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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Friends at Cambridge and Elsewhere, by
-J. Willis Clark
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Old Friends at Cambridge and Elsewhere
-
-Author: J. Willis Clark
-
-Release Date: August 18, 2016 [EBook #52846]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD FRIENDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Chris Curnow and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. The single
-instance of blackletter font uses the ‘=’ as a delimiter.
-
-The footnotes have been re-sequenced for uniqueness across the text, and
-positioned to follow the paragraph in which they are referenced.
-Footnote 95 (originally footnote 1 on p. 227) has two separate
-references in the text, both of which are retained.
-
-There were very few and minor typographical flaws in the copy from which
-this version is derived. These have been corrected, with no further
-notice.
-
- Old Friends at Cambridge
- and Elsewhere
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Old Friends at Cambridge
- and Elsewhere
-
- by
-
- J. Willis Clark, M.A.
-
- Registrary of the University of Cambridge
- formerly Fellow of Trinity College
-
-
- London
-
- Macmillan and Co. Limited
- Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes
-
- 1900
-
- All Rights reserved
-
-
-
-
- ~Cambridge:~
-
- PRINTED BY J. AND C. F. CLAY,
- AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
-
-I have frequently been asked to write my _Memoirs_, or I should rather
-say, my _Recollections_. I have serious doubts as to whether I recollect
-anything of value; and, even if I do, I have no time at present to
-commit it to paper. But, as the University, when I first knew it, was a
-very different place from what it is now; and as it has fallen to my lot
-to write several biographical notices of distinguished Cambridge men, in
-the course of which I have noted incidentally a good many of the
-constitutional and social changes of later years, I venture to republish
-what I have written. Such compositions, many of which were dashed off on
-the spur of the moment, under the influence of strong feeling, with no
-opportunity for correction or amplification, are, I am aware, defective
-as a serious record of lives which ought to have been told at greater
-length. But, that they gain in sincerity what they lose in detail, will,
-I hope, be conceded by those who take the trouble to read them.
-
-Most of these articles are reprinted as they were written, with only
-obvious and necessary corrections. The Life of Dr Whewell has been
-slightly enlarged; and that of Bishop Thirlwall has been revised, though
-not substantially altered. Any merit that this Life may possess is due
-to the kindness of the late Master of my College, Dr Thompson. I myself
-had never so much as seen Thirlwall, and undertook the article with
-great reluctance. But my difficulties vanished as soon as I had
-consulted Dr Thompson. He had been one of Thirlwall’s intimate friends,
-and not only supplied me with information about him which I could not
-have learnt from any other source, but revised the article more than
-once when in type.
-
-The article on Dr Luard is practically new. Soon after his death I
-contributed a short sketch of his Life to the _Saturday Review_, and
-afterwards another, in a somewhat different style, to a Trinity College
-Magazine called _The Trident_. Out of these, with some additions, the
-present article has been composed.
-
-It has been suggested to me that an article on Richard Owen, in a series
-devoted entirely, with that exception, to Cambridge men, needs
-justification. I would urge in my defence that the Senate coopted Owen
-by selecting him, in 1859, as the first recipient of an honorary degree
-under the new statutes.
-
-My cordial thanks are due to Dr Jackson, Fellow and Prælector of Trinity
-College, for much valuable criticism, and assistance in preparing the
-volume for the press.
-
-I have also to thank the proprietors of the _Church Quarterly Review_,
-and those of the _Saturday Review_, for their kindness in allowing me to
-reprint articles of which they hold the copyright.
-
- JOHN WILLIS CLARK.
-
- SCROOPE HOUSE, CAMBRIDGE.
- _1 January, 1900._
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
- PAGE
-
- WILLIAM WHEWELL 1
-
- _Church Quarterly Review_, April, 1882.
-
- CONNOP THIRLWALL 77
-
- _Church Quarterly Review_, April, 1883.
-
- RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, LORD HOUGHTON 153
-
- _Church Quarterly Review_, July, 1891.
-
- EDWARD HENRY PALMER 201
-
- _Church Quarterly Review_, October,
- 1883.
-
- FRANCIS MAITLAND BALFOUR 282
-
- _Saturday Review_, 29 July, 1882.
-
- HENRY BRADSHAW 292
-
- _Saturday Review_, 10 February, 1886.
-
- WILLIAM HEPWORTH THOMPSON 302
-
- _Saturday Review_, 9 October, 1886.
-
- COUTTS TROTTER 314
-
- _Saturday Review_, 10 December, 1887.
-
- RICHARD OKES 319
-
- _Saturday Review_, 1 December, 1888.
-
- HENRY RICHARDS LUARD 328
-
- _Saturday Review_, 9 May, 1891.
-
- _The Trident_, June, 1891.
-
- RICHARD OWEN 344
-
- _Church Quarterly Review_, July, 1895.
-
-
-
-
- WILLIAM WHEWELL[1].
-
-
-Full materials for the life of Dr Whewell are at last before the public.
-We say ‘at last,’ because ten years elapsed from his death in 1866
-before the first instalment of his biography appeared, and fifteen years
-before the second. Haste, therefore, cannot be pleaded for any faults
-which may be found in either of them. Nor, indeed, is it our intention
-to carp at persons who have performed a difficult task as well as they
-could. Far rather would we take exception to the strange resolution of
-Dr Whewell’s executors and friends to have his life written in separate
-portions. It was originally intended that there should be three of these
-published simultaneously: (1) the scientific, (2) the academic, (3) the
-domestic. As time went on, however, it was found impossible to carry out
-this scheme; and Mr Todhunter published the first instalment before
-anyone had been found to undertake either of the others. At last, after
-repeated failures, the second and third portions were thrown together,
-and entrusted to Mrs Stair Douglas, Dr Whewell’s niece by marriage. The
-defects of such a method are obvious; events scarcely worth telling once
-are told twice; documents that would have been useful to one biographer
-appear in the work of the other, and the like. For this, however, the
-authors before us deserve less blame than the scheme which they were
-compelled to follow.
-
-Few lives, we imagine, have been so many-sided as to need a double, not
-to say a triple, narrative in order to set them fully before the public;
-and we assert most distinctly that Dr Whewell was the last man whose
-biography should have been so treated. His life, notwithstanding his
-diverse occupations and his widespread interests, presented a singular
-unity, due to his unflinching determination to subordinate his pursuits,
-his actions, and his thoughts to what he felt to be his work in the
-world, viz. the advancement, in the fullest sense the word can be made
-to bear, of his College and his University. He himself made no attempt
-to subdivide his time, so as to carry out some special work at the
-expense of other occupations. He found time for everything. His
-extraordinary energy, and his power of absorbing himself at a moment’s
-notice in whatever he had to do, whether scientific research or
-University business, enabled him to get through an astonishing amount of
-work in a single day. Much of what he did must have been very irksome
-and repulsive to him. He particularly disliked detail, especially that
-relating to finance. ‘I hate these disgusting details,’ was his way of
-putting aside, or trying to put aside, economical discussions at College
-meetings; and it was often hard to make him understand the real
-importance of these apparently small matters. Again, he always found
-time to go into society; to keep himself well acquainted with all that
-was going forward in politics, literature, art, music, science; and to
-carry on a vast correspondence with relatives, friends, and men of
-science in England and on the Continent. A considerable number of these
-letters have of course perished; but the extent of the collection is
-evident from Mr Todhunter’s statement that he had examined more than
-3,500 letters written to Dr Whewell, and more than 1,000 written by him.
-His opinion of the latter, after this wide experience, is well worth
-quotation:
-
-‘I do not think that adequate justice can be rendered to Dr Whewell’s
-vast knowledge and power by any person who did not know him intimately,
-except by the examination of his extensive correspondence; such an
-examination cannot fail to raise the opinion formed of him by the study
-of his published works, however high that opinion may be. The evidence
-of his attainments and abilities which is furnished by the fact that he
-was consulted and honoured by the acknowledged chiefs of many distinct
-sciences is most ample and impressive. United with this intellectual
-eminence we find an attractive simplicity and generosity of nature, an
-entire absence of self-seeking and assertion, and a warm concern in the
-fortunes of his friends, even when they might be considered in some
-degree as his rivals.’
-
-The academic side of Dr Whewell’s life has no doubt been imperfectly
-related in both the works before us; and the due recognition of his
-merits will have to wait until the intellectual history of the
-University during the nineteenth century shall one day be written. On
-the other hand, we owe our warmest thanks to Mrs Stair Douglas for
-having brought prominently into notice, as only an affectionate woman
-could do, the softer side of Dr Whewell’s character. No one who did not
-know him as she did could have suspected the almost feminine tenderness,
-the yearning for sympathy, which were concealed under that rough
-exterior. These qualities, though much developed by his marriage, were
-characteristic of him throughout his whole life. The following passage,
-which has not before been printed, from a letter written in 1836 to the
-Marchesa Spineto, his oldest and most valued Cambridge friend, while he
-was busy writing his _History of the Inductive Sciences_, shows how
-necessary female sympathy was to him even when he was most occupied:
-
-‘It appears to me long since I have seen you, and I am disposed to write
-as if your absence were a disagreeable and unusual privation; although
-it is very likely that if you had been here I might have seen just as
-little of you and might have felt just as lonely. And perhaps if I send
-you this sheet of my ruminations, it will find you in the middle of a
-new set of interests and employments, with only a little bit of your
-thoughts and affections at liberty to look this way; and so I shall be
-little the better for the habit you have taught me of depending upon you
-for unvarying kindness and love. Perhaps you will tell me I am unjust in
-harbouring such a suspicion, but do not be angry with me if I am; for
-you know such thoughts come into my head whether I will or no; and then
-go away the sooner for being put into words.’
-
-University life changes with such rapidity, that no matter how great a
-man may have been, it is inevitable that he should soon become little
-more than a tradition to those who succeed him. Few of the present
-Fellows of Trinity College can have even seen Dr Whewell; and though his
-outward appearance has been handed down to posterity by a picture in the
-Lodge, a bust in the Library, and a statue in the Chapel, neither canvas
-nor marble, no matter how skilfully they may be handled, can convey the
-impression which that king of men made upon his contemporaries. These
-portraits give a fairly just idea of his lofty stature, broad shoulders,
-and large limbs, but the features are inadequately rendered in all of
-them. The proportions are probably correct, but the expression has been
-lost. The artists have been so anxious to render the philosopher, that
-they have forgotten the man. His expression, except on very solemn
-occasions, was never so grave as they have made it. His bright blue eye
-had nearly always a merry twinkle in it, and his broad mouth was ever
-ready to break into a smile. His nature was essentially joyous; and he
-dearly loved a good joke, a funny story, or a merry party of friends, in
-which his laugh was always the loudest, and his pleasure the keenest.
-Nor did he disdain the pleasures of the table; a good dinner, followed
-by a good bottle of port, was not without its charm for him, though it
-may be doubted whether he enjoyed these matters for their own sake so
-much as for the society they brought with them. He could not bear to be
-alone, and was not particular into what company he went, provided he
-could get good conversation, and plenty of it. He used to say that he
-liked to hear a dinner in ‘full cry’; and, if we may adopt his own
-simile without offence to the memory of one whom we love and revere, he
-was himself the leader of the pack. He could hardly be called a good
-talker; he was too fond of the sound of his own loud cheery voice, and
-engrossed the conversation too much. He would take up a subject started
-by somebody else, and handle it in a masterly fashion, as if he were in
-a lecture room, while the rest sat by and listened. He laid down the
-law, too, in a style that did not admit of reply. We remember an
-occasion when the conversation turned on Longfellow’s _Golden Legend_,
-then just published, and Whewell was asked to say what he thought of it.
-‘I think it is a bad echo of a bad original, Goethe’s _Faust_,’
-thundered out the great man; after which, of course, there was a dead
-silence. Again, he was no respecter of persons, nor was he too careful
-to observe the ordinary rules of politeness. If anybody said a silly
-thing, even if the person were a lady, and in her own house, he thought
-nothing of crushing her with ‘Madam, no one but a fool would have made
-that observation’; but his company was so delightful, his stores of
-information so varied and so vast, his readiness to communicate them so
-unusual, and his memory so retentive, that these eccentricities in
-‘Rough Diamond,’ as a clever University _jeu d’esprit_ called him, were
-readily forgiven. He was far too well aware of his own supremacy to be
-afraid of unbending; and years after he became Master of Trinity he has
-been seen to kneel down on the carpet to play with a Skye terrier. He
-was a special favourite with young people, especially with young ladies,
-from the heartiness with which he threw himself into their pursuits and
-pleasures, talked with them, romped with them, wrote verses and riddles
-and translated German poems for their amusement, and assisted
-approvingly at the musical parties which were the fashion when he was a
-young man. There were indeed several houses in Cambridge and its
-neighbourhood in which we should have ventured to say that he was ‘a
-tame cat,’ had there been anything feline in that rugged and vehement
-nature.
-
-Those who wish to draw for themselves a life-like portrait of Whewell in
-his best days must take into account the fact that his health was always
-excellent. There is a legend that as a boy he was delicate; but, if this
-were ever the case, which we doubt, he put it aside with other childish
-things. When he came to man’s estate no rebellious liver ever troubled
-his repose, or made him look upon life with a jaundiced eye. It was his
-habit to sit up late; but, notwithstanding, he appeared regularly at
-morning chapel, then at 7 a.m., fresh and radiant, and ready for the
-day’s work. This vigour of body enabled him to appreciate everything
-with a keenness which age could not dull, nor the most poignant grief
-extinguish, except for very brief intervals. He thoroughly appreciated
-‘the mere joy of living’; and whatever was going forward attracted him
-so powerfully that he was never satisfied until he had found out all
-about it. He went everywhere: to public ceremonials and exhibitions; to
-new plays, new music, new pictures; to London drawing-rooms and smart
-country houses; to quiet parsonages and canonical residences; to foreign
-cities and English cathedrals; always deriving the keenest enjoyment
-from what he saw, and delighting in new experiences because they were
-new. There was but one exception to the universality of his interests.
-When he was a resident Fellow of Trinity, it was the fashion for College
-Dons to dabble in politics, and more than one of his Trinity friends
-made their fortune by their Liberal opinions. He did not imitate their
-example. He always described himself as no politician. As a young man he
-seemed inclined to take a Liberal line, for he opposed a petition from
-the University against the Roman Catholic claims in 1821, and in the
-following year voted against ‘our dear, our Protestant Bankes’ for the
-same reason. But in those stormy days of the Reform Bill, when so many
-ancient friendships were destroyed, he took no decided line; and
-latterly he abstained from politics altogether. We do not mean that he
-shut his eyes to what was going forward in the world—far from it, but he
-seemed to consider that one Administration was as good as another, and
-provided no violent change was threatened, he left the destinies of the
-Empire to take care of themselves. As he grew older, his mind became
-engrossed by thoughts of the suffering which even the most glorious
-achievements must of necessity entail. The events of the Indian Mutiny,
-for instance, were followed by him with the closest interest; but he was
-more frequently heard to deplore the severity dealt out to the natives
-than to admire the heroism of their victims.
-
-Whewell’s natural good health was no doubt maintained by his love of
-open air exercise. No matter how busy he was, or how bad the weather, he
-rarely missed his daily ride. On most afternoons he might be seen on his
-grey horse ‘Twilight,’ usually with his inseparable friend Dr Worsley,
-either galloping across country, or joining quieter parties along the
-roads. He was never a good rider, but a very bold one, as will be seen
-from the following story, the accuracy of which we once tested by
-reference to Sebright, the veteran huntsman of the Fitzwilliam hounds.
-Whewell was staying with Viscount Milton, we believe in 1828. One
-morning his host said to him at breakfast, ‘We are all going out
-hunting; what would you like to do?’ He replied, ‘I have never been out
-hunting, and I should like to go too.’ So he was mounted on a first-rate
-horse, well up to his weight, and told to keep close to the huntsman.
-Whewell did as he was bid, and followed him over everything. They had an
-unusually good run across a difficult country, in the course of which
-Sebright took an especially stout and high fence. Looking round to see
-what had become of the stranger, he found him at his side, safe and
-sound. ‘That, sir, was a rasper,’ he said. ‘I did not observe that it
-was anything more than ordinary,’ replied Whewell. So on they went, till
-at last his horse pulled up, quite exhausted, to Whewell’s great
-indignation, who exclaimed, ‘I thought a hunter never stopped.’
-
-We are not presumptuous enough to suppose that we can add any new facts
-to those which have been already collected in the volumes before us; but
-we think that even after their publication there is room for a short
-essay, which shall bring into prominence certain points in Whewell’s
-academic career, and attempt to determine the value of what he did for
-science in general, and for his own College and University in
-particular. His life divides itself naturally into three periods of
-about equal length, the first extending from his birth in 1794 to his
-appointment as assistant-tutor of Trinity College in 1818, the second
-from 1818 to his appointment as Master in 1841, and the third from 1841
-to his death in 1866.
-
-Whewell came up to Cambridge at the beginning of the Michaelmas
-Term, 1812. Those who are familiar with the exciting spectacle
-presented by the splendid intellectual activity of the Cambridge of
-to-day—accommodating itself with flexibility and readiness to
-requirements the most diverse, appointing new teachers in
-departments of study the most unusual and the most remote on the
-bare chance of their services being required, flinging open its
-doors to all comers, regardless of sex, creed, or nationality, and
-thronged with students whose numbers are increasing year by year,
-eager to take advantage of the instruction which their elders are
-equally eager to supply them with—will find it difficult, if not
-impossible, to imagine the totally different state of things which
-existed at that time. Were we asked to express its characteristic by
-a single word, we should answer, dulness. It must be remembered that
-communication in those days was slow; news did not arrive until it
-was stale; travelling, especially for passengers, was expensive, so
-that, at least for the shorter vacations, many persons did not leave
-Cambridge at all; and some remained there during the whole year—we
-might say, in some cases, during their whole lives. For the same
-reasons strangers rarely visited the University. The same people
-dined and supped together day after day, with no novelty to
-diversify their lives or their conversation. No wonder that they
-became narrow, prejudiced, eccentric, or that their habits were
-tainted with the grosser vices which there was no public opinion to
-repudiate. The undergraduates, most of whom came from the upper
-classes, were few. In the fifteen years between 1800 and 1815 the
-yearly average of those who matriculated did not exceed 205: less
-than one-fourth of those who now present themselves[2]. The only
-road to the Honour Degree was through the Mathematical Tripos. The
-amusements were as little varied as the studies. There was riding
-for those who could afford it; and a few boated and played cricket
-or tennis; but the majority contented themselves with a walk. With
-the undergraduates, as with their seniors, the habit of hard
-drinking was unfortunately still prevalent. But the great changes
-through which the country passed between 1815 and 1834 produced a
-totally different state of things. The old order changed; slowly and
-almost imperceptibly at first, but still it changed. As the wealth
-of the country increased, a new class of students presented
-themselves for education; ideas began to circulate with rapidity;
-old forms of procedure and examination were given up; academic
-society was purified from its coarseness and vulgarity, and lost
-much of its exclusiveness; new studies were admitted upon an all but
-equal footing with the old ones; and, lastly, the new political
-principles asserted themselves by gradually sweeping away, one after
-another, all restrictive enactments. This last change, however, was
-not consummated until 1871. The other changes with which what may be
-called modern Cambridge was inaugurated are thus enumerated with
-characteristic force by Professor Sedgwick in one of his ‘Letters to
-the Editor of the _Leeds Mercury_,’ written in 1836, with which he
-demolished that infamous slanderer of the University, Mr R. M.
-Beverley:
-
-‘It is most strange that in a letter on the present state of Cambridge
-no notice should be taken of the noble institutions which have of late
-years risen up within it; of the glories of its Observatory; of the
-newly-chartered body, the Philosophical Society, organized among its
-resident members in the year 1819, and now known to the world of science
-by its “Transactions,” the records of many important original
-discoveries; of the new Collections in Natural History; of the
-magnificent new Press; of the new School and Museum of Comparative
-Anatomy; of the noble extension of the collegiate buildings, made at
-some inconvenience and much personal cost to the present Fellows, and
-entailing on them and their successors the weight of an enormous debt;
-of the general spirit of inquiry pervading the members of the academic
-body, young and old; of the eight or nine _new courses_ of public
-lectures (established within the last twenty-five years) both on the
-applied sciences and the ancient languages; of the general activity of
-the professors, and of their correspondence with foreign establishments
-organized for objects like their own, whereby Cambridge is now, at
-least, an integral part of the vast republic of literature and science;
-of the crowded class at the lecture of Modern History [by Professor
-Smyth]; of the great knowledge of many of our younger members in modern
-languages; of the recent Professorship of Political Economy bestowed on
-a gentleman [Mr Pryme] who had been lecturing for years, and was a firm
-and known supporter of Liberal opinions.’
-
-When Whewell came to the University these improvements had not been so
-much as thought of. He was himself to be the prime mover in bringing
-several of them about. It must be remembered, however, while we confess
-to a special enthusiasm for our hero, that he did not stand alone as the
-champion of intellectual development in the University. Indeed it will
-become evident as we proceed that he was not naturally a reformer. He
-had so strong a respect for existing institutions that he hesitated long
-before he could bring himself to sanction any change, no matter how
-self-evident or how salutary. As a young man, however, he found himself
-one of a large body of enthusiastic workers, who, while they differed
-widely, almost fundamentally, on the methods to be employed, were all
-animated by the same spirit, and stimulated one another to fresh
-exertions in the common cause. It was one of the most remarkable
-characteristics of the period of which Professor Sedgwick has sketched
-the results, that it was hardly more distinguished for the changes
-produced than for the men who brought them about.
-
-But to return to the special subject of our essay. Of Whewell’s boyhood,
-school days, and undergraduateship, few details have been preserved. His
-father was a master carpenter, residing at Lancaster, where William, the
-eldest of his seven children, was born in 1794. His father is mentioned
-as a man of probity and intelligence; but his mother, whom he
-unfortunately lost when he was only eleven years old, appears to have
-been a woman of superior talents and considerable culture, who enriched
-the ‘Poet’s Corner’ of the weekly _Lancaster Gazette_ with occasional
-contributions in verse. William was about to be apprenticed to his
-father, when his superior intelligence attracted the attention of Mr
-Rowley, curate of the parish and master of the grammar school. The
-father objected at first: ‘He knows more about parts of my business than
-I do,’ he said, ‘and has a special turn for it.’ However, after a week’s
-reflection, he yielded, mainly out of deference to Mr Rowley, who
-further offered to find the boy in books, and educate him free of
-expense. Of his school experiences, Professor Owen, who was one of his
-schoolfellows, has contributed some delightful reminiscences. After
-mentioning that he was a tall, ungainly youth, he adds:
-
-‘The rate at which Whewell mastered both English grammar and Latin
-accidence was a marvel; and before the year was out he had moved upward
-into the class including my elder brother and a dozen boys of the same
-age. Then it was that the head-master, noting to them the ease with
-which Whewell mastered the exercises and lessons, raised the tale and
-standard. Out of school I remember remonstrances in this fashion: “Now,
-Whewell, if you say more than twenty lines of Virgil to-day, we’ll
-wallop you.” But that was easier said than done. I have seen him, with
-his back to the churchyard wall, flooring first one, then another, of
-the “walloppers,” and at last public opinion in the school interposed.
-“Any two of you may take Whewell in a fair stand-up fight, but we won’t
-have any more at him at once.” After the fate of the first pair, a
-second was not found willing. My mother thought “it was extremely
-ungrateful in _that boy Whewell_ to have discoloured both eyes of her
-eldest so shockingly.” But Mr Rowley said, “Boys will be boys,” and he
-always let them fight it fairly out.’
-
-In after years Whewell spoke of the good training he had received in
-arithmetic, geometry, and mensuration from Mr Rowley; but it is believed
-that his recollections of his first school were not wholly agreeable;
-and probably he was not sorry when he was removed to the grammar school
-at Heversham, in Westmoreland. This took place in 1810. The reason for
-it was that he might compete for an exhibition of 50_l._ per annum, at
-Trinity College, which he was so fortunate as to obtain. At his second
-school he paid great attention to classical studies, and practised
-versification in Greek and Latin.
-
-In October 1812 he commenced residence at Trinity College as a
-sub-sizar. His first University distinction was the Chancellor’s gold
-medal for English Verse, the subject being ‘Boadicea.’ In after years he
-was fond of expressing the theory that ‘a prize-poem should be a
-prize-poem’: by which he probably meant that the subject should be
-treated in a conventional fashion, with no eccentric innovations of
-style or metre. It must be admitted that his own work conformed exactly
-to this standard. The poem was welcomed with profound admiration in the
-family circle at home; but his old master took a different view of the
-question. Professor Owen relates that Mr Rowley called one day at his
-mother’s house, and began as follows:
-
-‘“I’ve sad news for you, Mrs Owen, to-day. I’ve just had a letter from
-Cambridge; that boy Whewell has ruined himself, he’ll never get his
-Wranglership now!” “Why, good gracious, Mr Rowley, what _has_ Whewell
-been doing?” “Why, he has gone and got the Chancellor’s gold medal for
-some trumpery poem, ‘Boadicea,’ or something of that kind, when he ought
-to have been sticking to his mathematics. I give him up now. Taking
-after his poor mother, I suppose.”’
-
-The letters which he wrote home give us some pleasant glimpses of his
-College life, which he evidently thoroughly enjoyed. For the first time
-in his life he had access to a good library—that of Trinity College—and
-he speaks of ‘an inconceivable desire to read all manner of books at
-once,’ adding that at that very moment there were two folios and six
-quartos of different works upon his table. The success which he
-afterwards achieved is a proof that he entered heartily into the studies
-of the place; and among his friends were men who were studious then, and
-afterwards became eminent. Among these we may mention Mr, afterwards Sir
-John, Herschel, Mr Richard Jones, Mr Julius Charles Hare, and Mr Charles
-Babbage. A correspondent of his, writing so late as 1841, recalls the
-‘Sunday morning philosophical breakfasts,’ at which they used to meet in
-1815; and there are indications in the letters of similar feasts of
-reason and flows of soul. It must, on the other hand, be admitted that a
-few indications of an opposite character may be produced. He admits, in
-a half-bantering, half-serious way, that he had laid himself open to the
-charge of idleness; and he describes the diversions of himself and his
-friends during the long vacation of 1815 as ‘dancing at country fairs,
-playing billiards, tuning beakers into musical glasses,’ and the like.
-It need be no matter of surprise that a young man of high spirits and
-strong bodily frame, brought up in the seclusion of Lancashire, should
-have taken the fullest advantage of the first opportunity which
-presented itself of appreciating the lighter and brighter side of
-existence. This, however, was all. Whewell knew perfectly well where to
-stop. No scandal ever attached itself to his name; and he ‘wore the
-white flower of a blameless life’ through a period when the customs
-prevalent in the University were such as are more honoured in the breach
-than in the observance.
-
-He proceeded to the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1816, when he was
-second Wrangler and second Smith’s Prize-man. On both occasions he was
-beaten by a Mr Jacob, of Caius College, who was his junior by two years.
-It is a Cambridge tradition that Mr Jacob’s success was a surprise to
-everybody, for he had intentionally affected to be an idle man, and
-showed himself on most days riding out in hunting costume, the truth
-being that he kept his books at a farm-house, where he pursued his
-studies in secrecy and quiet. He was a young man of the greatest
-promise; and it was expected that he would achieve a conspicuous success
-at the Bar. But his lungs were affected, and he died of consumption at
-an early age. As Mr Todhunter remarks, his fame rests mainly on the fact
-that he twice outstripped so formidable a competitor as the future
-Master of Trinity. Whewell mentions him as ‘a very pleasant as well as a
-very clever man,’ and adds, ‘I had as soon be beaten by him as by
-anybody else.’
-
-The labours of reading for the degree over, Whewell had leisure to turn
-his studies in any direction whither his fancy led him. No doubt he
-fully appreciated the, to him, unusual position, for he tells his sister
-that few people could be ‘more tranquilly happy than your brother, in
-his green plaid dressing-gown, blue morocco slippers, and with a large
-book before him.’ The time had come, however, when he was to experience
-the first of the inevitable inconveniences of a College life. Two of his
-most intimate friends, Herschel and Jones, left Cambridge, and he
-bitterly deplores their loss. Indeed it probably needed all the
-attachment to the place, which he proclaims in the same letter, to
-prevent his following their example. He appears at one time to have
-thought seriously of going to the Bar. He began, however, to take
-pupils: an occupation which becomes a singularly absorbing one,
-especially when the tutor takes the interest in them which apparently he
-did. One of those with whom he spent the summer of 1818, in Wales, Mr
-Kenelm Digby, afterwards author of the _Broadstone of Honour_, who
-admits that he was so idle that his tutor would take no remuneration
-from him, has recorded that—
-
-‘I had reason to regard Whewell as one of the most generous,
-open-hearted, disinterested, and noble-minded men that I ever knew. I
-remember circumstances that called for the exercise of each of those
-rare qualities, when they were met in a way that would now seem
-incredible, so fast does the world seem moving away from all ancient
-standards of goodness and moral grandeur.’
-
-This testimony is important, if only for comparison with the far
-different feelings with which his more official pupils regarded him in
-after years. In these occupations he spent the two years succeeding his
-degree; for the amount of special work done for the Fellowship
-Examination was probably not great. He was elected Fellow in October
-1817; and in the summer of the following year was made one of the
-assistant-tutors. With this appointment the first part of his University
-career ends, and the second begins.
-
-His connexion with the educational staff of Trinity College, first as
-assistant-tutor, then as sole tutor, lasted for just twenty years. These
-were the most occupied of his busy life; and in justification of what we
-said at the outset of the multifarious nature of his occupations, we
-proceed to give a rapid chronological sketch of them. His career as an
-author began, in 1819, with an _Elementary Treatise on Mechanics_. It
-went through seven editions, in each of which, as Mr Todhunter says,
-‘the subject was revolutionized rather than modified; and the preface to
-each expounded with characteristic energy the paramount merits of the
-last constitution framed.’ The value of the work was greatly impaired by
-these proceedings, for an author can hardly expect to retain the
-unwavering confidence of his readers while his own opinions are in
-constant fluctuation. In 1820 he was Moderator, and travelled abroad for
-the first time. In 1821 he was working at geology seriously, and took a
-geological tour in the Isle of Wight with Sedgwick, who had been made
-Woodwardian Professor three years before. Later in the year he explored
-the Lake Country, and was introduced to Mr Wordsworth. Their
-acquaintance subsequently ripened into a friendship, which appears in
-numerous letters, and notably in the dedication prefixed to the
-_Elements of Morality_. A _Treatise on Dynamics_ was published in 1823,
-which was treated in much the same fashion as its fellow on _Mechanics_.
-The summer vacation was spent in a visit to Paris for the first time,
-and an architectural tour in Normandy with Mr Kenelm Digby. In 1824 he
-took a prominent part in the resistance to the Heads of Colleges in
-their attempt to nominate to the Professorship of Mineralogy; and later
-in the year he went again to Cumberland with Sedgwick, ‘rambling about
-the country, and examining the strata’; visiting Southey and Wordsworth;
-and, in the intervals of geology, seeing cathedrals and churches. In
-1825, as the chair of Mineralogy was about to be vacated by Professor
-Henslow, promoted to that of Botany, Whewell announced himself a
-candidate; and by way of preparation spent three months in Germany,
-studying crystallography at the feet of Professor Mohs, of Freiburg: a
-subject on which he had already made communications to the Royal Society
-and to the Cambridge Philosophical Society. This was his first
-introduction to Germany, in whose language and literature he
-thenceforward took the greatest interest. He even modified his way of
-writing English in accordance with German custom, as is shown by the
-plentiful scattering of capitals through his sentences, and by a certain
-ponderosity of style which savours of German originals. The dissensions
-as to the mode of election to the Mineralogical chair caused it to
-remain vacant for three years; so that Whewell, about the choice of whom
-there never seems to have been any doubt, had no immediate opportunity
-of turning to account his newly-acquired knowledge. He therefore, with
-even more than characteristic energy, turned his attention to two most
-opposite subjects, Theology, and the Density of the Earth.
-
-In the summer of 1826 he commenced a series of investigations on the
-latter subject at Dolcoath Mine, Cornwall, in conjunction with Mr Airy.
-The essential part of the process was to compare the time of vibration
-of a pendulum at the surface of the earth with the time of vibration of
-the same pendulum at a considerable depth below the surface.
-Unfortunately the experiments, which were renewed in 1828, failed to
-lead to any satisfactory result, partly through an error in the
-construction of the pendulum, partly through a singular fatality, by
-which, on both occasions, they were frustrated by a serious accident.
