reformer he was.
+
+In religion, Mr. Ripley's position was the same that it was in
+philosophy. In fact the intellectual side of religion interested him
+more than the spiritual or experimental side. It was mainly a
+speculative matter, where it was not speculative it was practical; in
+each event it concerned the head rather than the heart, as being an
+opinion rather than a feeling. He was instructed in the school of
+orthodoxy, and, as a youth, was strict in his allegiance to the old
+system of belief; but he became a disciple of Dr. Channing, and later a
+rationalist of the order of Theodore Parker, a friend of Emerson, an
+adherent of what was newest in theology. Yet, in this extreme departure
+from the views of his early years, he betrayed no sign of agitation, no
+trace of internal suffering. He wished to go to Yale instead of Harvard,
+because "the temptations incident to a college, we have reason to think,
+are less at Yale than at Cambridge." He preferred Andover to Cambridge,
+being "convinced that the opportunities for close investigation of the
+Scriptures are superior to those at Cambridge, and the spirit of the
+place, much relaxed from its former severe and gloomy bigotry is more
+favorable to a tone of decided piety." Still, he goes to Cambridge, is
+"much disappointed in what he had learned of the religious character of
+the school," and, on more intimate acquaintance is impressed by "the
+depth and purity of their religious feeling and the holy simplicity of
+their lives"; "enough to humble and shame those who had been long
+professors of Christianity, and had pretended to superior sanctity." In
+1824 a bold article in the _Christian Disciple_, a Unitarian journal,
+the precursor of the _Christian Examiner_, excited a good deal of
+comment, not to say apprehension. He writes to his sister about it as
+follows:
+
+ You asked me to say something about the article in the _Disciple_.
+ For myself, I freely confess that I think it a useful thing and
+ correct. The vigor of my orthodoxy, which is commonly pretty
+ susceptible, was not offended. Now, if you have any objections
+ which you can accurately and definitely state, no doubt there is
+ something in it which had escaped my notice. If your dislike is
+ only a misty, uncertain feeling about something, you know not what,
+ it were well to get fairly rid of it by the best means.
+
+The same year he writes to his mother:
+
+ I am no partisan of any sect, but I must rejoice in seeing any
+ progress towards the conviction that Christianity is indeed "_glad
+ tidings of great joy_," and that in its original purity it was a
+ very different thing from the system that is popularly preached,
+ and which is still received as reasonable and scriptural by men and
+ women, who in other respects are sensible and correct in their
+ judgments. When shall we learn that without the spirit of Christ we
+ are none of us His? I trust I am not becoming a partisan or a
+ bigot. I have suffered enough, and too much, in sustaining those
+ characters, in earlier, more inexperienced, and more ignorant
+ years; but I have no prospects of earthly happiness more inviting
+ than that of preaching the truth, with the humble hope of
+ impressing it on the mind with greater force, purity, and effect
+ than I could do with any other than my present conviction.
+
+In 1840 the ministry was abandoned forever, for more secular pursuits.
+After 1849 his activities were wholly literary; he had no connection
+with theology, and none who did not know his past suspected that he had
+once been a clergyman.
+
+The same cast of thought, not "pale" in his case, suffused his action
+at Brook Farm and made a Utopia quiet, calm, dignified, pervaded by the
+radiance of mind, the gentle enthusiasm of the intellect. The heat came
+in the main from other sources. He was receptive rather than original,
+inflammable rather than fiery, brilliant rather than warm. The heat was
+supplied by those near him, by those he trusted, and by those he loved.
+Not that he was deficient in concern for society; far from it; but his
+interest was more philosophical than philanthropic. The subject of an
+association that should combine intellectual and mechanical labor and
+should diminish the distance between the tiller of the ground and the
+educator was agitated among the thinkers he was intimate with. Dr.
+Channing had such a project at heart. Mrs. Ripley burned with humane
+anticipations. Plans for social regeneration were in the air. It was
+impossible for one who lived in the midst of ardent spirits, or was
+sensitive to fine impressions, or was cultivated in an ideal wisdom that
+was not of this world, to escape the contagion of this kind of optimism;
+Emerson was saved by his belief in individual growth; Parker by his
+steady common-sense; others were protected by their conservatism of
+temperament or of association, by their want of courage, or their want
+of faith; but men and women of ideal propensities, like Nathaniel
+Hawthorne, W. H. Channing, J. S. Dwight, joined the community, which
+promised a new era for Humanity. Mr. Ripley would probably have left the
+ministry at any rate, for it had become distasteful to him, but it is
+not likely that he would have undertaken the management of Brook Farm
+unless he had been assured of its success; for he was a New England
+youth by birth and by disposition, prudent, careful, thrifty; his very
+enthusiasm was of the New England type, the product of theological
+ideas, a creation of the gospels, a desire to introduce the "Kingdom of
+Heaven," a continuance of the prophetic calling. New England is as noted
+for its fanaticism as it is for its theology. Its fanaticism is the
+offspring of its theology, and in proportion as its theology disappears
+its fanaticism decreases. In Mr. Ripley's case the theology had reached
+very near to its last attenuation and the fanaticism had tapered off
+into a gentle enthusiasm. He undertook to establish a kingdom of heaven
+on earth because he had given up the expectation of a kingdom of heaven
+in the skies; and he undertook to establish a kingdom of heaven on earth
+by rational, economic means, not by religious interventions. He was
+subject to that peculiar kind of excitement that comes to a few people
+in connection with the keen exercise of their intellectual powers, when
+they have laid hold of what seems to them a principle--an excitement
+that is easily mistaken for moral earnestness even by one who is under
+its influence, which, indeed, lies so close to moral earnestness as to
+feel quickly the effect of moral earnestness in others, notwithstanding
+the checks applied by practical wisdom. Mr. Ripley had struck on a
+theory of society, which at that time was passing from the phase of
+feeling into the phase of philosophy. The theory was in the air; the
+most susceptible spirits were full of it; all noble impulses were in its
+favor, it belonged to the order of thought he had attained; it was
+native to the aspirations that inflamed the men and women with whom he
+was most intimate; their feelings awoke his intellect, and he was
+carried away by a stream whereof he appeared to himself to be a
+tributary and whereof he appeared to others as the main current, on
+account of his impetuosity, and the vigor with which he proceeded to put
+the idea into practice. In his own mind he was realizing the dream of
+the New Testament, but, in fact, he was testing a principle of which the
+New Testament was quite unconscious, the modern principle of the equal
+destinies of all men. He had abandoned the New Testament ground of
+allegiance to Jehovah, and had adopted the human ground of fidelity to
+social law. He was still under the spell of religious emotions, but they
+had become merged in the abstractions of rationalism and merely lent an
+added glow to his ideas, so that he could readily imagine that he was
+actuated by spiritual convictions when, in fact, he was doing duty as a
+disciple of socialist philosophers. His own interest in Brook Farm was
+in the main speculative, though through his personal sympathies he was
+moved toward an enterprise that had moral ends in view.
+
+Once embarked in it, he gave his whole mind to its
+accomplishment,--all his industry, all his organizing talent, all his
+high sense of duty. He worked day and night; he wrote letters; he
+answered inquiries; he mastered the science of agriculture; he did the
+labor of a practical farmer; he maintained the supervision of the
+strange family that gathered about him. Very remarkable was his success
+in keeping the intellectual side uppermost, in keeping clear of the
+temptations to give way to instinctive leanings. His associations were
+with books and study and bright people. He brought the most brilliant
+men and women of the day to the place. He awakened the interest of the
+general community. He diffused an atmosphere of cheerful hope around the
+experiment. It is easy to make sport of Brook Farm; to laugh at the odd
+folks who came there; to ridicule their motives and actions; to repeat
+stories of extravagant conduct; to tell of the eccentric behavior of men
+and maidens who were right-minded but impulsive; to follow
+spontaneousness to its results; to trace the course of unrestricted
+liberty. But it is not fair to remember these things as peculiarities of
+Brook Farm, as incidents of its conception, or as incidents that were
+agreeable to Mr. Ripley. He exerted the whole weight of his character
+against them. He watched and guarded. We do not hear of him in
+connection with the scandals, the laxities, or the frolics. His efforts
+were directed to the supremacy of ideas over instinct, the idea of a
+regenerated society, something very different from joyousness, or
+merriment, or the fun of having a good time. He, too, was gay; he felt
+the delight of freedom; but his gayety was born of happy confidence in
+the principle at stake, his delight was connected with the advent of a
+new method of intercourse among men. I remember hearing him once deliver
+a speech in Boston. In it he spoke of the "foolishness of preaching,"
+and avowed his willingness to be a pioneer in the task of breaking out a
+new future for humanity, a ditcher and delver in the work of
+constructing the new building of God. He had the coming time continually
+in view. Others might enjoy themselves, others might grow tired of
+waiting, but he held smiling on his way, determined to carry out the
+idea to the end. There was something grand in the steady intellectual
+force with which he did his best to carry through a principle that
+commanded more and more the assent of his reason. When the demonstration
+of Charles Fourier was laid before him, no argument was required to
+persuade him to adopt it. He took it up with all his energy; his
+enthusiasm rose to a higher pitch than ever; the rationale of the
+movement was revealed to him, and apparently he saw for the first time
+the full significance of the scheme he had been conducting. The
+impelling power of an intellectual conviction was never more splendidly
+illustrated. Nobody discerned so clearly as he did the financial
+hopelessness of the experiment. Nobody felt the burden of responsibility
+as he felt it. Yet he did not flinch for a moment, and his patient
+assumption of the indebtedness at last had the stamp of real heroism
+upon it. His renewal of the most painful traditions of "Grub Street"
+until the liabilities of Brook Farm were cleared off is one of the noble
+histories, a history that cannot be told in detail because of the
+modesty which has left no record of toil undergone or duty done. The old
+simile of the sun struggling with clouds, and gradually clearing itself
+as the day wears on, best illustrates my view of this man's
+accomplishment. There were the clouds of orthodoxy which were burned
+away at Cambridge. Then came the clouds of Unitarian divinity, which
+were dispelled by the transcendental philosophy. These were succeeded by
+the dark vapors of the ministry, and these by the sentimental
+philanthropy of New England rationalism. At length his intellect broke
+through these obscurations and showed what it truly was.
+
+On the failure of Brook Farm and the final dismissal of all plans for
+creating society anew, Mr. Ripley's faculties emerged in their full
+strength. The New England element was withdrawn. There was no longer
+thought for theology or reform, but solely for knowledge and literature.
+In Boston he had taken on himself every opprobrious epithet. In his
+final letter to his congregation he avows his interest in temperance,
+anti-slavery, peace, the projects for breaking down social distinctions;
+simply, it would seem, because his philosophy, falling in with popular
+sentiment, pointed that way; for he was never publicly identified with
+any of these causes, or ranked by reformers in the order of innovators.
+Indeed, one of the old Abolitionists told me that she had never
+associated him with the anti-slavery people, though her family went to
+his church. In New York there was no pretence of this kind. The devotion
+to literature absorbed his attention. His democratic concern for the
+workingmen continued, but in a theoretical manner, if we may judge from
+the fact that he took no part in domestic or foreign demonstrations,
+that he made no speech, attended no meeting, consorted with no social
+reformers, did not even keep up his intimacy with the original leaders
+of socialism in this country. When the sadness of his first wife's death
+was over, and the drudgery of toil was ended, he was happier than he had
+ever been. No time was wasted; no talent was misused. Mental labor was
+incessant, but in performing it there was pure delight. It is usual to
+think of his early life as his best, and there were some who regarded
+him as an extinct volcano; but I am of the opinion that his latter years
+were his most characteristic, and that he was most entirely himself when
+his intellectual nature came to its full play. In proportion as the
+"olden thoughts, the spirit's pall," fell off, he became peaceful and
+sweet; his view backward and forward became clear, his purpose steady,
+his will serene. The past was distasteful to him and he seldom alluded
+to it; but as one puts his childhood and his age together, a steady
+development is seen to run through both. His could not be a cloudless
+day, but he went on from glory to glory. His age more than justified the
+promise of his youth. In his latter years he befriended aspiring young
+men; he made literature a power in America; he threw a dignity around
+toil; he associated knowledge with happiness, and rendered light and
+love harmonious. His favorite author was Goethe, the apostle of culture.
+His familiarity with Sainte-Beuve, the master of literary criticism, was
+so great, that on occasion of that writer's decease, he sat down and
+wrote an account of him without recourse to books. Though without
+knowledge of art, destitute of taste for music, and deficient in
+aesthetic appreciation, his sympathy was so large and true that these
+deficiencies were not felt. The intellectual sunshine was shed over the
+entire nature, and the book was so universal that it seemed to embrace
+everything.
+
+This is the property of pure mind, rarely seen in such perfection of
+lucidity. Such a mind is at once conservative and radical; conservative
+as treasuring the past, radical as anticipating improvement in the
+future. There is nothing like fanaticism, but a bright look in every
+direction, a place for all sorts of accomplishments, hospitality to each
+new invention, a radiant acceptance of all temperaments. The mind cannot
+be superstitious, for it cannot believe that divine powers are
+identified with material objects or occasional accidents; it cannot be
+ever sanguine as those are who indulge in abstract visions of good, for
+it knows that progress is very slow and gradual, and that the welfare of
+mankind is advanced by the process of civilization, by cultivation,
+acquirement, refinement, the gains of wealth, elegance, and delicacy of
+taste. It judges by rational standards, not by sentimental feelings,
+accepting imperfection as the inevitable condition of human affairs and
+bounded characters. It is not exposed to the convulsions that accompany
+even the most exalted moods, but calmly labors and quietly hopes for the
+future.
+
+I do not say that George Ripley was such a mind, merely that his
+tendency was in that direction. He was limited by traditions; he had too
+many prejudices. The axioms of the transcendental philosophy clung to
+him. The shreds of religion hung about him. He could not divest himself
+of the ancient clerical memories and ways, nor wholly throw off the
+mantle of personal sympathy he had so long worn. He was not completely
+secular.
+
+That he was a perfect man is less evident still. His sunny quality was
+due in some degree to a happy temperament, and was subject to the
+eclipses that darken the blandest natures, and render sombre the most
+hilarious spirits. He lacked the steadfast courage of conviction, was
+somewhat over-prudent and timid, afraid of pain, of popular disapproval,
+of criticism and opposition. This may have been due in part to his
+frequent disappointments and the carefulness they forced upon him, to
+the distrust in his own judgment which he had occasion to learn, and the
+necessity of confining his action to the point immediately before him.
+But I am inclined to think that this apprehensiveness was
+constitutional. If it is suggested by way of objection that the bold
+experiment of Brook Farm, made in the face of obloquy and derision,
+indicated moral courage of a high stamp, I would remind the critic of
+the warm approbation of his friends, and the confident expectation of
+success on the part of those he was intimate with. His wife not merely
+gave him her countenance but stimulated his zeal, and surrounded him
+every day with an atmosphere of faith. He had the applause of Dr.
+Channing, and the support of his brilliant nephew. Men like Hawthorne,
+Ellis Gray Loring, George Stearns, not to mention others, urged him on.
+His own well-beloved sister was one of his ardent coadjutors. He had
+hopes of Emerson. In short, so far from being alone, he stood in an
+influential company, and instead of his being altogether unpopular was
+encompassed by the good-will of those he prized most. It would have
+required courage to resist such influences. Besides, he was inflated by
+a momentary enthusiasm which carried him along in spite of himself and
+would not allow his judgment to work. A sudden storm struck him, lifted
+unusual waves, caused unexampled spurts of foam, made the ordinarily
+quiet water boisterous and dangerous, and threw long lines of breakers
+on the coast, so that what was a still lake became of a sudden a
+tempestuous sea. One must not hastily imagine that the water had become
+an ocean, or that it was really an Atlantic formerly supposed to be a
+pool.
+
+Then it must be said he loved money too well. This infirmity was not
+native to him, but must probably be imputed to early poverty, the
+necessity of working hard in order to pay debts not altogether of his
+own contracting, thus pledging the meagre income of the first sixty
+years of his life. His final income was large, but it was earned by
+incessant literary toil, which naturally rendered him avaricious of the
+rewards that might come to him. His generosity did not have a fair
+chance to show itself outside of his family. There it was lavish, but
+there it was too much mixed up with affection, duty, and pride to be
+credited to his manhood. He did not live long enough, either, to attain
+complete superiority over his accidents. He was already an old man
+before he had money for his wants. I remember meeting him on Broadway in
+1861, the year of his wife's death, and he said: "My grief is embittered
+by the thought that she died just as I was getting able to obtain for
+her what she needed." He was then fifty-nine years of age. It cannot be
+expected that any impulse of generosity will overcome the habits of a
+life-time at so advanced a period as this. That they showed themselves
+at all is remarkable, and establishes as well their power as their
+existence.
+
+In a word, this man was too heavily weighted by circumstances to do his
+genius full justice. He seemed to be two individuals, with little in
+common between them. As one looked at his past or at his present, his
+real character was differently judged. The most plausible account of him
+was that which supposed the experiences to be buried in a deep grave,
+which was seldom uncovered even by the man himself, who lived in the day
+before him, and rarely glanced back save to mourn over or to make sport
+of his former career. The only way of establishing a unity in his
+history is to concede the supremacy of the intellectual quality over the
+moral in his first endeavors. The prejudice in favor of the moral was
+and is so strong that to maintain this supremacy will seem like a
+condemnation of him, though meant in his praise. He probably would so
+have considered it, especially when carried away by the flood of
+memories. It was easy for him to be mistaken. His merit consists in the
+energy of the reason which made headway against a host of disadvantages
+and achieved something resembling a victory in the end. Some time hence,
+when the homage paid to sentiment shall have yielded to the worship of
+knowledge, George Ripley will be regarded as one of the earliest
+apostles of the light.
+
+All these greatly enriched my life in New York, opened new spheres of
+activity, and enlarged my whole horizon, both intellectually and
+socially. Their variety, elasticity, and vigor in many fields of
+intellectual force added much to the extension of my view, and acted,
+not merely as a refreshment, but also as a stimulus.
+
+
+
+
+XV. THE PRESENT SITUATION.
+
+
+The progress of mind is continuous. Strictly speaking, there are no
+periods of transition, no crises in thought. The history of ideas
+presents no gap. Every stage begins and ends an epoch. One is often
+reminded of the common notion that the year begins and ends at a
+particular moment. Every day begins and ends a year; every hour is
+equally sacred. Yet solemn thought, worship, self-examination, are
+precious, and these can be secured only by the observance of times and
+seasons; so that we fall on our knees and pray when the old year ends
+and the new one begins.
+
+So, as a point of time must be fixed upon, we will begin with Thomas
+Paine. It is not easy to speak fully and justly of Paine, because in so
+doing we must speak of the misapprehensions and mis-statements of which
+he has been the victim; and even if we refute these, the bare mention of
+them leaves a stain on his fame. No doubt his method--application of
+common-sense to religion--was essentially vicious. Common-sense is an
+admirable quality in practical affairs, quite indispensable in the
+management of business of all kinds, but it has no place in the
+discussion of works of the higher imagination--of poetry, art, music, or
+faith. But such was the man's genius, such was the demand of his age. It
+is easy to speak of his ignorance, his coarseness, his impudence, his
+vanity; but it must be remembered that his education was very imperfect,
+for he was utterly ignorant of any language but his own, and he did not,
+apparently, read even the English deists; that he was a man of the
+people; that he lived in an age of revolutions; that he stood for the
+rights of common humanity. It must be remembered also that, in the first
+place, he brought the human mind face to face with problems which had
+been appropriated by a special class that considered itself exempt from
+criticism. In the next place he was in dead earnest; not attacking the
+Bible or religion out of flippancy or brutality, but because he really
+hated the interpretations that were usually given of sacred things; his
+attack was against orthodoxy, not against faith. "His blasphemy," says
+Leslie Stephen, "was not against the Supreme God, but against Jehovah.
+He was vindicating the ruler of the universe from the imputations which
+believers in literal inspiration and dogmatical theology had heaped upon
+him under the disguise of homage. He was denying that the God before
+whom reasonable creatures should bow in reverence could be the
+supernatural tyrant of priestly imagination, who was responsible for
+Jewish massacres, who favored a petty clan at the expense of his other
+creatures, who punished the innocent for the guilty, who lighted the
+fires of everlasting torment for the masses of mankind, and who gave a
+monopoly of his favor to priests or a few favored enthusiasts. Paine, in
+short, with all his brutality, had the conscience of his hearers on his
+side, and we must prefer his rough exposure of popular errors to the
+unconscious blasphemy of his supporters." Then Paine _did love his
+kind;_ he abhorred cruelty, and desired, after his fashion, to elevate
+his race.
+
+Examples of this are numerous. At the time when the "Common Sense" and
+"Crisis" were having an enormous sale, the demand for the former
+reaching not less than one hundred thousand copies, and both together
+offering to the author profits that would have made him rich, Paine
+freely gave the copyright to every State in the Union. In his period of
+public favor and of intimate friendship with the founders of the
+government, Paine declined to accept any place or office of emolument,
+saying: "I must be in everything, as I have ever been, a disinterested
+volunteer. My proper sphere of action is on the common floor of
+citizenship, and to honest men I give my hand and heart freely." The
+State of Virginia made a large claim on the general government for
+lands. Thomas Paine opposed the claim as unreasonable and unjust, though
+at that very time there was a resolution before the legislature of
+Virginia to appropriate to him a handsome sum of money for services
+rendered. In 1797, Paine was the chief promoter of the society of
+"Theophilanthropists," whose object was the extinction of religious
+prejudices, the maintenance of morality, and the diffusion of faith in
+one God. "It is want of feeling," says this _heartless blasphemer_, "to
+talk of priests and bells, while infants are perishing in hospitals, and
+the aged and infirm poor are dying in the streets." In 1774, Paine
+published in the _Pennsylvania Journal_, a strong, anti-slavery essay.
+While clerk in the Pennsylvania Legislature he made an appeal in behalf
+of the army, then in extreme distress, and subscribed his entire salary
+for the year to the fund that was raised. Towards the close of his life,
+he devised a plan for imposing a special tax on all deceased persons'
+estates, to create a fund from which all, on reaching twenty-one years,
+should receive a sum to establish them in business, and in order that
+all who were in the decline of life should be saved from destitution. It
+is not generally known that Paine often preached on Sunday afternoons at
+New Rochelle. In England he spoke in early life from Dissenting pulpits,
+and to him we owe this exquisite definition of religion: "It is man
+bringing to his Maker the fruits of his heart." All this is evidence
+that honorable considerations were at the bottom of his own belief. He
+was, according to his view, the friend of man, and in this interest
+wrote his books. He introduced kindness into religion.
+
+He certainly repeated the ideas of Collins and Toland, and the
+conceptions that were floating in the air, breathed by Voltaire and
+Diderot; but he did give them voice. The English deists were dead, and
+would have continued so but for him. He was essentially a pamphleteer,
+the master of a very rich, simple style that went directly to the hearts
+of the people. His best performances were unquestionably political, but
+all his works were marked by the same peculiarities. His mistake was in
+supposing that the power that could animate an army could pull down a
+church.
+
+Paine was no saint, but he was no sinner above all that dwelt in
+Jerusalem. He drank too much; he took too much snuff; he was vulgar; he
+was a vehement man in a vehement age; he went to dinner in his
+dressing-gown; and he certainly did not bring his best convictions to
+bear on his private character; but he did wake up minds that had been
+dumb or oppressed before. The "Age of Reason" went everywhere, into
+holes and corners, among back-woodsmen and pioneers, and did more
+execution among plain moral men than many a book that was more worthy of
+acceptance. It is a pity that his disciples should be content with
+repeating his denials, instead of building on the rational foundations
+which he laid. For instance, they might, while adding to his criticism
+of the Scriptures, have shown their high moral bearing and their
+spiritual glow. They might have carried out further his "enthusiasm for
+humanity," showing that man had more in him than Paine suspected. They
+might have justified by more scientific reasons his belief in God and in
+immortality. They might have been truly rationalists as he wanted to be,
+but could not be at that period. But they were satisfied with saying
+over and over again what he said as well as he could, but not as well as
+they can. He was simply a precursor, but he was a precursor of such men
+as Colenso and Robertson Smith, and a large host of scholars beside.