-The account he gives of himself, and of the way in which the researches
-were regarded by the Cornishmen, is too amusing not to be quoted. It is
-contained in a letter to his friend Lady Malcolm, and is dated
-‘Underground Chamber, Dolcoath Mine, Camborne, Cornwall, June 10, 1826:
-
-‘I venture to suppose that you never had a correspondent who at the time
-of writing was situated as your present one is. I am at this moment
-sitting in a small cavern deep in the recesses of the earth, separated
-by 1,200 feet of rock from the surface on which you mortals tread. I am
-close to a wooden partition which has been fixed here by human hands,
-through which I ever and anon look, by means of two telescopes, into a
-larger cavern. That larger den has got various strange-looking machines,
-illumined here and there by unseen lamps, among which is visible a clock
-with a face most unlike common clocks, and a brass bar which swings to
-and fro with a small but never-ceasing motion. I am clad in the garb of
-a miner, which is probably more dirty and scanty than anything you may
-have happened to see in the way of dress. The stillness of this
-subterranean solitude is interrupted by the noise, most strange to its
-walls, of the ticking of my clock, and the chirping of seven watches.
-But besides these sounds it has noises of its own which my ear catches
-now and then. A huge iron vessel is every quarter of an hour let down
-through the rock by a chain above a thousand feet long, and in its
-descent and ascent dashes itself against the sides of the pit with a
-violence and a din like thunder; and at intervals, louder and deeper
-still, I hear the heavy burst of an explosion when gunpowder has been
-used to rend the rock, which seems to pervade every part of the earth
-like the noise of a huge gong, and to shake the air within my prison. I
-have sat here for some hours, and shall sit five or six more, at the end
-of which time I shall climb up to the light of the sky in which you
-live, by about sixty ladders, which form the weary upward path from
-hence to your world. I ought not to omit, by way of completing the
-picturesque, that I have a barrel of porter close to my elbow, and a
-miner stretched on the granite at my feet, whose yawns at being kept
-here so many hours, watching my inscrutable proceedings, are most
-pathetic. This has been my situation and employment every day for some
-time, and will be so for some while longer, with the alternation of
-putting myself in a situation as much as possible similar, in a small
-hut on the surface of the earth. Is not this a curious way of spending
-one’s leisure time? I assure you I often think of Sir John’s favourite
-quotation from Leyden, “Slave of the dark and dirty mine! What vanity
-has brought thee here?” and sometimes doubt whether sunshine be not
-better than science.
-
-‘If the object of my companion and myself had been to make a sensation,
-we must have been highly gratified by the impression which we have
-produced upon the good people in this country. There is no end to the
-number and oddity of their conjectures and stories about us. The most
-charitable of them take us to be fortune-tellers; but for the greater
-part we are suspected of more mischievous kinds of magic. A single loud,
-insulated, peal of thunder, which was heard the first Sunday after our
-arrival, was laid at our door; and a staff which we had occasion to
-plant at the top of the cliff, was reported to have the effect of
-sinking all unfortunate ships which sailed past.
-
-‘I could tell you many more such histories; but I think this must be at
-least enough about myself, if I do not wish to make the quotation from
-Leyden particularly applicable.’
-
-Whewell had been ordained priest on Trinity Sunday, 1826, and this
-circumstance had probably directed him to a more exact study of theology
-than he had previously attempted. The result was a course of four
-sermons before the University in February 1827. The subject of these,
-which have never been printed, may be described as the ‘Relation of
-Human to Divine Knowledge.’ They attracted considerable attention when
-delivered; and it was even suggested that the author ought to devote
-himself to theology as a profession, and try to obtain one of the
-Divinity Professorships; but the advice was not taken. A theological
-tone may, however, be observed in most of his scientific works; he loved
-to point out analogies between scientific and moral truths, and to show
-that there was no real antagonism between science and revealed religion.
-
-In 1828 the new Professor of Mineralogy entered upon his functions, and
-after his manner rushed into print with an _Essay on Mineralogical
-Classification and Nomenclature_, in which there is much novelty of
-definition and arrangement. He was conscious that he had been somewhat
-precipitate; for he writes to his friend, Mr Jones, who was trying to
-make up his mind on certain problems of political economy, and declined
-to print until he had done so:
-
-‘I avoid all your anxieties about authorship by playing for lower stakes
-of labour and reputation. While you work for years in the elaboration of
-slowly-growing ideas, I take the first buds of thought and make a
-nosegay of them without trying what patience and labour might do in
-ripening and perfecting them[3].’
-
-At the beginning of the year 1830 there appeared an anonymous
-publication entitled _Architectural Notes on German Churches, with
-Remarks on the Origin of Gothic Architecture_. The author need not have
-tried to conceal his name; in this, as in other similar attempts, his
-style betrayed his identity at once. The work went through three
-editions, in each of which it was characteristically altered and
-enlarged, so that what had appeared as an essay of 118 pages in 1830,
-was transformed into a work of 348 pages in 1842. Architecture had been
-from the first one of Whewell’s favourite studies. In a letter to his
-sister in 1818 he speaks of a visit to Lichfield and Chester for the
-purpose of studying their cathedrals; many of his subsequent tours were
-undertaken for similar objects; and his numerous note-books and
-sketch-books (for he was no mean draughtsman) contain ample evidence of
-the pains he bestowed on perfecting himself in architectural details.
-The theory, or ‘ground-idea,’ as his favourite Germans would have called
-it, which he puts forward, is, that the pointed arch, even if it was
-really introduced from the East, which he evidently doubts, was improved
-and developed through the system of vaulting, which the Gothic builders
-learnt from the Romans. This theory has not been generally accepted; but
-the mere statement of it may have been of value, as the author suggests,
-‘in the way of bringing into view relations and connexions which really
-exerted a powerful influence on the progress of architecture’; and the
-sketch of the differences between the classical and the Gothic styles is
-certainly extremely good. It has been sometimes suggested that the whole
-book was written in a spirit of rivalry to the _Remarks on the
-Architecture of the Middle Ages_, by Professor Willis. A glance at the
-dates of publication is enough to refute this view; for the work of
-Professor Willis was published in 1835, the first edition of Dr
-Whewell’s in 1830. In the course of this summer he made an architectural
-tour with Mr Rickman in Devon and Cornwall; and, as if in order that his
-occupations might be as sharply contrasted as possible, investigated
-also the geology of the neighbourhood of Bath.
-
-In 1831 we find Whewell reviewing three remarkable books: Herschel’s
-_Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy_; Lyell’s _Principles of
-Geology_, vol. i.; and Jones _On the Distribution of Wealth_. As Mr
-Todhunter remarks, scarcely any person but himself could have ventured
-on such a task. These reviews are not merely critical; they contain much
-of the author’s own speculations, much that went beyond the interest of
-the moment, and might be considered to possess a permanent value.
-Herschel was delighted with his own share. He writes to Whewell,
-thanking him for ‘the splendid review,’ and declaring that he ‘should
-have envied the author of any work, if a stranger, which could give
-occasion for such a review.’ Lyell wrote in much the same strain; and we
-are rather surprised that he did so; for his reviewer not only
-stubbornly refused to accept his theory of uniformity of action, in
-opposition to the cataclysmic views of the Huttonians, but treated the
-whole question in a spirit of good-humoured banter, in which even
-Herschel thought that he had gone too far. The article on his friend Mr
-Jones’ work—which appeared in the _British Critic_—is rather an
-exposition of his views, which were original, than a criticism. It was
-Whewell’s first appearance in print on any question of political
-economy, except a short memoir in the Transactions of the Cambridge
-Philosophical Society, called a _Mathematical Exposition of some
-Doctrines of Political Economy_; and therefore marks a period when he
-had added yet one more science to those which he had already mastered.
-In this year he gave much time to a controversy which was agitating the
-University on the question of the best plans to be adopted for a new
-Public Library; and contributed a bulky pamphlet to the literature of
-the subject, in opposition to his friend Mr Peacock. The whole question
-is a very interesting one; but our space will not allow us to do more
-than mention it, as another instance of the diversity of Whewell’s
-interests.
-
-The next year (1832) was even a busier one than its predecessor; he was
-occupied in revising some of his mathematical text-books; in drawing up
-a Report on Mineralogy for the British Association, described as ‘an
-example of the unrivalled power with which he mastered a subject with
-which his previous studies had had but little connexion’; and in writing
-one of the Bridgewater Treatises, a work which, with most men, would
-have been enough to occupy them fully during the whole of the three
-years which had elapsed since the President of the Royal Society had
-selected him as one of the eight writers who should carry out the
-intentions of the Earl of Bridgewater. The subject of his treatise is
-_Astronomy and General Physics considered with reference to Natural
-Theology_. It is one of Whewell’s most thoughtful and justly celebrated
-works, on which he must have bestowed much time. During the intervals,
-however, of its composition, he had not only written the reviews we have
-mentioned, and others also, to which we can only allude, but had
-commenced those researches on the Tides, which are embodied in no fewer
-than fourteen memoirs in the Transactions of the Royal Society, and for
-which he afterwards received the Royal Medal. No wonder that even he
-began to feel overworked, and resigned the Professorship of Mineralogy
-early in the year. He writes to his friend Mr Jones, whom he was always
-striving to inspire with some of his own restless activity of thought
-and composition:
-
-‘I am plunging into term-work, hurried and distracted as usual; the only
-comfort is the daily perception of what I have gained by giving up the
-Professorship. If I can work myself free so as to have a little command
-of my own time, I think I shall be wiser in future than to mortgage it
-so far. Quiet reflexion is as necessary as fresh air, and I can scarcely
-get a breath of it.’
-
-His friend must have smiled as he read this, for he probably knew what
-such resolutions were worth. Whewell might have said, with Lord Byron—
-
- ‘I make
- A vow of reformation every spring,
- And break it when the summer comes about’;
-
-for, notwithstanding these promises and many others like them, we shall
-find that in future years he took upon himself a greater rather than a
-less amount of work, which he did not merely _get through_ in a
-perfunctory fashion, but discharged with a thoroughness as rare as it is
-marvellous.
-
-The Bridgewater Treatise appeared in 1833, a year in which he delivered
-an address to the British Association, at its meeting at Cambridge;
-contributed a paper _On the Use of Definitions_ to the Philological
-Museum; and increased his stock of architectural and geological
-knowledge by tours with Messrs Rickman, Sedgwick, and Airy. He was now
-generally recognized as the first authority on scientific language; and
-we find Professor Faraday deferring to him on the nomenclature of
-electricity. In 1834 he invented an _anemometer_, or instrument for
-measuring the force and direction of the wind; it was employed for some
-time at York, by Professor Phillips, but has since been superseded by
-more convenient contrivances.
-
-The real meaning of his longing for leisure soon became manifest. In
-July 1834 he expounds to his friend Mr Jones the plan of the _History
-and Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences_, which he was prosecuting
-vigorously. This great work occupied him, _almost_ to the exclusion of
-other matters, for the whole of 1835 and 1836. We say _almost_, because,
-even at this time, with his usual habit of taking up some new subject
-just before he had completed an extensive labour on an old one, he was
-beginning to study systematic morality, and in 1835 published a preface
-to Sir James Mackintosh’s _Dissertation on the Progress of Ethical
-Philosophy_, a subject which he further considered in 1837, when he
-preached before the University _Four Sermons on the Foundation of
-Morals_. In this year he succeeded Mr Lyell as President of the
-Geological Society, an office which must have been given to him rather
-in recognition of his general scientific attainments and the work he had
-done in the kindred science of mineralogy, than on account of any
-special publications on geology. He seems to have made an excellent
-President. Sir Charles Lyell[4] speaks of him with enthusiasm, and
-points out his sacrifices of time, not only in attending the meetings of
-the Society, but in supervising the details of its organization. The
-extra work which the office involved is thus described in a letter to
-his sister, dated November 18, 1837:
-
-‘My old complaint of being overwhelmed with business, especially at this
-time of year, is at present, I think, rather more severe than ever. For,
-besides all my usual employments, I have to go to London two days every
-fortnight as President of the Geological Society, and am printing a book
-which I have not yet written, so that I am obliged often to run as fast
-as I can to avoid the printers riding over me, so close are they at my
-heels. I am, in addition to all this, preaching a course of sermons
-before the University; but this last employment, though it takes time
-and thought, rather sobers and harmonizes my other occupations than adds
-anything to my distraction.’
-
-In this same year (1837) the _History of the Inductive Sciences_ was
-published, to be followed in less than three years by the _Philosophy_
-of the same. This encyclopædic publication—for the two books must be
-considered together—marks the conclusion of that part of his life which
-had been devoted, in the main, to pure science; and it gives the reason
-for his having thrown himself into occupations so diverse. It was not
-his habit to write on that which he had not completely mastered; and he
-therefore thought, wrote, and published on most of the separate sciences
-while tracing their history and developing their philosophy.
-
-In this rapid sketch we have not been able to do more than indicate the
-principal works which Whewell had had in hand. It must not be forgotten
-that at the same time he was engaged in a large and ever-increasing
-correspondence; writing letters—which, as he used to say himself, ought
-to be ‘postworthy’—not merely to scientific men, as we know from Mr
-Todhunter’s book, but—as we now know from Mrs Stair Douglas—to his
-sisters and other ladies, on all sorts of subjects which he thought
-would interest them. Then he was a wide reader, as is proved by notes he
-made on the books which he had read from 1817 to 1830: ‘books in almost
-all the languages of Europe; histories of all countries, ancient or
-modern; treatises on all sciences, moral and physical. Among the notes
-is an epitome of Kant’s _Kritik der reinen Vernunft_, a work which
-exercised a marked influence on all his speculations in mental
-philosophy.’ Whatever he read, he read thoroughly. Mr Todhunter
-illustrates this by a story given on the authority of one of his oldest
-friends. He was found reading Henry Taylor’s _Philip van Artevelde_,
-which then had just appeared. Not content with the poem alone, however,
-he had Froissart by his side, and was carefully comparing the modern
-drama with the ancient chronicle. Lastly—and we put the subject we are
-now about to mention last, not because it was least, but because it was,
-or ought to have been, the most important of all his occupations—he held
-the office of tutor of one of the three _sides_, as they were called,
-into which Trinity College was then divided, first alone, and next in
-conjunction with Mr Perry, from 1823 to 1838.
-
-At that time the College was far smaller than it is at present, and a
-tutor was able, if he chose, to see much more of his pupils, to form
-some appreciation of their tastes and capacities, and personally to
-direct their studies. A man who combines the varied qualities which a
-thoroughly good tutor ought to possess is not readily found. It is a
-question of natural fitness rather than of training. In the first place,
-he must be content to forego all other occupations, and to be at the
-beck and call of his pupils and their parents whenever they may choose
-to come to him. Secondly, he must never forget that the dull, the idle,
-and the vicious demand even more care and time than the clever and the
-industrious. It may seem almost superfluous to mention that nothing
-which concerns his pupils must be beneath his notice. Petty details
-which concern their daily life, their rooms, their bills, their domestic
-relations, their amusements, have all to be referred to the tutor; and
-the most trivial of these may not seldom be of the greatest importance
-in giving occasion for exercising influence or administering advice. We
-are sorry to have to admit that Whewell was hardly so successful as he
-ought to have been in discharging these arduous duties. The period of
-his tutorship was, as we have shown, precisely that during which he was
-most occupied with his private studies; he threw his energies into them,
-and disposed of his College work in a perfunctory fashion. His letters
-are full of such passages as: ‘I have got an infinitude of that trifling
-men call business on my hands’; ‘During the last term I have been almost
-too busy either to write or read. I took upon myself a number of
-employments which ate up almost every moment of the day’; and the like;
-and his delight at having transferred the financial part of the work to
-his colleague Mr Perry, in 1833, was unbounded. The result was
-inevitable; he could not give the requisite time to his pupils, and, in
-fact, hardly knew some of them by sight. A story used to be current
-about him which is so amusing that we think it will bear repeating. We
-do not vouch for its accuracy; but we think that it would hardly have
-passed current had it not been felt to be applicable. One day he gave
-his servant a list of names of certain of his pupils whom he wished to
-see at a wine-party after Hall, a form of entertainment then much in
-fashion. Among the names was that of an undergraduate who had died some
-weeks before. ‘Mr Smith, sir; why he died last term, sir!’ objected the
-man. ‘You ought to tell me when my pupils die,’ replied the tutor
-sternly; and Whewell could be stern when he was vexed. Again, his
-natural roughness of manner was regarded by the undergraduates as
-indicating want of sympathy. They thought he wanted to get rid of them
-and their affairs as quickly as possible. Those who understood him
-better knew that he was really a warm-hearted friend; and we have seen
-that with his private pupils he had been exceedingly popular; but those
-who came only occasionally into contact with him regarded him with fear,
-not with affection. On the other hand, he was inflexibly just, whatever
-gossip or malevolence may have urged to the contrary. He had no
-favourites. No influence of any kind could make him swerve from the
-lofty standard of right which he had prescribed for himself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We left Whewell completing the _Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences_;
-and for the future we shall find him turning his attention
-exclusively—so far as he could be said to do anything exclusively—to
-Moral Philosophy. In 1838 he was elected to the Knightbridge
-Professorship, founded in 1677 by the Rev. John Knightbridge, who
-directed his Professor of ‘Moral Theology or Casuistical Divinity,’ as
-he termed it, to read five lectures in the Public Schools in every term,
-and, at the end of it, to deliver them, fairly written out, to the
-Vice-Chancellor. Various pains and penalties were enjoined against those
-who failed to perform these duties; but, notwithstanding, the office had
-remained a sinecure for more than a century; indeed we are doubtful
-whether it had ever been anything else. The suggestion that Whewell
-should become a candidate for it was made by his old friend, Dr Worsley,
-Master of Downing, who was Vice-Chancellor in that year, and, by virtue
-of his office, one of the electors. Whewell determined to inaugurate a
-new era, and at once commenced a course of lectures, which were
-regularly continued in subsequent years. We have seen that he had
-prepared himself for these pursuits by previous studies; and his letters
-show that he had made up his mind to devote himself to them for some
-years to come. In 1845 he produced his _Elements of Morality_, wherein
-the subject is treated systematically; and subsequently he wrote, or
-edited, works devoted to special parts of it, as _Lectures on the
-History of Moral Philosophy in England_; _Grotius de Jure Belli et
-Pacis_; and the _Platonic Dialogues for English Readers_. The permanent
-influence which Grotius exercised upon his mind is marked by his
-munificent foundation of a Professorship and Scholarships in
-International Law, in connexion with two additional courts for Trinity
-College, one of which was built during his life-time, while for the
-other funds were provided by his Will. The most sober-minded of men may
-sometimes be a visionary; and the motto _Paci sacrum_, which Whewell
-placed on the western façade of his new buildings, would seem to prove
-that he seriously believed that his foundation would put an end to war,
-and inaugurate ‘a federation of the world.’
-
-As time went on, and Whewell approached his fiftieth year, he began to
-feel that ‘College rooms are no home for declining years.’ His friends
-were leaving, or had left; he did not make new ones; and he was
-beginning to lead a life of loneliness which was very oppressive to him.
-In 1840 he thought seriously of taking a College living, but his friend
-Mr Hare dissuaded him; and the letters that passed between them on this
-subject are among the most interesting in Mrs Stair Douglas’ volume. In
-1841 he made up his mind to settle in Cambridge as a married man, with
-his Professorship and his ethical studies as an employment. The lady of
-his choice was Miss Cordelia Marshall. They were married on October 12,
-1841, and on the very same day, Dr Wordsworth, Master of Trinity, wrote
-to him at Coniston, where he was spending his honeymoon, announcing his
-intention of resigning, ‘in the earnest _desire_, _hope_, and _trust_,
-that _you_ may be, and _will_ be, my successor.’ The news, which seems
-to have been quite unexpected, spread rapidly among the small circle of
-Whewell’s intimate friends; and succeeding posts brought letters from Dr
-Worsley and others, urging him ‘not to linger in his hymeneal Elysium,’
-but to go up to London at once, and solicit the office from the Prime
-Minister, Sir Robert Peel. Dr Whewell describes himself as ‘vehemently
-disturbed’; most probably he was unwilling to comply with what seems to
-us to have been extraordinary advice. He did comply, however, and went
-to London, where he found a letter from Sir Robert, offering him the
-Mastership. It is pleasant to be able to record that the offer was made
-spontaneously, before any solicitations had reached the Minister.
-Whewell accepted it on October 18; had an interview with Sir Robert on
-the 19th; returned to Coniston by the night mail; and on the 23rd
-(according to Mr Todhunter) had sufficiently recovered from his
-excitement to sit down to compose the first lecture of a new course on
-Moral Philosophy.
-
-The appointment was felt to be a good one, though it must be admitted
-that there were dissentient voices. It was notorious that Dr Wordsworth
-had resigned soon after the fall of Lord Melbourne’s administration, in
-order to prevent the election of either Dean Peacock or Professor
-Sedgwick, both of whom were very popular with the Fellows. The feeling
-in College, therefore, was rather against the new Master than with him.
-Nor was he personally popular. We now know, from the letters which, in
-reply to congratulations, he wrote to Lord Lyttelton, Bishop Thirlwall,
-Mr Hare, and others, how diffident he was of his fitness for the office,
-and how anxious to discharge its high duties becomingly. Mr Hare had
-evidently been giving advice with some freedom, as was his wont, for
-Whewell replies:
-
-‘I perceive and feel the value of the advice you give me, and I have no
-wish, I think, either to deny or to defend the failings you point out.
-In a person holding so eminent a station as mine will be, everything
-impatient and overbearing is of course quite out of place; and though it
-may cost me some effort, my conviction of this truth is so strong that I
-think it cannot easily lose its hold. As to my love of disputation, I do
-not deny that it has been a great amusement to me; but I find it to be
-so little of an amusement to others that I should have to lay down my
-logical cudgels for the sake of good manners alone.’
-
-The writer of these sentences was far too straightforward not to have
-meant every word that he wrote; and we feel sure that he tried to carry
-out his good intentions. We are compelled, however, to admit that he
-failed. He _was_ impatient and he _was_ overbearing; or he was thought
-to be so, which, so far as his success as a Master went, came to the
-same thing. He had lived so long as a bachelor among bachelors—giving
-and receiving thrusts in argument, like a pugilist in a fair fight—that
-he had become somewhat pachydermatous. It is probable, too, that he was
-quite ignorant of the weight of his own blows. He forgot those he
-received, and expected his antagonist to have an equally short memory.
-Again, the high view which he took of his position as Master laid him
-open to the charge of arrogance. We believe the true explanation to be
-that he was too conscientious, if such a phrase be admissible; too
-inflexible in exacting from others the same strict obedience to College
-rules which he imposed upon himself. There are two ways, however, of
-doing most things; and he was unlucky in nearly always choosing the
-wrong one. For instance, his hospitality was boundless; whenever
-strangers came to Cambridge, they were entertained at Trinity Lodge;
-and, besides, there were weekly parties at which the residents were
-received. The rooms are spacious, and the welcome was intended to be a
-warm one; but the parties were not successful. Even at those social
-gatherings he never forgot that he was Master; compelling all his guests
-to come in their gowns, and those who came only after dinner to wear
-them during the entire evening. Then an idea became current that no
-undergraduate might sit down. So far as this notion was not wholly
-erroneous, it was based on the evident fact that the great drawing-room,
-large as it is, could not contain more than a very limited number of
-guests, supposing them all to sit; and that the undergraduates were
-obviously those who ought to stand. A strong feeling against anybody,
-however, resembles a popular panic; argument is powerless against it;
-and the victim of it must be content to wait until his persecutors are
-weary with fault-finding. In Dr Whewell’s case it seemed to matter very
-little what he did, or what he left undone; he was sure to give offence.
-The inscription commemorating himself on the restored oriel window of
-the Lodge[5]; the motto, _Lampada tradam_, which he adopted for his
-arms; his differences with Her Majesty’s judges about their
-entertainment at the Lodge; his attempts to stop the disorderly
-interruptions of undergraduates in the Senate House; and a hundred other
-similar matters, were all made occasions for unfavourable comment both
-in and out of College. The comic literature of the day not unfrequently
-alluded to him as the type of the College Don and the University Snob;
-and in 1847, when he actively promoted the election of the Prince
-Consort as Chancellor, a letter in the _Times_ newspaper, signed
-‘Junius,’ informed Prince Albert that he had been made ‘the victim
-chiefly of one man of notoriously turbulent character and habits. Ask
-how HE is received by the University whenever he appears,’ &c.; and a
-second letter, signed ‘Anti-Junius,’ affecting to reply to these
-aspersions, described in ironical language, with infinite humour, ‘the
-retiring modesty, the unfeigned humility, the genuine courtesy’ of the
-‘honoured and beloved Whewell[6].’ We are happy to be able to say that
-he outlived much of this obloquy; his temper grew gradually softer—a
-change due partly to age, partly to the genial influence of both his
-wives; and before the end came he had achieved respect, if not
-popularity. The notion that he was arrogant and self-asserting may still
-be traced in the epigrams to which the essay on _The Plurality of
-Worlds_ gave occasion. Sir Francis Doyle wrote:
-
- ‘Though you through the regions of space should have travelled,
- And of nebular films the remotest unravelled,
- You’ll find, though you tread on the bounds of infinity,
- That God’s greatest work is the Master of Trinity.’
-
-Even better than this was the remark that ‘Whewell thinks himself a
-fraction of the universe, and wishes to make the denominator as small as
-possible.’ These, however, were harmless sallies, at which he was
-probably as much amused as any one.
-
-No one who knew Whewell well can avoid admitting, as we have done, that
-there was much in his manner and conduct that might with advantage have
-been different. But what we wish to maintain is that these defects were
-not essential to his character: that they arose either from a too
-precise adherence to views that were in themselves good and noble, or
-from a certain vehemence and impulsiveness that swept him away in spite
-of himself, and landed him in difficulties over which he had to repent
-at leisure. And in this place let us draw attention to one of his most
-pleasing traits—his generosity. We do not merely refer to the numerous
-cases of distress which he alleviated, delicately and secretly, but to
-the magnanimity of temperament with which he treated those from whom he
-had differed, or whose conduct he had condemned. He had no false notions
-of dignity. If he felt that he had said what he had better have left
-unsaid, or overstepped the proper limits of argument, he would sooth the
-bruised and battered victims of his sledgehammer with some such words as
-these: ‘I am afraid that I was hasty the other day in what I said to
-you. I am very sorry.’ He never bore a grudge, or betrayed remembrance
-of a fault, or repeated a word of scandal. There was nothing small or
-underhand about him. He would oppose a measure of which he disapproved,
-fairly and openly, by all legitimate expedients; but, when beaten, he
-cordially accepted the situation, and never alluded to the subject
-again.
-
-His conduct at the contested election for a University Representative in
-1856 affords a good illustration of what we have here advanced. The
-candidates were Mr Walpole and Mr Denman; and it was decided, after
-conference with their rival committees, that the poll should extend over
-five days, on four of which votes were to be taken in the Public Schools
-from half-past seven to half-past eight in the evening, in addition to
-the usual hours in the Senate House, namely, from ten to four. The
-proceedings excited an unusual interest among the undergraduates, who on
-the first morning occupied the galleries of the Senate House in force,
-and made such a noise that the University officers could not hear each
-others’ voices, and the business was transacted in dumb show. In
-consequence they represented to the Vice-Chancellor that they could not
-do their work unless he ‘took effectual means for the prevention of this
-inconvenience.’ Whewell hated nothing so much as insubordination, and
-had on former occasions addressed himself to the repression of this
-particular form of it. It is therefore probable that he was not
-indisposed to take the only step that, under the circumstances, seemed
-likely to be effectual, namely, to exclude the undergraduates from the
-Senate House for the rest of the days of polling. On the second and
-third days peace reigned within the building, but, when the
-Vice-Chancellor appeared outside, he was confronted by a howling mob,
-through which he had to make his way as best he could. He was advised to
-go by the back way; but, with characteristic pluck, he rejected this
-counsel, and went out and came in by the front gate of his College. A
-few Masters of Arts acted as a body-guard; but further protection was
-thought necessary, and on the third afternoon the University beheld the
-extraordinary spectacle of the Vice-Chancellor proceeding along Trinity
-Street with a prize-fighter on each side of him. On the evening of that
-day Mr Denman withdrew from the contest, a step which probably averted a
-serious riot. When the excitement had subsided a little Whewell drew up
-a printed statement, which, though marked _Private_, is in fact an
-address to the undergraduate members of the University. He points out
-the necessity for acting as he had done, both as regards the business in
-hand and because it was his duty to enforce proper behaviour in a public
-place as a part of education. He concludes with the following passage:
-
-‘I the more confidently believe that the majority of the
-Undergraduates have a due self-respect, and a due respect for just
-authority temperately exercised, because I have ever found it so, both
-as Master of a College, and as Vice-Chancellor. One of the happiest
-recollections of my life is that of a great occasion in my former
-Vice-Chancellorship[7], when I had need to ask for great orderliness
-and considerable self-denial on the part of the Undergraduates. This
-demand they responded to with a dignified and sweet-tempered obedience
-which endeared them to me then, as many good qualities which I have
-seen in successive generations of students have endeared them to me
-since. And I will not easily give up my trust that now, as then, the
-better natures will control and refine the baser, and that it will be
-no longer necessary to put any constraint upon the admission of
-Undergraduates to the Galleries of the Senate-house.’
-
-After the poll had been declared the Proctors brought him a list of the
-rioters. He said, ‘The election is over, they will not do it again,’ and
-threw the record into the fire. Not long afterwards he went, as was his
-frequent custom, to a concert of the University Musical Society. The
-undergraduates present rose and cheered him. Whewell was so much
-affected, that he burst into tears, and sat for some time with his face
-hidden in the folds of his gown.
-
-Those who recollect Whewell, or even those who know him only by his
-portraits, will smile incredulously at an assertion we are about to
-make. But it is true, no matter how severely it may be criticised.
-Whewell was, in reality, an extremely humble-minded man, diffident of
-himself, and sure of his position only when he had the approval of his
-conscience for what he was doing. Then he went forward, regardless of
-what might bar his passage, and too often regardless also of those who
-chanced to differ from him. The few who were admitted to the inner
-circle of his friendship alone knew that he really was what his enemies
-called him in sarcastic mockery, modest and retiring. If he appeared to
-be, as one virulent pamphlet said he was, an ‘imperious bully[8],’ the
-manner which justified such a designation was manner only, and due not
-to arrogance but to nervousness. He disliked praise, even from his best
-friends, if he thought that it was not exactly merited. For instance,
-when Archdeacon Hare spoke enthusiastically of his condemnation of
-‘Utilitarian Ethics’ in the _Sermons on the Foundation of Morals_, and
-exclaimed: ‘May the mind which has compast the whole circle of physical
-science find a lasting home, and erect a still nobler edifice, in this
-higher region! May he be enabled to let his light shine before the
-students of our University, that they may see the truth he utters[9],’
-Whewell requested that the passage might be altered in a new edition. He
-wrote (26 February, 1841):
-
-‘You have mentioned me in a manner which I am obliged to say is so
-extremely erroneous that it distresses me. The character which you have
-given of me is as far as possible from that which I deserve. You know, I
-think, that I am very ignorant in all the matters with which you are
-best acquainted, and the case is much the same in all others. I was
-always very ignorant, and am now more and more oppressed by the
-consciousness of being so. To know much about many things is what I
-never aspired at, and certainly have not succeeded in. If you had called
-me a persevering framer of systems, or had said that in architecture, as
-in some other matters, by trying to catch the principle of the system, I
-had sometimes been able to judge right of details, I should have
-recognised some likeness to myself; but what you have said only makes me
-ashamed. You will perhaps laugh at my earnestness about this matter, for
-I am in earnest; but consider how you would like praise which you felt
-to be the opposite of what you were, and not even like what you had
-tried to be[10].’
-
-It would be unbecoming to intrude domestic matters into an essay like
-the present, in which we have proposed to ourselves a different object;
-but we cannot wholly omit to draw attention to the painful, but deeply
-interesting, chapters in which Mrs Stair Douglas describes her uncle’s
-grief at the loss of his first wife in 1855, and of his second wife in
-1865. His strong nature had recovered after a time from the first of
-these terrible shocks, under which he had wisely distracted his mind by
-the composition of his essay on _The Plurality of Worlds_, and by again
-accepting the Vice-Chancellorship. The second, however, fell upon him
-with even greater severity. He was ten years older, and therefore less
-able to bear up against it. Lady Affleck died a little before midnight
-on Saturday, April 1, 1865; and her heart-broken husband, true to his
-theory that the chapel service ought to be regarded as family prayers,
-appeared in his place at the early service on Sunday morning, not
-fearing to commit to the sympathies of his College ‘the saddest of all
-sights, an old man’s bereavement, and a strong man’s tears[11].’ We can
-still recall the look of intense sorrow on his face; a look which,
-though he tried to rouse himself, and pursue his usual avocations, never
-completely wore off. He survived her for rather less than a year, dying
-on March 6, 1866, from injuries received from a fall from his horse on
-February 24 previous. It was at first hoped that these, like those he
-had received on many similar occasions, for he used to say that he had
-measured the depth of every ditch in Cambridgeshire by falling into it,
-were not serious; but the brain had sustained an injury, and he
-gradually sank. His last thoughts were for the College. On the very last
-morning he signified his wish that the windows of his bedroom might be
-opened wide, that he might see the sun shine on the Great Court, and he
-smiled as he was reminded that he used to say that the sky never looked
-so blue as when framed by its walls and turrets. Among the numerous
-tributes to his memory which then appeared, none we think are more
-appropriate than the following lines, the authorship of which we believe
-we are right in ascribing to the late Mr Tom Taylor[12]:
-
- ‘Gone from the rule that was questioned so rarely,
- Gone from the seat where he laid down the law;
- Gaunt, stern, and stalwart, with broad brow set squarely
- O’er the fierce eye, and the granite-hewn jaw.
-
- ‘No more the Great Court shall see him dividing
- Surpliced crowds thick round the low chapel door;
- No more shall idlers shrink cowed from his chiding,
- Senate-house cheers sound his honour no more.
-
- ‘Son of a hammer-man: right kin of Thor, he
- Clove his way through, right onward, amain;
- Ruled when he’d conquered, was proud of his glory,—
- Sledge-hammer smiter, in body and brain.
-
- ‘Sizar and Master,—unhasting, unresting;
- Each step a triumph, in fair combat won—
- Rivals he faced like a strong swimmer breasting
- Waves that, once grappled with, terrors have none.
-
- ‘Trinity marked him o’er-topping the crowd of
- Heads and Professors, self-centred, alone:
- Rude as his strength was, that strength she was proud of,
- Body and mind, she knew all was her own.
-
- ‘“Science his strength, and Omniscience his weakness,”
- So _they_ said of him, who envied his power;
- Those whom he silenced with more might than meekness,
- Carped at his back, in his face fain to cower.
-
- ‘Milder men’s graces _might_ in him be lacking,
- Still he was honest, kind-hearted, and brave;
- Never good cause looked in vain for his backing,
- Fool he ne’er spared, but he never screened knave.
-
- ‘England should cherish all lives from beginning
- Lowly as his to such honour that rise;
- Lives, of fair running and straightforward winning,
- Lives, that so winning, may boast of the prize.
-
- ‘They that in years past have chafed at his chiding,
- They that in boyish mood strove ’gainst his sway,
- Boys’ hot blood cooled, boys’ impatience subsiding,
- Reverently think of “the Master” to-day.
-
- ‘Counting his courage, his manhood, his knowledge,
- Counting the glory he won for us all,
- Cambridge—not only his dearly loved College—
- Mourns his seat empty in chapel and hall.
-
- ‘Lay him down here—in the dim ante-chapel,
- Where NEWTON’S statue looms ghostly and white,
- Broad brow set rigid in thought-mast’ring grapple,
- Eyes that look upward for light—and more light.
-
- ‘So should he rest—not where daisies are growing:
- NEWTON beside him, and over his head
- Trinity’s full tide of life, ebbing, flowing,
- Morning and evening, as he lies dead.
-
- ‘Sailors sleep best within boom of the billow,
- Soldiers in sound of the shrill trumpet call:
- So his own Chapel his death-sleep should pillow,
- Loved in his life-time with love beyond all.’
-
-We have not thought it necessary to go through the events of Whewell’s
-Mastership in order, because progressive development of thought and
-occupation had by that time ended, and his efforts were chiefly directed
-towards establishing in the University the changes which his previous
-studies had led him to regard as necessary, and which, from the
-vantage-ground of that influential position, he was enabled to enforce.
-In his own College, so far as its education was concerned, he had little
-to do except to maintain the high standard which already existed. As
-tutor he had been successful in increasing the importance of the paper
-of questions in Philosophy in the Fellowship Examination; and
-subsequently he had introduced his _Elements of Morality_, his preface
-to Mackintosh’s _Ethical Philosophy_, and his edition of Butler’s _Three
-Sermons_ into the examination at the end of the Michaelmas Term. None,
-however, of those fundamental measures which have achieved for Trinity
-College its present position of pre-eminence will in the future be
-associated with his name, unless the abolition of the Westminster
-Scholars be thought sufficiently important to be classed in this
-category. On the contrary, it is remarkable what slight influence he
-exerted on the College while Master. He saw but little of any of the
-Fellows, and became intimate with none. In theory he was a despot, but
-in practice he deferred to the College officers; and, with the exception
-of certain domestic matters, such as granting leave to studious
-undergraduates to live in College during the Long Vacation, and the
-formation of a cricket-ground for the use of the College, to which he
-and Lady Affleck both contributed largely, he originated nothing. As
-regards the constitution of the College, he was strongly opposed to
-change. The so-called Reform of the Statutes in 1842 amounted to nothing
-more than the excision of certain obsolete usages, and the accommodation
-in some few other points of the written law to the usual practice of the
-College. The proposals for a more thorough reform brought forward by
-certain of the Fellows in 1856, when called together in accordance with
-the Act of Parliament passed in that year, met with his vehement
-disapproval. It was a mental defect with him that he could never be
-brought to see that others had as much right as himself to hold special
-views. If he saw no defect in a statute or a practice, no one else had
-any right to see one. Here is a specimen of the language he used
-respecting the junior Fellows, all, it must be remembered, men of some
-distinction, whom he himself had had a hand in electing:
-
-‘It is a very sad evening of my College life, to have the College pulled
-in pieces and ruined by a set of schoolboys. It is very nearly that kind
-of work. The Act of Parliament gives all our Fellows equal weight for
-certain purposes, and the younger part of them all vote the same way,
-and against the Seniors. Several of these juveniles are really boys,
-several others only Bachelors of Arts, so we have crazy work, as I think
-it[13].’
-
-As regards the University, as distinct from the College, he deserves
-recognition as having effected important educational changes. These
-range over the whole of his life, commencing with the novelties which he
-introduced, in conjunction with Herschel, Peacock, and Babbage, into the
-study of mathematics, so early as 1819. It was his constant endeavour,
-whatever office he held—whether Moderator, Examiner, or College
-lecturer—to keep the improvement and development of the Mathematical
-Tripos constantly before the University. But, before we enumerate the
-special improvements or developments with which he may be credited, let
-us consider what was his leading idea. He held that every man who was
-worth educating at all, had within him various faculties, such as the
-mathematical, the philological, the critical, the poetical, and the
-like; and that the truly liberal education was that which would develop
-all of these, some more, some less, according to the individual nature.
-A devotion to ‘favourite and selected pursuits’ was a proof, according
-to him, of ‘effeminacy of mind.’ We are not sure that he would have been
-prepared to introduce one or more classical papers into the Mathematical
-Tripos, though he held that a mere mathematician was not an educated
-man; but he was emphatic in wishing to preserve the provisions by which
-classical men were obliged to pass certain mathematical examinations. He
-did not want ‘_much_ mathematics’ from them, he said, writing to
-Archdeacon Hare in 1842; ‘but a man who either cannot or will not
-understand Euclid, is a man whom we lose nothing by not keeping among
-us.’ He was no friend to examinations. He ‘repudiated emulation as the
-sole spring of action in our education,’ but did not see his way to
-reducing it. It was probably this feeling that made him object to
-private tuition so strongly as he always did. In opposition to private
-tutors, he wished to increase attendance at Professors’ lectures; and
-succeeded in ‘connecting them with examinations,’ as he called it; in
-other words, in making attendance at them compulsory for precisely those
-men who were least capable of deriving benefit from the highest teaching
-which the University can give, namely, the candidates for the Ordinary
-Degree.
-
-The first definite novelty in the way of public examinations which he
-promoted was the examination in Divinity called, when first established,
-the Voluntary Theological Examination. Whewell was a member of the
-Syndicate which recommended it, in March, 1842; and subsequently, he
-took a great interest in making it a success. As Vice-Chancellor, he
-brought it under the direct notice of the Bishops. Subsequently, in
-1845, he advocated, in his essay _Of a Liberal Education in General_,
-the establishment of ‘a General Tripos including the Inductive Sciences,
-or those which it was thought right by the University to group together
-for such a purpose.’ The basis of University education was still to be
-the Mathematical Tripos; but, after a student had been declared a Junior
-Optime, he was free to choose his future career. He might become a
-candidate either for the Classical Tripos, or for the suggested new
-Tripos, or for any other Tripos that the University should subsequently
-decide to establish. With these views it was natural that Whewell should
-be in favour of the establishment of a Moral Sciences Tripos (to include
-History and Law), and of a Natural Sciences Tripos; and in consequence
-we find him not only a member of the Syndicate which suggested them, but
-urging their acceptance upon the Senate (1848). Further, he offered two
-prizes of £15 each, so long as he was Professor, to be given annually to
-the two students who shewed the greatest proficiency in the former
-examination. It is worth noticing that he did not insist upon a
-candidate becoming a Junior Optime before presenting himself for either
-of these new Triposes, but was satisfied with the Ordinary Degree. He
-wished to encourage, by all reasonable facilities, the competition for
-Honours in them; but when the Senate (in 1849) threw open the Classical
-Tripos to those who had obtained a first class in the examination for
-the Ordinary Degree, he deplored it as a retrograde step. Before many
-years, however, had passed, he had modified his views to such an extent
-that he could sign (in 1854) a Report which began by stating ‘that much
-advantage would result from extending to other main departments of
-study, generally comprehended under the name of Arts, the system which
-is at present established in the University with regard to Candidates
-for Honours in the Mathematical Tripos’; and proceeded to advocate the
-establishment of a Theological Tripos, and the concession, with
-reference to the Classical Tripos, the Moral Sciences Tripos, and the
-Natural Sciences Tripos, that in and after 1857 students who obtained
-Honours in them should be entitled to admission to the degree of
-Bachelor of Arts. We may therefore claim Whewell as one of the founders
-of the modern system of University education.
-
-Whewell’s wish to develop Professorial tuition has been already alluded
-to. It may be doubted if he would have been so earnest on the subject
-had he foreseen the development of teaching by the University as opposed
-to teaching by the colleges, which a large increase in the number of
-Professors was certain to bring about. So far back as 1828, he had
-brought before the University the want of proper lecture-rooms and
-museums; and, as a matter of course, he promoted the erection of the
-present museums in 1863. We are justified, therefore, in claiming for
-him no inconsiderable share in that development of natural science which
-is one of the glories of Cambridge; and when we see the crowds which
-throng the classes of the scientific professors, lecturers, and
-demonstrators, we often wish that he could have been spared a few years
-longer to enter into the fruit of his labours.
-
-As regards the constitution of the University he earnestly deprecated
-the interference of a Commission. He held that ‘University reformers
-should endeavour to reform by efforts within the body, and not by
-calling in the stranger.’ He therefore worked very hard as a member of
-what was called the ‘Statutes Revision Syndicate,’ first appointed in
-1849, and continued in subsequent years. His views on these important
-matters have been recorded by him in his work on a Liberal Education. It
-is worth remarking that while he was in favour of so advanced a step as
-making College funds available for University purposes, he strenuously
-maintained the desirability of preserving that ancient body, the
-_Caput_. One of the most vexatious provisions of its constitution was
-that each member of it had an absolute veto on any grace to which he
-might object. As the body was selected, the whole legislative power of
-the University was practically vested in the Heads of Houses, who are
-not usually the persons best qualified to understand the feeling of the
-University. Dr Whewell has frequently recorded, in his correspondence,
-his vexation when graces proposed by himself were rejected by this body;
-and yet, though he knew how badly the constitution worked, his
-attachment to existing forms was so great, that he could not be
-persuaded to yield on any point except the mode of election.
-
-We have spoken first of Whewell’s work in his College and University,
-because it was to them that he dedicated his life. We must now say a
-word or two on his literary and scientific attainments. He wrote an
-excellent English style, which reflects the personality of the writer to
-a more than usual extent. As might be expected from his studies and tone
-of mind, he always wrote with clearness and good sense, though
-occasionally his periods are rough and unpolished, defects due to his
-habit of writing as fast as he could make the pen traverse the paper.
-But, just as it was not natural to him to be grave for long together, we
-find his most serious criticisms and pamphlets—nay, even his didactic
-works—lightened by good-humoured banter and humorous illustrations. On
-the other hand, when he was thoroughly serious and in earnest, his style
-rose to a dignified eloquence which has rarely been equalled, and never
-surpassed. For an illustration of our meaning we beg our readers to turn
-to the final chapters of the _Plurality of Worlds_. He was always fond
-of writing verse; and published more than one volume of poems and
-translations, of which the latter are by far the most meritorious. Nor
-must we forget his valiant efforts to get hexameters and elegiacs
-recognized as English metres. Example being better than precept, he
-began by printing a translation of Goethe’s _Hermann und Dorothea_, in
-the metre of the original, which he at first circulated privately among
-his friends; but subsequently he discussed the subject in several
-papers, in which he laid down the rules which he thought were required
-for successful composition of the metre. His main principle is to pay
-attention to accent, not to quantity, and to use trochees where the
-ancients would have used spondees; in other words, where according to
-the classical hexameter we should have two strong syllables, we are to
-have a strong syllable followed by a weak one. Here is a short specimen
-from the _Isle of the Sirens_:
-
- ‘Over the broad-spread sea the thoughtful son of Ulysses
- Steered his well-built bark. Full long had he sought for his father,
- Till hope, lingering, fled; for the face of the water is trackless.
- Then rose strong in his mind the thought of his home and his island;
- And he desired to return; to behold his Ithacan people,
- Listen their just complaints, restrain the fierce and the lawless.’
-
-Mrs Stair Douglas has acted wisely in reprinting the elegiacs written
-after the death of Mrs Whewell. We cannot believe that the metre will
-ever be popular; but in the case of this particular poem eccentricities
-of style will be forgiven for the sake of the dignified beauty of the
-thoughts. With the exception of _In Memoriam_, we know of no finer
-expression of Christian sorrow and Christian hope. We will quote a few
-lines from the first division of the poem, in which the bereaved husband
-describes the happiness which his wife had brought to him:
-
- ‘Blessed beyond all blessings that life can embrace in its circle,
- Blessed the gift was when Providence gave thee to me:
- Gave thee, gentle and kindly and wise, calm, clear-seeing, thoughtful,
- Thee to me as I was, vehement, passionate, blind:
- Gave me to see in thee, and wonder I never had seen it,
- Wisdom that shines in the heart dearer than Intellect’s light;
- Gave me to find in thee, when oppressed by loneliness’ burden,
- Solace for each dull pain, calm from the strife of the storm.
- For O, vainly till then had I sought for peace and contentment,
- Ever pursued by desires, yearnings that could not be still’d;
- Ever pursued by desires of a heart’s companionship, ever
- Yearning for guidance and love such as I found them in thee.’
-
-It is painful to be obliged to record that Whewell’s executors found
-that the copyright of his works had no mercantile value. He perhaps
-formed a true estimate of his own powers when he said that all that he
-could do was to ‘systematize portions of knowledge which the consent of
-opinions has brought into readiness for such a process[14].’ His name
-will not be associated with any great discovery, or any original theory,
-if we except his memoir on Crystallography, which is the basis of the
-system since adopted; and his researches on the Tides, which have
-afforded a clear and satisfactory view of those of the Atlantic, while
-it is hardly his fault if those of the Pacific were not elucidated with
-equal clearness[15]. It too often happens that those who originally
-suggest theories are forgotten in the credit due to those who develop
-them; and we are afraid that this has been the fate of Whewell. Even as
-a mathematician he is not considered really great by those competent to
-form a judgment. He was too much wedded to the geometrical fashions of
-his younger days, and ‘had no taste for the more refined methods of
-modern analysis[16].’ In science, as in other matters, his strong
-conservative bias stood in his way. He was constitutionally unable to
-accept a thorough-going innovation. For instance, he withstood to the
-last Lyell’s uniformity, and Darwin’s evolution[17]. Much, therefore, of
-what he wrote will of necessity be soon forgotten; but we hope that some
-readers may be found for his _Elements of Morality_, and that his great
-work on the Inductive Sciences may hold its own. It is highly valued in
-Germany; and in England Mr John Stuart Mill, one of the most cold and
-severe of critics, who differed widely from Whewell in his scientific
-views, has declared that ‘without the aid derived from the facts and
-ideas contained in the _History of the Inductive Sciences_, the
-corresponding portion of his own _System of Logic_ would probably not
-have been written.’
-
-We have felt it our duty to point out these shortcomings; but it is a
-far more agreeable one to turn from them, and conclude our essay by
-indicating the lofty tone of religious enthusiasm which runs through all
-his works. As Dr Lightfoot pointed out in his funeral sermon, ‘the world
-of matter without, the world of thought within, alike spoke to him of
-the Eternal Creator the Beneficent Father; and even his opponent, Sir
-David Brewster, who more strongly than all his other critics had
-denounced what he termed the paradox advanced in _The Plurality of
-Worlds_, that our earth may be ‘the oasis in the desert of the solar
-system,’ was generous enough to admit that posterity would forgive the
-author ‘on account of the noble sentiments, the lofty aspirations, and
-the suggestions, almost divine, which mark his closing chapter on the
-future of the universe.’
-
-
-
-
- CONNOP THIRLWALL[18].
-
-
-Until a few years ago biographies of Bishops were remarkable for that
-decent dullness which Sydney Smith has noted as a characteristic of
-modern sermons. The narrative reproduced, with painful fidelity, the
-oppressive decorum and the conventional dignity; but kept out of sight
-the real human being which even in the Georgian period must have existed
-beneath official trappings. But in these matters, as in others, there is
-a fashion. The narratives which describe the lives of modern Bishops
-reflect the change that has come over the office. As now-a-days ‘a
-Bishop’s efficiency is measured, in common estimation, by his power of
-speech and motion[19],’ his biography, if he has overtopped his brethren
-in administration, or eloquence, or statesmanship, becomes an
-entertaining, and sometimes even a valuable, production. It reflects the
-ever-changing incidents of a bustling career; it is spiced with good
-stories; and it reveals, more or less indiscreetly, matters of high
-policy in Church and State, over which a veil has hitherto been drawn.
-In a word, it is the portrait of a real person, not of a lay figure:
-and, if the artist be worthy of his task, a portrait which faithfully
-reproduces the original. The life of Bishop Thirlwall could not have
-been treated in quite the same way as the imaginary biography we have
-just indicated; but, in good hands, it might have been made quite as
-entertaining, and much more valuable. Dr Perowne has told us that his
-life was not eventful. It was not, in the ordinary sense of that word.
-He rarely quitted his peaceful retreat at Abergwili; but, paradoxical as
-it sounds, he was no recluse. He took part in spirit, if not in bodily
-presence, in all the important events, political, religious, and
-literary, of his time; and when he chose to break silence, in speech or
-pamphlet, no one could command a more undivided attention, or exercise a
-more powerful influence.
-
-What manner of man was this? By what system of education had his mind
-been developed? What were his tastes, his pursuits, his daily life? To
-these questions, which are surely not unreasonable, the editors of the
-five volumes before us vouchsafe no adequate reply, for the meagre
-thread of narrative which connects together the _Letters Literary and
-Theological_, may be left out of consideration. Thirlwall’s life, as we
-understand the word, has yet to be written; and we fear that death has
-removed most of those who could perform the task in a manner worthy of
-the subject. For ourselves, all that we propose to do is to try to set
-forth his talents and his character, by the help of the materials before
-us, and of such personal recollections as we have been able to gather
-together.
-
-Connop Thirlwall was born February 11, 1797. His father, the Rev. Thomas
-Thirlwall, minister of Tavistock Chapel, Broad Court, Long Acre,
-Lecturer of S. Dunstan, Stepney, and chaplain to the celebrated Thomas
-Percy, Lord Bishop of Dromore, resided at Mile End. We can give no
-information about him except the above list of his preferments; and of
-Connop’s mother we only know that her husband describes her as ‘pious
-and virtuous,’ and anxious to ‘promote the temporal and eternal welfare’
-of her children. She had the satisfaction of living long enough to see
-her son a bishop[20]. Connop must have been a fearfully precocious
-child. In 1809 the fond father published a small duodecimo volume
-entitled ‘_Primitiæ; or, Essays and Poems on Various Subjects,
-Religious, Moral, and Entertaining_. By Connop Thirlwall, eleven years
-of age.’ The first of these essays is dated ‘June 30, 1804. Seven years
-old’; and in the preface the father says:
-
-‘In the short sketch which I shall take of the young author, and his
-performance, I mean not to amuse the reader with anecdotes of
-extraordinary precocity of genius; it is, however, but justice to him to
-state, that at a very _early_ period he read English so well that he was
-taught Latin at three years of age, and at four read Greek with an ease
-and fluency which astonished all who heard him. From that time he has
-continued to improve himself in the knowledge of the Greek, Latin,
-French, and English languages. His talent for composition appeared at
-the age of seven, from an accidental circumstance. His mother, in my
-absence, desired his elder brother to write his thoughts upon a subject
-for his improvement, when the young author took it into his head to ask
-her permission to take the pen in hand too. His request was of course
-complied with, without the most remote idea he could write an
-intelligible sentence, when in a short time he composed that which is
-first printed, “On the Uncertainty of Life.” From that time he was
-encouraged to cultivate a talent of which he gave so flattering a
-promise, and generally on a Sunday chose a subject from Scripture. The
-following essays are selected from these lucubrations.’
-
-We will quote a passage from one of these childish sermons, written when
-he was eight years old. The text selected is, ‘Behold, I will add unto
-thy days fifteen years’ (Isaiah xiii. 6); and, after some commonplaces
-on the condition of Hezekiah, the author takes occasion from the day,
-January 1, 1806, to make the following reflections:
-
-‘I shall now consider what resolutions we ought to form at the beginning
-of a new year. The intention of God in giving us life was that we might
-live a life of righteousness. The same ever is His intention in
-preserving it. We ought, then, to live in righteousness, and obey the
-commandments of God. Do we not perceive that another year is come, that
-time is passing away quickly, and eternity is approaching? and shall we
-be all this while in a state of sin, without any recollection that the
-kingdom of heaven is nearer at hand? But we ought, in the beginning of a
-new year, to form a resolution to be more mindful of the great account
-we must give at the last day, and live accordingly: we ought to form a
-resolution to reform our lives, and walk in the ways of God’s
-righteousness; to abhor all the lusts of the flesh, and to live in
-temperance; and resolve no more to offend and provoke God with our sins,
-but repent of them. In the beginning of a new year we should reflect a
-little: although we are kept alive, yet many died in the course of last
-year; and this ought to make us watchful[21].’
-
-There is not much originality of thought in this; indeed, it is
-impossible to avoid the suspicion that the paternal sermons, to which
-the author doubtless listened every Sunday, suggested the form, and
-possibly the matter, of these essays. What meaning could a child of
-eight attach to such expressions as ‘the lusts of the flesh,’ or
-‘repentance,’ or ‘eternity’? Still, notwithstanding this evident
-imitation of others in the matter, the style has a remarkable
-individuality. Indeed, just as the portrait of the child which is
-prefixed to the volume recalls forcibly the features of the veteran
-Bishop at seventy years of age, we fancy that we can detect in the style
-a foreshadowing of some of the qualities which rendered that of the man
-so remarkable. There is the same orderly arrangement of what he has to
-say, the same absence of rhetoric, the same logical deduction of the
-conclusion from the premisses. As we turn over the pages of the volume
-we are struck by the extent of reading which the allusions suggest. The
-best English authors, the most famous men of antiquity, are quoted as if
-the writer were familiar with them. The themes, too, are singularly
-varied. We find ‘An Eastern Tale,’ which, though redolent of _Rasselas_,
-is not devoid of originality, and has considerable power of description;
-an ‘Address’ delivered to the Worshipful Company of Drapers at their
-annual visit to Bancroft’s School, which is not more fulsome than such
-compositions usually are; and, lastly, half a dozen poems, which are by
-far the best things in the book. Let us take, almost at random, a few
-lines from the last: ‘Characters often Seen, but little Marked: a
-Satire.’ A young lady, called Clara, is anxious to break off a match,
-and lays her plot in the following fashion:
-
- ‘The marriage eve arrived, she chanced to meet
- The unsuspecting lover in the street;
- Begins an artful, simple tale to tell.
- “I’m glad to see your future spouse so well,
- But I just heard—” “What?” cries the curious swain.
- “You may not like it; I must not explain.”
- “What was the dear, delusive creature at?”
- “Oh! nothing, nothing, only private chat.”
- “A pack of nonsense! it cannot be true!
- As if, dear girl, she could be false to you[22]!”’
-
-Here, again, there may not be much originality of thought, but the
-versification is excellent, and the whole piece of surprising merit,
-when we reflect that it was written by a child of eleven. Yet, whatever
-may be the worth of this and other pieces in the volume before us as a
-promise of future greatness, we cannot but pity the poor little fellow,
-stimulated by the inconsiderate vanity of his parents to a priggish
-affectation of teaching others when he ought to have been either
-learning himself or at play with his schoolfellows; and we can
-thoroughly sympathize with the Bishop’s feelings respecting the book.
-The lady to whom the _Letters to a Friend_ were written had evidently
-asked him for a copy, and obtained the following answer:
-
-‘I am sure that if you knew the point in my foot which gives me pain you
-would not select that to kick or tread upon; and I am equally sure that
-if you had been aware of the intense loathing with which I think of the
-subject of your note you would not have recalled it to my mind. When Mrs
-P——, in the simplicity of her heart, and no doubt believing it to be an
-agreeable topic to me, told me at dinner on Thursday that she possessed
-the hated volume, it threw a shade over my enjoyment of the evening, and
-it was with a great effort that, after a pause, I could bring myself to
-resume the conversation. If I could buy up every copy for the flames,
-without risk of a reprint, I should hardly think any price too high. Let
-me entreat you never again to remind me of its existence[23].’
-
-In 1809 young Thirlwall was sent as a day-scholar to the Charterhouse,
-the choice of a school having very likely been determined by the fact
-that his father resided at the east end of London. The records of his
-school days are provokingly incomplete; nay, almost a blank. We should
-like to know whether he was ever a boy in the ordinary sense of the
-word; whether he played at games[24], or got into mischief, or obtained
-the distinction of a flogging. As far as his studies were concerned, he
-was fortunate in going to the Charterhouse when that excellent scholar
-Dr Raine was head master, and in being the contemporary of several boys
-who afterwards distinguished themselves, among whom may be specially
-mentioned his life-long friend, Julius Charles Hare, and George Grote,
-with whom, in after years, he was to be united in a common field of
-historical research. His chief friend, however, at this period was not
-one of his schoolfellows, but a young man named John Candler[25], a
-Quaker, resident at Ipswich. Several of the letters addressed to him
-during the four years spent at Charterhouse have fortunately been
-preserved. When we remember that these were written between the ages of
-twelve and sixteen, they must be regarded as possessing extraordinary
-merit. They are studied and rather stilted compositions, evidently the
-result of much thought and labour, as was usual in days when postage
-cost eightpence; but they reveal a wonderfully wide extent of reading,
-and an interest in passing events not usual in so ardent a student as
-the writer evidently had even then become. Young Candler was ‘a friend
-to liberty,’ and an admirer of Sir Francis Burdett. His correspondent
-criticizes with much severity the popular hero and the mob, who, ‘after
-having broken the ministerial windows and pelted the soldiers with
-brickbats, have gone quietly home and left him to his meditations upon
-Tower Hill.’ Most thoughtful boys are fond of laying down the lines of
-their future life in their letters to their schoolfellows; but how few
-there are who do not change their opinions utterly, and end by adopting
-some profession wholly different from that which at first attracted
-them! This was not the case with Thirlwall. We find him writing at
-twelve years old in terms which he would not have disdained at fifty. ‘I
-shall never be a bigot in politics,’ he says; ‘whither my reason does
-not guide me I will suffer myself to be led by the nose by no man[26].’
-‘I would ask the advocates for confining learning to the breasts of the
-wealthy and the noble, in whose breasts are the seeds of sedition and
-discontent most easily sown? In that of the unenlightened or
-well-informed peasant? In that of a man incapable of judging either of
-the disadvantages of his station or the means of ameliorating it?...
-These were long since my sentiments[27].’ And, lastly, on the burning
-question of Parliamentary Reform: ‘Party prejudice must own it rather
-contradictory to reason and common sense that a population of one
-hundred persons should have two representatives, while four hundred
-thousand are without one. These are abuses which require speedy
-correction[28].’ He had evidently been taken to see Cambridge, and was
-constantly looking forward to his residence there. His anticipations,
-however, were not wholly agreeable. At that time he did not care much
-for classics. He thought that they were not ‘objects of such infinite
-importance that the most valuable portion of man’s life, the time which
-he passes at school and at college, should be devoted to them.’ In
-after-life he said that he had been ‘injudiciously plied with Horace at
-the Charterhouse,’ and that, in consequence, ‘many years elapsed before
-I could enjoy the most charming of Latin poets[29].’ He admits, however,
-that he is looking forward ‘with hope and pleasing anticipation to the
-time when I shall immure myself’ at Cambridge; and he makes some really
-admirable reflections, most unusual at that period, on University
-distinctions and the use to be made of them:
-
-‘There is one particular in which I hope to differ from many of those
-envied persons who have attained to the most distinguished academical
-honours. Several of these seem to have considered the years which they
-have spent at the University, not as the time of preparation for studies
-of a more severe and extended nature, but as the term of their labours,
-the completion of which is the signal for a life of indolence,
-dishonourable to themselves and unprofitable to mankind. Literature and
-science are thus degraded from their proper rank, as the most dignified
-occupations of a rational being, and are converted into instruments for
-procuring the gratification of our sensual appetites. This will not, I
-trust, be the conduct of your friend. Sorry indeed should I be to accept
-the highest honours of the University were I from that time destined to
-sink into an obscure and useless inactivity[30].’
-
-An English translation of the _Pensées_ of Pascal had fallen in his way;
-and, in imitation of that great thinker, he had formed a resolution, of
-which he begs his friend to remind him in future years, to devote
-himself wholly to such studies (among others to the acquisition of a
-knowledge of Hebrew) as would fit him for the clerical profession. We
-shall see that he never really faltered from these intentions; for,
-though he was at one time beset with doubts as to his fitness to perform
-the practical duties of a clergyman, he was from first to last a
-theologian, and only admitted other studies as ancillary to that central
-object.
-
-Thirlwall left Charterhouse in December 1813, and proceeded to Trinity
-College, Cambridge, in October of the following year. How he spent the
-interval has not been recorded: possibly, like many other boys educated
-at a purely classical school, he was doing his best to acquire an
-adequate knowledge of mathematics, to his deficiency in which there are
-frequent references. He was so far successful in his efforts that he
-obtained the place of 22nd senior optime in 1818, when he proceeded in
-due course to his degree. Meanwhile, however great his distaste for the
-classics might have been at school, he had risen to high distinction in
-them; for he obtained the Craven University scholarship when only a
-freshman, as well as a Bell scholarship, and in the year of his degree
-the first Chancellor’s medal[31]. In the autumn of the same year he was
-elected Fellow of his college. It is provoking to have to admit that our
-history of what may be termed the first part of his Cambridge career
-must begin and end here. Of the second portion, when he returned to his
-college and became assistant tutor, we shall have plenty to say
-hereafter; but of his undergraduate days no record has been preserved.