+
+Paine's best exponent in America is perhaps Robert G. Ingersoll. He is a
+sort of transfigured Paine. He has all Paine's power over the masses,
+being perhaps the most eloquent man in America; more than Paine's wit;
+more than Paine's earnestness; more than Paine's love of humanity; more
+than Paine's scorn of deceit and harshness,--for he extends his
+abhorrence of cruelty even to dumb beasts. He has great power of
+sympathy, a tender feeling for misery of all kinds. He is a poet, as is
+evident from these words:
+
+ We do not know whether the grave is the end of this life or the
+ door of another, or whether the night here is somewhere else a
+ dawn. The idea of Immortality, that like a sea has ebbed and flowed
+ into the human heart with its countless waves beating against the
+ shores and rocks of time and faith, was not born of any book or of
+ any creed or of any religion. It was born of human affection, and
+ it will continue to ebb and flow beneath the mists and clouds of
+ doubt and darkness as long as love kisses the lips of death. It is
+ the rainbow, Hope, shining upon the tears of grief.
+
+Paine's simple childlike belief in God and Immortality, Ingersoll
+remands to the cloudy sphere of agnosticism, as Paine probably would
+now; but it is my opinion that if evidence which he regarded as
+satisfactory--that is, legal evidence--could be given, he, too, would
+accept these articles; for he has none of the elements of the bigot
+about him. His detestation is simply of hell and a priesthood; for pure,
+spiritual religion, he has only respect. Like Paine, he attacks the
+ecclesiasticism and theology of the day, and is satisfied with doing
+that; and, like Paine, he has convictions instead of opinions, and his
+character is all aflame with his ideas.
+
+In his private life, in his family relations, in his public career,
+there is no reproach on his name--nothing that he need be ashamed of.
+
+Mr. Ingersoll does not worship the Infinite under any recognized form or
+name, but that he adores the _substance of deity_ is beyond all doubt;
+he worships truth and purity and sincerity and love,--everything that is
+highest and noblest in human life. One word more I must say,--that his
+motive is essentially religious. It is his aim to lift off the burden of
+superstition and priestcraft; to elevate the soul of manhood and
+womanhood; to promote rational progress in goodness; to emancipate every
+possibility of power in the race; and this is the aim of every pure
+religion,--to open new spheres of hope and accomplishment.
+
+The disintegration of the popular orthodoxy goes on very fast, and
+always under the influence of the moral sentiment. This is very prettily
+put by Miss Jewett, in one of her short stories, entitled "The Town
+Poor." Two ladies, jogging along a country road, fall to talking about
+an old meeting-house which is being _improved_ after the modern fashion.
+One of them laments the loss of the ancient pews and pulpit, and the
+substitution of a modern platform and slips. The other says:
+
+ When I think of them old sermons that used to be preached in that
+ old meeting-house, I am glad it is altered over so as not to remind
+ folks. Them old brimstone discourses! you know preachers is far
+ more reasonable now-a-days. Why, I sat an' thought last Sabbath as
+ I listened, that if old Mr. Longbrother and Deacon Bray could hear
+ the difference, they'd crack the ground over 'em like pole beans,
+ and come right up 'long side their headstones.
+
+In Chicago, some years ago, orthodox preachers begged a pronounced
+radical to stay and help them fight the matter out on the inside; and a
+minister of one of the principal churches there distinctly said that he
+did not believe in the infallibility of the Bible or an everlasting
+punishment. A Congregational minister in Connecticut expressed himself
+as thoroughly in sympathy with the advanced party in theology. An
+orthodox clergyman in New England declared that he did not know of an
+orthodox minister in the whole range of his acquaintance who believed in
+the old doctrine. A minister in Rhode Island, who occupied a high
+position in the orthodox church, while declining to make an open
+statement on account of social and political reasons, avowed his
+willingness to write a private letter disclaiming all belief in the
+accepted views. The Rev. Howard MacQueary, the Episcopal rector of
+Canton, Ohio, who has recently published a book, entitled the "Evolution
+of Man and Christianity," has been convicted of heresy against his own
+protest and the popular sentiment. The successor of Henry Ward Beecher,
+in Brooklyn, N. Y., recently published the essentials of his creed.
+There is no fall in it, no trinity, no miracle in the old sense, no
+eternal punishment. He declares, frankly, that there is no difference
+_in kind_ between man, Jesus, and God, but only a difference _in
+degree_. The same man recently preached in King's Chapel, and lectured
+in Channing Hall. The Andover controversy distinctly reveals the decay
+of the ancient theology. In England dissent has gone very far, as is
+evident from a book called "The Kernel and the Husk," written by the
+Rev. Dr. E. A. Abbott, the author of the article on "The Gospels," in
+the last edition of the "Encyclopaedia Britannica." In this article the
+fall is repudiated, the trinity, miracles, the virgin birth, the
+physical resurrection of Jesus, and eternal punishment; yet even his
+bishop has not rebuked him. Yes, the moral sentiment is certainly coming
+to its rights.
+
+Of Unitarianism, after what has been said, it is unnecessary to speak.
+That there should be a difference between the East and the West is
+natural. The East holds fast, in large sense, to the ancient theological
+traditions. The West never had them, and can therefore declare that its
+fellowship is conditioned on no doctrinal tests, and can welcome all who
+wish to establish truth and righteousness and love in the world. The
+West will ultimately prevail; the temper of the East is rapidly wasting
+away, and the breach will soon be closed up. The new Unitarian churches
+will be founded on a practical basis, the only requirement being that
+the minister should be deeply in earnest about religious things. The
+characteristic of all churches, of whatever name, is an urgent interest
+in social reform, a deep concern for the disfranchised and oppressed,
+and a warm feeling towards the elevation of mankind. The universal
+prayer is, to borrow the pithy language of Dr. F. H. Hedge: "May Thy
+kingdom come on earth!" not "May we come into Thy kingdom."
+
+If it was hard to do full justice to Thomas Paine, it is harder to do
+full justice to the Broad Churchman. There is no authoritative account
+of his position to which appeal can be made, and the great variety of
+opinion on incidental points makes it difficult to frame any description
+which the leaders would accept. A great deal depends on the change of
+circumstances, the ruling spirit of the time, the prevailing tendencies
+of thought in the period,--whether scientific, critical, or social,--and
+a great deal depends, too, on the peculiarities of individual
+temperament, but the fundamental doctrines are the same. The ordinary
+observer can see the largeness, sympathy, inclusiveness, devotion to
+actual needs. But the ordinary observer cannot see the real basis of
+faith in human nature; the manifestation of the Divine Being in the
+highest possibilities of man; the trust in a living, active,
+communicating God.
+
+These are cardinal points, and must be insisted on. The inherent
+depravity of man; his essential corruption; his absolute inability to
+receive any portion of the divine life, is naturally repudiated. But his
+feebleness, crudeness, imperfection, his dearth and deficiency, his
+sensuality, hardness, love of material things, is insisted on, and
+cannot be exaggerated. Still there is a germ of the divine nature in
+him, a spark of the divine flame which can be kindled. The familiar
+language of Longfellow expresses this idea exactly:
+
+ "Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple,
+ Who have faith in God and Nature,
+ Who believe that in all ages
+ Every human heart is human,
+ That in even savage bosoms
+ There are longings, yearnings, strivings
+ For the good they comprehend not,
+ That the feeble hands and helpless,
+ Groping blindly in the darkness,
+ Touch God's right hand in that darkness
+ And are lifted up and strengthened:--
+ Listen to this simple story."
+
+To this nature, thus receptive, God addresses Himself. He is the
+Father, the absolute Love, and his desire is to lead men upward towards
+the height of divine perfection. In all ages, in every way, he has been
+trying to do this; and all nature, all art, all literature is full of
+this affection for his child. Even the Pagan myths express this striving
+of God with man. The existence of what we call evil is assumed, but
+there is no attempt to explain it or theorize about it or reconcile it
+with any mode of philosophy. To us it may be simply the divine effort to
+startle the soul into a consciousness of itself. Even the worst forms of
+doubt, of denial, of atheism may be parts of this divine effort; even
+men like Strauss and Feuerbach may be witnesses for truth, because they
+drive men back in horror from the pit of disbelief, and compel them to
+take refuge through tears and prayers in the supreme love. Of absolute
+evil we cannot be sure that there is any; so many ways must the infinite
+spirit have to awaken men to a sense of their own destiny.
+
+I cannot better convey my thought than by recounting the essence of two
+sermons that I heard some years ago from eminent preachers in different
+American cities; the first was on the death of Charles Darwin. After a
+very ornate service, the minister dwelt enthusiastically on the merits
+of Darwin as a philosopher, described his system, and declared that his
+own belief in the Deity of Christ, was confirmed in large measure by
+Darwin's theory of the Selection of the Fittest. The statement was
+startling at first, for the two doctrines seemed to point in opposite
+directions, but the speaker probably meant that the Christ expressed all
+the potentialities of human nature; that he was the Fittest; not a
+miracle, not an exception to humanity, but the perfection of man; in
+other words, a divine person. The other sermon turned on the murder of
+Sisera (Judges iv, 18), as contrasted with a statement in the first
+epistle of John (iv, 8), "God is love." The rector spoke of the
+assassination of Sisera in terms of extreme abhorrence; called it
+treacherous, cruel, base, and then said: "See what progress the human
+mind has made from this period to that when John was written." The
+common impression is that the _human_ mind had nothing to do with it, it
+being the _divine_ mind that was alone in question. But what the
+preacher meant was evidently this,--either that the divine mind dropped
+thoughts into the human mind as fast as they could be appreciated, or
+that the human mind, imperfect in development, apprehended all that it
+could of the perfect mind. Whichever case we assume, the integrity of
+the divine mind is secured, and at the same time the growth of the
+human.
+
+At this point, the conception of the Broad Churchman's idea of the
+inspiration of the Scripture must be dwelt upon, for the doctrine is
+very remarkable, and throws a flood of light upon his whole conception
+of the aim and purpose of Christianity. According to the common notion,
+the Bible is literally the word of God, and men have nothing to do but
+to submit themselves to its authority. They must suppress all natural
+desires, all dictates of their moral sense, to this supreme standard of
+truth and rectitude. According to this notion, the whole of man, as a
+thoroughly corrupted being, is _subject_, in obedience to this law. The
+second theory, adopted by the American Broad Churchman, holds that the
+Bible _contains_ the word of God; and this implies that there may be a
+part of the Bible that is not the word of God, and opens the way to an
+indefinite amount of criticism, speculation, and doubt. The English
+Broad Churchman holds, as I understand it, the common doctrine, but with
+this immense difference. That whereas, according to the common notion,
+the Bible is the word of God, he maintains that the whole object of the
+Bible is to educate and uplift man. The word is a minister to human
+needs. Through it, God is trying in various ways, by history, biography,
+tale, and song, to warn, persuade, teach, inspire the human soul.
+Sometimes he can do nothing but startle, shame, provoke; and the very
+things we find fault with may be designed for moral education. The
+Bible, itself, encourages this idea. Does not Paul preach
+reconciliation? Does not John speak of God as love? God hardened the
+heart of Pharaoh in order that he might show that He was stronger than
+Pharaoh. Jacob was not altogether a lovely character, but the Lord
+wrestled with him and lamed him, thus showing his own disapproval of the
+patriarch's temper. David was a seducer, adulterer, and murderer, but he
+_repented_, was ashamed, was sorrowful, and this repentance made him a
+man after God's own heart. It was not that God _approved_ of his
+conduct, but that he wanted to make us _disapprove_ of it. In like
+manner Luther based his faith on the Bible, because it convicted him of
+sin, and drove him to seek refuge for himself in Christ. The Church as
+an organization has always this one purpose in view--to minister to the
+soul of man. The "Articles" fairly throbbed with this conception. The
+outrage committed by the "Evangelicals," men who insist upon everlasting
+punishment and talk of doom, consists in their overlooking this divine
+purpose towards humanity.