-He had the good fortune to know Trinity College when society there was
-exceptionally brilliant; among his contemporaries were Sedgwick,
-Whewell, the two Waddingtons, his old friend Hare, who gained a
-Fellowship in the same year as himself, and many others who contributed
-to make that period of University history a golden age. We can imagine
-him in their company ‘moulding high thought in colloquy serene,’ and
-taking part in anything which might develop the general culture of the
-place; but beyond the facts that he was secretary to the Union Society
-in 1817, when the ‘debate was interrupted by the entrance of the
-proctors, who laid on its members the commands of the Vice-Chancellor to
-disperse, and on no account to resume their discussions[32],’ and that
-he had acquired a high reputation for eloquence as a speaker there[33],
-we know nothing definite about him. He does not appear to have made any
-new friends; but as Julius Hare was in residence during the same period
-as he was, the two doubtless saw much of each other; and it is probably
-to him that Thirlwall owed the love of Wordsworth which may be detected
-in some of his letters, his fondness for metaphysical speculation, and
-his wish to learn German. The only letters preserved are addressed to
-his old correspondent Mr Candler, and to his uncle Mr John Thirlwall,
-and they give us no information relevant to Cambridge. In writing to the
-latter he dwells on his fondness for ancient history, on his preference
-for that of Greece over that of Rome; he records the addition of the
-Italian and German languages to his stock of acquirements; and he
-describes with enthusiasm his yearning for foreign travel, which each
-year grew stronger:
-
-‘I certainly was not made to sit at home in contented ignorance of the
-wonders of art and nature, nor can I believe that the restlessness of
-curiosity I feel was implanted in my disposition to be a source of
-uneasiness rather than of enjoyment. Under this conviction I peruse the
-authors of France and Italy, with the idea that the language I am now
-reading I may one day be compelled to speak, and that what is now a
-source of elegant and refined entertainment may be one day the medium
-through which I shall disclose my wants and obtain a supply of the
-necessaries of daily life. This is the most enchanting of my day dreams;
-it has been for some years past my inseparable companion. And, apt as
-are my inclinations to fluctuate, I cannot recollect this to have ever
-undergone the slightest abatement[34].’
-
-The letter from which we have selected the above passage was written to
-his uncle in 1816; in another, written a few months later to his friend
-Mr Candler, he enters more fully into his difficulties and prospects.
-The earlier portion of the letter is well worth perusal for the insight
-it affords into the extent of his reading and the originality of his
-criticisms; but it is the concluding paragraph which is specially
-interesting to a biographer. We do not know to what influences the
-change was due, but it is evident that his mind was passing through a
-period of unrest; his old determinations had been, at least for the
-moment, uprooted, and he looked forward with uncertain eyes to an
-unknown future. ‘My disinclination to the Church,’ he says, ‘has grown
-from a motive into a reason.’ The Bar had evidently been suggested to
-him as the only alternative, and on that dismal prospect he dilates with
-unwonted bitterness. It would take him away from all the pursuits he
-loved most dearly, and put in their place ‘the routine of a barren and
-uninteresting occupation,’ in which not only would the best years of his
-life be wasted, but—and this is what he seems to have dreaded most—his
-loftier aspirations would be degraded, and, when he had become rich
-enough to return to literature, he would feel no inclination to do so.
-
-The Fellowship examination of 1818 having ended in Thirlwall’s election,
-he was free to go abroad, and at once started alone for Rome. At that
-time Niebuhr was Prussian Envoy there, and Bunsen his Secretary of
-Legation. Thirlwall was so fortunate as to bring with him a letter of
-introduction to Madame Bunsen, who had been a Miss Waddington, cousin to
-Professor Monk, and had married Bunsen about a year before Thirlwall’s
-visit. The following amusing letter from Madame Bunsen to her mother
-gives an interesting picture of Thirlwall in Rome:
-
-‘_March 16, 1819._—Mr Hinds and Mr Thirlwall are here.... My mother has,
-I know, sometimes suspected that a man’s abilities are to be judged of
-in an _inverse ratio_ to his Cambridge honours; but I believe that rule
-is really not without exception, for Mr Thirlwall is certainly no dunce,
-although, as I have been informed, he attained high honours at Cambridge
-at an earlier age than anybody except, I believe, Porson. In the course
-of their first interview Charles heard enough from him to induce him to
-believe that Mr Thirlwall had studied Greek and Hebrew in good earnest,
-not merely for _prizes_; also, that he had read Mr Niebuhr’s Roman
-History proved him to possess no trifling knowledge of German; and, as
-he expressed a wish to improve himself in the language, Charles ventured
-to invite him to come to us on a Tuesday evening, whenever he was not
-otherwise engaged, seeing that many Germans were in the habit of calling
-on that day. Mr Thirlwall has never missed any Tuesday evening since,
-except the _moccoli_ night and one other when it rained dogs and cats.
-He comes at eight o’clock, and never stirs to go away till everybody
-else has wished good night, often at almost twelve o’clock. It is
-impossible for any one to behave more like a man of sense and a
-gentleman than he has always done—ready and eager to converse with
-anybody that is at leisure to speak to him, but never looking fidgety
-when by necessity left to himself; always seeming animated and
-attentive, whether listening to music, or trying to make out what people
-say in German, or looking at one of Goethe’s songs in the book, while it
-is sung. And so there are a great many reasons for our being _very much_
-pleased with Mr Thirlwall; yet I rather suspect him of being very cold,
-and very dry; and although he seeks, and seeks with general success, to
-understand everything, and in every possible way increase his stock of
-ideas, I doubt the possibility of his understanding anything that is to
-be _felt_ rather than _explained_, and that cannot be reduced to a
-system. I was led to this result by some most extraordinary questions
-that he asked Charles about _Faust_ (which he had borrowed of us, and
-which he greatly admired nevertheless, attempting a translation of one
-of my favourite passages, which, however, I had not pointed out to him
-as being such), and also by his great fondness for the poems of
-Wordsworth, two volumes of which he insisted on lending to Charles.
-These books he accompanied with a note, in which he laid great stress
-upon the necessity of reading the author’s _prose essays on his own
-poems_, in order to be enabled to relish the latter. Yet Mr Thirlwall
-speaks of Dante in a manner that would seem to prove a thorough taste
-for his poetry, as well as that he has really and truly studied it; for
-he said to me that he thought no person who had taken the trouble to
-understand the whole of the _Divina Commedia_ would doubt about
-preferring the “Paradiso” to the two preceding parts, an opinion in
-which I thoroughly agree[35].
-
-‘As Mr Thirlwall can speak French sufficiently well to make himself
-understood, and as he has _something to say_, Charles found it very
-practicable to make him and Professor Bekker acquainted, though
-Professor Bekker has usually the great defect of _never_ speaking but
-when he is prompted by his own inclination, and of never being _inclined
-to speak_ except to persons whom he has long known—that is, to whose
-faces and manners he has become accustomed, and whose understanding or
-character he respects or likes.... In conclusion, I must say about Mr
-Thirlwall, that I was prepossessed in his favour by his having made up
-in a marked manner to Charles, rather than to myself. I had no
-difficulty in getting on with him, but I had all the advances to make;
-and I can never think the worse of a young man, just fresh from college
-and unused to the society of women, for not being at his ease with them
-at first[36].’
-
-It is vexatious that Thirlwall’s biographers should have failed to
-discover—if indeed they tried to discover—any information about his
-Roman visit, to which he always looked back with delight, occasioned as
-much by the friends he had made there as by ‘the memorable scenes and
-objects’ he had visited[37]. So far as we know, the above letter is the
-only authority extant. We should like to have heard whether Thirlwall
-had, or had not, any personal intercourse with Niebuhr, whom we have
-reason to believe he never met; and to what extent Bunsen influenced his
-future studies. We find it stated in Bunsen’s life that he determined
-Thirlwall’s wavering resolutions in favour of the clerical
-profession[38]. This, as we shall presently shew, is clearly a mistake;
-but, when we consider the strong theological bias of Bunsen’s own mind,
-it does seem probable that he would direct his attention to the modern
-school of German divinity. We suspect that Thirlwall had been already
-influenced in this direction by the example, if not by the direct
-precepts, of Herbert Marsh, then Lady Margaret’s Professor of Theology
-at Cambridge[39], who had stirred up a great controversy by translating
-Michaelis’ _Introduction to the New Testament_, and by promoting a more
-free criticism of the Gospels than had hitherto been thought
-permissible. However this may be, it is certain that the friendship
-which began in Rome was one of the strongest and most abiding influences
-which shaped Thirlwall’s character, and just half a century afterwards
-we find him referring to Bunsen as a sort of oracle in much the same
-language that Dr Arnold was fond of employing.
-
-We must pass lightly and rapidly over the next seven years of
-Thirlwall’s life. He entered as a law student at Lincoln’s Inn in
-February 1820, and in 1827 returned to Cambridge. In the intervening
-period he had given the law a fair trial; but the more he saw of it the
-less he liked it. It is painful to think of the weary hours spent over
-work of which he could say, four years after he had entered upon it, ‘It
-can never be anything but loathsome to me[40]’; ‘my aversion to the law
-has not increased, as it scarcely could, from the first day of my
-initiation into its mysteries’; or to read his pathetic utterances to
-Bunsen, describing his wretchedness, and the delight he took in his
-brief excursions out of law into literature, consoling himself with the
-reflection that perhaps he gained in intensity of enjoyment what he lost
-in duration. With these feelings it would have been useless for him to
-persevere; but we doubt if the time spent in legal work was so entirely
-thrown away as he imagined. It might be argued that much of his future
-eminence as a bishop was due to his legal training. As a friend has
-remarked, ‘he carried the temper, and perhaps the habit, of Equity into
-all his subsequent work’; and to the end of his life he found a special
-delight in tracking the course of the more prominent _causes célèbres_
-of the day, and expressing his judgment upon them[41]. Even in these
-years, however, law was not allowed to engross his whole time. From the
-beginning he had laid this down as a fixed principle. He spent his
-vacations in foreign travel, and every moment he could snatch from his
-enforced studies was devoted to a varied course of reading, of which the
-main outcome was a translation of Schleiermacher’s _Critical Essay on
-the Gospel of S. Luke_[42], to which his friend Hare had introduced him.
-Why should Thirlwall have selected, as a specimen of the new school of
-German theology, a work which, at this distance of time, does not appear
-to be specially distinguished for merit or originality[43]? It is
-evident, from what he says in his _Introduction_, that he had a sincere
-admiration for the talents of Dr Schleiermacher, whom he describes as
-‘this extraordinary writer,’ whose fate it has been ‘to open a new path
-in every field of literature he has entered, and to tread all alone.’
-But the real motive for the selection is to be found, we think, in the
-opportunity it afforded him for studying the whole question of the
-origin and authorship of the synoptic Gospels, and, as the title page
-informs us, for dealing with the contributions to the literature of the
-subject which had appeared since Bishop Marsh’s _Dissertation on the
-Origin and Composition of our three first Canonical Gospels_, published
-in 1801. In this direct reference to Marsh’s work we find a confirmation
-of our theory that Thirlwall owed to him his position as a critical
-theologian, though we can hardly imagine a greater difference than that
-which must have existed in all other matters between the passionate
-Toryism of the one and the serene Liberalism of the other.
-
-Thirlwall’s gallant attempt to follow an uncongenial profession could
-have but one termination; and we can imagine his friends watching with
-some curiosity for the moment and the cause of the final rupture. The
-moment was probably determined by the prosaic consideration that his
-fellowship at Trinity College would terminate in October 1828, unless he
-were in Priest’s Orders. We do not mean that he became a clergyman in
-order to secure a comfortable yearly income; but, that having decided in
-favour of the clerical profession, joined to those literary pursuits
-which his position as a fellow of Trinity College would allow, he took
-the necessary steps in good time. He returned to Cambridge in 1827, and,
-having been ordained deacon in the same year, and priest in the year
-following, at once undertook his full share of college and University
-work[44]. His friend Hare had set the example in 1822 by accepting a
-classical lectureship at Trinity College at the urgent request of Mr
-Whewell, then lately appointed to one of the tutorships[45], and
-Thirlwall had paid visits to him in the Long Vacations of 1824 and 1825.
-It is probable that at one of these visits the friends had planned their
-translation of Niebuhr’s _History of Rome_, for the first volume was far
-advanced in 1827, and was published early in 1828. The second did not
-appear until 1832. The publication of what Thirlwall rightly terms ‘a
-wonderful masterpiece of genius’ in an English dress marked an epoch in
-historical and classical literature in this country. Yet,
-notwithstanding its pre-eminent excellence, the work of the translators
-was bitterly attacked in various places, and particularly in a note
-appended to an article in the _Quarterly Review_, a criticism which
-would long ago have been forgotten if it had not called forth a reply
-which we have heard described as ‘Hare’s bark and Thirlwall’s bite[46].’
-The pamphlet consists of sixty-three pages, of which sixty belong to the
-former, and a ‘Postscript,’ of little more than two, to the latter. It
-is probable that Hare’s elaborate vindication of his author, his brother
-translator, and himself, had but little effect on any one; Thirlwall’s
-indignant sarcasms—worthy of the best days of that controversial style
-in which he subsequently became a master—are still remembered and
-admired. We will quote a few sentences, of an application far wider than
-the criticism to which they originally referred. The reviewer had
-expressed pity that the translators should have wasted ‘such talents on
-the drudgery of translation.’ Thirlwall took exception to the phrase,
-and pointed out that their intellectual labour did not deserve to be so
-spoken of.
-
-‘On the other hand, intellectual labour prompted and directed by no
-higher consideration than that of personal emolument appears to me to
-deserve an ignominious name; nor do I think such an employment the less
-illiberal, however great may be the abilities exerted, or the advantages
-purchased. But I conceive such labour to become still more degrading,
-when it is let out to serve the views and advocate the opinions of
-others. It sinks another step lower in my estimation, when, instead of
-being applied to communicate what is excellent and useful, it ministers
-to the purpose of excluding from circulation all such intellectual
-productions as have not been stampt with the seal of the party to which
-it is itself subservient. But when I see it made the instrument of a
-religious, political, or literary proscription, forging or pointing
-calumny and slander to gratify the malice of hotter and weaker heads
-against all whom they hate and fear, I have now before me an instance of
-what I consider as the lowest and basest intellectual drudgery. I leave
-the application of these distinctions to the QUARTERLY REVIEWER.’
-
-In 1831 the two friends started the publication of the _Philological
-Museum_. It had a brief but glorious career. Only six numbers were
-published, but they contained ‘more solid additions to English
-literature and scholarship’ than had up to that time appeared in any
-journal. We are glad to see that seven of Thirlwall’s contributions have
-been republished, and that among them is the well-known essay _On the
-Irony of Sophocles_. Those who read these articles, and still more those
-who turn to the volumes from which they have been extracted, and look
-through the whole series of Thirlwall’s contributions, will be as much
-impressed by the writer’s erudition as by his critical insight; and, if
-a translation from the German should fall under their notice, they will
-not fail to remark the extraordinary skill with which he has turned that
-difficult language into sound English. Thirlwall would have smiled with
-polite incredulity had any one told him that he was setting an example
-in those writings of his which would bear fruit in years to come; but we
-maintain that this is what really happened. More than one of his
-successors in the field of classics at Cambridge was directly stimulated
-by what he had done to undertake an equally wide course of reading; and
-it may be argued with much probability that the thoroughness and breadth
-of illustration with which classical subjects are treated by the
-lecturers in Trinity College is derived from his initiative.
-
-In 1832, when Hare left Cambridge, his friend succeeded him as assistant
-tutor, to give classical lectures to the undergraduates on Whewell’s
-‘side.’ For a time all went well. His lectures were exceedingly popular
-with those capable of appreciating them, as was shown by the large
-attendance not only of undergraduates, but of the best scholars in the
-college, men who had already taken their degrees, and who were working
-for the Fellowship Examination or for private improvement. They were
-remarkable for translations of singular excellence, and for an
-exhaustive treatment of the subject, as systematic as Hare’s had been
-desultory, as we learn from traditions of them which still survive, and
-from two volumes of notes which now lie before us, taken down at a
-course on the Ethics of Aristotle. Moreover Thirlwall was personally
-popular. He was the least ‘donnish’ of the resident Fellows, and sought
-the society of undergraduates, inviting the men who attended his
-lectures to walk with him or to take wine at his rooms after Hall. He
-delighted in a good story, and used to throw himself back in his chair,
-his whole frame shaking with suppressed merriment, when anything struck
-his fancy as especially humorous. He had one habit which, had it been
-practised with less delicacy, might have marred his popularity. He was
-fond of securing an eager but inconsiderate talker, whom he drew out, by
-a series of subtle questions, for the amusement of the rest. So well
-known was this peculiarity among his older friends that after one of his
-parties a person who had not been present has been heard to inquire from
-another who had just left his rooms, ‘Who was fool to-day?’
-
-In 1834 Thirlwall’s connection with the educational staff of the college
-was rudely severed by a controversy respecting the admission of
-Dissenters to degrees. This debate has been long since forgotten in the
-University; but the influence which it exercised on Thirlwall’s future
-career, as well as its own intrinsic interest, point it out for
-particular notice. We had occasion in a recent article[47] to sketch the
-changes which took place in the University between 1815 and 1830. It
-will be remembered that the stormy period of our political history which
-is associated with the first Reform Bill fell between those dates. It
-was hardly to be expected that Cambridge should escape an influence by
-which the country was so profoundly affected. Indeed, it may be cited as
-a sign of the absorbing interest of that question, that it did affect
-the University very seriously; for there is ample evidence that in the
-previous century external events, no matter how important, had made but
-little impression. In 1746 we find the poet Gray lamenting that his
-fellow academicians were so indifferent to the march of the Pretender;
-and even the French Revolution excited but a languid enthusiasm, though
-Dr Milner, the Vice-Chancellor, and his brother Heads, did their best to
-draw attention to it by expelling from the University Mr Frend, of Jesus
-College, for writing a pamphlet called _Peace and Union_, which
-advocated the principles of its leaders. With the Reform Bill of 1830,
-however, the case was very different. Sides were eagerly taken;
-discussions grew hot and angry; old friends became estranged; and, years
-afterwards, when children of the next generation asked questions of
-their parents about some one whose name was mentioned in their hearing,
-but with whom they were not personally acquainted, it was not unusual
-for them to be told: ‘That is Mr So-and-so; he used to be very intimate
-with us before the Reform Bill; but we never speak now.’
-
-One of the grievances then discussed was the exclusion of Dissenters
-from participation in the advantages of the Universities. The propriety
-of imposing tests at matriculation, and on proceeding to degrees,
-especially to degrees in the faculties of law and physic, had been from
-time to time debated, both in the University and in the House of
-Commons. The ancient practice had, notwithstanding, been steadily
-maintained. On one occasion, in 1772, the House had even gone so far as
-to decline, by a majority of 146, to receive a petition on the subject.
-In December 1833, however, Professor Pryme offered Graces to the Senate
-for appointing a Syndicate to consider the abolition or the modification
-of subscription on graduation. The ‘Caput[48]’ rejected them. In
-February of the following year, Dr Cornwallis Hewett, Downing Professor
-of Medicine, offered a similar Grace to consider the subject with
-special reference to the faculty of medicine. This also was rejected by
-the ‘Caput’ on the veto of the Vice-Chancellor, Dr King, President of
-Queens’ College. These two rejections, following so closely upon each
-other, made it evident that the authorities of the University were not
-disposed so much as to consider the subject. It was therefore determined
-to extend the field of the controversy, and at once to apply to the
-Legislature. A meeting was held at Professor Hewett’s rooms in Downing
-College, at which it was agreed to present an identical petition to both
-Houses of Parliament. The document began by stating the attachment of
-the petitioners to the Church of England, and to the University as
-connected therewith; and further, their belief ‘that no civil or
-ecclesiastical polity was ever so devised by the wisdom of man as not to
-require, from time to time, some modification from the change of
-external circumstances or the progress of opinion.’ They then
-suggested—this was the word employed—
-
-‘“That no corporate body, like the University of Cambridge, can exist in
-a free country in honour and safety unless its benefits be communicated
-to all classes as widely as may be compatible with the Christian
-principles of its foundation”; and urged “the expediency of abrogating
-by legislative enactment every religious test exacted from members of
-the University before they proceed to degrees, whether of Bachelor,
-Master, or Doctor, in Arts, Law, or Physic.”’
-
-This petition was signed by sixty-two resident members of the Senate.
-Among them were two Masters of Colleges, Dr Davy, of Caius, and Dr Lamb,
-of Corpus Christi; and nine Professors, Hewett, Lee, Cumming, Clark,
-Babbage, Sedgwick, Airy, Musgrave, Henslow; some of whom were either
-Conservatives, or very moderate Liberals. It was presented to the House
-of Lords by Earl Grey, and to the House of Commons by Mr Spring-Rice,
-member for the town of Cambridge. As might have been expected, it was
-met, after an interval of about ten days, by a protest, signed by 110
-residents; which was shortly followed by a counter-petition to
-Parliament, signed by 258 members of the Senate, mostly non-residents—a
-number which would no doubt have been greatly enlarged had there been
-more time for collecting signatures[49]. These expressions of opinion,
-however, which showed that even resident members of the University were
-not unanimous in desiring the proposed relief, while non-residents were
-probably strongly opposed to it, did not prevent the introduction of a
-Bill into the House of Commons to make it ‘lawful for all his Majesty’s
-subjects to enter and matriculate in the Universities of England, and to
-receive and enjoy all degrees in learning conferred therein (degrees in
-Divinity alone excepted), without being required to subscribe any
-articles of religion, or to make any declaration of religious opinions
-respecting particular modes of faith and worship.’ The third reading of
-this Bill was carried by a majority of 89; but it was rejected in the
-House of Lords by a majority of 102.
-
-It will easily be imagined that these proceedings were watched with the
-greatest interest at Cambridge. Public opinion had risen to fever-heat,
-and a plentiful crop of pamphlets was the result. It is difficult
-nowadays to read without a smile these somewhat hysterical productions,
-with their prophecies of untold evils to come, should the fatal measure
-suggested by the petitioners ever pass into the Statute-book. Among
-these pamphlets that which most concerns our present purpose was by Dr
-Thomas Turton, then Regius Professor of Divinity, and afterwards Lord
-Bishop of Ely, entitled, _Thoughts on the Admission of Persons, without
-regard to their Religious Opinions, to certain Degrees in the
-Universities of England_. Dr Turton was universally respected, and his
-pamphlet attracted great attention on that account, and also from the
-ability and ingenuity of the argument. He adopted the comparative
-method; and endeavoured to prove that evils would ensue from the
-intercourse of young men who differed widely from one another in
-theological beliefs, by tracing the history of the Theological Seminary
-for Nonconformists, commenced by the celebrated Dr Doddridge, in 1729,
-at Northampton, and subsequently removed to Daventry in 1751. The
-gauntlet thus thrown down was taken up by Thirlwall, who lost but little
-time in addressing to him a _Letter on the Admission of Dissenters to
-Academical Degrees_. After stating briefly that what he was about to say
-would be said on his own responsibility, and that he did not come
-forward as ‘the organ or advocate’ of those who had taken the same side
-as himself, many of whom, he thought, would not agree with him, he
-proceeded to attack the analogy between Cambridge and Daventry which Dr
-Turton had attempted to establish. ‘Our colleges,’ he boldly asserted,
-‘are not theological seminaries. We have no theological colleges, no
-theological tutors, no theological students.’ The statement was
-literally true; it might even be said to be as capable of demonstration
-as any simple mathematical proposition; but uttered in that way, in a
-controversial pamphlet, in support of a most unpopular cause, it must
-have sounded like the blast of a hostile trumpet. This, however, was not
-all. Dr Turton had claimed for the Universities the same privilege which
-was enjoyed by Nonconformists, viz. the possession of colleges where
-‘those principles of religion alone are taught which are in agreement
-with their own peculiar views.’ Thirlwall, therefore, proceeded to
-inquire whether the colleges, though not theological seminaries, might
-be held to be schools for religious instruction. This question again he
-answered in the negative; and his opponent having placed in the foremost
-rank among the privileges long exercised by the Universities (1) the
-relation of tutor to pupil, (2) the chapel services, (3) the college
-lectures, he proceeded to examine whether these could ‘properly be
-numbered among the aids to religion which this place furnishes.’ To him
-it appeared impossible, under any circumstances, to instil religion into
-men’s minds against their will. ‘We cannot even prescribe exercises, or
-propose rewards for it, without killing the thing we mean to foster.’
-The value of the three aids above enumerated had been, he thought,
-greatly exaggerated; and compulsory attendance at chapel—‘the constant
-repetition of a heartless, mechanical service’—he denounced as a
-positive evil.
-
-‘My reason for thinking that our daily services might be omitted
-altogether, without any material detriment to religion, is simply that,
-as far as my means of observation extend, with an immense majority of
-our congregation it is not a religious service at all, and that to the
-remaining few it is the least impressive and edifying that can well be
-conceived[50].’
-
-He had no fault to find with the decorum of the service, but he
-criticised it as follows:
-
-‘If this decorum were to be carried to the highest perfection, as it
-might easily be, if it should ever become a mode and a point of honour
-with the young men themselves, the thing itself would not rise one step
-in my estimation. I should still think, that the best which could be
-said of it would be, that at the end it leaves every one as it found
-him, and that the utmost religion could hope from it would be to suffer
-no incurable wounds.
-
-‘As to any other purposes, foreign to those of religion, which may be
-answered by these services, I have here no concern with them. I know
-that it is sometimes said that the attendance at chapel is essential to
-discipline; but I have never been able to understand what kind of
-discipline is meant: whether it is a discipline of the body, or of the
-mind, or of the heart and affections. As to the first, I am very
-sensible of the advantage of early rising; but I think this end might be
-attained by a much less circuitous process; and I suppose that it will
-hardly be reckoned among the uses of our evening service, that it
-sometimes proves a seasonable interruption to intemperate gaiety. But I
-confess that the word discipline, applied to this subject, conveys to my
-mind no notions which I would not wish to banish: it reminds me either
-of a military parade, or of the age when we were taught to be _good_ at
-church[51].’
-
-As a remedy for the existing state of things he suggested a weekly
-service, ‘which should remind the young men of that to which they have,
-most of them, been accustomed at home.’ Such a service as this, he
-thought, ‘would afford the best opportunity of affording instruction of
-a really religious kind, which should apply itself to their situation
-and prospects, and address itself to their feelings.’
-
-Next he took the college lectures in divinity, and proceeded to show,
-that, for the most part, they had no claim to be called theological.
-This part of his pamphlet excited even greater dissatisfaction than the
-other; and it must be admitted that it was by far the weakest part of
-his case. His statements under this head were presently examined, and
-completely refuted, by Mr Robert Wilson Evans, then a resident Fellow of
-Trinity, who published a detailed account of the lectures on the New
-Testament which he had given during the past year in his own college.
-
-Up to this time Mr Whewell had taken no part in the controversy, because
-he had felt himself unable ‘fully to agree with either of the contending
-parties.’ But his position as tutor of the college whence the
-denunciation of the existing system had emanated—for the system of
-Trinity College was practically the system of all the other colleges in
-the University also—compelled him, though evidently with the greatest
-reluctance, to break silence. He argued that Thirlwall’s opinion, that
-we cannot prescribe exercises or propose rewards for religion without
-killing that which we fain would foster, strikes at the root of all
-connexion between religion and civil institutions, such as an
-Established Church and the like; that external influences have always
-been recognized by Christian communities, and must have been used even
-in the case of those services at home which his opponent approved.
-Chapel service is nothing more than family prayers. If, therefore, we
-teach our students that compulsion is destructive of all religion, shall
-we not make them doubt the validity of the religion which was instilled
-into their minds at home? The aim of such ordinances and safeguards is
-to throw a religious character over all the business of life; to bind
-religious thought upon us by the strongest of all constraints—the
-constraint of habit. He admitted that all was not perfect in the chapel
-services as they existed; and lamented that the task of those who wished
-to make the undergraduates more devout would henceforward be harder than
-it had ever been before, through their consciousness of a want of
-unanimity among their instructors. A stated method is of use in religion
-as it is in other studies. What would become of men under the voluntary
-system? It is interesting to remark that in a subsequent pamphlet
-written a few months later—in September 1834—he spoke in favour of such
-a change in the Sunday service as Thirlwall had suggested. Towards the
-close of his Mastership this change was effected, and a sermon was
-introduced at the second of the two morning services on Sundays. We are
-not aware, however, that the movement which resulted in this alteration
-was regarded with any special favour by the Master[52].
-
-Thirlwall’s pamphlet is dated May 21, 1834; Whewell’s four days later.
-On the 26th the Master, Dr Wordsworth, wrote to Mr Thirlwall, calling
-upon him to resign the assistant-tutorship. The words used were:
-
-‘I trust you will find no difficulty in resigning the appointment of
-assistant-tutor which I confided to you somewhat more than two years
-ago. Your continuing to retain it would, I am convinced, be very
-injurious to the good government, the reputation, and the prosperity of
-the college in general, to the interests of Mr Whewell in particular,
-and to the welfare of the young men, and of many others.’
-
-In another passage he went further still:
-
-‘With respect to the letter itself, I have read it with some attention,
-and, I am sorry to say, with extreme pain and regret. It appears to me
-of a character so out of harmony with the whole constitution and system
-of the college that I find some difficulty in understanding how a person
-with such sentiments can reconcile it to himself to continue a member of
-a society founded and conducted on principles from which he differs so
-widely.’
-
-The Heads of Houses of that day regarded themselves as seated upon an
-academic Olympus, from whose serene heights they surveyed the common
-herd beneath them with a sort of contemptuous pity; and they not only
-exacted, but were commonly successful in obtaining, the most precise
-obedience from their subjects. In Trinity College, however, at least
-since the days of Dr Bentley, the Master had usually been in the habit
-of consulting the Seniors before taking any important step; but, on this
-occasion, it is quite clear that the Seniors were not consulted. The
-Master probably thought that as he appointed the assistant-tutors he
-could also remove them. We believe, however, that even in those days the
-Master usually consulted the tutors before appointing their
-subordinates; and common courtesy would have suggested a similar course
-of action before dismissing a distinguished scholar[53].
-
-Thirlwall lost no time in obeying the Master’s commands, and then issued
-a circular to the Fellows of the college, enclosing a copy of the
-Master’s letter, in order that they might learn what was ‘the power
-claimed by the Master over the persons engaged in the public instruction
-of the college, and the manner in which it has been exercised;’ and,
-secondly, that he might learn from them how far they agreed with the
-Master as to the propriety of his continuing a member of the Society. On
-this point he entreated each of them to favour him with a ‘private,
-explicit, and unreserved declaration’ of his opinions. It is needless to
-say that one and all desired to retain him among them; and the Master’s
-conduct was condemned by a large majority. It must not, however, be
-supposed that Thirlwall’s own conduct was held to be free from fault. He
-was much blamed for having resigned so hastily, without consulting any
-one, as it would appear, except Whewell and Perry. Moreover, many of the
-Fellows, among whom was Mr Hare, condemned the Master’s action, and
-censured Thirlwall’s rashness in publishing such sentiments while
-holding a responsible office, with almost equal severity. This feeling
-explains, as we imagine, the very slight resistance made to an act
-which, under any other circumstances, would have caused an explosion.
-The Fellows felt that the victim had put himself in the wrong; and that,
-much as they regretted the necessity of submission, it was the only
-course to be taken. Thirlwall mentions in a letter to Professor Pryme
-that when he showed the Masters communication to Whewell, the latter
-‘expressed great regret,’ but ‘did not intimate that there could be any
-doubt as to our connexion being at an end.’
-
-It has often been said that Whewell did not exert himself as he might
-have done to avert the catastrophe. We are glad to know, as we now do
-most distinctly, from a letter written by him to Professor Sedgwick[54],
-full of grief at what had happened, and of apprehension at its probable
-consequences, that he had done all in his power to stay the Master’s
-hand. He does not say, in so many words, that the Master had consulted
-him _before_ he sent the letter; but he does say that ‘the Master’s
-request to him (Mr Thirlwall) to resign the tuition I entirely
-disapprove of, and expressed my opinion against it to the Master as
-strongly as I could.’ If Thirlwall felt some resentment against Whewell
-at first—as we believe he did—the feeling soon died away, and towards
-the end of September he wrote him a long letter which ended with the
-following passage:
-
-‘Besides the explanations which I desired, your letter has afforded me a
-still higher satisfaction, in shewing me that I am indebted to you for
-an obligation on which I shall always reflect with pleasure and
-gratitude—in the attempt which you made to avert the evil which my
-imprudence had drawn upon me. And as this is the strongest proof you
-could have given of the desire you felt to continue the relation in
-which we stood with one another, so it encourages me to hope that I may
-still find opportunities, before I leave this place, of co-operating
-with you, though in a different form, for the like ends. But at all
-events I shall never cease to retain that esteem and regard with which I
-now remain yours most truly,
-
- C. THIRLWALL[55].’
-
-In reviewing the whole controversy at a distance of more than half a
-century, with, we must admit, a strong bias in Thirlwall’s favour, it is
-impossible not to admit that he had made a mistake. In all questions of
-college management it is most important that the authorities should
-appear, at any rate, to be unanimous; and the words ‘my imprudence,’
-which occur in the passage quoted above from his letter to Whewell,
-indicate that by that time he had begun to take the same view himself.