+
+The _doctrines_ of the Church--the Deity of Christ, the Incarnation, the
+Resurrection, the Ascension--bear this testimony, and are inexplicable
+without it. But these doctrines simply convey one thought. The Christ
+must be God, otherwise he could not exemplify the perfect love; he must
+be Incarnate, otherwise he could not mingle with men. His Resurrection
+teaches his absolute triumph over death; his Ascension is a pledge of
+his union with God and his perpetual intercourse with God's children.
+
+The two _rites_, Baptism and Communion, give the same idea. Baptism
+imports a recognition of the duty to lead a Christian life; and
+Communion imports a wish, on the part of all who partake of it, to enter
+into the privilege of a perfect harmony with Christ. None of these
+points are reached by criticism, or any array of texts, though passages
+may be cited in confirmation of them. But the proof is derived from
+experience, from the felt need of enlightenment and inspiration, from
+prayer and the yearning after eternal life. No doubt it is taken for
+granted that neither the Bible nor the Church expresses the _whole_ word
+of God. The word is as large as the divine love, and this is infinite.
+The complete word of God includes all nature, all history, and all life.
+
+It will be understood that the Broad Church notion is only a theory and
+rests entirely on its reasonableness. It is simply a modification of
+Episcopalianism, and none but an Episcopalian would be likely to adopt
+it. Its interest for us consists in its _human_ character, in its
+earnestness for social reform, in its passionate desire to make
+conscience and justice and freedom of the Spirit supreme in all human
+affairs. It is essentially an ethical system with an ecclesiastical
+addition and a heavenly purpose.
+
+There is certainly a great difference between the Broad Church in
+America and the Broad Church in England; there are no Thirty-Nine
+Articles in this country; there is no National Church. The Broad
+Churchman here is still a Churchman, but the system is much more elastic
+and much more intellectual. The Church is to him also a divine
+institution, but not a final establishment; and it becomes divine by
+virtue of its helpfulness in imparting the divine life and its power of
+human service. The sacraments have become symbols, venerable from their
+antiquity, but more venerable from their use. The Broad Churchman is an
+orthodox believer, but he accepts only the simplest creeds, and he
+interprets them in accordance with the rational principles of thought,
+and with his fundamental conception of Christianity, holding not to the
+written letter, but to the real meaning of the Confession. This meaning
+is, he maintains, easily reconcilable with the idea that all revelation
+is made to a living mind,--whether that of a race or an individual,--and
+that the Bible is merely the record of it. No _book_, in his estimation,
+can be inspired. This, coupled with a belief in the unlimited progress
+of the natural conscience, brings the system within the category of
+modern arrangements.
+
+The idea that man is _developed_ into the divine life, not _converted_
+to it, seems to be the heart of the system. The writings of F. D.
+Maurice are full of it. He said that he did not know what the Broad
+Church was, and disclaimed any position in it; yet he is its reputed
+father, and certainly held its cardinal doctrine. This was the soul of
+his teaching; this dictated his likes and his dislikes; this animated
+his dissent from the Evangelicals on the one hand and the Rationalists
+on the other; this made him cling to the "Articles"; this made him love
+the Church. I cannot better convey my notion of the Broad Churchman's
+credence than by quoting some passages from Maurice:
+
+ I think that the _ground-work of this thought_ and this humanity
+ _is laid bare_ in the Thirty-nine Articles; _that for that
+ ground-work_ [namely, the living God, the living Word] all our
+ different schools are trying to produce feeble and crumbling
+ substitutes; that we must recur to it if we would pass the narrow
+ dimensions of Calvinism, Anglicanism, Romanism; if we would learn
+ what a message we have for Jews, Mahometans, Brahmins, Buddhists,
+ for all the nations of the earth, as well as our poor people at
+ home.
+
+ I cannot doubt that this belief [the confession of a God, who was,
+ and is, and is to come] is latent in every man now; that we are all
+ living, moving, having our being in this God, and that He does
+ reveal Himself to His creatures gradually, before He is revealed in
+ His fulness of glory.
+
+ I do perceive that if I have any work in the world, it is to bear
+ witness of this name [the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
+ Ghost], not as expressing certain relations, however profound, in
+ the divine nature, but as the underground of all fellowship among
+ men and angels, as that which will at last bind all into one,
+ satisfying all the craving of the reason as well as of the heart,
+ meeting the desires and intuitions that are scattered through all
+ the religions of the world.
+
+ The Church must either fulfil its witness of the redemption for
+ mankind or be cut off. And I cannot help thinking that a time is at
+ hand when we shall awaken to this conviction, and when we shall
+ perceive that what we call our individual salvation means nothing,
+ and that our faith in it becomes untenable when we separate it from
+ the salvation which Christ wrought out for the world by His
+ incarnation and sacrifice, resurrection and ascension.
+
+ He has been pleased to reveal to me in His Son the brightness of
+ His glory, His absolute love. On that point I have a right to be
+ certain; he who says I have not, rejects the Bible and disbelieves
+ the incarnation of the Lord. I will not give up an inch of this
+ ground; it is a matter of life and death.
+
+ By baptism we claim the position which Christ has claimed for all
+ mankind.... More and more I am led to ask myself what a Gospel to
+ mankind must be, whether it must not have some other ground than
+ the fall of Adam and the sinful nature of man.... No doctrine can
+ be so at variance as this, with the notion that it is a Gospel
+ which men have need of, and in their inmost hearts are craving for.
+
+Why is not this system sufficient? Simply because the claim that Christ
+is God, does not seem made out to severely critical minds. Such as these
+must hold even the Broad Church to be a mythology, beautiful and
+innocent, but still a mythology. The word "mythology" implies no
+disparagement. A mythology is simply the poetical form of an idea, and
+takes its character from the nature of the ideas it represents. The
+pagan mythology is on this account very different from the Christian,
+and a mythology that has universal love as its basis may well be called
+innocent and beautiful. To the doctrine of trinity, philosophically
+considered, even Unitarian scholars make no objection. What they cannot
+accept is the deity of Jesus as an historical person. The Christ is not,
+in their opinion, an historical person, but a doctrine, not identical
+with the man of the New Testament. The Divine Being has never, in their
+estimation, appeared on earth. They only who can put aside criticism,
+can suppress it, can regard it but as one of many manifestations of
+mind, can fix their eyes on a church for society at large and not for
+individuals, will be likely to accept it, and they will on the ground
+that it is altogether human, a church for mankind.
+
+The last phase in the development of the moral sentiment is represented
+by the "Ethical Societies." It is natural that the origin of these
+should be Jewish, for the Jews are unencumbered by the mysteries of the
+Christian theology; their genius is for social organization, and the
+moral element is very large in their religion. It is natural, too, that
+the system should be purer here than in England. Some of the members of
+the "Cambridge Ethical Society" are members of the Church of England,
+and have to be warned not to set themselves needlessly in opposition to
+the work of the Christian churches. The "Edinburgh Ethical Club" is
+mainly a debating society. In America it is usual to have a lecturer,
+and stated services on Sunday. But these services are very simple, nay,
+even bare; there is no prayer, and no scripture, no architecture or art
+or poetry; but there is an intense earnestness, nay, enthusiasm, for
+social reform. There are kindergartens for the poor children of the
+streets, there are classes for the untaught, libraries for the
+workingmen, plans for better lodging and employment for the families of
+artisans. There is no fixed doctrine in regard to the origin of the
+moral sentiments, lest any should be alienated; the object being to
+combine all who have at heart the moral interests of mankind. The
+peculiarity of these societies is not so much that they lay emphasis on
+the moral as distinct from the spiritual interests, or aim to break down
+the dividing line between Religion and Ethics, as it is that they rest
+upon conscience as the supreme authority, that they assume its practical
+function, build upon it as the one and only thing absolutely known.
+There is no pretence of following, even at a distance, the charities of
+the old churches with their vast funds, their immense organizations,
+their heaps of tracts, their legions of missionaries, all employed in
+calling unbelievers into the fold. The object is to elevate all mankind
+by appealing to their moral instincts, on the ground of their inherent
+ability to rise in the scale of being.
+
+To make their position clear let me quote the words of the founder of
+these societies, contained in an article entitled "The Freedom of
+Ethical Fellowship," in the first number of the _International Journal
+of Ethics_:
+
+ It is the aim of the Ethical Societies to extend the area of moral
+ co-operation so as to include a part, at least, of the inner moral
+ life; to unite men of divers opinions and beliefs in the common
+ endeavor to explore the field of duty; to gain clearer perceptions
+ of right and wrong; to study with thoroughgoing zeal the practical
+ problems of social, political, and individual ethics, and to embody
+ the new insight in manners and institutions....
+
+ It would be a wrong and a hindrance to the further extension of
+ truth to raise above our opinions the superstructure of a social
+ institution. For institutions in their nature are conservative;
+ they dare not, without imperilling their stability, permit a too
+ frequent inspection or alteration of their foundations.... The
+ subject part of mankind, in most places, might, with Egyptian
+ bondage expect Egyptian darkness, were not the candle of the Lord
+ set up by himself in men's minds, which it is impossible for the
+ breath or power of man wholly to extinguish. It is to this "candle
+ of the Lord set up in men's minds" that we look for illumination.
+ It is in the light which it sheds that we would read the problems
+ of conduct and teach others to read them. We appeal directly to the
+ conscience of the present age, and of the civilized portion of
+ mankind. There remains as a residue a common deposit of moral
+ truth, a common stock of moral judgments, which we may call the
+ common conscience. It is upon this common conscience that we
+ build.... The contents of the common conscience we would clarify
+ and classify, to the end that they may become the conscious
+ possession of all classes; and in order to enrich and enlarge the
+ conscience, the method we would follow is to begin with cases in
+ which the moral judgment is already clear, the moral rule already
+ accepted; and to show that the same rule, the same judgment,
+ applies to other cases, which, because of their greater complexity,
+ are less transparent to the mental eye....
+
+ And here it may be appropriate to introduce a few reflections on
+ the relations of moral practice to ethical theory in religious
+ belief. To many it will appear that the logic of our position must
+ lead us to underestimate the value of philosophical and religious
+ doctrines in connection with morality, and that, having excluded
+ this from our basis of fellowship, we shall inevitably drift into a
+ crude empiricism. I may be permitted to say that precisely the
+ opposite is at least our aim, and that among the objects we propose
+ to ourselves, none are dearer than the advancement of ethical
+ theory and the upbuilding of religious conviction. The Ethical
+ Society is a society of persons who are bent on being taught
+ clearer perceptions of right and wrong, and being shown how to
+ improve conduct. At least, let us hasten to add, the ideal of the
+ society is that of a body of men who shall have this bent. Is it
+ vain to hope that there will in time arise those who will render
+ them the service they require....
+
+ It is safe to say that every step forward in religion was due to a
+ quickening of the moral impulses; that moral progress is the
+ condition of religious progress; that the good life is the soil out
+ of which the religious life grows. The truths of religion are
+ chiefly two,--that there is a reality other than that of the
+ senses, and that the ultimate reality in things is, in a sense
+ transcending our comprehension, akin to the moral nature of men.
+ But how shall we acquaint ourselves with this super-sensible? The
+ ladder of science does not reach so far. And the utmost stretch of
+ the speculative reason cannot attain to more than the abstract
+ postulate of an infinite, which, however, is void of the essential
+ attributes of divinity. Only the testimony of the moral life can
+ support a vital conviction of this sort....
+
+ The Ethical Society is friendly to genuine religion anywhere and
+ everywhere, because it vitalizes religious doctrines by pouring
+ into them the contents of spiritual meaning.... A new moral
+ earnestness must precede the rise of larger religious ideals; for
+ the new religious synthesis which many long for, will not be a
+ fabrication, but a growth. It will not steal upon us as a thief in
+ the night, or burst upon us as lightning from the sky, but will
+ come in time as a result of the gradual, moral evolution of modern
+ society, as the expression of higher moral aspirations, and a
+ response to deeper moral needs.
+
+In his famous essay on "Worship," Emerson says:
+
+ There will be a new church founded on moral science, at first cold
+ and naked, a babe in a manger again, the algebra and mathematics of
+ ethical law, the church of men to come, without shawm or psaltery
+ or sackbut; but it will have heaven and earth for its beams and
+ rafters; science for symbol and illustration; it will fast enough
+ gather beauty, music, picture, poetry.
+
+Is this the church that Emerson predicted? It looks like it. Already we
+seem to hear the shawms and sackbuts. Already there are desires after a
+more rich and melodious administration.
+
+The last number of the _International Journal of Ethics_ contains two
+articles: one on "The Inner Life in Relation to Morality," the other on
+"The Ethics of Doubt," which suggest a transcendental ground for moral
+beliefs; and they who dissent from this position surround _action_ with
+an ideal solemnity. At all events it is something to see, even at a
+distance, a city that hath foundations.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. THE RELIGIOUS FUTURE OF AMERICA.
+
+
+In the _Revue des Deux Mondes_ of October 15, 1860, M. Renan wrote a
+remarkable article on the "Future of Religion in Modern Society." This
+paper of course dealt largely with questions that were interesting at
+that time, but it also contains very acute observations on the whole
+subject, which are of universal concern. His conclusions are that
+neither Judaism nor Romanism nor the established forms of Protestantism
+will constitute the coming faith, which must be spiritual (that is, free
+of space and time), undogmatical, and enfranchised. "The religious
+question," he says, "finds its solution in liberty.... The liberal
+principle pre-eminently is that man has a soul, that he is to be reached
+only through the soul, that nothing is of value save as it effects a
+change in the soul. An inflexible justice, granting with inexorable
+firmness liberty to all, even to those who, were they masters, would
+refuse it to their adversaries, is the only issue that reason discovers
+for the grave problems raised in our time." This essay, along with that
+of Emile de Laveleye of Liege in Belgium, on the "Religious Future of
+Civilized Communities," written in 1876, sums up the whole question. It
+only remains to apply their principles to America.
+
+Many dread the prevalence of Roman Catholicism. I confess I never could
+share in that apprehension. For if there is anything certain it is the
+unchangeableness of the lines of division that separate the three great
+regions of the earth, each having its own faith. There is the Greek
+Church, which rules in Asia; the Latin Church, which is confined to the
+Latin races, and is strongest in Southern Italy, where the people are
+most ignorant and supine; and the Protestant Church, which prevails in
+Northern Europe among the Germanic nations. As Renan says:
+
+ Nothing will come of the mutual struggle of the three Christian
+ families; their equilibrium is as well assured as that of the three
+ great races which share between them the world; their separation
+ will secure the future against the excessive predominance of a
+ single religious power, just as the division of Europe must forever
+ prevent the return of that _orbis romanus_, that closed circle,
+ which allowed no possible escape from the tyranny that unity has
+ engendered.
+
+Moreover, the Roman Catholic faith is essentially _Italian_, and as
+such can have no permanent influence in Germany, England, or America.
+The great popes of the Middle Ages, whose genius raised the papacy to
+power and splendor, were Italians. Italy, until a few years ago, was
+isolated; not a great political power, as it is now, among other powers
+of Europe, nor drawn by political affiliations into the schemes of other
+dominions. Besides, the Catholic Church had the advantages of the
+Italian genius for organization, command, wisdom in practical affairs.
+Then, too, it had the immense benefit of the old Roman treasures of art,
+which gave a glory to the system. These considerations alone would make
+it impossible that Romanism, in its foreign form, should ever become the
+religion of the United States. There may be another kind of
+ecclesiasticism, but without the ancient authority; an ecclesiasticism
+which stands for pomp, ornament, display, beauty, but not for anything
+more. There is evidence that every form of religion here is disposed to
+take on elements of decoration,--architecture, music, stained glass,
+drapery, pictures, and monuments; but this is only a sign of increasing
+wealth, not of increasing subjection.
+
+In addition to all this, the _genius_ of the American people is
+strongly against anything like submission to authority. The love of
+liberty is exceedingly powerful. It is claimed that Romanism is not
+committed to any form of government, that it is as favorable to
+republican institutions as to monarchical; but this is not the opinion
+of Renan, who was born and trained in the church, and who is therefore
+entitled to speak with knowledge; nor is it the opinion of other
+scholars, Martineau for instance, who says in his article on the "Battle
+of the Churches" (_Westminster Review_, January, 1851):
+
+ We are convinced it cannot occupy the scope which English
+ traditions and English usage have secured; that every step it may
+ make is an encroachment upon wholesome liberty; that it is innocent
+ only where it is insignificant, and where it is ascendant will
+ neither part with power nor use it well, and that it must needs
+ raise to the highest pitch the common vice of tyranny and
+ democracy,--the relentless crushing of minorities.
+
+But whether this charge of absolutism be just or not, Romanism has been
+so long associated as a polity with monarchical governments that it has
+contracted a habit of domineering, and the people can never be persuaded
+that the papacy is democratic in its constitution.
+
+Americans are very suspicious, too, of any interference on the part of
+the government. If a system demands an army, a palace, lands, it must
+pay for them out of its own private means. A generation or more ago it
+was possible for an administration to give for a merely nominal sum, in
+the very heart of a large city, great estates to one denomination. This
+is possible no longer. Every sect must vindicate itself, and stand on
+its own feet; this alone would make it impossible for a church so poor
+as the Catholic to establish itself in this country on any terms of
+supremacy.
+
+The desire for change which is inherent in the American mind must also
+prove fatal in the end to any claim of absolute stability. Protestantism
+is therefore better for Americans than Romanism is, because it is more
+portable, more various, more accommodating to popular tastes and
+inclinations.
+
+There is no disposition to undervalue the work of the Catholic Church.
+Its great saints, its heroic martyrs, its stupendous missions, its
+enormous philanthropy, its influence in educating and controlling masses
+of people, cannot be exaggerated; and still it is destined to wield an
+immense influence as a spiritual power over the human race; but it never
+again can be the absolute system it once was. However it may commend
+itself to certain classes in our population, it must always be simply
+one department in the universal church.
+
+But it will be said that the Catholic Church may _accommodate_ itself to
+republican institutions. M. Renan doubts whether any radical change can
+be made. He says:
+
+ Catholicism, persuaded that it works for the truth, will always
+ endeavor to enlist the state in its defence or its spread....
+ Catholicism is, in fact, the believer's country, far more than is
+ the land of his birth. The stronger a religion is, the more
+ effective it is in this way.... More and more have Catholics been
+ brought to think that they derive life and salvation from Rome. It
+ is especially worth remarking that the new Catholic conquests
+ exhibit the most sensitiveness on this point. The old provincial
+ Catholic, whose faith belonged to the soil, has less need of the
+ Pope, and is much less alarmed at the storms that menace him, than
+ the new Catholics, who are coming fresh to Catholicism, and regard
+ the Pope, after the new system, as the author and defender of their
+ faith.... Catholicism has been seduced into becoming a religion
+ essentially political. The Pope becomes the actual sovereign of the
+ church.
+
+But supposing that such an alteration is possible, that the church can
+abase its pretensions to supremacy over all other sects, that Romanism
+simply melts into our society,--in this case, the papacy, as usually
+understood, becomes simply a form of church government like
+Presbyterianism or Congregationalism or Episcopacy; Catholicism becomes
+a purely spiritual faith, and, as such, is not only harmless but
+beneficent.
+
+The religion, therefore, of America cannot be ecclesiastical; neither
+can it be dogmatic. I was on the point of saying _theological_; but
+there is a great difference between theological and dogmatical.
+Dogmatism is theology raised to power. Theology there always must be;
+some account of the Supreme Power in the world; some report of the
+contents of the Divine Mind. The present indifference to theology is
+hardly a good sign, unless it be an indifference to theology as usually
+regarded--that is, to the old systems of theology. The future religion,
+for this reason, cannot be Protestantism. For Protestantism is
+essentially dogmatical. It claims superiority to Romanism on the one
+hand and to infidelity on the other. Furthermore, it is identified with
+the Bible. Now, modern scientific criticism has so riddled the Bible,
+that it no longer can serve as a foundation. And this foundation being
+taken away, Protestantism must lose its corner-stone, and rest entirely
+on a rational basis. Likewise, Protestantism encourages sectarianism. It
+exists, in fact, only in numerous parties, each jealous of the rest and
+seeking to build up its own establishment without regard to the
+well-being of opposing bodies. There is a dream of unity amid all this
+diversity. But such unity can be gained only by the sacrifice of the
+very peculiarity of division, and the admission of certain things which
+all have in common; and such a reconciliation, besides the tyranny it
+engenders, cannot be desired, as it would be fatal to all activity.
+Sectarianism itself, apart from the "hatred, malice, and
+uncharitableness" which accompany it, may not of necessity be an evil;
+but sectarianism as it exists now is an evil of very great moment, and
+yet, without something of this alienation between sects Protestantism
+would decline.
+
+Is Unitarianism then to be the coming religion? I cannot think so.
+Unitarianism is but a form of Protestantism; the most attenuated form.
+It is committed to the Bible; held to it indeed by a very fine thread,
+but still held to it. No doubt it has gained greatly in the last years.
+The annual circulation of its tracts has risen in twenty-five or thirty
+years from fifteen thousand to three hundred thousand copies. A quarter
+of a century ago there was but one Unitarian church on the Pacific
+coast, now there are eighteen. A generation since it had, in the whole
+region from the Alleghanies to the Rocky Mountains, only fourteen
+churches, now there are ninety; and in the same period, sixty-three new
+societies have come into being in the New England and Middle States.
+Still, as compared with the great sects, it is very small, and never can
+be their rival. And this because, however interesting and precious it
+may be to some people, it lacks, and must ever lack, owing to its
+critical character, the elements of a great religion, the passionateness
+that charms the people, and the moral enthusiasm that catches up the few
+men of genius. The period of "pale negations" is past; but in proportion
+as the system becomes positive it tends more and more towards the
+principle that animates the ethical societies, namely, its supreme
+devotion to the moral law. Thus it stands at the beginning, not at the
+end, of the line of advance, and has all the work of building up to do,
+before it can grow in general influence.
+
+No, the religion of the future in America must be of the spirit; not
+merely as being independent of form and dogma, but as cherishing a great
+hope for the soul, and a great aspiration after perfection. No doubt
+every spirit must have a form of some kind, but it need not be a fixed,
+established, dominant imposition. M. Renan touched the matter exactly
+when commenting on the interview of Jesus with the woman of Samaria:
+"Woman, the hour is coming and now is, when men shall worship neither on
+this mountain nor at Jerusalem, but when the true worshippers shall
+worship the Father in spirit and in truth." Renan says:
+
+ When the Christ pronounced this word, he became really a Son of
+ God, and for the first time spoke the word upon which eternal
+ religion shall repose. He founded the worship without date, without
+ country, which shall endure to the end of time. He created a heaven
+ of pure souls, where one finds what one asks in vain for on the
+ earth, the perfect nobleness of the children of God, absolute
+ purity, total abstraction from the impurities of the world, the
+ liberty which has its complete amplitude only in the world of
+ thought.... The love of God conceived as the type of all
+ perfection, the love of man, charity, his whole doctrine is reduced
+ to this; nothing can be less theological, less sacerdotal, nothing
+ more philosophical, more profound, or more simple.
+
+The coming religion must also be humane and social. Intellectual it must
+certainly be, but it must, too, be emotional and adoring. There are
+three implications in it--a spiritual nature in man, a living power in
+the universe, an eternal life of progress and attainment, and these are
+assured only by reason.