-It is easy to see how he had been drawn into an opposite course. He had
-never considered that he had anything to do with the chapel discipline;
-he had agreed to attend himself, but he did not consider that such
-attendance implied approval of the system. His own attendance, as we
-learn from a contemporary, was something more than formal; he was rarely
-absent, morning or evening; and his behaviour was remarkable for
-reverence and devotion. With him, religion had nothing to do with
-discipline; and it was infinitely shocking to his pure and thoughtful
-mind to defile things heavenly with things earthly. The far too rigorous
-rules of attendance which were then in force had exasperated the
-undergraduates, and their behaviour, without being absolutely profane,
-was careless and irreverent. Talking was very prevalent, especially on
-surplice nights, when the service is choral. Thirlwall probably knew,
-from the friendly intercourse which he maintained with the younger
-members of the College, what their feelings were, and determined to do
-his best to get a system altered which produced such disastrous results.
-It must be remembered that at that time the Act of Uniformity prevented
-any shortening of the service. Whewell’s mind was a very different one.
-Without being a bigot, he had a profound respect for the existing order
-of things; shut his eyes to any defects it might have, even when they
-were pointed out to him; and regarded attempts to subvert it, or even to
-weaken it, as acts of profanity.
-
-It will be readily conceived that these events rendered Cambridge no
-pleasant place of residence for Thirlwall, deprived of his occupation as
-a teacher and unsupported by any particularly strong force of liberal
-opinion in the University. Yet he had the courage to make the experiment
-of continuing to live in college. He went abroad for the Long Vacation
-of 1834, and returned at the beginning of the October term. In a few
-weeks, however, the course of his life was changed by an unexpected
-event. Lord Melbourne’s first Ministry broke up, and just as Lord
-Chancellor Brougham was regretting that Sedgwick and Thirlwall were the
-only clergymen who had deserved well of the Liberal party for whom he
-had been unable to provide, came the news of the death of a gentleman
-who was both canon of Norwich and rector of Kirby Underdale, a valuable
-but very secluded living in Yorkshire. He at once offered the canonry to
-Sedgwick and the rectory to Thirlwall. Both offers were accepted, we
-believe, without hesitation; and both appointments, though evidently
-made without regard to the special fitness of the persons selected, were
-thoroughly successful. Sedgwick threw himself into the duties of a
-cathedral dignitary with characteristic vigour; and Thirlwall, whose
-only experience of parochial work had been at Over, in Cambridgeshire, a
-small village without a parsonage, of which he was vicar for a few
-months in 1829, became a zealous and popular parish priest. We are told
-that ‘the recollection still survives of regular services with full and
-attentive congregations, including incomers from neighbouring villages;
-of the frequent visits to the village school; of the extempore prayers
-with his flock, of which the larger number were Dissenters; of the
-assiduous attentions to the sick and poor.’ And his old friend Hare,
-writing to Whewell in 1840, describes his work in his parish as
-‘perfect,’ and holds up his example as ‘an encouragement’ to his
-correspondent to go and do likewise[56].
-
-Thirlwall did not revisit Cambridge until 1842, when he stayed in
-Trinity College for two days during the installation of the Duke of
-Northumberland as Chancellor. Such an occasion, however, does not give
-much opportunity for judging of the real state of the University. He
-paid a similar visit in 1847, when Prince Albert was installed. After
-this he did not see Cambridge again until the spring of 1869, when he
-stayed at Trinity Lodge with his old friend Dr Thompson, and on
-Whitsunday, May 16, preached before the University in Great S. Mary’s
-Church. He has himself recorded that he was never so much pleased with
-the place since he went up as a freshman, and has given an amusing
-description of a leisurely stroll round the backs of the colleges and
-through part of the town[57], which, he might have added, he insisted
-upon taking without a companion. Those who conversed with him on that
-occasion remember that he was much struck by the changes which had taken
-place in the University since he had left it; and that he observed with
-pleasure the increased numbers of the undergraduates, and the movement
-and activity which seemed to reign everywhere.
-
-It was at Kirby Underdale that Thirlwall wrote the greater part of the
-work on which his reputation as a scholar and a man of letters will
-chiefly rest—his _History of Greece_—of which the first volume had been
-published before he finally left Cambridge[58]. It is, perhaps,
-fortunate for the world that he had bound himself to produce the volumes
-at regular intervals[59], and that his editor, Dr Dionysius Lardner
-(whom he used to call ‘Dionysius the Tyrant’), was not a man to grant
-delays; for, had the conditions been easier, parochial cares and new
-interests might have retarded the production of it indefinitely, or even
-stopped it altogether. From the first Thirlwall had applied himself to
-the work with strenuous and unremitting energy. At Cambridge he used to
-work all day until half-past three o’clock in the afternoon, when he
-might be seen leaving his rooms for a half-hour’s rapid walk before
-dinner in Hall, then served at four o’clock; and in the country he is
-said to have spent sixteen hours of the twenty-four in his study. We do
-not know what was the original design of the work, as part of the
-_Cabinet Cyclopædia_, but we have it on Thirlwall’s own authority that
-it was ‘much narrower than that which it actually reached[60],’ and
-before long it was further expanded into eight goodly octavos. The first
-of these was scarcely in the hands of the public when Grote’s _History
-of Greece_, published, like its predecessor, volume by volume, began to
-make its appearance. It was mentioned above that Grote and Thirlwall had
-been school-fellows; but, though they met not unfrequently in London
-afterwards, Thirlwall knew so little of his friend’s intentions that he
-had been heard to say, ‘Grote is the man who ought to write the History
-of Greece.’ When it did appear, he at once welcomed it with enthusiasm.
-‘High as my expectations were of it,’ he writes to Dr Schmitz, ‘it has
-very much surpassed them all, and affords an earnest of something which
-has never been done for the subject either in our own or any other
-literature[61]’; and to Grote himself, when the publication of four
-volumes had enabled him to form a maturer judgment, he not only used
-stronger words of praise, but contrasted it with his own History in
-terms which for generosity and sincerity can never be surpassed. After
-alluding to ‘the great inferiority’ of his ‘own performance,’ he
-concludes as follows: ‘I may well be satisfied with that measure of
-temporary success and usefulness which has attended it, and can
-unfeignedly rejoice that it will, for all highest purposes, be so
-superseded[62].’ It would be beside our present purpose to attempt a
-comparison of the relative merits of these two works, which, by a
-curious coincidence, had been elaborated simultaneously. They have many
-points of resemblance. Both originated in a desire to apply to the
-history of Greece those principles of criticism which Niebuhr had
-applied so successfully to the history of Rome; both were intended to
-counteract the misrepresentations of Mitford; both were the result of
-long and careful preparation. Grote has a decided advantage in point of
-style; he writes vigorous, ‘newspaper’ English, as might be expected
-from a successful pamphleteer; while Thirlwall’s periods are laboured
-and somewhat wooden. Grote has infused animation into his work by being
-always a partisan. We do not mean that he wilfully misrepresents facts;
-he certainly does not; but he unconsciously finds ‘extenuating
-circumstances’ for those with whom he sympathizes, and condemns
-remorselessly those whose springs of action are alien to his own.
-Thirlwall, on the contrary, holds the judicial balance with a firm hand.
-In estimating character his serene intellect is never warped by
-partisanship, or by a wish to present old facts under a new face; while
-from his scholarship and critical power there is no appeal.
-
-After a residence of five years at Kirby Underdale Thirlwall was
-unexpectedly made Bishop of S. David’s by Lord Melbourne. Lord Houghton,
-an intimate friend of both the Bishop and the Minister, has recorded
-that Lord Melbourne was in the habit not merely of reading, but of
-severely judging and criticising the writings of every divine whom he
-thought of promoting. By some accident the translation of
-Schleiermacher’s essay had fallen in his way soon after it appeared; he
-had formed a high opinion of Thirlwall’s share in the work, and so far
-back as 1837 had done his best to send the author to Norwich instead of
-Dr Stanley. On this occasion the bishops whom the Minister consulted
-regarded the orthodoxy of the views sustained in the essay as
-questionable, and Thirlwall’s promotion was deferred. In 1840, however,
-Lord Melbourne got his way, and the bishopric of S. David’s was offered
-in due form to the Rector of Kirby Underdale. His first impulse was to
-refuse; but his friends persuaded him to go to London, and at least have
-an interview with Lord Melbourne. We do not vouch for the literal
-accuracy of the following scene, but it is too amusing not to be
-related. The time is the forenoon; the place, Lord Melbourne’s bedroom.
-He is supposed to be in bed, surrounded by letters and newspapers. On
-Thirlwall’s entrance he delivers the following allocution:
-
-‘Very glad to see you; sit down, sit down. Hope you are come to say you
-accept? I only wish you to understand that I don’t intend, if I know it,
-to make a heterodox bishop. I don’t like heterodox bishops. As men they
-may be very good anywhere else, but I think they have no business on the
-bench. I take great interest,’ he continued, ‘in theological questions,
-and I have read a good deal of those old fellows,’ pointing to a pile of
-folio editions of the Fathers. ‘They are excellent reading, and very
-amusing. Some time or other we must have a talk about them. I sent your
-edition of Schleiermacher to Lambeth, and asked the Primate (Howley) to
-tell me candidly what he thought of it; and look, here are his notes in
-the margin. Pretty copious, you see. He does not concur in all your
-opinions, but he says there is nothing heterodox in your book. Had he
-objected I would not have appointed you[63].’
-
-We should like to know how Thirlwall answered this strange defender of
-the faith; but tradition is silent on the point. Before leaving,
-however, the offer was accepted; and, with as little delay as possible,
-the Bishop removed to his diocese and entered upon his duties.
-
-Thirlwall’s life as a bishop did not differ much, at least in its
-outward surroundings, from his life as a parish clergyman. The palace at
-S. David’s having been allowed to fall to ruin, the Bishop is compelled
-to live at Abergwili, a small village near Carmarthen, distant nearly
-fifty miles from his cathedral. Most persons would have regretted the
-isolation of such a position, but to Thirlwall the enforced solitude of
-Abergwili was thoroughly congenial. There he could read, as he delighted
-to do, ‘literally from morning till night.’ Except in summer time he
-rarely quitted ‘Chaos,’ as he called his library, where books lined the
-walls and shared with papers and letters the tables, chairs, and floor.
-It is curious that a man with so orderly a mind should have had such
-disorderly habits. His letters are full of references to lost papers;
-and when offers to arrange his drawers were made he would answer
-regretfully, ‘I can find nothing in them now, but if they were set to
-rights for me I should certainly find nothing then.’ Books accompanied
-him to his meals; and when he went out for a walk or a drive he read
-steadily most of the time. He does not seem to have had any favourite
-authors; he read eagerly new books in all languages and on all subjects.
-We believe that he took no notes of what he read; but his singularly
-powerful memory enabled him to seize all that he wanted, and, as may be
-seen from the collection of his writings which is now before us, to
-retain it until required for use. His charges, essays, and serious
-correspondence reveal his mastery of theological literature, both past
-and present; the charming _Letters to a Friend_ give us very pleasant
-glimpses of the gentler side of his character. We find from them that he
-took a keen interest in the general literature of England and the
-Continent, whether in philosophy, science, history, biography, fiction,
-poetry; and, as he and his young correspondent exchanged their
-sentiments without restraint, we can enjoy to the full his criticisms,
-now serious, now playful, on authors and their productions, his generous
-appreciation of all that is noble in life or art. We must find room for
-one passage on George Eliot’s last story, written in 1872, when he was
-seventy-five years old.
-
-‘I suppose you cannot have read _Middlemarch_, as you say nothing about
-it. It stands quite alone. As one only just moistens one’s lips with an
-exquisite liqueur to keep the taste as long as possible in one’s mouth,
-I never read more than a single chapter of _Middlemarch_ in the evening,
-dreading to come to the last, when I must wait two months for a renewal
-of the pleasure. The depth of humour has certainly never been surpassed
-in English literature. If there is ever a shade too much learning that
-is Lewes’s fault[64].’
-
-But there was another reason for his enjoyment of Abergwili. Student as
-he was, he delighted in the sights, the sounds, the air of the country.
-He never left it for his annual migration to London without regret,
-partly because it was so troublesome to move the mass of books without
-which he could not bear to leave home, but still more because the bustle
-and dust of London annoyed him; and in the midst of congenial society,
-and the enjoyment of music and pictures, his thoughts reverted with
-longing regret to his trees, his flowers, and his domestic pets. He had
-begun his social relations with dogs and cats in Yorkshire, and an
-amusing story is told of the way in which the preparations for his
-formal reception when he came home after accepting the bishopric of S.
-David’s, were completely disconcerted by the riotous welcome of his
-dogs, who jumped on his shoulders and excluded all human attentions[65].
-At Abergwili he extended his affections to birds, and kept peacocks,
-pheasants, canaries, swans, and tame geese, which he regularly fed every
-morning, no matter what the weather might be. They treated him with easy
-familiarity, for they used to seize his coattails with their beaks to
-show their welcome. His flowers had to yield to the tastes of his
-four-footed friends. One day his gardener complained, ‘What am I to do,
-my Lord? The hares have eaten your carnations.’ ‘Plant more carnations,’
-was his only reply. Fine summer weather would draw him out of ‘Chaos’
-into the field or garden; and one of his letters gives a delicious
-picture of his enjoyment of a certain June, sitting on the grass while
-the haymakers were at work in the field beyond, reading _The Earthly
-Paradise_, and watching the movements of ‘a dear horse’ who paced up and
-down with a ‘system of hay rakes behind him to toss it about and
-accelerate its maturity[66].’
-
-It must not, however, be supposed that Bishop Thirlwall lived the life
-of an indolent man of letters. No bishop ever performed the duties of
-his position more thoroughly, or with greater sacrifice of personal ease
-and comfort. His first care was to learn Welsh, and in a little more
-than a year he could read prayers and preach in that language. In his
-large and little-known diocese locomotion was not easy, and
-accommodation was often hard to obtain. Yet he visited every part of it,
-personally inspected the condition of the schools and churches
-(deplorable enough in 1840), and regularly performed the duties of
-confirmation, preaching, and visitation. In the charge of 1866 he
-reviewed the improvements which had been accomplished up to that time,
-and could mention 183 churches to the restoration of which the Church
-Building Society had made grants, and more than thirty parishes in which
-either new or restored churches were in progress. Besides these, there
-were some which had been restored by private munificence; others,
-including the cathedral, by public subscription; many parsonages had
-been built, livings had been augmented, and education had been largely
-increased[67]. To all these excellent objects he had himself been a
-munificent contributor, and we believe that between the beginning and
-the end of his episcopate he had spent nearly £40,000 in charities of
-various kinds[68]. Yet with all these claims on the gratitude of the
-clergy we are sorry to have to admit that he was not personally popular.
-It would have been more wonderful perhaps had he been so. The Welsh
-clergy forty years ago were a rough and uncultivated body of men,
-narrow-minded and prejudiced, and with habits hardly more civilized than
-those of the labourers around them. They were ill at ease with an
-English man of letters. He was to them an object of curiosity, possibly
-of dread. The new Bishop intimated his wish that the clergy should come
-to his house without restraint, and when there should be treated as
-gentlemen and equals. This was of itself an innovation. In his
-predecessor’s time when a clergyman called at Abergwili he entered by
-the back door, and if he stayed to dinner he took that meal in the
-housekeeper’s room with the upper servants. Thirlwall abolished these
-customs, and entertained the clergy at his own table. This was excellent
-in intention, but impossible in practice. The difference in tastes,
-feelings, manners, between the entertainer and the entertained made
-social intercourse equally disagreeable to both parties; and the Bishop
-felt obliged to substitute correspondence for visits, so far as he
-could, reserving personal intercourse for the archdeacons, or those
-clergymen whose education enabled them to appreciate his friendship[69].
-Again, the peculiar tone of his mind must be remembered. He was nothing
-if not critical; and, further, as one of his oldest friends once said in
-our hearing, ‘he was the most thoroughly veracious man I ever knew.’ He
-could not listen to a hasty, ill-considered, remark without taking it to
-pieces, and demonstrating, by successive questions, put in a slow,
-deliberate tone of voice, the fallacy of the separate parts of the
-proposition, and, by consequence, of the whole. Hence he was feared and
-respected rather than beloved; and those who ought to have been proud of
-having such a man among them wreaked their small spite against him by
-accusing him of being inhospitable, of walking out attended by a dog
-trained to know and bite a curate, and the like. These slanders, of
-which we hope he was unconscious, he could not answer; those who
-attacked him in public he could and did crush with an accuracy of
-exposition, and a power of sarcasm, for which it would be hard to find a
-parallel. We need only refer to his answers to Sir Benjamin Hall, M.P.
-for Marylebone, on the general question of the condition of the churches
-in his diocese, appended to his charge for 1851, and on the special case
-of the Collegiate Church of Brecon, in two letters to the Archbishop of
-Canterbury; or to the _Letter to the Rev. Rowland Williams_, published
-in 1860. Mr Williams had published some sermons, entitled _Rational
-Godliness_, the supposed heterodoxy of which had alarmed the clergy of
-his diocese, seventy of whom had signed a memorial to the Bishop,
-praying him to take some notice of the book; in other words, to remove
-the author from the college at Lampeter, of which he was vice-principal.
-The Bishop had declined to interfere, and in his charge of 1857 had
-discussed the question at length, considering it, as was his manner,
-from all points of view, and, while he found much to blame, defending
-the author’s intentions, on the ground of the high opinion of his
-personal character which he himself held. This, however, did not satisfy
-Mr Williams. We cannot help suspecting that he was longing for a
-martyr’s crown; and, indignant at not having obtained one, he addressed
-the Bishop at great length in what he called _An Earnestly Respectful
-Letter on the Difficulty of bringing Theological Questions to an Issue_.
-He described the charge as ‘a miracle of cleverness,’ but deplored its
-indefiniteness; he drew a picture of ‘a preacher in our wild mountains’
-who came to seek counsel from his bishop and got only evasive
-answers—‘in all helps for our guidance Abergwili may equal Delphi in
-wisdom, but also in ambiguity[70]’—and entreated the Bishop to declare
-plainly his own opinion on the questions raised. For once Bishop
-Thirlwall’s serenity was fairly ruffled. Stung by the ingratitude of a
-man whom he had steadily befriended, and whose aim was, as he thought,
-to draw him into admissions damaging to himself, he struck with all his
-might and main, and, as was said at the time, ‘you may hear every bone
-in his adversary’s body cracking.’ One specimen of the remarkable power
-of his reply must suffice. On the comparison of himself to the Delphic
-oracle he remarked:
-
-‘Even if I had laid claim to oracular wisdom I should have thought this
-complaint rather unreasonable; for the oracle at Delphi, though it
-pretended to divine infallibility, was used to wait for a question
-before it gave a response. But I wish above all things to be sure as to
-the person with whom I have to do. I remember to have read of one who
-went to the oracle at Delphi, “ex industriâ factus ad imitationem
-stultitiæ”; and I cannot help suspecting that I have before me one who
-has put on a similar disguise. The voice does not sound to me like that
-of a “mountain clergyman”; while I look at the roll I seem to recognize
-a very different and well-known hand. The “difficulties” are very unlike
-the expression of an embarrassment which has been really felt, but might
-have been invented in the hope of creating one. They are quite worthy of
-the mastery which you have attained in the art of putting questions, so
-as most effectually to prevent the possibility of an answer[71].’
-
-But if Thirlwall’s great merits were not fully appreciated in his own
-diocese, there was no lack of recognition of them in the Church at
-large. His seclusion at Abergwili largely increased his influence. It
-was known that he thought out questions for himself, without consulting
-his episcopal brethren or his friends, and without being influenced in
-any way, as even the most conscientious men must be, in despite of
-themselves, by the opinions which they hear expressed in society. Hence
-his utterances came to be accepted as the decisions of a judge; of one
-who, standing on an eminence, could take ‘an oversight of the whole
-field of ecclesiastical events[72],’ and from that commanding position
-could distinguish what was of permanent importance from that which
-possessed a merely controversial interest as a vexed question of the
-day. We have spoken of the advantages which he derived from his secluded
-life; it must be admitted that it had also certain disadvantages. The
-freshness and originality of his opinions, the judicial tone of his
-independent decisions, gave them a permanent value; but his want of
-knowledge of the opinions of those from whom he could not wholly
-dissociate himself, and, we may add, his indifference to them, caused
-him to be not unfrequently misunderstood, and to be charged with holding
-views not far removed from heresy. ‘I will not call him an unbeliever,
-but a misbeliever,’ said a very orthodox bishop, whose love of epigram
-occasionally got the better of his charity. His brother bishops, like
-the Welsh clergy, feared him more than they loved him; they knew his
-value as an ally, but they knew also that he would never, under any
-circumstances, become a partisan, or adopt a view which he could not
-wholly approve, merely because it seemed good to his Order to exhibit
-unanimity. It was probably for this reason, as much as for his eloquence
-and power, that he had the ear of the House of Lords on the rare
-occasions when he addressed it. The Peers knew that they were listening
-to a man who had the fullest sense of the responsibilities of the
-episcopate, but who would neither defend nor oppose a measure because
-‘the proprieties’ indicated the side on which a bishop would be expected
-to vote. Two only of his speeches are republished in the collection
-before us—on the Civil Disabilities of the Jews (1848), and on the
-Disestablishment of the Irish Church (1869). We should like to have had
-added to these that on the grant to the Roman Catholic College of
-Maynooth (1845), which seems to us to be equally worth preserving. On
-these occasions Bishop Thirlwall took the unpopular side at periods of
-great excitement; his arguments were listened to with the utmost
-attention; and in the case of the Irish Church it has been stated that
-no speech had a greater effect in favour of the measure than his.
-
-In all Church matters he was a thorough Liberal. His view of the Church
-of England cannot be better stated than by quoting a passage from one of
-his _Letters to a Friend_. He had been reading Mr Robertson’s sermons;
-and after saying that their author was specially recommended to him by
-the hostility of the _Record_, ‘which I consider as a proof of some
-excellence in every one who is its object,’ he thus proceeds:
-
-‘He was certainly not orthodox after the _Record_ standard, but might
-very well be so after another. For our Church has the advantage—such I
-deem it—of more than one type of orthodoxy: that of the High Church,
-grounded on one aspect of its formularies; that of the Low Church,
-grounded on another aspect; and that of the Broad Church, striving to
-take in both, but in its own way. Each has a right to a standing-place,
-none to exclusive possession of the field. Of course this is very
-unsatisfactory to the bigots of each party—at the two extremes. Some
-would be glad to cast the others out; and some yearn after a Living
-Source of Orthodoxy, of course on the condition that it sanctions their
-own views. To have escaped that worst of evils ought, I think, to
-console every rational Churchman for whatever he finds amiss at
-home.’[73]
-
-Had the Bishop added that he wished each of these parties to have fair
-play, but that none should be exalted at the expense of the others, we
-should have had a summary of the principles which regulated his public
-life. Let it not, however, be supposed that he was an indifferent
-looker-on. He held that truth had many sides; that it might be viewed in
-different ways by persons standing in different positions; but still it
-was to him clear, and definite, and based upon a rock which no human
-assailant could shake. This, we think, is the keynote which is struck in
-every one of those eleven most remarkable Charges which are now for the
-first time collected together. We would earnestly commend them to the
-study of all who are interested in the history of the Church of England
-during the period which they cover. Every controversy which agitated
-her, every measure which affected her welfare, is discussed by a master;
-the real question at issue is carefully pointed out; the trivial is
-distinguished from the important; moderation and charity are insisted
-upon; angry passions are allayed; and, while the liberty of the
-individual is perpetually asserted, the duty of maintaining her
-doctrines is strenuously inculcated. As illustrations of some of these
-characteristics we would contrast his exhaustive analysis of the
-Tractarian movement or the Gorham controversy, with his conduct
-respecting _Essays and Reviews_. In the former cases he hesitated to
-condemn; he preferred to allay the terror with which his clergy were
-evidently inspired. In the latter, though always ‘decidedly opposed to
-any attempt to narrow the freedom which the law allows to every
-clergyman of the Church of England in the expression of his opinion on
-theological subjects,’ he joined his brother bishops in signing the
-famous ‘Encyclical,’ which we now know was the composition of Bishop
-Wilberforce, because he thought that in this case the principles
-advocated led to a negation of Christianity.
-
-Thirlwall’s position towards theological questions has been called
-‘indefinable[74].’ In a certain sense this statement is no doubt true.
-It was quite impossible to label him as of this or that party or
-faction; or to predict with any approach to certainty what he would do
-or say on any particular occasion. He had no enthusiasm (in the ordinary
-sense of the word) and no sentiment, and therefore, when a question was
-submitted to him, he did not decide it in the light of previous
-prejudices, or welcome it as a point gained towards some cherished end.
-He considered it as if it were the only question in the world at that
-moment, and as if he had never heard of it, or anything like it, before;
-he looked all round it, and balanced the arguments for and against it
-with the accuracy of a man of science in a laboratory. As a result of
-this process he frequently came to no resolution at all, and frankly
-told his correspondent that he would leave the matter referred to him to
-the decision of others. But, if what he held to be truth was assailed,
-or the conduct of an individual unjustly called in question, Thirlwall’s
-hesitation vanished. We have already mentioned his conduct in the House
-of Lords; but it should never be forgotten that he was one of the four
-Bishops who dissented from the resolution to inhibit Bishop Colenso from
-preaching in the various dioceses of England; and that he stood alone in
-withholding his signature from the address requesting him to resign his
-see. Again, when Mr J. S. Mill was a candidate for Westminster in 1865,
-and his opponents circulated on a placard some lines from his
-_Examination of Sir W. Hamilton’s Philosophy_ intended to shock the
-minds of the electors as irreverent if not blasphemous,—a proceeding
-which was eagerly followed up by the _Record_ and the _Morning
-Advertiser_ in leading articles—Thirlwall at once wrote to the
-_Spectator_, maintaining that this passage contained “the utterance of a
-conviction in harmony with ‘the purest spirit of Christian morality’;
-that nothing but ‘an intellectual and moral incapacity worthy of the
-‘Record’ and its satellite could have failed to recognise its truth’;
-and that it ‘thrilled’ him ‘with a sense of the ethical sublime’[75].”
-
-There were many other duties besides the care of the diocese of S.
-David’s to which the Bishop devoted himself, but these we must dismiss
-with a passing notice. We allude to his work as a member of the Ritual
-Commission, as chairman of the Old Testament Revision Company, and in
-Convocation. Gradually, however, as years advanced, his physical powers
-began to fail, and he resolved to resign his bishopric. This resolution
-was carried into effect in 1874. He retired to Bath, where he was still
-able to continue many of his old pursuits, and, by the help of his
-nephew and his family, notwithstanding blindness and deafness, to
-maintain his old interests. He died rather suddenly, July 27, 1875, and
-was buried in Westminster Abbey, where, by a singularly felicitous
-arrangement, his remains were laid in the same grave as those of George
-Grote.
-
-Regret has been often expressed that Bishop Thirlwall did not write
-more. We do not share this feeling. Had he written more he would have
-thought less, studied less, possessed in a less perfect degree that
-‘_cor sapiens et intelligens ad discernendum judicium_[76]’ which was
-never weary of trying to impart to others a portion of its own serenity.
-At seventy-six years of age, just before his resignation, he could say,
-‘I should hesitate to say that whatever is is best; but I have strong
-faith that it is _for_ the best, and that the general stream of tendency
-is toward good’; and in the last sentence of his last charge he bade his
-clergy remark that even controversies were ‘a sign of the love of truth
-which, if often passionate and one-sided, is always infinitely
-preferable to the quiet of apathy and indifference.’
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- 1. _William Whewell, D.D., Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. An
- Account of his Writings, with Selections from his Literary and
- Scientific Correspondence._ By I. TODHUNTER, M.A., F.R.S., Honorary
- Fellow of S. John’s College. 2 vols., 8vo. (London, 1876.)
-
- 2. _The Life and Selections from the Correspondence of William
- Whewell, D.D., late Master of Trinity College, Cambridge._ By Mrs
- STAIR DOUGLAS. 8vo. (London, 1881.)
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- In the fifteen years from 1800-1814 inclusive the average was 205;
- from 1815-1829 it was 402; and from 1830-1844 it was 433; from
- 1845-1859 it was 444; from 1859-1874 it was 545.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Todhunter’s _Life_, ii. 91.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- _Life and Letters of Sir C. Lyell_, ii. 38. In the same letter he
- expresses his astonishment at finding that Whewell, while writing one
- of his papers on the Tides, was passing through the press _four other
- works_.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- The inscription runs: munificentia · fultus · Alex. J. B. Hope,
- generosi · hisce · ædibus · antiquam · speciem · restituit. W.
- Whewell. Mag. Collegii. A. D. MDCCCXLIII. Mr Hope gave £1000, and the
- Master himself £250; but the liberality of the College, which spent
- some £4000 before the work was finished, is unrecorded. It was on this
- occasion that somebody wrote a parody on _The House that Jack Built_,
- beginning:
-
- This is the House that Hope built.
- This is the Master, rude and rough,
- Who lives in the House that Hope built.
- These are the Seniors, greedy and gruff,
- Who toady the Master, rude and rough,
- Who lives in the House that Hope built.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- The _Times_, February 25 and 26, 1847. Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 285,
- prints a letter from Archdeacon Hare, who had been disturbed by
- reports of the Vice-Chancellor’s vehemence.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- The visit of Queen Victoria to the University in 1843.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- _A Letter to the Rev. W. Whewell, B.D., Master of Trinity College,
- etc. By an Undergraduate._ 8vo. London, 1843.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- _The Victory of Faith, and other Sermons._ By J. C. Hare, M. A. 8vo.
- Cambridge, 1840, p. x.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 216.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Dr Lightfoot’s Sermon, preached in the College Chapel on Sunday, March
- 18, 1866.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- They appeared in _Punch_ for March 17, 1866.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- The letter is dated 30 October, 1857.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 208.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Memoir by Sir John Herschel, _Proceedings of Royal Society_, XVI., p.
- lvi.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Bishop Goodwin’s article in _Macmillan’s Magazine_ for December, 1881,
- p. 140.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- We are not sure that he ever allowed the _Origin of Species_ to be
- admitted into the College Library. It was certainly refused more than
- once, being probably dismissed with the expression which he was fond
- of using when, as Chairman of the Seniority, he read the list of books
- proposed—‘a worthless publication.’
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- 1. _Remains, Literary and Theological, of Connop Thirlwall, late Lord
- Bishop of S. David’s._ Edited by J. J. STEWART PEROWNE, D.D. Vol. 1:
- Charges delivered between the years 1842 and 1860. Vol. 2: Charges
- delivered between the years 1863 and 1872. 8vo. (London, 1877.)
-
- 2. _Essays, Speeches, and Sermons._ By CONNOP THIRLWALL, D.D., late
- Lord Bishop of S. David’s. Edited by J. J. STEWART PEROWNE, D.D. 8vo.
- (London, 1880.)
-
- 3. _Letters to a Friend._ By CONNOP THIRLWALL, late Lord Bishop of S.
- David’s. Edited by the Very Rev. ARTHUR PENRHYN STANLEY, D.D. 8vo.
- (London, 1881.)
-
- 4. _Letters, Literary and Theological, of Connop Thirlwall, late Lord
- Bishop of S. David’s._ Edited by the Very Rev. J. J. STEWART PEROWNE,
- D.D., Dean of Peterborough, and the Rev. LOUIS STOKES, B.A. Corpus
- Christi College, Cambridge. With Annotations and Preliminary Memoirs
- by the Rev. LOUIS STOKES. 8vo. (London, 1881.)
-
- 5. _Letters to a Friend._ New Edition. (London, 1882.)
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- Dr Perowne’s Preface to _Letters_, &c., p. vi.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- _Letters_, &c., p. 177.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- _Primitiæ_, p. 52. The essay is endorsed: ‘Composed 1st January, 1806.
- Eight years old.’
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- _Primitiæ_, p. 224. The piece is dated October 28, 1808.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- _Letters to a Friend_, p. 155. As a matter of fact the Bishop did buy
- and destroy all the copies that he could.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- Dean Perowne mentions (Preface, p. viii.) that ‘at school he did not
- care to enter into the games and amusements of the other boys, but was
- to be seen at play-hour withdrawing himself into some corner with a
- pile of books under his arm.’