+
+The coming religion, we may add, must be Christian in name, because
+Christianity as an ideal faith has worked itself into our common life.
+It is the soul of our laws, of our customs, of our institutions. All
+assume its authority; all respect its sanction. The great thinkers of
+the world conspire in thinking so. Thus Goethe says:
+
+ Let intellectual culture progress; let natural science extend our
+ knowledge; let the human mind grow; it will never outstrip the
+ grandeur of Christianity, nor its moral culture.
+
+Strauss, in his essay on "The Transient and Permanent in Christianity,"
+declares that humanity never will be without religion; and Laveleye
+says:
+
+ It is Christianity which has shed abroad in the world the idea of
+ fellowship, from which issue the aspirations after equality which
+ threaten the actual social order; it is also the influence of
+ Christianity which arrests the explosion of this subversive force,
+ and its principles, better comprised and better applied, will bring
+ back by degrees peace in society.
+
+Ours is a scientific age. There is a general demand for knowledge, a
+desire for demonstrated truth. Many will believe nothing that they
+cannot see with their eyes. In this sense, and in this sense alone, it
+is true that facts count for nothing in the domain of religion. But
+there are facts of the inner world that are quite as important as any
+facts in the outer world,--facts of the imagination; facts of love;
+facts of faith. Nothing is truer than that we are saved by hope. Science
+has enlarged the world; has beautified it; has made it look orderly,
+harmonious, poetic; but the realm of the known is very small indeed as
+compared with the realm of the unknown, and the more we discover, the
+more we find that there is to discover. The realm of the inner world is
+immensely large; and thousands of years must elapse before we discover
+its contents, if we ever do. The language of James Martineau is as true
+to-day as it was when the words were spoken, more than fifty years ago:
+
+ Until we touch upon the mysterious, we are not in contact with
+ religion; nor are any objects reverently regarded by us, except
+ such as, from their nature or their vastness, are felt to transcend
+ our comprehension.... The station which the soul occupies when its
+ devout affections are awakened, is always this; on the twilight
+ between immeasurable darkness and refreshing light; on the confines
+ between the seen and the unseen; where a little is discerned and an
+ infinitude concealed; where a few distinct conceptions stand in
+ confessed inadequacy, as symbols of ineffable realities.... And if
+ this be true, the sense of what we do not know is as essential to
+ our religion as the impression of what we do know: the thought of
+ the boundless, the incomprehensible, must blend in our mind with
+ the perception of the clear and true: the little knowledge we have
+ must be clung to as the margin of an invisible immensity; and all
+ our positive ideas be regarded as the mere float to show the
+ surface of the infinite deep.
+
+Shall I say that some form of theism will be the religion of America in
+the future? Not the literal theism of a generation or more ago, with its
+individual God, its contriving Providence, its supplicatory prayer, its
+future of retribution; nor yet the theism of Theodore Parker, of an
+infinite God revealed in consciousness, "the Being, infinitely powerful,
+infinitely wise, infinitely just, infinitely loving, and infinitely
+holy." It well may resemble the system described by Francis W. Newman in
+his book called "Theism," published in London in 1858. In this work he
+describes a religion based on conscience, without regard to any form of
+professed faith, yet covering in its theory and practice the whole
+region of ideal ethics. Different minds approach the problem from
+different directions. Mr. F. E. Abbot ("Scientific Theism," 1885)
+appeals to science; Josiah Royce printed a volume in 1885 entitled "The
+Religious Aspect of Philosophy," wherein he pursues the line of
+sympathetic thought; James Martineau in his "Study of Religion" (1888),
+bases his system on the moral sense; but all three arrive at the same
+point--a supreme mind in creation.
+
+We must be careful not to confound Theism with Deism, for though both
+are the same word--one Greek and one Latin--and mean the same thing, yet
+they stand for entirely different conceptions. Deism is a purely
+negative system, weighed down with denials. It is content when it has
+rejected what it calls all supernatural adjuncts--miracles, revelations,
+an inspired Scripture. Its face is set towards the past, not toward the
+future, and it is simply what is left of the old systems of belief,
+having no positive philosophy of its own. But Theism is a positive,
+fresh, original faith. It gazes forward, and builds on the natural
+consciousness of man, making no criticism on previous modes of belief.
+It is full of hope and enthusiasm, looking towards something that is
+before it, not scorning but believing. All that it needs in order to
+become a popular faith is a poetical element, something imaginative,
+symbolical, picturesque. The intellectual requirements it already
+possesses. It is affirmative; it is universal.
+
+Neither must this kind of theism be identified with natural religion,
+unless natural religion be made to comprehend facts of the inner as well
+as the outer world--facts of psychology as well as of physiology; facts
+of mind as well as of body. Such a theism is not a mere reminiscence,
+either, of an ancient faith; for every form of mediatorial religion,
+however modified, simplified, "enlightened," as it is called, leaves
+something of its temper behind it. The intellect is haunted by old modes
+of truth; the heart lingers around the ancient places of reverence; the
+conscience refers to some antique authority; the soul cannot pray except
+in the language of a pater-noster or a psalm. A scent as of roses may
+hang round the human mind; but the roses will be grown in some garden of
+the East, not in ours. Such a theism as I am thinking of will be
+grounded in Ethical Law. You may call it "Christian," if you will,
+because the word _Christian_ expresses the highest form of the moral
+sentiment, and carries a supreme authority to the human conscience; but
+on the _human conscience_ it must rest. It will be a noble, pure faith,
+giving a welcome to all knowledge, bright with anticipation, warm with
+enthusiasm. As John Weiss has said so much better than I can what I
+mean, I will quote a passage from him. It occurs in "American Religion"
+(page 67):
+
+ Cannot the power which sustains, without budging from the spot, my
+ personal vitality, sustain and nourish the immediate conscience of
+ which that vitality makes me aware? I cannot hurt my health, nor
+ tell a lie, nor commit a fraud, nor strike my brother, nor leave
+ the beggar in the ditch, nor parade my superiorities, without
+ knowing it by direct intimation. My pains are its rebukes, my
+ delights its sympathies, my hopes its suggestions, my sacrifices
+ its impost, my heavenly longings its apology for haunting me
+ forever. There is a power in which I live and move and have my
+ being, in which I eat, drink, breathe, sleep, wake, love and hate,
+ marry, and protect a home. Is it incapable of sustaining all my
+ functions of true religion on the spot as well as these? Do I have
+ these without a mediator, and must I travel for the rest? When I
+ undertake to breathe by tradition it will be time for me to get a
+ sense of God in the same way.
+
+The Dignity of Human Nature must be our watchword; of human _nature_,
+not of human _character_. For human _nature_ denotes the _capacities_ of
+man, what he _ought_ to be and _shall_ be, not what he _is_. Human
+character expresses only the undeveloped condition of man, and is
+therefore not to be taken as a final stand. This doctrine does not
+belong to a sect or a church, but to all mankind. It assumes an entirely
+new conception of the basis of religious faith; it makes a new
+beginning; it starts a new system; it exactly reverses the ancient order
+of thought, and builds up from a completely original foundation.
+
+The weightiest objections proceed from the undeveloped character of
+man. For example, the common saying that conscience is crude, confused,
+either does not exist at all, or erects inconsistent standards of right
+and wrong. But if a high criterion of morality is established, as it is,
+it has an educating and sustaining power. Every saint attests it; all
+the bibles of the world voice it; revelation owes to it its authority.
+Great souls do but raise the common level on which common souls tread;
+as the discovery of the ancient pavements in the Forum at Rome opens to
+ordinary feet the way that statesmen and heroes went. When I was in
+Salem, a young man who was very much addicted to drink, being
+remonstrated with, urged that he could not help it, that he was born so,
+just as another was born to praise and pray. His appetite for ardent
+spirits was just as natural to him as the preacher's appetite for
+spiritual things. His argument could not be refuted, but I always
+thought that in his hours of reflection, if he had any, he must have
+despised himself. At all events, the outside observer would class him
+with a lower order of humanity; the fixed rule of conscience being a
+universal judge.
+
+Again, the slowness of moral advance is flung in our teeth; the
+stubbornness of vice and evil. But we must give time for improvement and
+cultivation. All good things must wait--coal, petroleum, gas,
+electricity; the fertilizing qualities of guano were known and announced
+a full generation before the industrial world acted on the discovery;
+now millions of dollars are made by its importation. We are so used to
+thinking of the globe as round, and of men as living at the antipodes
+just as we live here, that we cannot believe that once it was deemed
+impossible for human creatures to live with their heads downward and
+their feet upward, and to walk like flies upon a ceiling. None but
+hopelessly crazy or foolish people were supposed to entertain such a
+notion. So the time will come when it shall be as natural for men to do
+right as to breathe; when all kinds of injustice, cruelty, and tyranny
+will be instinctively abandoned. When that time does come, men will be
+unable to believe that the ages ever were when men could make brutes of
+themselves or brutally treat each other. An eminent divine, commenting
+on a passage in Matthew, xviii., 15--"Moreover, if thy brother shall
+trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between him and thee
+alone; if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he
+will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the
+mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. And if he
+shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect
+to hear the church, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a
+publican,"--said: "This is equivalent to saying, 'You must begin all
+over again; must start fresh from the beginning.'" This was very bad
+exegesis, but it was excellent morality; even the "heathen man and the
+publican" holds in his bosom all the possibilities of human nature; and
+we are bound to believe that in time the like of him may be saintly.
+
+The decline of faith in religion, the passion for material
+things--money, fame, luxury,--is often cited as a proof that man is
+going downward; but may not this be a simple return to honesty and a
+rudimental integrity; a disposition to depend on one's self, and not on
+any mediator or redeemer? Let us build then in hope and faith, for,
+after all, these are the great architects. A listener to an eminent
+divine once said that when he got up to speak a radiance seemed to grow
+round his head; the great walls of a temple seemed to rise above him;
+the audience was composed of all nations, all sorts and conditions of
+men, and a choir of seraphs made the music; and yet this man spoke in a
+small, low-browed hall to a scanty audience, and the hymns were badly
+sung by a voluntary company. Such power has a great conviction; and when
+a deep conviction like that is extended and confirmed, the visible
+church will match the invisible, and shepherds will again hear the songs
+of angels.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. CONFESSIONS.
+
+
+The course of spiritual advance is traced with difficulty and
+hesitation. It is the most obscure phase of the general problem of
+progress, which is almost insoluble. There are so many currents and
+counter-currents; so many tributaries; so many swift torrents and still
+bays; so many times the stream seems moving in the opposite
+direction--it is not surprising if some have concluded that there was no
+progress at all, that we only moved in a circle, went over the same
+ground again and again, and even marched backwards; what some counted
+gain others counted loss. A keen examination suggests that on the whole
+advance has been made, allowance being conceded for many a turn and
+variation.
+
+The law of evolution may be considered established, but the method of
+evolution is hidden. The law of hereditary descent may be admitted, and
+yet the lines of hereditary descent are by no means obvious. Tendencies
+may even run in parallel lines, may aid each other, may confuse each
+other, may neutralize each other, may go very far or lie close at hand,
+and in any individual instance it is almost impossible to find how they
+work.
+
+In my own case the inferences of temperament followed each other. During
+the first fifty years of my life I was mainly under the influence of my
+father's temperament. I sang, wrote hymns and poems, sent pieces to the
+papers, was sanguine, inclined to take a happy view of all experiences;
+but at the same time I was conscious of another train of thought which
+struggled fitfully with the first, acquiring more and more power until
+at last it gained the ascendency, and I found myself more inclined to
+conservatism, as it is called, to a grave, sober, serious regard for
+existing institutions and modes of opinion. It is said that this might
+have been the effect of years, inasmuch as after middle life one is very
+apt to experience a change of sentiment. But in my own case time will
+hardly explain the phenomenon, for long before I came to middle age I
+was aware of this less hopeful tendency in my constitution. It was my
+mother's influence succeeding my father's. And though it never entirely
+prevailed, I can see how it may have shadowed my visions of the future.