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- Candler was seven years older than Thirlwall. He was junior assistant
- in a draper’s shop at Ipswich, and afterwards set up in business on
- his own account at Chelmsford, where he became a leading member of the
- Society of Friends. He died, nearly eighty years of age, in 1872. We
- have not been able to ascertain how he became acquainted with
- Thirlwall.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- _Letters_, &c., p. 7.
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- _Letters_, &c., p. 17.
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- _Ibid._ p. 8.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- _Letters to a Friend_, p. 225.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- _Letters_, &c., p. 21. The letter is dated December, 1813, when the
- writer was sixteen years old.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Professor Monk, who had examined Thirlwall on one of these occasions,
- was so much struck with the vigour and accuracy of his translations
- that he remarked to a friend, who had also had experience of his worth
- as a scholar, ‘Had I been sitting in my library, with unlimited access
- to books, I could not have done better.’ ‘Nor so well,’ was the reply.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Cooper’s _Annals of the Town and University of Cambridge_, iv. 516.
- The words between inverted commas in our text are from a pamphlet
- entitled ‘A Statement regarding the Union, an Academical Debating
- Society, which existed at Cambridge from February 13, 1815, to March
- 24, 1817, when it was _suppressed by the Vice-Chancellor_.’ The
- ‘statement’ is evidently official, and is thoroughly business-like and
- temperate. The Vice-Chancellor was Dr Wood, Master of S. John’s
- College; the officers of the society were: Mr Whewell, _President_; Mr
- Thirlwall, _Secretary_; Mr H. J. Rose, _Treasurer_. The late Professor
- Selwyn, in a speech at the opening of the new Union building, October
- 30, 1866, stated that on the entrance of the proctors the President
- said, ‘Strangers will please to withdraw, and the House will take the
- message into consideration.’
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- _Autobiography of John Stuart Mill_, p. 125. Mill is describing a
- debate at ‘a society of Owenites called the Co-operation Society,’ in
- 1825. ‘It was a _lutte corps à corps_ between Owenites and political
- economists, whom the Owenites regarded as their most inveterate
- opponents; but it was a perfectly friendly dispute.... The speaker
- with whom I was most struck, though I dissented from nearly every word
- he said, was Thirlwall, the historian, since Bishop of S. David’s,
- then a Chancery barrister, unknown except by a high reputation for
- eloquence acquired at the Cambridge Union before the era of Austin and
- Macaulay. His speech was in answer to one of mine. Before he had
- uttered ten sentences, I set him down as the best speaker I had ever
- heard, and I have never since heard anyone whom I placed above him.’
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- _Letters_, &c., p. 31.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- An old friend of Bishop Thirlwall informs us that he retained his
- preference for the ‘Paradiso’ in after years.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- _Life and Letters of Frances Baroness Bunsen_; by Augustus J. C. Hare.
- 8vo. Lond. 1882: i. 138.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Letter to Bunsen, November 21, 1831, _Letters_, &c., p. 99.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- _Memoirs of Baron Bunsen_, i. 339.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Marsh was professor from 1807 to 1839. The first volume of his
- translation of Michaelis had appeared in 1793.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- _Letters_, &c., p. 55.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- _Edinburgh Review_, April, 1876, p. 291.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- _A Critical Essay on the Gospel of S. Luke._ By Dr Frederick
- Schleiermacher. With an introduction by the Translator, containing an
- account of the controversy respecting the origin of the first three
- Gospels since Bishop Marsh’s dissertation. 8vo. London: 1825.
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- F. D. Maurice writes, 25 February, 1848: ‘The Bishop of S. David’s
- very injudiciously translated, about twenty years ago,
- Schleiermacher’s book on S. Luke—the one of all, perhaps, which he
- ever wrote the most likely to offend religious people in England, and
- so mislead them as to his real character and objects.’ _Life of F. D.
- Maurice_, i. 454.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Between 1827 and 1832 he held the college offices of Junior Bursar,
- Junior Dean, and Head Lecturer. In 1828, 1829, 1832, and 1834 he was
- one of the examiners for the Classical Tripos.
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- See Dean Stanley’s Memoir of Archdeacon Hare, prefixed to the third
- edition of _The Victory of Faith_. 1874.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- _A Vindication of Niebuhr’s ‘History of Rome’ from the Charges of the
- ‘Quarterly Review.’_ By Julius Charles Hare, M.A. Cambridge, 1829. The
- passage commented on will be found in the _Quarterly Review_ for
- January 1829 (vol. xxxix. p. 8). The first edition of Niebuhr’s own
- work had been highly praised in an article in the same _Review_ for
- June 1825 (vol. xxxii. p. 67).
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- On the Life of Dr Whewell, printed above. It was originally called
- ‘Half a Century of Cambridge Life,’ and appeared in the _Church
- Quarterly Review_, April 1882.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- The _Caput Senatus_ consisted of five persons, viz. a Doctor of
- Divinity, a Doctor of Laws, a Doctor of Physic, a non-regent Master,
- and a regent Master. These persons held office for a year. They were
- elected by the votes of the Heads of Colleges, the Doctors in all
- faculties, and the Scrutators. Each member had the right to veto any
- proposal of which he disapproved. The _Caput Senatus_ was established
- by the Statutes of Elizabeth, 1570, Cap. xli, and abolished by the
- University Act, 1856.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- The first petition was presented to the House of Lords on March 21,
- 1834; the protest is dated April 3; and the counter-petition was
- presented on April 21 in the same year.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- _A Letter_ etc., p. 20.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- _A Letter_ etc., pp. 21, 22.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- When the ‘Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Undergraduates’
- tabulated the weekly attendance of the Fellows at Chapel in the Lent
- Term of 1838, and finally published a list, like the class list at the
- end of an examination, Whewell was placed in the middle of the second
- class, having obtained only 34 marks. The Deans, being obliged, in
- virtue of their office, to attend twice daily, were disqualified from
- obtaining the prize—a Bible—which the Society gave to Mr Perry,
- afterwards Bishop of Melbourne, who had obtained 66 marks.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- It has been said that the Master was advised to take the course he did
- by Mr Hugh James Rose, who was in the University at the time, and on
- Whitsunday, May 18, had preached a sermon at Great S. Mary’s on the
- ‘Duty of Maintaining the Truth,’ from S. Matt. x. 27: ‘What ye hear in
- the ear, that preach ye upon the house-tops.’ Thirlwall’s letter,
- however, was not published before May 21, so that, unless the nature
- of it had been known beforehand, it is clear that anything which Mr
- Rose had said in his sermon could not have referred to it. That
- Thirlwall believed that there was some connexion between the sermon,
- or at any rate the preacher, and his dismissal, is evident from the
- fact that after showing the Master’s letter to one of the junior
- Fellows, who expressed indignant surprise that such a course could
- have been taken, he remarked: ‘Ah! let this be a warning to you to
- preach truth, if need be, upon the house-tops, but never under any
- circumstances to preach error.’ Thirlwall was a regular attendant at
- Great S. Mary’s, and no doubt heard the sermon in question.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- The letter, dated 27 May, 1834, is printed by Mrs Stair Douglas, _Life
- of Dr Whewell_, p. 163.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- The letter, dated 23 September 1834, is printed in _Letters of Bishop
- Thirlwall_, p. 124; and by Mrs Stair Douglas, _Life of Dr Whewell_, p.
- 168. Dr Wordsworth’s action was noticed with disapproval beyond the
- limits of Trinity College, for Professor Babington records in his
- Diary:
-
- _Nov. 17 [1834]\._ Attended a meeting at Mr Bowstead’s rooms at
- Corpus, to vote an address to Mr Connop Thirlwall expressive of our
- sorrow at his being prevented from acting as tutor, and of our
- disapprobation of the discussion of things not forming part of the
- duties of tuition being made a cause for depriving a tutor of his
- office.
-
- _Nov. 29._ A meeting was called for 28th to take into consideration
- the address to Thirlwall. Laing, Henslow, and I supposed that it was
- this day, and went, and found that the meeting was over and the
- address, much to our sorrow burnt. (_Memorials, etc. of Charles
- Cardale Babington_, 8vo. Camb. 1897, p. 33). Professor Mayor (_Ibid._
- 265) conjectures, with much probability, that the address was
- destroyed at Thirlwall’s own suggestion. It is curious that his
- friends should have deferred their action for so many months.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- _Life of Dr Whewell_, by Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 211.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- _Letters to a Friend_, p. 191.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- The preface to the first edition of vol. i. is dated ‘Trinity College,
- June 12, 1835.’ He was instituted to Kirby Underdale, 13 February,
- 1835 (_Letters_, p. 136), but he did not take up his residence there
- till July following (_Ibid._ p. 137). The dates of the subsequent
- volumes are ii. iii., 1836; iv., 1837; v., 1838; vi., 1839; vii.,
- 1840; viii., 1844.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- _Letters_, &c. p. 138.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- Preface to the second edition, dated ‘London, May 1845.’
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- _Letters_, &c. p. 194. The letter is dated April 9, 1846.
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- _The Personal Life of George Grote._ By Mrs Grote, p. 173.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- _Memoirs of Viscount Melbourne._ By W. M. Torrens, M.P. Vol. ii. p.
- 332. Lord Houghton in the _Fortnightly Review_, February 1878.
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- _Letters to a Friend_, p. 278.
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- _Letters_, &c. p. 161.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- _Letters_, &c. p. 292.
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- _Charges_, vol. ii. pp. 90-100.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- In his charge for 1851 (_Charges_, vol. i. p. 150) he announced his
- intention to devote the surplus of his income to the augmentation of
- small livings, and in 1866 he pointed out that the fund had up to that
- time yielded £24,000 (_Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 98).
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- He particularly disliked gossip. At Kirby Underdale the old sexton
- used to relate how Mr Thirlwall said, ‘I never ’ears no tales’; and
- the following story shows that he maintained the same wise discretion
- after he became a bishop. One of his archdeacons thought it right to
- tell him that a certain clergyman in the diocese, who was a clever
- mimic, was fond of entertaining his friends with imitations of the
- Bishop. Thirlwall listened, and then inquired, ‘Does he do me well?’
- ‘I am sure I cannot say, my Lord,’ replied the informer; ‘I was never
- present myself at one of these disgraceful exhibitions.’ ‘Ah! I should
- like to know, because he does _you_ admirably,’ replied the Bishop. It
- is needless to say that no more stories were carried to his ears.
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- _An Earnestly Respectful Letter_, 8vo. 1860, pp. 20-23. See also _The
- Life and Letters of Rowland Williams, D.D._, London, 1874, chap. xv.,
- where his determination to make the Bishop declare himself, under the
- belief that he really agreed with him, is expressly stated.
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- _A Letter to the Rev. Rowland Williams_, 8vo. 1860, p. 19.
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- Dean Stanley’s preface to the _Letters to a Friend_, p. xi.
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- _Letters to a Friend_, p. 54.
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Review of ‘The letters of Bishop Thirlwall,’ _The Times_, 23 November,
- 1881.
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- _The Edinburgh Review_, for April, 1876, p. 292.
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- These words are inscribed upon Bishop Thirlwall’s grave.
-
-
-
-
- RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES,
- LORD HOUGHTON[77].
-
-
-It is much to be regretted that Lord Houghton did not write his own
-biography. Those who know his delightful _Monographs, Social and
-Personal_, can form some idea of how he would have treated it. From his
-early years he lived in society—not merely the society to which his
-birth naturally opened the door, but a varied society of his own
-creating. He had an insatiable curiosity. It is hardly too much to say
-that in his long life he was present at every ceremony of importance,
-from the Eglinton Tournament to the Œcumenical Council; he knew
-everybody who was worth knowing, both at home and abroad—not merely as
-chance acquaintances, but as friends with whom he maintained a
-correspondence; he was both a politician and a man of letters, a friend
-of the unwashed and the associate of princes. What a book might have
-been written by such a man on such a subject! But, alas! though he often
-spoke of writing his own life, he died before he had leisure even to
-begin it; and, instead, we have to content ourselves with the volumes
-before us. They are good—unquestionably good; they abound with amusing
-stories and brilliant witticisms; but we confess that we laid them down
-with a sense of disappointment which it is hard to define. Perhaps it
-was beyond the writer’s ability to draw so complex a character—a man of
-many moods, a creature of contradictions, a master of what _not_ to do
-and _not_ to say, as a lady of fashion told him to his face; perhaps he
-was overweighted by a wish to bring into prominence those solid
-qualities in his hero which society often failed to discover, while
-judging only ‘the man of fashion, whose unconventional originality had
-so far impressed itself upon the popular mind that there was hardly any
-eccentricity too audacious to be attributed to him by those who knew him
-only by repute[78].’ We are not so presumptuous as to suppose that we
-can paint a portrait of Lord Houghton that will satisfy those who were
-his intimate friends; but we hope to present to our readers at least a
-faithful sketch of one for whom we had a most sincere admiration and
-respect.
-
-Richard Monckton Milnes was born in London, June 19, 1809. His father,
-Robert Pemberton Milnes, then a young man of twenty-five, and M.P. for
-the family borough of Pontefract, had just flashed into sudden celebrity
-in the House of Commons by a brilliant speech in favour of Mr Canning,
-which saved the Portland Administration, and would have made Mr Milnes’s
-political fortune, had he been so minded. But when Mr Perceval offered
-him a seat in the Cabinet, either as Chancellor of the Exchequer or as
-Secretary of War, he exclaimed, ‘Oh, no: I will not accept either; with
-my temperament, I should be dead in a year.’ That he had entered
-Parliament with high hopes, and confidence in his own powers to win
-distinction there, is plain from the well-known story (which his son
-evidently believed) that he laid a bet of 100_l._ that he would be
-Chancellor of the Exchequer in five years. But, when the time came, he
-declined to ‘take occasion by the hand,’ and sat down under the oaks of
-Fryston to spend the rest of his life, just half a century, in the
-placid uniformity of a country gentleman’s existence. His abandonment of
-public life, and his refusal to return to it in any form, even when,
-late in life, Lord Palmerston offered him a peerage, were unsolved
-riddles to his contemporaries. Those who read these volumes will have
-but little difficulty in finding the answer to it. He was endowed with a
-proud independence of judgment which could never bind itself to any
-political party, and a critical fastidiousness which made him hesitate
-over every question presented to him. These two qualities of mind were
-conspicuous in his son, and barred to some extent his advancement, as
-they had barred his father’s. It must not, however, be imagined that the
-elder Milnes was an indolent man. Far from it. He was a daring rider to
-hounds, a scientific agriculturist, an active magistrate, a stimulator
-of the waning Toryism of Yorkshire by speeches which showed what the
-House of Commons had lost when he left it, and ardently curious about
-men of note and events of interest—another characteristic which
-descended to his son. Occasionally, too, he yielded to a love of
-excitement which Yorkshire could not gratify, and revisited London, to
-tempt the fickle goddess who presides over high play—a taste which cost
-him dear, for it compelled him to pass several years of his life in
-comparative obscurity abroad, while the rents in his fortune, due to his
-own and his brother’s extravagance, were being slowly repaired. We have
-been told, by one who knew him late in life, that he was a singularly
-loveable person—the delight of children and young people—full of jokes,
-and fun, and _persiflage_. ‘You could never be sure whether he spoke in
-jest or in earnest,’ said our informant. Here again one of the most
-obvious characteristics of his son makes its appearance.
-
-The boyhood of Richard Milnes may be passed over in a sentence. A
-serious illness when he was ten years old put an end to his father’s
-intention of sending him to Harrow, and he was educated at home, or near
-it, till he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, in October 1827. He
-was entered as a fellow-commoner—a position well suited to the training
-he had received, for it gave him the society of men older than himself,
-while he was looking out for congenial friends among men of his own age.
-His college tutor was Mr Whewell, and it was doubtless at his suggestion
-that he went to read classics with Thirlwall, then one of the resident
-Fellows. On one of his later visits to Cambridge Lord Houghton told an
-interesting story of their relations as pupil and instructor. After a
-few days’ trial Thirlwall said to him: ‘You will never be a scholar. It
-is no use our reading classics together. Have you ever read the Bible?’
-‘Yes, I have read it, but not critically,’ was the reply. ‘Very well,’
-said Thirlwall, ‘ then let us begin with Genesis.’ And so the rest of
-the term was spent in the study of the Old Testament. Mr Reid is, no
-doubt, right in saying that, for ‘the making of his mind,’ Milnes was
-more deeply indebted to Thirlwall than to any other man. But Thirlwall
-was not merely the Gamaliel at whose feet Milnes was willing to sit; he
-became the chosen friend of his heart. Lord Houghton was once asked to
-name the most remarkable man whom he had known in his long experience.
-Without a moment’s hesitation he replied ‘Thirlwall’; and the numerous
-letters which Mr Reid has printed show that the friendship was equally
-strong on both sides.
-
-The most picturesque of Roman historians said of one of his heroes that
-he was _felix opportunitate mortis_; it might be said of Milnes, with
-regard to Cambridge, that he was _felix opportunitate vitæ_. It would be
-difficult, if not impossible, to find a period in which so many men who
-afterwards made their mark in the world have been gathered together
-there; and, with a happy facility for discovering and attracting to
-himself whatever was eminent and worth knowing, it was not long before
-he became intimate with the best of them. Nearly forty years afterwards,
-in 1866, on the occasion of the opening of the new rooms of the Union
-Society, he commemorated these friends of his early years in a speech of
-singular beauty and sincerity:
-
-‘There was Tennyson, the Laureate, whose goodly bay-tree decorates our
-language and our land; Arthur, the younger Hallam, the subject of _In
-Memoriam_, the poet and his friend passing, linked hand in hand,
-together down the slopes of fame. There was Trench, the present
-Archbishop of Dublin, and Alford, Dean of Canterbury, both profound
-Scriptural philologists who have not disdained the secular muse. There
-was Spedding, who has, by a philosophical affinity, devoted the whole of
-his valuable life to the rehabilitation of the character of Lord Bacon;
-and there was Merivale, who—I hope by some attraction of repulsion—has
-devoted so much learning to the vindication of the Cæsars. There were
-Kemble and Kinglake, the historian of our earliest civilization and of
-our latest war—Kemble as interesting an individual as ever was portrayed
-by the dramatic genius of his own race; Kinglake, as bold a man-at-arms
-in literature as ever confronted public opinion. There was Venables,
-whose admirable writings, unfortunately anonymous, we are reading every
-day, without knowing to whom to attribute them; and there was Blakesley,
-the “Hertfordshire Incumbent” of the _Times_. There were sons of
-families which seemed to have an hereditary right to, a sort of habit
-of, academic distinction, like the Heaths and the Lushingtons. But I
-must check this throng of advancing memories, and I will pass from this
-point with the mention of two names which you would not let me omit—one
-of them, that of your Professor of Greek, whom it is the honour of Her
-Majesty’s late Government to have made Master of Trinity; and the other,
-that of your latest Professor, Mr F. D. Maurice, in whom you will all
-soon recognize the true enthusiasm of humanity’ (vol. ii. p. 161).
-
-Mr Reid tells us that Tennyson sought Milnes’s acquaintance because ‘he
-looks the best-tempered fellow I ever saw.’ Hallam proclaimed him to be
-‘a kindhearted fellow, as well as a very clever one, but vain and
-paradoxical.’ Milnes himself put Hallam at the head of those whom he
-knew. ‘He is the only man of my standing,’ he wrote, ‘before whom I bow
-in conscious inferiority in everything.’
-
-It was hardly to be expected that Milnes, with his taste for the general
-in literature rather than the particular, would achieve distinction in
-the Cambridge of 1830. We have seen how Thirlwall disposed of his
-classical aspirations, and in mathematics he fared no better. He read
-hard, and hoped for distinction in the college examination. But he had
-overtaxed his energies; his health gave way, and he was forced to give
-up work altogether for some days. Happily, the benefit a man derives
-from his three years at a university need not be measured by his
-honours, and we may be sure that the experience of men and books that
-Milnes gained there was of greater service to him than a high place in
-any Tripos would have been. He roamed in all directions over the fields
-of knowledge; phrenology, anatomy, geology, political economy,
-metaphysics, by turns engaged his attention; he dabbled in periodical
-literature; he acted Beatrice in _Much Ado about Nothing_, and Mrs
-Malaprop in _The Rivals_; he made an excursion in a balloon with the
-celebrated aeronaut, Mr Green; he wrote two prize-poems, _Timbuctoo_ and
-_Byzantium_, but only to be beaten by Tennyson and Kinglake; he obtained
-a second prize for an English declamation, and a first prize for an
-English essay, _On the Homeric Poems_; he became a member of the club
-known as ‘The Apostles,’ in which he maintained a kindly interest to the
-end of his life; and last, but by no means least, he was a constant
-speaker at the Union.
-
-It is impossible, at a distance of just sixty years, to form an exact
-estimate of the success of Milnes in those debates. But that it was
-something more than ordinary, is, we think, certain; for otherwise he
-would not have ventured to present himself at the Oxford Union in
-December 1829, in the character of a self-selected missionary, who hoped
-to carry light and leading into the dark places of the sister
-University. As this expedition has been twice described by Milnes
-himself, first in a letter to his mother soon after his return to
-Cambridge, and secondly in a speech at the opening of the new building
-of the Cambridge Union Society in 1866; and also, more or less fully, by
-four of his contemporaries, Sir Francis Doyle, Mr Gladstone, Cardinal
-Manning, and Dean Blakesley, it is clear that it was regarded by himself
-and his friends, both at the time and afterwards, as something uncommon
-and remarkable, and we feel sure that we shall be excused if we try to
-give a connected narrative of what really took place.
-
-Doyle had ‘brought forward a motion at the Oxford Union that Shelley was
-a greater poet than Byron[79].’ According to Blakesley, ‘the respective
-moral tendency of the writings of Shelley and Byron[80]’ was the subject
-under debate. Doyle states that he acted ‘under Cambridge influences’;
-and that his motion was ‘an echo of Cambridge thought and feeling,’
-words which probably refer to the then recent reprint of Shelley’s
-_Adonais_ at Cambridge. The debate, he proceeds, ‘was attended by three
-distinguished members of the Cambridge Union, Arthur Hallam, Richard
-Milnes, and Sunderland’; or, to use the words of what may be called his
-second account, taken from a lecture on Wordsworth delivered forty-three
-years afterwards, ‘friends of mine at Cambridge took the matter up and
-appeared suddenly on the scene of action.’ That this was the true state
-of the case, and that there was little or no premeditation about the
-excursion, is made still clearer by Milnes’ first account. After
-mentioning that he had been to Oxford, he proceeds:
-
-‘I wanted much to see the place and the men, and had no objection to
-speak in their society; so, as they had a good subject for debate (the
-comparative merits of Shelley and Byron), and Sunderland and Hallam were
-both willing to go—and the Master, when he heard what was our purpose,
-very kindly gave us an _Exeat_—we drove manfully through the snow,
-arriving in time to speak that evening....
-
-‘Sunderland spoke first after Doyle, who opened, then Hallam, then some
-Oxonians, and I succeeded. The contrast from our long, noisy, shuffling,
-scraping, talking, vulgar, ridiculous-looking kind of assembly, to a
-neat little square room, with eighty or ninety young gentlemen, sprucely
-dressed, sitting on chairs or lounging about the fire-place, was enough
-to unnerve a more confident person than myself. Even the brazen
-Sunderland was somewhat awed, and became tautological, and spoke what we
-should call an inferior speech, but which dazzled his hearers. Hallam,
-as being among old friends, was bold, and spoke well. I was certainly
-nervous, but, I think, pleased my audience better than I pleased
-myself[81].’
-
-In his second account, written thirty-six years afterwards, Milnes gives
-greater prominence to the Union Society than, we think, is consistent
-with the facts. It might easily be argued, after reading it, that the
-three Cambridge undergraduates had been selected by the Society to
-represent it. This exaggeration of the part played by the Union was
-perhaps only natural on an occasion when the speaker must have felt
-almost bound to magnify the influence of that Society on all departments
-of Cambridge life. After mentioning Arthur Hallam and Sunderland, he
-says:
-
-‘It was in company with Mr Sunderland and Arthur Hallam that I formed
-part of a deputation sent from the Union of Cambridge to the Union of
-Oxford; and what do you think we went about? Why, we went to assert the
-right of Mr Shelley to be considered a greater poet than Lord Byron. At
-that time we in Cambridge were all very full of Mr Shelley. We had
-printed the _Adonais_ for the first time in England, and a friend of
-ours suggested that as Shelley had been expelled from Oxford, and
-greatly ill-treated, it would be a very grand thing for us to go to
-Oxford and raise a debate upon his character and powers. So, with full
-permission of the authorities[82] we went....
-
-We had a very interesting debate ... but we were very much shocked, and
-our vanity was not a little wounded, to find that nobody at Oxford knew
-anything about Mr Shelley. In fact, a considerable number of our
-auditors believed that it was Shenstone, and said that they only knew
-one poem of his, beginning, “My banks are all furnished with bees.” We
-hoped, however, that our apostolate was of some good...[83].’
-
-Sir Francis Doyle is provokingly brief in his account of the
-performances of his Cambridge allies. Sunderland, he tells us, ‘spoke
-with great effect, though scarcely, I believe, with the same fire that
-he often put forth on more congenial subjects. Then followed Hallam,
-with equal if not superior force.’ Of Milnes he says but little. After
-recounting the discomfiture of a speaker from Oriel, who while
-declaiming against Shelley suddenly caught sight of him, he adds: ‘Lord
-Houghton then stood up, and showed consummate skill as an advocate....
-After him there was silence in the Union for several minutes, and then
-Mr Manning of Baliol rose.’ He was on the side of Byron; and when the
-votes were taken the members present agreed with him.
-
-Mr Gladstone, in a conversation with the author of the life of Cardinal
-Manning, has given a rather different account of the matter:
-
-‘There was an invasion of barbarians among civilized men, or of
-civilized men among barbarians. Cambridge men used to look down upon us
-at Oxford as prim and behind the times. A deputation from the Society of
-the Apostles at Cambridge, consisting of Monckton Milnes and Henry
-[Arthur] Hallam, and Sunderland, came to set up among us the cult of
-Shelley; or at any rate, to introduce the School of Shelley as against
-the Byronic School at Oxford—Shelley that is, not in his negative, but
-in his spiritual side. I knew Hallam at Eton, and, I believe, was the
-intermediary in bringing about the discussion[84].’
-
-This view, that the commission of the three knights-errant emanated from
-the Apostles, and not from themselves, or from the Union Society, is
-borne out to some degree by Blakesley’s account. But for this we have no
-space. We will conclude with Manning’s admirable description of the
-scene. It occurs in a letter dated 3 November, 1866—just after Lord
-Houghton had made his speech at the Cambridge Union.
-
-‘I do not believe that I was guilty of the rashness of throwing the
-javelin over the Cam. It was, I think, a passage of arms got up by the
-Eton men of the two Unions. My share, if any, was only as a member of
-the august committee of the green baize table. I can, however, remember
-the irruption of the three Cambridge orators. We Oxford men were
-precise, orderly, and morbidly afraid of excess in word or manner. The
-Cambridge oratory came in like a flood into a mill-pond. Both Monckton
-Milnes and Henry [Arthur] Hallam took us aback by the boldness and
-freedom of their manner. But I remember the effect of Sunderland’s
-declaration and action to this day. It had never been seen or heard
-before among us; we cowered like birds, and ran like sheep.... I
-acknowledge that we were utterly routed. Lord Houghton’s beautiful
-reviving of those old days has in it something fragrant and sweet, and
-brings back old faces and old friendships, very dear as life is drawing
-to its close.’
-
-Mr Milnes had always wished that his son should become distinguished in
-that House of Commons where he had himself made so brilliant a _début_.
-With this object in view, he had urged him to cultivate speaking in
-public, and probably the only part of his Cambridge career which he
-viewed with complete satisfaction was his interest in, and success at,
-the Union Debating Society. But even in this they did not quite agree.
-Mr Milnes urged his son to take a decided line, and to lead the Union.
-But the only answer he could get was, ‘If there is one thing on which I
-have ever prided myself, it is on having no politics at all, and judging
-every measure by its individual merits. A leader there must be a violent
-politician and a party politician, or he must have a private party. I
-shall never be the one or have the other.’ Again, they were at variance
-on the burning question of the day, the Reform Bill. Mr Milnes, though a
-Conservative, was in favour of it; his son described it as ‘the curse
-and degradation of the nation.’ Further, while exhorting his son to
-prepare himself for public life, with a singleness of purpose that, if
-adhered to, would have excluded other and more congenial pursuits, Mr
-Milnes warned him that his circumstances would not allow him to enter
-parliament. No wonder, therefore, that the young man became perplexed
-and melancholy, and more than ever anxious to find a refuge for his
-aspirations in literature.
-
-While these questions were pending between father and son, the pecuniary
-embarrassments to which we have already alluded entered upon an acute
-stage, and in 1829 the whole family left England for five years. If Mr
-Milnes ever submitted his own actions to the test of rigorous
-examination, he must have concluded that he had himself brought about
-the very result which he was most anxious to prevent; for it was this
-enforced residence on the Continent which, more than any other
-influence, shaped the character of his son. Mr Milnes evidently wished
-him to become a country gentleman like himself, and, if he must write,
-to be ‘a pamphleteer on guano and on grain.’ Instead of this, while he
-kept his loyalty to England with unbroken faith, he divested himself of
-English narrowness, and acquired that intimate knowledge of the other
-members of the European family, and, we may add, that catholicity of
-taste, for which he was so conspicuous. Probably no public man of the
-present century understood the Continent so well as Milnes. In many ways
-he was a typical Englishman; but he was also a citizen of the world.
-
-The first resting-place of the family was Boulogne, and there Milnes
-made his first acquaintance with Frenchmen and their literature. The
-romantic school was beginning to engross public attention, and Victor
-Hugo—then, as afterwards, the ‘stormy voice of France’—became his
-favourite French poet. But, great as was the interest which Milnes felt
-in France, he was too eager for knowledge to be content with one
-language and one literature, and, rejecting his father’s suggestion that
-he should spend some time in Paris, he spent most of the summer and
-autumn of 1830 at Bonn, in order to learn German. We suspect that he
-must have taken this step at the suggestion of Thirlwall, for it was he
-who introduced him to Professor Brandis, and probably also to the
-veteran Niebuhr. Thence, his family having migrated to Milan, he crossed
-the Alps, and made his first acquaintance with Italy, which became, we
-might almost say, the country of his adoption. He felt a deep sympathy
-for the Italian people in their aspirations for liberty, and though, as
-was natural at his age, he enjoyed the society of the Austrian
-vice-regal Court, he longed to see the foreigner expelled from Italy.
-Other Italian cities were visited in due course, and, lastly, Rome.
-Where-ever he went, he managed, with a skill that was peculiarly his
-own, to know the most interesting people, and to be welcomed with equal
-warmth by persons of the most opposite opinions. It was no small feat to
-have known both Italians and Austrians at Milan; but at Rome, besides
-his English acquaintances, he formed lasting friendships with the
-Chevalier Bunsen and his family, and with Dr Wiseman, M. Rio, M.
-Montalembert, and other catholics of distinction. The Church of Rome
-must always have great attractions for a young man of deep feeling and
-with no settled principles of faith, and we gather that Milnes was at
-one time not indisposed to join it. His feelings in that time of unrest
-and perplexity are well indicated in the following lines, written at
-Rome in 1834:
-
- ‘To search for lore in spacious libraries,
- And find it hid in tongues to you unknown;
- To wait deaf-eared near swelling minstrelsies,
- Watch every action, but not catch one tone;
- Amid a thousand breathless votaries,
- To feel yourself dry-hearted as a stone—
- Are images of that which, hour by hour,
- Consumes my heart, the strife of Will and Power.
-
- ‘The Beauty of the past before my eyes
- Stands ever in each fable-haunted place,
- I know her form in every dark disguise,
- But never look upon her open face;
- O’er every limb a veil thick-folded lies,
- Showing poor outline of a perfect grace,
- Yet just enough to make the sickened mind
- Grieve doubly for the treasures hid behind.
-
- ‘O Thou! to whom the wearisome disease
- Of Past and Present is an alien thing,
- Thou pure Existence! whose severe decrees
- Forbid a living man his soul to bring
- Into a timeless Eden of sweet ease,
- Clear-eyed, clear-hearted—lay thy loving wing
- In death upon me—if that way alone
- Thy great creation-thought thou wilt to me make known[85].’
-
-An interesting picture of Milnes at about this period has been drawn by
-Mr Aubrey de Vere, whom he visited in Ireland during one of his brief
-absences from Italy.