+And it makes me somewhat distrustful of the entire sanity of my
+criticism. I am afraid of not being hopeful enough.
+
+I have sometimes suspected myself of a too critical disposition, a
+propensity to discover defects in men and opinion, to look at the dark
+side of systems that were repudiated; and in the effort to correct the
+aberrations of a literal estimate I may have gone too far in the
+opposite direction, rendering more than justice to antagonistic
+doctrines. But this, if it was an error, was certainly not an error to
+be ashamed of. For say what we will, the partial man is not the whole
+man, nor is cold perception true perception. There must be sympathy in
+every act of judgment, as Dr. Diman wisely wrote ("The Theistic
+Argument," p. 32): "In the pursuit of the highest truth not one faculty
+but all faculties need to be enlisted." Every system, however formal or
+dogmatical it may have become, had in the beginning its spiritual
+aspect; it was piously, if not humanely, meant; and in order to be
+rightly comprehended, should be surveyed from the inside. The most
+repulsive doctrine has something to urge in its favor, and it is the
+duty of the true rationalist to find out what it may be.
+
+If the inclination to take a common-sense view of opinions was derived
+from my mother's side, a strong democratic bent was primarily due to
+her. My grandfather was a poor boy who earned his fortune by the simple
+qualities of industry, integrity, perseverance, independence,
+faithfulness, honesty,--virtues which he bequeathed to his children.
+These inherited dispositions were encouraged by the social influences of
+the public school, which, in spite of its laborious method of imparting
+a knowledge of Latin and Greek, threw the lads together, thus breaking
+down artificial distinctions; and also by my experience at Harvard
+College, where scholarship was associated with mere manhood, and was
+cultivated by youth of all conditions. The anti-slavery agitation was a
+practical instructor in humanity, indicating as it did the widest
+sympathy of race. An assumption of the essential identity of all sorts
+of mind was a cardinal principle of transcendentalism, while my later
+experiences confirmed these early tendencies. My societies in Jersey
+City and New York were popular in their composition. The "Free Religious
+Association" was based on universal sentiments. The clerical profession
+was, in my day, broadly human, so that aristocratic proclivities had
+small hope of prevailing. In fact, the lessons which I learned from
+R. W. Emerson and Wendell Phillips sank deeply in, and became clearer as
+years went on.
+
+One can hardly say that learning is retrogressive when one thinks of Dr.
+Doellinger, of Germany; Ernest Renan, of France; Benjamin Jowett, Arthur
+P. Stanley, James Martineau, of England; but erudition must, as a rule,
+be conservative; for it associates the mind directly with the past,
+binds one down to facts of history, and lays great stress on the
+testimony of evidence. It still is true that abundance of luggage is a
+sign that one is far from home. And they who can move quickly with all
+this weight upon them must have extraordinary genius.
+
+An indifference to dogma is also characteristic of a speculative
+reformer; and I cannot recollect the time when I cared much for
+doctrinal differences. All questions were to me open questions. I had
+doubts about everything, and never suffered acute pain from such doubts.
+The influence of Jesus, the immortality of the soul, the existence of
+God, were always exposed to misgivings. Everything active was
+interesting to me, whether it looked toward "radicalism" or not. This
+was an advantage, not merely because it saved me from suffering, but
+because it enabled me to face all emergencies.
+
+But some one will say: Does not the love of truth count for anything?
+Yes, undoubtedly it does. But lovers of truth do not by any means belong
+to the same school, or look for light from the same quarter; some are
+Romanists, some Protestants; some have no religion at all. Lovers of
+truth are found in all denominations, from Calvinist to Unitarian, from
+Christian to Buddhist. Truth exists for us in layers. There are truths
+of the letter and truths of the spirit; there is truth to fact, and
+truth to fancy; there is truth to the individual soul, and truth to the
+public conscience; there is truth to the heart, to the moral sense, to
+the spiritual intuition: but it will not do to charge lack of
+truthfulness upon anybody simply because he does not hold the same
+opinion with ourselves. M. Renan somewhere says that in order to judge a
+system one must have been in it as a disciple, and outside of it as a
+critic. But then only a very extraordinary person can do this. As a
+disciple he must be earnest, intelligent, devoted; as a critic he must
+be without prejudice, without animosity, and without guile. Thus the
+point of view must of necessity be individual. There can be no general
+or absolute standard of judgment. One thing only is certain: the fact of
+spiritual progress; but what constitutes this progress nobody can tell.
+Since 1822 till now the change in _Unitarianism_ has been immense, and
+it has consisted in the gradual supremacy of reason over tradition, but
+it has been almost too sudden and too swift. Progress had better be
+slow, in order that it may be sure. One step at a time, for the reason
+that only one step at a time can be taken safely. We must not jump at
+conclusions. There must be unbounded catholicity of thought, but it must
+not be made up of indifference, concession, and idle compliance.
+
+Experience has taught me many things--this among others, that there is
+no final criterion of truth, not criticism, or "science," or philosophy,
+or liberty. There is no question any more of "destructive" and
+"constructive." The Supreme Power is always constructive, and the
+Supreme Power is sure at last to prevail. There is an old Greek fable,
+that Apollo once challenged Jupiter to shoot. The sun-god shot an arrow
+to the very confines of the earth; then Jupiter, at one stride, reached
+the limits of creation, and said, "Where shall I shoot?" We are not
+Jupiters; we are not Apollos; but we can take our stand and shoot our
+arrows a little way into the dark. The utmost we can do is to be
+steadfast in our own places; be faithful to our own calling; draw our
+own shaft to the head. Father Hecker said a brave thing to me when, on
+declining my request that he would speak before the Free Religious
+Association, he took the ground that in a few weeks Catholicism would
+enter Boston in triumph. I honored the Broad Churchman, who said to me
+once that he always preached Christ as an historical person, and wished
+he had a church big enough to hold all humanity; and I admired the
+Presbyterian clergyman who commended the sincerity of Dr. Briggs, whom
+some regarded as a heretic. Fidelity to one's own word and gift is the
+one thing needful here.
+
+Whether it be the tendency of modern thought, or whether it be not, to
+abandon the Christian religion and cast discredit on every kind of faith
+held by the churches and professors throughout the world, cannot, in
+this generation, be decided. In any event, we shall not be left
+desolate. For nature will remain, with its unfathomable resources of use
+and beauty. The mind will remain, with its infinite faculties of reason
+and imagination. The heart will remain, with its insatiable affections
+and desires. Conscience will remain, with its sense of duty. The
+sentiments of awe, wonder, admiration, worship, will not expire. The
+reconstructive powers will still be active, and every creative quality
+will continue in full operation. Knowledge, literature, art, will live
+and flourish in new manifestations; and no original capacity will lie
+unemployed.
+
+We should have learned by this time that nothing dies before its hour
+has come; that processes of recuperation keep even pace with processes
+of decay; that forms alone perish while principles endure; that living
+things become more mighty and glorious as they throw off encumbrances;
+that strength always in the end accompanies simplicity.
+
+The idea of God has passed through several phases, and each new phase
+has been a gain. The deity who was an individual has become a person;
+the attributes of personality, as commonly understood, have disappeared,
+so that pantheism has succeeded to a mechanical theism; God has become a
+name for our most exalted feelings, so that instead of saying "God is
+Spirit," some read "Spirit is God"; yet the ancient reverence more than
+persists, is on the increase. And if the course of disintegration of the
+old clumsy conception should go on, there need be no apprehension that
+loving veneration will decline.
+
+The future life is no longer associated with retribution, and
+immortality means opportunity instead of doom. Should the doctrine of
+moral influence follow upon the doctrine of spiritual progression, the
+essential significance of the tenet would be preserved, for that is
+ethical not individual.
+
+Prayer, too, is no more a begging for favors, or an act of
+intercession. Supplication for outward benefits has given place to
+petition for spiritual gifts, and this to pure aspiration, the desire
+for excellence; still the soul's passion is as deep as ever, perhaps
+deeper.
+
+If Mr. Tyndall's prophecy should be fulfilled, and we should come to
+"discover in that matter which we, in our ignorance, and notwithstanding
+our professed reverence for its Creator, have hitherto covered with
+opprobrium, the promise and potency of every form and quality of life,"
+then what we call matter would simply assume new properties commensurate
+with novel tasks. The properties themselves will remain as they were,
+and will in nowise change their peculiarity. The ancient attributes of
+mind will persist, whatever theory of their origin be adopted. The old
+sanctities will endure, and the burden of responsibility will fall upon
+another pair of shoulders.
+
+Thus every virtue will be maintained in complete vigor,--reverence,
+aspiration, trust, submission, confidence, serenity, patience,
+fortitude,--and nothing will be lost.
+
+Then there is the social world, in which we "live and move and have our
+being." This "encompasses us behind and before, and lays its hand upon
+us." There is not an hour in the day, hardly a moment of the hour, when
+the call of duty is not made upon us. None but the rarest spirits
+discharge the claims of mercy and brotherhood; people generally do not
+know what they are; repudiate them when presented. The preachers have
+more than they can do to induce practice of even the commonest virtues
+of good will. Humanity, in its grand aspects, is left to the writers of
+Utopias. Not a day passes that conscience is not over-worked, even when
+it is not perplexed by misgivings in regard to the amount or the kind of
+service it ought to render. Some have sought an escape in the immortal
+life from the demands of this; and some have denied the doctrine of
+another world because it drew attention away from this, and made the
+ills of the present seem light in view of some coming beatitude. In
+truth, the friends of that great hope will do well to remember that it
+is identical with moral attainment; that it is for great souls; that
+
+ The life of heaven above,
+ Springs from the life below.
+
+It is, to say the least, doubtful whether any future life can do more
+than ripen seeds that are sowed here, or whether spiritual perfection
+will owe anything essential to other events of time, while it is certain
+that nothing is sure to abide but what is born of love.
+
+Unless the doctrine of a future life can be used to reinforce the
+doctrine of moral attainment in the present state of existence, its
+power must depart. The cords of personal affection are not strong enough
+to hold the belief. The true inference from disbelief is not expressed
+in the words, "Let us eat and drink for tomorrow we die"; but in these,
+"I must work while it is day." This idea is a very old one. The air was
+full of it when I was a youth. It was the soul of all liberal faith. The
+_Westminster Review_, which was in full force in my early manhood,
+having begun in 1824, two years after my birth, was animated by it. The
+_Prospective Review_, the organ of the spiritual Unitarians, and edited
+by such men as James Martineau, John James Taylor, John Hamilton Thom,
+and Charles Wicksteed, a magazine aiming to "interpret and represent
+Spiritual Christianity in its character of the Universal Religion," was
+started about 1845. In its pages "spirituality" was intimately
+associated with "humanity." The books of F. W. Newman, "The Soul"
+(1849); "Phases of Faith" (1850); "Catholic Union" (1854), teemed with
+this conception. The charming verses of William Blake, published in his
+"Songs of Innocence," had somehow came to my knowledge.
+
+ To mercy, pity, peace, and love,
+ All pray in their distress;
+ And to these virtues of delight
+ Return their thankfulness.
+
+ For mercy, pity, peace, and love
+ Is God, our Father dear;
+ And mercy, pity, peace, and love
+ Is man, His child and care.
+
+ For mercy has a human heart;
+ Pity, a human face;
+ And love, the human form divine
+ And peace, the human dress.
+
+ Then every man of every clime
+ That prays, in his distress,
+ Prays to the human form divine
+ Love, Mercy, Pity, Peace.
+
+ And all must love the human form
+ In Heathen, Turk, or Jew;
+ Where mercy, love, and pity dwell,
+ There God is dwelling too.
+
+In this country the same idea prevailed in the early period of
+transcendentalism, and gradually worked its way into the common heart.