-
-‘He remained with us a good many days, though when he left us they
-seemed too few. We showed him whatever of interest our neighbourhood
-boasts, and he more than repaid us by the charm of his conversation, his
-lively descriptions of foreign ways, his good-humour, his manifold
-accomplishments, and the extraordinary range of his information, both as
-regards books and men. He could hardly have then been more than
-two-and-twenty, and yet he was already well acquainted with the
-languages and literatures of many different countries, and not a few of
-their most distinguished men, living or recently dead. I well remember
-the vivid picture which he drew of Niebuhr’s profound grief at the
-downfall of the restored monarchy in France, at the renewal of its
-Revolution in 1830. He was delivering a series of historical lectures at
-the time, and Milnes was one of the young men attending the course. One
-day they had long to wait for their Professor; at last the aged
-historian entered the lecture-hall, his form drooping, and his whole
-aspect grief-stricken. ‘Gentlemen,’ he said, ‘I have no apology for
-detaining you; a calamity has befallen Europe which must undo all the
-restorative work recently done, and throw back her social and political
-progress—perhaps for centuries. The Revolution has broken out again’
-(vol. i. p. 115).
-
-One episode of these foreign experiences deserves a separate notice. In
-1832 Milnes spent some months in Greece with his friend Mr Christopher
-Wordsworth, a scholar whose _Athens and Attica_ has long been a
-classical text-book. But Milnes was more powerfully attracted by the
-sight of Grecian independence than by the relics of her ancient glory.
-The volume which he published on his return, called _Memorials of a Tour
-in some parts of Greece, chiefly Poetical_ (his first independent
-literary venture, it may be remarked), contains but scanty references to
-antiquity. He was keenly interested in the efforts of Greece to obtain a
-settled government of her own, and through all the drawbacks and
-discomforts which, as a traveller, he had to endure from the Greeks, he
-firmly adhered to the cause of freedom. He even advocated the immediate
-restoration of the Elgin marbles to the Parthenon. But Milnes had a mind
-which was singularly free from prejudice, and even in those early days
-he had learnt to consider both sides of every question, and to keep his
-sympathies controlled by his judgment. He probably approached Greece
-with the enthusiasm for a liberated nation which had so deeply stirred
-even the most indifferent in England; but he left it ‘with an affection
-for the Turkish character which he never entirely lost, and which
-enabled him in very different days, then far distant, to understand the
-political exigencies of the East better than many politicians of more
-pretentious character and fame.’
-
-We have dwelt on Milnes’s early years at some length, because their
-history throws considerable light on his subsequent career, and accounts
-for most of the difficulties that he experienced when he made his first
-entrance into London society. ‘Conceive the man,’ said Carlyle: ‘a most
-bland-smiling, semi-quizzical, affectionate, high-bred, Italianised
-little man, who has long olive-blonde hair, a dimple, next to no chin,
-and flings his arm round your neck when he addresses you in public
-society!’ If the rough Scotch moralist was not in an unusually bad
-humour when he wrote these words, it is not to be wondered at that
-Milnes was regarded for a time as a dangerous person, ‘anxious to
-introduce foreign ways and fashions into the conservative fields of
-English life.’ But this dislike of him was very transient, and in less
-than a year after his return to England he had ‘made a conquest of the
-social world.’ That he was still looked upon as an oddity seems certain,
-and even his intimate friend Charles Buller could exclaim: ‘I often
-think how puzzled your Maker must be to account for your conduct;’ but
-people soon became willing to accept him on his own terms for the sake
-of his wit and brilliancy, and, we may add, of his kind heart. Some
-nicknames that survived long after their application had lost its point,
-are worth remembering as illustrations of what was once thought of him;
-perhaps still more for the sake of the letter which Sydney Smith wrote
-on being accused, quite groundlessly, of having invented them.
-
-‘DEAR MILNES,—Never lose your good temper, which is one of your best
-qualities, and which has carried you hitherto safely through your
-startling eccentricities. If you turn cross and touchy, you are a lost
-man. No man can combine the defects of opposite characters. The names of
-“Cool of the evening,” “London Assurance,” and “In-I-go Jones,” are, I
-give you my word, not mine. They are of no sort of importance; they are
-safety-valves, and if you could by paying sixpence get rid of them, you
-had better keep your money. You do me but justice in acknowledging that
-I have spoken much good of you. I have laughed at you for those follies
-which I have told you of to your face; but nobody has more readily and
-more earnestly asserted that you are a very agreeable, clever man, with
-a very good heart, unimpeachable in all the relations of life, and that
-you amply deserve to be retained in the place to which you had too
-hastily elevated yourself by manners unknown to our cold and phlegmatic
-people. I thank you for what you say of my good-humour. Lord Dudley,
-when I took leave of him, said to me: “You have been laughing at me for
-the last seven years, and you never said anything that I wished unsaid.”
-This pleased me.
-
- ‘Ever yours,
-
-‘SYDNEY SMITH[86].’
-
-When we read that Milnes ‘made a conquest of society,’ it must not be
-supposed that he was a mere pleasure-seeker. On the contrary, as Mr Reid
-says in another place, ‘he had too great a reverence for what was good
-and pure and true, too consuming a desire to hold his own with the best
-intellects of his time, and, above all, too deep a sympathy with the
-suffering and the wronged to allow him to fall a victim to these
-temptations.’ From the first, then, he ‘sought to combine the world of
-pleasure and the world of intellect.’ A list of his friends would
-contain the names of the best-known men of the day, but, at the same
-time, men who had but little in common: Carlyle, Sterling, Maurice,
-Spedding, Thackeray, Tennyson, Landor, Hallam, Rogers, Macaulay, Sydney
-Smith. ‘He became an intimate member of circles differing so widely from
-each other as those of Lansdowne House, Holland House, Gore House, and
-the Sterling Club’; and as a host he was notorious for mingling together
-the most discordant social elements. Disraeli sketched him in _Tancred_
-under a disguise so thin that nobody could fail to penetrate it:
-
-‘Mr Vavasour saw something good in everybody and everything, which is
-certainly amiable, and perhaps just, but disqualifies a man in some
-degree for the business of life, which requires for its conduct a
-certain degree of prejudice. Mr Vavasour’s breakfasts were renowned.
-Whatever your creed, class, or merit—one might almost add, your
-character—you were a welcome guest at his matutinal meal, provided you
-were celebrated. That qualification, however, was rigidly enforced. He
-prided himself on figuring as the social medium by which rival
-reputations became acquainted, and paid each other in his presence the
-compliments which veiled their ineffable disgust’ (vol. i. p. 337).
-
-When some one asked if a celebrated murderer had been hanged, the reply
-he got was: ‘I hope so, or Richard will have him at his breakfast-table
-next Thursday;’ and Thirlwall, when his friend was on the brink of
-marriage, thus alludes to past felicity:
-
-‘It is very likely, nay certain, that you will still collect agreeable
-people about your wife’s breakfast-table; but can I ever sit down there
-without the certainty that I shall meet with none but respectable
-persons? It may be an odd thing for a Bishop to lament, but I cannot
-help it’ (vol. i. p. 448).
-
-After all it seems probable that Milnes himself, and not the lion of the
-hour, was the chief attraction at those parties. He delighted in the
-best sort of conversation—that which he called ‘the rapid counterplay
-and vivid exercise of combined intelligences,’ and he did his best to
-revive the practice of that almost forgotten art—_l’art de causer_. As
-Mr Reid says:
-
-‘How brilliant and amusing he was over the dinner-table or the
-breakfast-table was known to all his friends. Overflowing with
-information, his mind was lightened by a bright wit, whilst his immense
-stores of appropriate anecdotes enabled him to give point and colour to
-every topic which was brought under discussion’ (vol. i. p. 189).
-
-At the same time he did not fall into the fatal error of taking the talk
-into his own hands, and delivering a monologue, as too many social
-celebrities have done before and since. He had the happy art of making
-his guests talk, while he listened, and threw in a remark from time to
-time, to give new life when the conversation seemed to flag. Carlyle, in
-a letter written to his wife during his first visit to Fryston, gives us
-a lifelike portrait of Milnes when thus engaged:
-
-‘Richard, I find, lays himself out while in this quarter to do
-hospitalities, and of course to collect notabilities about him, and play
-them off one against the other. I am his trump-card at present. The
-Sessions are at Pontefract even now, and many lawyers there. These last
-two nights he has brought a trio of barristers to dine, producing
-champagne, &c.... Last night our three was admitted to be a kind of
-failure, three greater blockheads ye wadna find in Christendee. Richard
-had to exert himself; but he is really dexterous, the villain. He pricks
-you with questions, with remarks, with all kinds of fly-tackle to make
-you bite, does generally contrive to get you into some sort of speech.
-And then his good humour is extreme; you look in his face and forgive
-him all his tricks’ (vol. i. p. 256).
-
-As a pendant to this we will quote Mr Forster’s description of Milnes
-and Carlyle together:
-
-‘Monckton Miles came yesterday and left this morning—a pleasant,
-companionable little man—delighting in paradoxes, but good-humoured
-ones; defending all manner of people and principles in order to provoke
-Carlyle to abuse them, in which laudable enterprise he must have
-succeeded to his heart’s content, and for a time we had a most amusing
-evening, reminding me of a naughty boy rubbing a fierce cat’s tail
-backwards, and getting in between furious growls and fiery sparks. He
-managed to avoid the threatened scratches’ (vol. i. p. 387).
-
-Milnes entered Parliament in 1837 as Conservative member for Pontefract.
-His friends were rather surprised at his selection of a party, for even
-then his views on most subjects were decidedly Liberal. Thirlwall, for
-instance, wrote:
-
-‘I can hardly bring myself now to consider you a Tory, or indeed as
-belonging to a party at all; and although I am aware how difficult, and
-even dangerous, it is for a public man to keep aloof from all parties,
-still my first hope as well as expectation as to your political career
-is that it may be distinguished by some degree of originality’ (vol. i.
-p. 199).
-
-These hopes were realized to an extent that none of Milnes’s friends
-would have expected or perhaps desired. From the outset he maintained an
-independence of thought and action which did him the utmost credit as a
-man of honour, but which ruined his chances of obtaining that success
-which is measured by the attainment of official dignity. And yet, as Mr
-Reid tells us, he was more ambitious of political than of literary
-distinction. But the fates were against him. In the first place, his
-oratorical style did not suit the House, though as an after-dinner
-speaker he was conspicuously successful. He ‘had modelled himself on the
-old style of political oratory, and gave his hearers an impression of
-affectation.’ Then he would not vote straight with his party. He took a
-line of his own about Canada and the Ballot; he voted on the opposite
-side to Peel on the question of a large remission of capital
-punishments; and he wrote _One Tract More_, ‘an eloquent and earnest
-plea for toleration for the Anglo-Catholic enthusiasm,’ which shocked
-the Protestants in general, and the electors of Pontefract in
-particular. Perhaps he was too much in earnest; perhaps he was not a
-sufficiently important person to be silenced by office; perhaps, as Mr
-Reid says, ‘public opinion in England always insists upon drawing a
-broad line of demarcation between the man of letters and the man of
-affairs;’ but, whatever might be the reason, Sir Robert Peel passed him
-over when forming his Administration in 1841—nay, rather, appears never
-to have turned his thoughts in his direction. Milnes was grievously
-disappointed, but with characteristic lightheartedness set at once to
-work to make himself more thoroughly fit for the post he specially
-coveted, the Under-Secretaryship of Foreign Affairs. He went to Paris,
-got intimate with Guizot, De Tocqueville, Montalembert—‘that English
-aristocrat foisted into the middle of French democracy’—and other
-leading statesmen. Through them, and by help of his natural gift of
-knowing everybody he wished to know, he managed to include Louis
-Philippe among those by whom he was accepted as a sort of unaccredited
-English envoy. He kept Peel informed of the views of Guizot and the
-King, and Peel replied with a message to the former in a letter which
-shows that he was quite ready to make use of Milnes, though not to
-reward him. On his return he gave Peel a general support on the Corn
-Laws, while regretting that his ‘measures were not of a more liberal
-character;’ he interested himself in the passing of the Copyright Bill,
-a measure in respect of which he was accepted as the representative of
-men of letters; and he travelled in the East, no doubt to study Oriental
-politics on the spot. A letter he wrote to Peel from Smyrna is full of
-shrewd observation and far-reaching insight into the Eastern Question;
-but, on his return, he published a volume of poems called _Palm Leaves_.
-Now Peel, like a certain Hanoverian monarch who hated ‘boetry and
-bainters,’ hated literature; and, as Milnes’s father told him, ‘every
-book he wrote was a nail in his political coffin.’ Again, Milnes was in
-favour of the endowment of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland, and had
-written a pamphlet called _The Real Union of England and Ireland_, on
-which, we may note, in passing, Mr Gladstone’s remark, that he had ‘some
-opinions on Irish matters that are not fit for practice.’ With these
-views he supported Peel’s grant to Maynooth, a step which brought him
-into such disgrace at Pontefract that he thought seriously of giving up
-parliamentary life altogether. In fact he applied for a diplomatic post,
-but without success. Before long we find him again running counter to
-his chief’s policy, supporting Lord Ashley against the Government, and
-seconding a motion of Charles Buller’s against Lord Stanley. After this
-it cannot excite surprise that Peel passed him over when he rearranged
-his Administration in 1845. With his second disappointment Milnes’s
-career as a professional politician came to an end. Ten years later
-Palmerston offered him a lordship of the Treasury, but he declined it.
-As he said himself in a letter written shortly afterwards:
-
-‘_Via media_ never answers in politics, and somehow or other I never can
-get out of it. My Laodicean spirit is the ruin of me. From having lived
-with all sorts of people, and seen good in all, the broad black lines of
-judgment that people usually draw seem to me false and foolish, and I
-think my own finer ones just as distinct, though no one can see them but
-myself’ (vol. i. p. 360).
-
-Before long Milnes found a more congenial position on the opposite side
-of the House. But it must not be supposed that he rushed into sudden and
-rancorous opposition to his old leader. So long as Peel remained in
-office, he allowed no personal considerations to interfere with his
-support of him; and he steadily refused to join those who rebelled when
-he announced his conversion to Free Trade. Meanwhile, his interest in
-the burning question of the day being little more than formal, he turned
-his attention to a social question in which he had long been interested,
-and introduced a Bill for the establishment of reformatories for
-juvenile offenders. Among the many combinations of opposite tastes and
-tendencies with which Milnes was fond of startling the world, could one
-more curious be imagined than this—the literary exquisite and the
-criminal unwashed? But in fact this is only a single instance out of
-many which could be produced to show that the cynical selfishness he
-affected was only a mask which hid his real nature; perhaps assumed for
-the sake of concealing from his left hand what his right hand was doing
-so well. The proposal, we are told, ‘was scoffed at by many politicians
-of eminence when it was first put forward.’ But Milnes was not to be
-daunted by rebuffs, and ‘he persevered with his proposal, until he had
-the great happiness of seeing reformatories established under the
-sanction of the law, and of becoming himself the president of the first
-and greatest of these noble institutions, that at Redhill.’ His very
-genuine sympathy with the poor and the unfortunate, especially when
-young, is testified to by one of his intimate friends, Miss Nightingale:
-
-‘His brilliancy and talents in tongue or pen—whether political, social,
-or literary—were inspired chiefly by good-will towards man; but he had
-the same voice and manners for the dirty brat as he had for a duchess,
-the same desire to give pleasure and good. Once, at Redhill, where we
-were with a party, and the chiefs were explaining to us the system in
-the court-yard, a mean, stunted, villainous-looking little fellow crept
-across the yard (quite out of order, and by himself), and stole a dirty
-paw into Mr Milnes’s hand. Not a word passed; the boy stayed quite quiet
-and quite contented if he could but touch his benefactor who had placed
-him there. He was evidently not only his benefactor, but his friend’
-(vol. ii. p. 7).
-
-Milnes had been called a Liberal-Conservative during the first ten years
-of his parliamentary life. He now became a Conservative-Liberal; but the
-transposition of the adjective made little, if any, change in his
-political conduct. He was as insubordinate in the latter position as he
-had been in the former. He took Lord Palmerston as his leader and chosen
-friend; but he did not always side with him. In the debates on the
-Conspiracy Bill, after the attempt of Orsini to assassinate Napoleon
-III., Milnes spoke and voted against his chief; and on the measure for
-abolishing the East India Company he was equally indifferent to the
-claims of party. As time went on, he drifted out of party politics
-altogether; and both in the House of Commons and the House of Lords,
-which he entered in 1863, it was to measures of a private character, or
-to measures of social reform, that he gave his attention. He advocated
-help to Lady Franklin in her expedition to clear up the mystery of her
-husband’s fate; he was in favour of female suffrage; of the abolition of
-public executions; and he led the agitation for legalising marriage with
-a deceased wife’s sister. At the same time he cordially supported the
-Liberal party on all great occasions. Speaking of the abortive Reform
-Bill of 1866, Mr Reid remarks:
-
-‘Houghton held strongly to the Liberal side throughout the movement, and
-again afforded proof of the fact that his elevation to the House of
-Lords had strengthened, rather than weakened, his faith in the people
-and in popular institutions. Early in April he presided at one of the
-great popular meetings in favour of Reform. The scene of the meeting was
-the Cloth Hall at Leeds—a spot famous in the political history of the
-West Riding—and Lord Houghton’s speech was as advanced in tone as the
-most thoroughgoing Reformer could have wished it to be. He was, indeed,
-one of the very few peers who took an open and pronounced part in the
-agitation of the year’ (vol. ii. p. 151).
-
-This is only one instance, out of many that could be adduced. It would
-be interesting to know what he would have thought of some of the later
-developments of his party. It is almost needless to say that he never
-regarded Lord Beaconsfield as a serious politician. On the eve of his
-return from Berlin in 1878, he writes: ‘I hope to be in my place on
-Thursday, to see the reception of the Great Adventurer. Whether from
-knowing him so well, or from the sarcastic temperament of old age, the
-whole thing looks to me like a comedy, with as much relation to serious
-politics as Punch to real life.’ At the same time he had not been a
-thoroughgoing supporter of Mr Gladstone’s agitation against the Turks,
-and he had warned that statesman so far back as 1871, that ‘a demon, not
-of demagoguism, but of demophilism, is tempting you sorely.’
-
-Advancing years and disappointed hopes caused no abatement in his
-interest in foreign affairs. The events of 1848 had been specially
-interesting to him; and at the close of that year he produced what Mr
-Reid well describes as ‘a striking and instructive’ pamphlet, entitled
-_A Letter to the Marquis of Lansdowne_. The author reviews the events of
-the year, and supports the thesis that ‘the Liberals of the Continent
-had not proved themselves unworthy of the sympathy of England.’ We have
-no room for an analysis of this masterly work, but we cannot refrain
-from quoting one remarkable passage in which he foreshadows French
-intervention in Italy. After describing measures by which Austria
-intended to make the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom a second Poland, he
-proceeds:
-
-‘And France, whatever be her adventures in government, will not easily
-have so dulled her imagination or quelled her enthusiasm as to be
-unmoved by appeals to the deeds of Marengo and Lodi, and to suffer an
-expiring nation at her very door to cry in vain for help and protection,
-not against the restraints of an orderly authority, but against fierce
-invaders intent upon her absolute destruction’ (vol. i. p. 413).
-
-This pamphlet made a great sensation. In England it was received, for
-the most part, with dislike and apprehension. Carlyle was almost alone
-in praising it. ‘Tell him,’ he said, ‘it is the greatest thing he has
-yet done; earnest and grave, written in a large, tolerant, kind-hearted
-spirit, and, as far as I can see, saying all that is to be said on
-_that_ matter.’ But the strongest proof of the power of the pamphlet is
-the fact that the Austrians stopped the writer on the Hungarian frontier
-when travelling with his wife in 1851, as a person who could not breathe
-that revolutionary atmosphere without danger to the empire. In his later
-years foreign travel became almost a necessity to Lord Houghton; and as
-he had then fewer ties to bind him to England, his absences were more
-frequent and more prolonged. He travelled in France, no longer as an
-envoy without credentials, but for his private information, or to be the
-guest of Guizot and De Tocqueville; he became the friend of the
-accomplished Queen of Holland; he represented the Geographical Society
-at the opening of the Suez Canal; he made a triumphal progress through
-the United States; and only three years before his death he went again
-to Egypt and Greece.
-
-Throughout his life Milnes approached public events with a singular
-sobriety of judgment. He was never led away by popular clamour, but
-formed his opinions, on principle, after mature deliberation. It is
-almost needless to add that he generally found himself on the unpopular
-side. When England went mad over the Crimean war, Milnes wrote calmly:
-‘For my own part I like neither of the combatants, though I prefer a
-feeble and superannuated despotism as less noxious to mankind than one
-young and vigorous, and assisted by the appliances of modern
-intelligence.’ During the American civil war, he ‘broke away from his
-own class, and ranged himself on the side of the friends of the North,
-with an earnestness not inferior to that of Mr Bright and Mr Forster.’
-Mr Reid tell us that this conduct won for Milnes that popularity with
-the masses, especially in Yorkshire and Lancashire, which all his
-previous efforts had failed to obtain, and that he found himself, to his
-great surprise, one of the popular idols. In 1870, again, he was on the
-unpopular side: ‘I am Prussian to the backbone,’ he wrote, ‘which is a
-pure homage to principle, as they are the least agreeable people in the
-world.’
-
-We have been at pains to set forth Milnes’s political acts and
-convictions in some detail, because he has been frequently represented
-as a gay _farceur_, who took up politics as a pastime. It is not,
-however, as a politician that he will be remembered, but as a man of
-letters. In his younger days he achieved distinction as a writer of
-verse, and Landor hailed him as ‘the greatest poet now living in
-England.’ This judgment may nowadays provoke a smile; but, though it is
-not to be expected that his poems will recover their former popularity,
-they hardly deserve to have fallen into complete neglect. As Mr Reid
-says:
-
-‘A great singer he may not have been; a sweet singer with a charm of his
-own he undoubtedly was; nor did his charm consist alone in the melody of
-which he was a master. In many of his poems real poetic thought is
-linked with musical words; whilst in everything that he wrote, whether
-in verse or in prose, one may discern the brightest characteristics of
-the man himself: the catholicity of his spirit; the tenderness of his
-sympathy with weakness, suffering, mortal frailty in all its forms; the
-ardour of his faith in something that should break down the artificial
-barriers by which classes are divided, and bring into the lives of all a
-measure of that light and happiness which he relished so highly for
-himself’ (vol. ii. p. 438).
-
-For his prose works, or at least for some of them, we predict a very
-different fate. We do not like even to think of an age that will refuse
-to admire the charming style, the real dramatic power, the exquisite
-tact, and the fine taste which distinguish his _Life of Keats_, and his
-_Monographs_, to which we have already alluded. Other essays, probably
-of equal merit, lie scattered in Reviews and Magazines. We hope that
-before long we may see the best of these collected together. Such a
-series, which would cover a period of nearly sixty years, would form a
-most important chapter in the history of English literature.
-
-Besides his reputation as a writer, Milnes occupied an unique position
-towards the world of letters, which it is not quite easy to define. It
-is not enough to say that he was a Mæcenas, though he knew and
-entertained the whole literary community both in London and at Fryston—a
-house which, as Thackeray said, ‘combined all the graces of the château
-and the tavern’; or that he was always ready to lend a helping hand to
-those in distress, though he spent a fortune in generously and
-delicately assisting others. His peculiar characteristics were a rare
-gift in detecting merit, and an untiring energy in bringing it out, and
-setting it in a position where it could bloom and flourish and be
-recognized by other people. In effecting this he spared no pains, and
-shrank from no annoyance. Often, indeed, he must have risked his own
-popularity by his importunity for favours to be conferred on others. Mr
-Reid describes at length the amusing scene between him and Sir Robert
-Peel, when he solicited and obtained pensions for Tennyson and Sheridan
-Knowles, of neither of whom the Minister had ever heard; and to Milnes
-must also be allowed the credit of having been the first, or nearly the
-first, to bring into prominent recognition the merits of Mr John
-Forster. He possessed, too, in a very high degree, the gift of sympathy,
-and, as a consequence, of influence. ‘Ever since I knew you,’ said his
-friend Macarthy, ‘you have been the chief person in my life; a friend
-and brother and confessor—the end and aim of all my actions and hopes’;
-and Robert Browning, in a long and most interesting letter, written to
-ask Milnes to use his interest to get him appointed secretary to the
-minister whom England, as he then believed, ‘must send before the year
-ends to this fine fellow, Pio Nono[87],’ admits that his own interest in
-Italy was due in the first instance to Milnes’s influence. ‘One gets
-excited,’ he says, ‘at least here on the spot, by this tiptoe strained
-expectation of poor dear Italy, and yet, if I had not known you, I
-believe I should have looked on with other bystanders.’ We have said
-that he was charitable; but to say this is to give an imperfect idea of
-the efforts he would make for literary men in difficulties. When Hood
-was in distress he found that he ‘preferred to receive assistance in the
-shape of gratuitous literary work for his magazine rather than in
-money.’ Milnes not only contributed himself, but ‘canvassed right and
-left among his friends for contributions.’ Nor was his help confined to
-the person whose work he valued. ‘The interest and friendship which the
-genius had aroused,’ says Mr Reid, ‘was extended to his or her friends
-and connexions. Many a widow and many an orphan had occasion to be
-thankful that the husband or father had during his lifetime excited the
-admiration of Milnes. Years after the death of Charlotte Brontë we find
-him trying to smooth the path of her father, and to secure preferment in
-the Church for her husband.’ This is only one instance out of many that
-might be adduced. Again, he seemed to regard his critical faculty as a
-trust for the benefit of others, and was never more congenially employed
-than in drawing attention to some young poet who had no influential
-friends. In proof of this we will only refer our readers to the touching
-story of poor David Gray, whom he nursed with almost feminine
-tenderness, and whose poem, _The Luggie_, he edited; and to his early
-recognition of the genius of Mr Swinburne, to whose merits he drew
-attention by an article in the _Edinburgh Review_. In close connexion
-with this kind help to men of whom he knew little or nothing may be
-mentioned his interest in the Newspaper Press Fund. The formation of
-such a fund was strenuously resisted, we are told, by the most
-influential members of the Press; but Milnes, from the first, brought
-the whole weight of his social influence to its support, and
-contributed, more than any other man, to its permanent and successful
-establishment.
-
-Nor should his kindness to young men be forgotten. He may have sought
-their society in the first instance from the pleasure he took in all
-that was bright, and entertaining, and unaffected; but, as we have
-already tried to point out, his motives were commonly underlaid by some
-serious purpose which it was not always easy to discover. We do not
-maintain that he was specially successful in drawing young men out, for
-his own talk was often scrappy, anecdotical, and difficult to follow;
-still less do we mean that he tried to influence them in any particular
-direction by improving conversation, or the enunciation of any special
-opinions in politics or literature. But he certainly made his juniors
-feel sure of his sympathy and his good-will.
-
-Of Milnes’s religious opinions it is difficult to give any positive
-account. His family had been Unitarian; at college he became an
-Evangelical; soon afterwards he fell under the influence of Irving, whom
-he proclaimed to be ‘the apostle of the age.’ Then, during his residence
-in Italy, as we have already mentioned, he chose Dr Wiseman for his
-intimate friend, and the higher Roman Catholic clergy had hopes of his
-conversion. ‘Mezzofanti,’ wrote one of his friends in 1832, ‘is full of
-hopes that you will return to the bosom of her whom Carlyle calls “the
-slain mother”.’ But, during this same period, while passing through what
-he calls ‘the twilight of his mind,’ he was the friend of Sterling and
-Maurice and Thirlwall, under whose influence he was hardly likely to
-submit to an infallible Church. He himself said that he was prevented
-from joining the Church of Rome by the uprising of a Catholic school in
-the Church of England. To this movement, as we have seen, he was deeply
-attached, and both spoke and wrote in its defence. In one of his
-commonplace books he called himself a Puseyite sceptic; sometimes he
-said he was a crypto-Catholic, and to the last he never entirely shook
-off the impressions of his youth. But Mr Reid is probably right in
-describing him as ‘a tolerant, liberal-minded man, apt to look at
-religion from many different points of view.’ We are not aware that he
-ever took part in any directly religious movement, or ever declared his
-allegiance to the Church of England except as a political organization.
-Partly from a love of paradox, partly from a habit of looking round a
-question rather than directly at it, he would have had something to say
-in defence of almost any system of religion, while his unfeigned charity
-would induce him to adopt that which recognized most fully the claims of
-suffering humanity.
-
-Lord Houghton died at Vichy, August 11, 1885. He had been in failing
-health for some time, but the end was sudden and unexpected. Only a few
-hours before it came he had been entertaining a mixed company at the
-_table d’hôte_ by the brilliancy and variety of his conversation. It
-might almost be said that he died, as he had lived, in society.
-
-We have tried to eliminate what we believe to have been the real Milnes
-from a cloud of misrepresentations and erroneous judgments—for both of
-which, it must be remembered, he was himself directly responsible. We
-leave to our readers the task of passing sentence on a singularly
-amiable, if eccentric, personality. Some opinions expressed by those who
-understood him and valued him will appropriately close this article.
-When he was young his friends recognized in him what Dr Johnson would
-have called the potentiality of greatness, though they doubted whether
-he would have sufficient steadiness of purpose to achieve it. ‘Your gay
-and airy mind,’ wrote Tennyson in 1833, ‘must have caught as many
-colours from the landscape you moved through as a flying soap-bubble—a
-comparison truly somewhat irreverent, yet I meant it not as such.’ ‘I
-think you are near something very glorious,’ said Stafford O’Brien, ‘but
-you will never reach it.’ Mr Aubrey de Vere decided that ‘he had not
-much solid ambition. The highlands of life were not what interested him
-much; its mountains cast their shadows too far and drew down too many
-clouds.’ But, if Milnes’s well-wishers were compelled to abandon their
-hopes of any great distinction for their friend, they recognized, with
-one accord, his charity and his sincerity. If they did not admire him,
-they loved him. ‘You are on the whole a good man,’ said Carlyle, ‘though
-with terrible perversities.’ Forster declared that he himself had ‘many
-friends who would be kind to him in distress, but only one who would be
-equally kind to him in disgrace.’ A distinguished German said of him,
-‘Is it possible that an Englishman can be so loveable?’ and Mr Sumner
-described him as ‘a member of Parliament, a poet and a man of fashion, a
-Tory who does not forget the people, and a man of fashion with
-sensibilities, love of virtue and merit among the simple, the poor, and
-the lowly.’ Lastly, let us cite his own whimsical character of himself,
-which, though expressed in the language of paradox, is probably, in the
-main, nearer to the truth than one drawn by any critic could be:
-
-‘He was a man of no common imaginative perceptions, who never gave his
-full conviction to anything but the closest reasoning; of acute
-sensibilities, who always distrusted the affections; of ideal
-aspirations and sensual habits; of the most cheerful manners and of the
-gloomiest philosophy. He hoped little and believed little, but he rarely
-despaired, and never valued unbelief, except as leading to some larger
-truth and purer conviction’ (vol. ii. p. 491).
-
-
-
-
- EDWARD HENRY PALMER[88].