+Channing lent it an impulse. His brilliant nephew, William Henry
+Channing, exemplified it. The transcendental preachers all insisted on
+it. The "Dial" was charged with it. The most kindling literature of my
+growing days drew inspiration from it. Brook Farm, Fruitlands, and every
+other attempt at association was built upon it. Modern socialism owes to
+it the fascination it has for the heart; and we cannot listen to a
+sermon now that does not throb with the emotion it excites.
+
+For myself I must confess that I have no interest in another life, save
+as it encourages the endeavor after this human excellence. My mental
+constitution makes me insensible to sentimental considerations, to
+arguments addressed to private affections. As my first sermon was about
+the brotherhood of man, so my present hope is that love may increase,
+and that the reign of theology may be succeeded by that of charity.
+
+This was the dream of Abbot Joachim, in the twelfth century, the
+Cistercian monk, founder of the monastery of Floris, author of "The
+Everlasting Gospel." It was his notion that the existing era of
+Christianity was passing away. According to him, there were three
+dispensations, corresponding to the three persons in the Trinity--that
+of the Father, that of the Son, that of the Spirit,--the dispensation of
+Awe, the dispensation of Wisdom, and the dispensation of Love. The first
+was represented by Peter, the organizer, the patron saint of Romanism;
+the second, by Paul, the preacher of the Word, the bulwark of
+Protestantism; the third by John, the seer, the beloved disciple, the
+apostle of love. How much the pious man meant by this we cannot tell.
+His own contemporaries were divided in opinion; but a pretty fair
+commentary is furnished, in the fact that his writing was condemned by
+two Councils--that of the Lateran in 1215, and of Arles in 1260,--and
+that he has ever since been classed among the mystics--that is, the
+unintelligible and the unbalanced in mind.
+
+True the prophecy has not been literally fulfilled, inasmuch as the
+first two dispositions are still in force, and are likely to be for many
+a day, but the essence of it has come to pass. Romanism has been
+deprived of its temporal authority, and is reduced to a picturesque form
+of faith; its disciples easily throw off its bondage, while its new
+professors never put it on. Protestantism is decomposing under the
+influence of doubt and criticism. The thought of brotherhood is
+extending. I have small faith that the time will ever come when all
+people will worship under one form, or will accept the same mode of
+believing. I cannot think that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow,
+or that every tongue will make confession of his Lordship; but I do
+believe that the reign of justice and good-will shall be established. It
+is a great deal to hope for a time when the many will submit to the law
+of reason, becoming strong enough to withstand the force of authority in
+church or creed, and content with charity.
+
+We have gained much since Joachim's day. We have acquired knowledge,
+industry, civilization, freedom, enterprise, intelligence, the sense of
+mutual dependence. The bars of prejudice are being taken down. Class
+distinctions are being abolished. Newly discovered arts are bringing men
+nearer together, and weaving the ties of fraternity. All this is
+opportunity--opportunity that immediately precedes performance. When we
+see the road prepared for the Spirit, we may be sure that the Spirit
+itself is not far off.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+ A
+
+ Abbot, F. E., 117, 282
+ Abbott, E. A., 256
+ Abolitionists, 45, 183
+ Adler, Felix, quoted, 268
+ Alcott, A. B., 52
+ Anti-slavery, 44, 46, 49
+ Arminians, 1
+ Arnold, M., 13
+
+
+ B
+
+ Barnard, F. A. P., 226
+ Barnard, T., 43
+ Bartol, C. A., 119
+ Baur, F. C., 57
+ Beecher, H. W., 256
+ Bellows, H. W., 63, 74, 76, 115, 116, 118, 184
+ Blake, Wm., quoted, 299
+ Boston, 17
+ Brace, C. L., 226
+ Brazer, John, 43
+ Broad Church, 71, 257, etc.
+ Brook Farm, 136, 227, 235, 236, 239, 240, 241, 244
+ Brown, John, 104
+ Browning, R., 4, 16, 145, 201
+ Brownson, Orestes, 203
+
+
+ C
+
+ Calvinism, 1
+ Carlyle, 7, 124
+ Carter, R., 226
+ Cary, Alice, 225
+ Cary, Phoebe, 225
+ Chadwick, J. W., 187
+ Channing, W. E., 47, 183, 186, 235, 300
+ Channing, W. H., 236, 300
+ Clarke, J. F., 44, 124
+ Clerical Profession, The, 146, etc.
+ Colonization, 181
+ Communion Service, 66, etc.
+ Comte, A., 217
+ Conference, Unitarian, 115-117
+ Curtis, G. W., 42
+
+
+ D
+
+ Darwin, C., 259
+ Deists, 61, 62
+ Dewey, Mary, 176
+ Dewey, Orville, 176, etc.
+ Dillaway, C. K., 20
+ Diman, J. L., quoted, 291
+ Divinity Hall, 26
+ Divinity School, 25-34
+ Dixwell, E. S., 20
+ Dwight, J. S., 236
+
+
+ E
+
+ Eliot, George, 138
+ Emerson, R. W., 21, 34, 42, 48, 68, 75, 122, 134, 135, 145, 166, etc.,
+ 196, 209, 245, 270, 292
+ Endicott, John, 36
+ Ethical Religion, 267, etc.
+ Europe, 131
+ Evolution, 145, 194, 217
+
+
+ F
+
+ Field, H. M., 227
+ Fourier, C., 240
+ Francis, Convers, 27
+ Fraternity Club, 128, 129
+ Free Religious Association, 119, etc., 124-126, 209, 292
+ Free Thought in America, 133, etc.
+ Frothingham, Ann G., 14-17
+ Frothingham, N. L., 2-14
+
+
+ G
+
+ Gardner, F., 20
+ Garrison, W. L., 44
+ Greeley, H., 109, 226, 227
+ Goethe, J. W. von, quoted, 280
+
+
+ H
+
+ Haeckel, E., 217
+ Harvard College, 21
+ Hawthorne, N., 42, 236, 246
+ Heath, 131
+ Hecker, I. T., 226, 295
+ Hedge, F. H., 257
+ Higginson, T. W., 35, 122
+ Hillard, G. S., 21
+ Hitchcock, R. D., 226
+ Holland, J. G., 227
+
+
+ I
+
+ Independent Society, 126-131, 132, 138, 139
+ Ingersoll, R. G., 227, 253, etc.
+
+
+ J
+
+ James, H., quoted, 155
+ Jersey City, 63, 65
+ Jewett, Sarah O., quoted, 255
+ Joachim (Abbot), 301
+ Johnson, S., 50, 210, etc.
+ Joy, Charles, 226
+
+
+ K
+
+ King, T. S., 42, 191, note.
+ Kirwan, R., 38
+
+
+ L
+
+ Latin School, 19
+ Laveleye, E. de, quoted, 272, 281
+ Leverett, F. P., 20
+ Longfellow, H. W., 51, 258, quoted
+ Loring, E. G., 245
+ Lyric Hall, 125, 128
+
+
+ M
+
+ Mahomet, 124
+ Martineau, J., 58, 165, 185, quoted, 275, 281, 282
+ Masonic Temple, 127
+ Maurice, F. D., 123, 264
+ McQueary, Rev. H., 256
+ Minister, Office of, in War Time, 106
+ Ministry in New York, 131
+ Mott, Lucretia, 121
+
+
+ N
+
+ National Conference, 85
+ Negroes, 111, 179
+ Newman, F. W., 282, 299
+ New York, 76
+ "North Church," 42
+ Noyes, G. R., 26
+
+
+ O
+
+ Osgood, S., 92, etc.
+
+
+ P
+
+ Paine, T., 248, etc.
+ Parker, T., 44, 54, etc., 70, 122, 134, 135, 203, 233, 282
+ Phillips, W., 9, 44, 292
+ Poe, E. A., quoted, 134
+ Prescott, W. H., 6, 21
+ Priests in the Riot, 113
+ _Prospective Review_, 299
+ Protestantism, 275, 277
+ Putnam, Eleanor, 36
+
+
+ R
+
+ Reid, Whitelaw, 227
+ Renan, J. Ernest, 58, 272-274, 276, 279, 293
+ Riot in New York, 107, etc.
+ Ripley, George, 227
+ Romanism, 273, etc.
+ Rood, O. N., 226
+ Royce, J., 282
+ Runkle, Mrs. Lucia, 227
+
+
+ S
+
+ Salem, 35, etc., 51
+ Sanitary Commission, 83
+ Scherb, E. V., 51
+ Schwegler, A., 57
+ Slavery, 47
+ Smith, S., 207
+ Stearns, G., 245
+ Stephen, Leslie, quoted, 249
+ Strauss, D. F., 217, 280
+ Sumner, C., 21, 221
+
+
+ T
+
+ Taine, H. A., 217
+ Taylor, Bayard, 226
+ Thackeray, W. M., 8
+ Ticknor, G., 6, 21
+ Torrey, H. W., 20
+ Transcendentalism, 47, 135-137, 214
+ Tuebingen School, 57
+ Tyndall, J., 217, 297
+
+
+ U
+
+ Unitarianism, 256, 278
+ Unitarians, 47, 69, 102, 115, 117, 124, 183, 266
+
+
+ V
+
+ Voltaire, 62
+
+
+ W
+
+ War, Civil, The, 114
+ Washburn, E. A., 227
+ Washington, George (Gen.), 105
+ Washington, L. W., (Col.), 105
+ Wasson, D. A., 60, 119, 122
+ Webster, D., 21, 180
+ Webster, J. W., 22
+ Weiss, J., 122, 190, etc., 284, quoted
+ _Westminster Review_, 299
+ White, R. G. 226
+ Williams, R., 36
+ Winthrop, T., 110
+ Wise, H. A. (Gov.), 104
+ Woman, Rights of, 221
+
+
+ Y
+
+ Youmans, E. L., 226
+
+
+ Z
+
+ Zeller, E., 58
+
+
+
+
+
+WORKS BY OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM.
+
+
+THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY. 4th edition, 12mo, pp. 338. $1.50
+
+ "A profoundly sincere book, the work of one who has read largely,
+ studied thoroughly, reflected patiently."--_Boston Globe._
+
+STORIES FROM THE LIPS OF THE TEACHER. Retold by a Disciple. Sixth
+edition, 16mo, pp. 193. $1.00
+
+ "It is in style and thought a superior book, that will interest young
+ and old."--_Zion Herald_ (Methodist).
+
+STORIES OF THE PATRIARCHS. 3d edition. 16mo, pp. 232. $1.00
+
+ "The sublimest lessons of manhood in the simple language of a
+ child."--_Springfield Republican._
+
+THE CHILD'S BOOK OF RELIGION. For Sunday-Schools and Homes. New edition,
+revised. 16mo, pp. xii. 273. $1.00
+
+TRANSCENDENTALISM IN NEW ENGLAND. A History. Second edition. 8vo, pp.
+iv. + 394. $1.75
+
+ "The book is masterly and satisfying."--_Appleton's Journal._
+
+THE CRADLE OF THE CHRIST. A Study in Primitive Christianity. 8vo, pp.
+x. + 234. $1.50
+
+ "Scholarly, acute, and vigorous."--_N. Y. Tribune._
+
+THEODORE PARKER. A Biography. 8vo, pp. viii. + 588. $2.00
+
+GERRIT SMITH. A Biography. 8vo, pp. 371. $2.00
+
+ "A good biography, it is faithful, sufficiently full, written with
+ vigor, grace, and good taste."--_N. Y. Evening Post._
+
+BELIEF OF THE UNBELIEVERS. 12mo, sewed $0.25
+
+ Speaking of Mr. Frothingham's Sermons, the _Springfield Republican_
+ says: "No one of serious intellectual character can fail to be
+ interested and taught by these most thoughtful discourses."
+
+BOSTON UNITARIANISM. 1820-1840. A Study of the Life and Work of
+Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham. 8vo, pp. 272. $1.75
+
+ "The book, to a thoughtful reader, cannot fail to be elevating and
+ suggestive of high ideals, high thinking, and noble living."--_Newark
+ Advertiser._
+
+RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS. 1822-1890. 8vo. $1.50
+
+
+G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, NEW YORK AND LONDON
+
+
+
+
+
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