-
-
-
-
-A dramatist who undertakes to write a play which is to be almost devoid
-of incident, and to depend for interest on the development of an
-eccentric character, with only a single strong situation, even though
-that situation be one of surpassing power, is considered by those
-learned in such matters to be almost courting failure. Such a work is
-therefore rarely attempted, and is still more rarely successful. Yet
-this is what Mr Besant has had to do in writing the Life of Edward Henry
-Palmer; and we are glad to be able to say at once that he has discharged
-a delicate and difficult task in a most admirable fashion. For in truth
-he had a very unpromising subject to deal with. It is always difficult
-to interest the general public in the sayings and doings of a man of
-letters, even when he has occupied a prominent position, and thrown
-himself with ardour into some burning question of the day, political or
-social. Palmer, however, was not such a man at all. He did ‘break his
-birth’s invidious bar,’ but alas! it was never given to him, until the
-end was close at hand, ‘to grasp the skirts of happy chance,’ or to rise
-into a position where he could be seen by the world. It is melancholy
-now to speculate on what might have been had he returned in safety from
-the perilous enterprise in which he met his death, for it is hardly
-likely that the Government would have failed to secure, by some
-permanent appointment, the services of a man who had proved, in so
-signal a manner, his capacity for dealing with Orientals. As it was,
-however, with the exception of the journeys to the Sinaitic Peninsula
-and the Holy Land, he lived a quiet student-life; not wholly retired,
-for he was no book-worm, and enjoyed, after a peculiar fashion of his
-own, the society of his fellow-men; but still a life which did not
-really bring him beyond the narrow circle of the few intimate friends
-who knew him thoroughly, and were proportionately devoted to him. He
-took no part in any movement; he was not ‘earnest’ or ‘intense.’ He did
-not read new books, or any of the ‘thoughtful’ magazines; nor had he any
-particular desire to alter the framework of society. The world was a
-good world so far as he was concerned; and men were strange and
-interesting creatures whom it was a pleasure to study, as a naturalist
-studies a new species; why alter it or them? The interest which attaches
-to such a life depends wholly on the way in which the central character
-is presented to the public. That Mr Besant should have succeeded where
-others would have failed need not surprise us. The qualities which have
-made him a delightful novelist are brought to bear upon this prose _In
-Memoriam_, with the additional incentives of warm friendship and
-passionate regret. It is clear that he realized all the difficulties of
-his task from the outset; and he has treated his materials accordingly,
-leading the reader forward with consummate art, chapter by chapter, to
-the final catastrophe, which is described with the picturesqueness of a
-romance, and the solemn earnestness of a tragedy. Such a book is almost
-above criticism. A mourner by an open grave, pronouncing the funeral
-oration of his murdered friend, has a prescriptive right to apportion
-praise and blame in what measure he thinks fit; and we should be the
-last to intrude upon his sacred sorrow with harsh and inconsiderate
-criticism. But we should be failing in our duty if we did not draw
-attention to one point. It has been Mr Besant’s object to show the
-difficulties of all kinds against which his hero had to
-contend—ill-health, heavy sorrows, debt—and how he came triumphant
-through them all, thanks to his indomitable pluck and energy; and
-further, as though no element of interest should be wanting, he has
-represented him as smarting under a sense of unmerited wrong done to him
-by his University, which ‘went out of the way to insult and neglect’
-him. This is no mere fancy of Mr Besant’s; we know from other sources
-that Palmer himself thought he had not been treated at Cambridge as he
-ought to have been, and that he was glad to get away from it. We shall
-do our best to show that this was a misconception on his part, and we
-regret that his biographer should have given such prominence to it. But,
-though Mr Besant may have been zealous overmuch on this particular
-point, his book is none the less fascinating, and we venture to predict
-that it will live, as a permanent record of a very remarkable man. We
-are sensible that much of its charm will disappear in the short sketch
-which we are about to give, but if our remarks have the effect of
-sending our readers to the original, we shall not have written in vain.
-
-Edward Henry Palmer was born in Green Street, Cambridge, 7 August, 1840.
-His father died when he was an infant, and his mother did not long
-survive her husband. Her place was supplied to some extent by an aunt,
-then unmarried, who took the orphan child to her own home and educated
-him. She was evidently a person who combined great kindness with great
-good sense. Palmer, we read, ‘owed everything to her,’ and ‘never spoke
-of her in after years without the greatest tenderness and emotion.’ Of
-his real mother we do not find any record; but the father, who kept a
-small private school, was ‘a man of considerable acquirements, with a
-strong taste for art.’ We do not know whether any of Palmer’s peculiar
-talents had ever been observed in the father, or whether he can be said
-to have inherited anything from his family except a tendency to asthma
-and bronchial disease. From this, of which the father died before he was
-thirty, the son suffered all his life. He grew out of it to a certain
-extent, but it was always there, a watchful enemy, ready to start forth
-and fasten upon its victim.
-
-The beginning of Palmer’s education was of the most ordinary
-description, and little need be said about it. He was sent in the first
-instance to a private school, and afterwards to the Perse Grammar
-School. There he made rapid progress, arriving at the sixth form before
-he was fifteen; but all we hear about his studies is that he
-distinguished himself in Greek and Latin, and disliked mathematics. By
-the time he was sixteen he had learnt all that he was likely to learn at
-school, and was sent to London to earn his living. He became a junior
-clerk in a house of business in East-cheap, where he remained for three
-years, and might have remained for the term of his natural life, had he
-not been obliged to resign his situation on account of ill-health.
-Symptoms of pulmonary disease manifested themselves, and he got worse so
-rapidly that he was told that he had little hope of recovery. He
-returned to Cambridge, with the conviction that he had but a few weeks
-to live, and that he had better die comfortably among his relations,
-than miserably among strangers. But after a few weeks of severe illness
-he recovered, suddenly and strangely. Mr Besant tells a curious story,
-which Palmer is reported to have believed, that the cure had been
-effected by a dose of _lobelia_, administered by a herbalist. That
-Palmer swallowed the drug—of which, by the way, he nearly died—is
-certain, and that he recovered is equally certain; but that the dose and
-the recovery can be correlated as cause and effect is more than we are
-prepared to admit. We are rather disposed to accept a less sensational
-theory, expressed by a gentleman who at that period was one of his
-intimate friends:
-
-‘Careful watchfulness on the part of his aunt, open air, exercise, and
-freedom from restraint, were the principal means of patching him up. He
-had frequent attacks of blood-spitting afterwards, and was altogether
-one of those wonderful creatures that defy doctors and quacks alike, and
-won’t die of the disease which is theirs by inheritance. How little any
-of us thought that he would die a hero!’
-
-Palmer’s peculiar gift of acquiring languages had manifested itself even
-before he went to London. Throughout his whole career his strength as a
-linguist lay in his extraordinary aptitude for learning a spoken
-language. The literature came afterwards. We are not aware that he was
-ever what is called a good scholar in Latin or in Greek, simply for the
-reason, according to our view, that those languages are no longer spoken
-anywhere. He did not repudiate the literature of a language; far from
-it. Probably few Orientalists have known the literatures of Arabia and
-Persia better than he knew them; but he learnt to speak Arabic and
-Persian before he learnt to read them. In this he resembled Cardinal
-Mezzofanti, who had the same power of picking up a language for speaking
-purposes from a few conversations—learning some words, and constructing
-for himself first a vocabulary and then a grammar. When Palmer was still
-a boy at school he learnt Romany. He learnt it, says Mr Besant, ‘by
-paying travelling tinkers sixpence for a lesson, by haunting the tents,
-talking to the men, and crossing the women’s palms with his pocket-money
-in exchange for a few more words to add to his vocabulary. In this way
-he gradually made for himself a Gipsy dictionary.’ In time he became a
-proficient in Gipsy lore, and Mr Besant tells several curious stories
-about his adventures with that remarkable people. We will quote the
-narrative supplied to him by Mr Charles Leland—better known as Hans
-Breitmann—Palmer’s intimate friend and brother in Romany lore.
-
-‘In one respect Palmer was truly remarkable. He combined plain common
-sense, clear judgment, and great quickness of perception into all the
-relations of a question, with a keen love of fun and romance. I could
-fill a volume with the eccentric adventures which we had in common,
-particularly among the gipsies. To these good folk we were always a
-first-class mystery, but none the less popular on that account. What
-with our speaking Romany “down to the bottom crust,” and Palmer’s
-incredible proficiency at thimble-rig, “ringing the changes,” picking
-pockets, card-sharping, three-monté, and every kind of legerdemain,
-these honest people never could quite make up their minds whether we
-were a kind of Brahmins, to which they were as Sudras, or what. Woe to
-the gipsy sharp who tried the cards with the Professor! How often have
-we gone into a _tan_ where we were all unknown, and regarded as a couple
-of green Gentiles! And with what a wonderful air of innocence would
-Palmer play the part of a lamb, and ask them to give him a specimen of
-their language; and when they refused, or professed themselves unable to
-do so, how amiably he would turn to me and remark in deep Romany that we
-were mistaken, and that the people of the tent were only miserable
-“mumpers” of mixed blood, who could not _rakker_! Once I remember he
-said this to a gipsy, who retaliated in a great rage, “How could I know
-that you were a gipsy, if you come here dressed up like a _gorgio_ and
-looking like a gentleman?”
-
-‘One day, with Palmer, in the fens near Cambridge, we came upon a
-picturesque sight. It was a large band of gipsies on a halt. As we
-subsequently learned, they had made the day before an immense raid in
-robbing hen-roosts and poaching, and were loaded with game, fowls, and
-eggs. None of them knew me, but several knew the Professor as a lawyer.
-One took him aside to confide as a client their late misdoings. “We have
-been,” said he——
-
-‘“You have been stealing eggs,” replied Palmer.
-
-‘“How did you know that?”
-
-‘“By the yolk on your waistcoat,” answered the Professor in Romany. “The
-next time you had better hide the marks[89].”’
-
-These experiences among the gipsies took place in 1874 or 1875, when
-Palmer had perfected himself in their language, and we must go back for
-a moment to the period spent in London. There, in his leisure hours, he
-managed to learn Italian and French, by a process similar to that by
-which he had previously acquired the rudiments of Romany.
-
-‘The method he pursued is instructive. He found out where Italians might
-be expected to meet, and went every evening to sit among them and hear
-them talk. Thus, there was in those days a _café_ in Titchborne Street
-frequented by Italian refugees, political exiles, and republicans. Here
-Palmer sat and listened and presently began to talk, and so became an
-ardent partisan of Italian unity. There was also at that time—I think
-many of them have now migrated to Hammersmith—a great colony of Italian
-organ-grinders and sellers of plaster-cast images in and about Saffron
-Hill. He went among these worthy people, sat with them in their
-restaurants, drank their sour wine, talked with them, and acquired their
-_patois_. He found out Italian waiters at restaurants and talked with
-them; at the docks he went on board Italian ships, and talked with the
-sailors; and in these ways learned the various dialects of Genoa,
-Naples, Nice, Livorno, Venice, and Messina. One of his friends at this
-time was a well-known Signor Buonocorre, the so-called “Fire King,” who
-used to astonish the multitude nightly at Cremorne Gardens and elsewhere
-by his feats. For Palmer was always attracted by people who run shows,
-“do” things, act, pretend, persuade, deceive, and in fact are
-interesting for any kind of cleverness. However, the first result of
-this perseverance was that he made himself a perfect master of Italian,
-that he knew the country speech as well as the Italian of the schools,
-and that he could converse with the Piedmontese, the Venetian, the
-Roman, the Sicilian, or the Calabrian, in their own dialects, as well as
-with the purest native of Florence.
-
-‘Also while he was in the City he acquired French by a similar process.
-I do not know whether he carried on his French studies at the same time
-with the Italian, but I believe not. It seems certainly more in
-accordance with the practice which he adopted in after life that he
-should attempt only one thing at a time. But as with Italian so with
-French; he joined to a knowledge of the pure language a curious
-acquaintance with _argot_; also—which points to acquaintance made in
-_cafés_—he acquired somehow in those early days a curious knowledge and
-admiration of the French police and detective system[90].’
-
-The illness which compelled Palmer to give up London had evidently been
-very serious, and his convalescence was tedious. Nor, when supposed to
-be well, did he feel any inclination to resume work as a clerk. So he
-stayed in Cambridge at his aunt’s house, with no definite aim in life,
-but taking up now one thing, now another, after the manner of clever
-boys when they are at home for the holidays. He did a little literature
-in the way of burlesques, one of which, _Ye Hole in ye Walle_, a legend
-told after the manner of Ingoldsby, was afterwards published by Messrs
-Macmillan; he wrote a farce, which was acted in that temple of Thespis,
-once dear to Cambridge undergraduates, the old Barnwell Theatre; he
-acted himself with considerable success, and for a week or so thought of
-adopting the stage as a profession; he tried conjuring, in which in
-after years he became an adept, and ventriloquism, where he failed; he
-took up various forms of art, as wood-engraving, modelling, drawing,
-painting, photography; in all of which, except the last, he arrived at
-creditable results. His aunt is reported to have borne her nephew’s
-changeable tastes with exemplary patience, until photography came to the
-front; but ‘the waste of expensive materials, the damage to clothes,
-stair carpets—he could always be traced—his disreputable piebald
-appearance,’ and (last, but not least!) ‘the results on glass,’ were too
-much for even her good-nature. The camera was banished, and the artist
-was bidden to adopt some pursuit less annoying to his neighbours. The
-one really useful study of this period was shorthand-writing; and in
-after years, when he practised as a barrister, he found the usefulness
-of it.
-
-Up to this time—the year 1860—he had never turned his attention to
-Oriental literature, and very likely had never seen an Oriental
-character. The friend whose reminiscences we have quoted more than once
-already says that he remembers ‘going one morning into his bedroom (he
-was a very late riser) and finding him looking at some Arabic
-characters. They interested him; he liked the look of them; it was an
-improvement on shorthand; he would find it all out; and so he did!’ He
-set to work without delay to find somebody he could talk to about his
-new fancy, and, as the supply of Oriental scholars is necessarily
-limited even at one of the Universities, he was led at once to the only
-two persons competent to instruct him—the Rev. George Skinner, and a
-Mohammedan named Syed Abdullah. The former was a Master of Arts of the
-University, who had published a translation of the Psalms; the latter
-was a native of Oudh, who had resided in England since 1851, and who
-about this time came to Cambridge to prepare students for the Civil
-Service of India. Under the guidance of these gentlemen, Palmer plunged
-into Oriental languages with the same enthusiasm with which he had
-followed the various pursuits we have mentioned above. There was this
-difference, however, between the new love and the old; there was no
-turning back; the day of transient fancies was over; that of serious
-work had begun. His ardour now knew no abatement; he is said to have
-worked at this time eighteen hours a day. This may well be doubted; but
-without pressing such a statement too closely, we may admit that he gave
-himself up to his new studies with unwonted perseverance, and that his
-progress was rapid. Mr Skinner used to take him out for walks in the
-country, and discourse to him on Hebrew grammar. Hebrew, however, was a
-language which did not attract him greatly, and in after years he used
-to say that he did not know it. Syed Abdullah gave him more regular and
-systematic instruction in Urdú, Persian, and Arabic. Palmer was
-‘constantly writing prose and verse exercises for him.’ They became
-intimate friends; and it was probably through his representations that
-Palmer was allowed to give up all thoughts of resuming work as a clerk,
-and to take up Oriental languages and literature as a profession.
-Through him, too, he was introduced to the Nawab Ikbal ud Dawlah, son of
-the late Rajah of Oudh, who took a very warm interest in Palmer’s
-studies, allowed him to live in his house when he pleased, and gave him
-the assistance of two able native instructors. Next he struck up a
-friendship with a Bengalee gentleman named Bazlurrahim, with whom he
-spent some time, composing incessantly under his supervision in Persian
-and Urdú. Besides these he was on terms of intimacy with other Orientals
-resident at that time in England, and also with Professor Mir Aulad Ali,
-of Trinity College, Dublin, ‘who was constantly his adviser, critic,
-teacher, friend, and sympathizer.’ Hence, as Mr Besant points out, we
-may see that he had no lack of instructors; and may at once dismiss from
-our minds two common misconceptions about him—first that Oriental
-languages ‘came natural’ to him; and, secondly, that he was a poor,
-friendless, solitary student, burning the midnight lamp in a garret, and
-learning Arabic all alone. On the contrary, he never felt any pressure
-of poverty, and was helped, sympathized with, encouraged, by all those
-with whom he came in contact. His progress was rapid, and in 1862 he was
-able to send a copy of original Arabic verses to the Lord Almoner’s
-Reader in that language, who described them as ‘elegant and idiomatic.’
-
-Up to this time Palmer does not appear to have known much of University
-men, or to have thought of becoming a member of the University himself.
-He would probably have never joined S. John’s College had he not been
-accidentally ‘discovered,’ as Mr Besant happily puts it, by two of the
-Fellows. The result of this discovery was that he was invited to become
-a candidate for a sizarship in October 1863, and in the interval
-prepared himself for the examination by reviving his former studies in
-classics, and in working at mathematics. He was assisted in this
-preparation by one of the Fellows, who tells us that, though he declared
-that he knew no mathematics at all, he ‘always did what I set him,
-passed the examinations very easily, and presumably obtained his
-sizarship on it.’ His known proficiency in Oriental languages was
-evidently not taken into account at the outset of his University career,
-but some two years afterwards, in 1865 or 1866, a scholarship was given
-to him on that account only. He took his degree in 1867, and, as there
-was no Oriental Languages Tripos in those days, he presented himself for
-the Classical Tripos, in which he obtained only a third class. Such a
-place cannot, as a general rule, be considered brilliant; but in his
-case it should be regarded as a distinction rather than a failure, for
-it shows that he must have possessed a more than respectable knowledge
-of Latin and Greek, and, moreover, have been able to write composition
-in those languages. At the time of his matriculation (November 1863) he
-could have known but little of either; and during the succeeding three
-years he had been much occupied with vigorous prosecution of his
-Oriental studies, with taking pupils in Arabic, and with making
-catalogues of the Oriental manuscripts in the libraries of the
-University, of King’s College, and of Trinity College. But he always had
-a surprising power of getting through an enormous quantity of work
-without ever seeming to be in a hurry. A friend tells us that Palmer
-
-‘Did not strike one as a man of method, as an economist of time, as
-moving about wrapped in thought. You met him apparently lounging along,
-ready for a talk, perhaps in company with a rather idle man; yet when
-you came to measure up his work you were puzzled to know how any one man
-could do it.’
-
-Palmer’s proficiency in Oriental languages at this time, 1867—only seven
-years, it should be remembered, after he had begun to study them—is
-abundantly attested by a very remarkable body of testimonials[91] which
-he obtained when a candidate for the post of interpreter to the English
-embassy in Persia. His old friend the Nawab said:
-
-‘Notwithstanding the fact that he has never visited any Eastern kingdom,
-or mixed with Oriental nations, he has yet, by his own perseverance,
-application, and study, acquired such great proficiency, fluency, and
-eloquence, in speaking and writing three Oriental tongues—to wit, Urdú
-(Hindoostani), Persian, and Arabic—that one would say he must have
-associated with Oriental nations, and studied for a lengthened period in
-the Universities of the East.’
-
-We have no room for quotations from the curious and flowery compositions
-in which numerous learned Orientals held up his excellencies of every
-sort to admiration; but we will cite a short passage from what was said
-by Mr Bradshaw, Librarian to the University of Cambridge, who had
-naturally seen a great deal of him while working at the manuscripts:
-
-‘What was at once apparent was the radical difference of his knowledge
-of these languages [Arabic and Persian] from that of any other
-Orientalist I had met. It was the difference between native knowledge
-and dictionary knowledge; between one who uses a language as his own and
-one who is able to make out the meaning of what is before him with more
-or less accuracy by help of a dictionary.’
-
-In the autumn of 1867, a fellowship at S. John’s College being vacant,
-the then Master, Dr Bateson, knowing Palmer’s reputation as an
-Orientalist, asked Professor Cowell, then recently made Professor of
-Sanskrit, to examine him. Professor Cowell writes:
-
-‘I undertook to examine him in Persian and Hindustani, as I felt that my
-knowledge of Arabic was too slight to justify my venturing to examine
-him in that language. I well remember my delight and surprise in this
-examination. I had never had any intercourse with Palmer before, as I
-had been previously living in India; and I had no idea that he was such
-an Oriental scholar. I remember well that I set him for translation into
-Persian prose a florid description from Gibbon’s chapter on Mohammed.
-Palmer translated it in a masterly way, in the true style of Persian
-rhetoric, every important substantive having its rhyming doublet, just
-as in the best models of Persian literature. In fact, his vocabulary
-seemed exhaustless. I also set him difficult pieces for translation from
-the Masnaví, Khondemir, and I think Saudá; but he could explain them all
-without hesitation. I sent a full report to the Master, and the college
-elected him at once to the vacant fellowship[92].’
-
-It has now become an understood thing at Cambridge that a man who is
-really distinguished in any branch of study has a good chance of a
-fellowship; but twenty years ago this was not the case, and we believe
-that Palmer was the first, at least in the present century, to obtain
-that blue ribbon of Cambridge life for proficiency in other languages
-than those of Greece and Rome. Such a distinction meant more to him than
-it would have meant to most men. No further anxieties on the score of
-money need trouble him for the future; he need no longer be dependent on
-the generosity of relations who were not themselves overburdened with
-the goods of this world. He might study Oriental languages to his
-heart’s content without let or hindrance from anybody; and it was more
-than probable that one piece of good fortune would be the parent of
-another—a distinction so signal would bring him into notice, and obtain
-for him the offer of something which would be worth accepting. He had
-not long to wait. In less than a year a post was offered to him which
-presented, in delightful combination, study, travel, some emolument, and
-a reasonable prospect of fame and fortune if he worked hard and was
-successful. At the suggestion of the Rev. George Williams, then a
-resident Fellow of King’s College, he was asked to take part in the
-exploration of the Holy Land, and to accompany an expedition then about
-to start for the survey of Sinai and the neighbourhood. He was to
-investigate the names and traditions of the country, and to copy and
-decipher the inscriptions with which the rocks in the so-called ‘Written
-Valley’ and in other places are covered. He accepted without hesitation,
-and left England in November 1868.
-
-The results of this expedition will be found in _The Desert of the
-Exodus_[93], a delightful book, in which Palmer has narrated in a
-pleasing style the daily doings of the surveyors, and the conclusions at
-which they arrived. His own proceedings are kept modestly in the
-background; but a careful reader will soon discover that, in addition to
-his appointed task as collector of folk-lore, he did his full share of
-topographical investigation, in which he evidently took a keen and
-growing interest, all the more remarkable as he could have had but
-little previous preparation for it. A detailed analysis of the results
-achieved would occupy far more space than we have at our disposal. We
-will only mention that the investigations of the expedition ‘materially
-confirmed and elucidated the history of the Exodus’; that objections
-founded on the supposed incapacity of the peninsula to accommodate so
-large a host as that of Israel were disposed of by pointing out abundant
-traces of ancient fertility; that the claims of Jebel Musa to be the
-true Sinai were vindicated by a comparison of its natural features with
-the Bible narrative, and by the collection of Arab and Mohammedan
-traditions; and, lastly, that the site of Kibroth Hattaavah was
-determined, partly on geographical grounds, partly on the traditions
-still current among the Towarah Bedouin, whose language Palmer mastered,
-and of whose manners and customs he has drawn up a very full and
-interesting account. The intimate acquaintance which he thus formed with
-one of these tribes stood him in good stead in the following year, when
-he took a far more responsible journey. The ease with which he spoke the
-Arab language was, however, one of the least of his many gifts: he
-thoroughly understood Arab character, and was generally successful, not
-merely in making the natives do what he wanted, but, what is far more
-wonderful, in making them speak the truth to him. He thus sums up his
-method of dealing with them:
-
-‘An Arab is a bad actor, and with but a very little practice you may
-infallibly detect him in a lie; when directly accused of it, he is
-astonished at your, to him, incomprehensible sagacity, and at once gives
-up the game. By keeping this fact constantly in view, and at the same
-time endeavouring to win their confidence and respect, I have every
-reason to believe that the Bedawín gave us throughout a correct account
-of their country and its nomenclature.
-
-‘When once an Arab has ceased to regard you with suspicion, you may
-surprise a piece of information out of him at any moment; and if you
-repeat it to him a short time afterwards, he forgets in nine cases out
-of ten that he has himself been your authority, and should the
-information be incorrect will flatly contradict you and set you right,
-while if it be authentic he is puzzled at your possessing a knowledge of
-the facts, and deems it useless to withhold from you anything
-further[94].’
-
-The survey of Sinai had been completed but a few months when Palmer left
-England again, for a second journey of exploration. It is evident that
-he must have taken a more prominent part in the management of the first
-expedition than the precise terms of his engagement with the explorers
-would have led us to expect, and that he had thoroughly satisfied those
-responsible for it, for this second expedition was practically entrusted
-to him to arrange as he pleased. He was instructed in general terms to
-clear up, first, certain disputed points in the topography of Sinai;
-next, to examine the country between the Sinaitic Peninsula and the
-Promised Land—the ‘Desert of the Wanderings’; and, lastly, to search for
-inscriptions in Moab. He determined to take with him a single companion
-only, Mr Charles Tyrwhitt-Drake, of Trinity College, Cambridge, who had
-had already some experience of the East, and who proved himself in every
-way to be the man of men for rough journeys in unknown lands; to travel
-on foot, without dragoman, servant, or escort; and to take no more
-baggage than four camels could carry. The two friends started from Suez
-on December 16, 1869, and reached Jerusalem in excellent health and
-spirits on February 26, 1870. They had performed a feat of which anybody
-might well be proud. They had traversed ‘the great and terrible desert,’
-the Desert of El Tih, and the Negeb, or ‘south country’ of Palestine,
-exactly as they had proposed to do—on foot, with no attendants except
-the owners of the baggage-camels. They had walked nearly 600 miles; but
-this fact, though it says much for their endurance, gives but little
-idea of the real fatigues of such a journey. The mental strain must have
-been far more exhausting than the physical fatigue. They were not
-tourists, but explorers, whose duty it was to observe carefully, to
-record their observations on the spot, to make plans and sketches, and
-to collect such information as could be extracted from the inhabitants.
-These various pursuits—in addition to their domestic arrangements—had to
-be carried on in the midst of an Arab population always suspicious, and
-sometimes openly hostile, who worried them from daybreak until far into
-the night, and against whom their only weapons were incessant
-watchfulness, tact, and good humour. Readers of Palmer’s narrative will
-not be surprised to find him hinting, not obscurely, that the only way
-to solve the ‘Bedouin question’ is to adopt what was called a few years
-afterwards, with reference to another not wholly dissimilar race, ‘the
-bag and baggage policy.’ This deliberate opinion, expressed by one who
-knew the Arabs well, and who had obtained singular influence over them,
-is worthy of careful attention, as, indeed, are all the chapters in the
-second part of _The Desert of the Exodus_, where this journey is fully
-described and illustrated. After reading that narrative no one can be
-surprised that the mission which ended so triumphantly and so fatally
-twelve years afterwards should have been entrusted to Palmer.
-
-After a brief repose in Jerusalem they started afresh, and, passing
-again through the South Country by a different route, travelled eastward
-of the Dead Sea through the unknown lands of Edom and Moab. They made
-numerous observations of great value to Biblical students; but they
-failed to find what they had come to seek—inscriptions—though they
-succeeded in inspecting every known ‘written stone’ in the country; and
-the conclusion at last forced itself upon them, ‘that, _above ground_ at
-least, there does not exist another Moabite stone[95].’ It will be
-remembered that the famous inscription of King Mesha was found built
-into a wall of late Roman work, the ancient Moabite city being buried
-some feet below the present surface of the ground. This fact induced
-Palmer to adopt the following opinion:
-
-‘If a few intelligent and competent men, such as those employed in the
-Jerusalem excavations, could be taken out to Moab, and certain of the
-ruins be excavated, further interesting discoveries might be made. Such
-researches might be made without difficulty if the Arabs were well
-managed and the expedition possessed large resources; but it must be
-remembered that the country is only nominally subject to the Turkish
-Government, and is filled with lawless tribes, jealous of each other and
-of the intrusion of strangers, and all greedily claiming a property in
-every stone, written or unwritten, which they think might interest a
-Frank.
-
-‘That many treasures do lie buried among the ruins of Moab there can be
-but little doubt; the Arabs, indeed, narrated to us several instances of
-gold coins and figures having been found by them while ploughing in the
-neighbourhood of the ancient cities, and sold to jewellers at Nablous,
-by whom they were probably melted up[95].’
-
-But, though there was no inscription to bring home as visible evidence
-of what had been done, the expedition was not barren of results. In the
-first place, the possibility of exploring the little-known parts of
-Palestine at a comparatively trifling cost had been demonstrated; and,
-secondly, numerous sites had been discovered where further research
-would probably yield information of the greatest value. It is a
-misfortune that Palmer was not able in after years to give undivided
-attention to these interesting problems of Biblical topography. Unless
-we are much mistaken, he would have made a revolution in many of them,
-and notably in the architectural history of the city of Jerusalem, upon
-which he did throw new light from an unexpected quarter—the Arab
-historians. He would, in fact, have pursued for the Temple area at
-Jerusalem the method which Professor Willis pursued so successfully for
-some of our own cathedrals; he would have marshalled in chronological
-order the notices of the Arab works there; and then, by comparing the
-historical evidence with the existing structures, have assigned their
-respective dates with certainty to each of them.
-
-Palmer returned to England in the autumn of 1870, and soon afterwards
-became a candidate for the Professorship of Arabic in the University of
-Cambridge. He was unsuccessful, and we should have contented ourselves
-with recording the fact without comment, had not Mr Besant stated the
-whole question in a way reflecting so unfavourably on the electors, and
-through them on the University, that we feel compelled to investigate
-the circumstances in detail. This is what he says:
-
-‘In the same year Palmer experienced what one is fully justified in
-calling the most cruel blow ever dealt to him, and one which he never
-forgot or forgave.
-
-‘The vacancy of the Professorship of Arabic in 1871 seemed to give him
-at last the chance which he had been expecting.... He became a candidate
-for the vacant post; the place in fact _belonged to him_; it was his
-already by a right which it is truly wonderful could have been contested
-by any—the right of Conquest. The electors were the Heads of the
-colleges.
-
-‘Consider the position: Palmer by this time was a man known all over the
-world of Oriental scholarship; he was not a single untried student and
-man of books; he had proved his powers in the most practical of all
-ways, viz. by relying on his knowledge of the language for safety on a
-dangerous expedition; he had written, and written wonderfully well, a
-great quantity of things in Persian, Urdú, and Arabic; he was known to
-everybody who knew anything at all about the subject; he had been
-greatly talked about by those who did not; he was a graduate of the
-University and Fellow of S. John’s, an honour which, as was well known,
-he received solely for his attainments in Oriental languages; he had a
-great many friends who were ready to testify, and had already testified,
-in the strongest terms, to his extraordinary knowledge; he was, in fact,
-the only Cambridge man who could, with any show of fairness justice at
-all, be elected. He was also young, and full of strength and enthusiasm;
-if Persian and Arabic lectures and Oriental studies could be made useful
-or attractive at the University, he would make them so. What follows
-seems incredible.
-
-‘On the other hand, the electing body consisted, as stated above, of the
-Heads of colleges. It is in the nature of things that the Heads, who are
-mostly men advanced in years, who have spent all their lives at the
-University, should retain whatever old prejudices, traditions, and
-ancient manner of regarding things, may be still surviving. There
-were—it seems childish to advance this statement seriously, and yet I
-have no doubt it is true and correct—two prejudices against which Palmer
-had then to contend. The first was the more serious. It was at that
-time, even more than it is now, the custom at Cambridge to judge the
-abilities of every man entirely with regard to his place in one of the
-two old Triposes; and this without the least respect or consideration
-for any other attainments, or accomplishments, or learning. Darwin, for
-instance, whose name does not occur in the Honour list at all, never
-received from his college the slightest mark of respect until his death.
-Long after he had become the greatest scientific man in Europe the
-question would have been asked—I have no doubt it was often asked—what
-degree he took. Palmer’s name did occur in the Classical Tripos—but
-alas! in the third class. Was it possible, was it probable, that a
-third-class man could be a person worthy of consideration at all?
-Third-class men are good enough for assistant-masters in small schools,
-for curacies, or for any other branch of labour which can be performed
-without much intellect. But a third-class man must never, under any
-circumstances, consider that he has a right to learn anything or to
-claim distinction as a scholar. I put the case strongly; but there is no
-Cambridge man who will deny the fact that, in whatever branch of
-learning distinction be subsequently attained, the memory of a second or
-third class is always prejudicial. Palmer, therefore, went before the
-grave and reverend Heads with this undeniable third class against a
-whole sheaf of proofs, testimonials, letters, opinions, statements, and
-assertions of attainments extraordinary, and, in some respects,
-unrivalled. To be sure they were only letters from Orientals and
-Oriental scholars. What could they avail against the opinion of the
-Classical Examiners of 1867 that Palmer was only worth a third class?
-
-‘As I said above, it seems childish. But it is true. And this was the
-first prejudice.
-
-‘The second prejudice was perhaps his youth. He was, it is true, past
-thirty, but he had only taken his degree three or four years, and
-therefore he only ought to have been five-and-twenty. He looked no more
-than five-and-twenty; he still possessed—he always possessed—the
-enthusiasm of youth; his manners, which could be, when he chose, full of
-dignity even among his intimates, were those of a man still in early
-manhood; he had been talked about in connection with his adventures in
-the East; and stories were told, some true and some false, which may
-have alarmed the gravity of the Heads. There must be no tincture of
-Bohemianism about a Professor of the University. Perhaps rumours may
-have been whispered about the gipsies and the tinkers, or the
-mesmerizing, or the conjuring; but I think the conjuring had hardly yet
-begun.
-
-‘In speaking of this election, I beg most emphatically to disclaim any
-comparison between the most eminent and illustrious scholar who was
-elected and the man who was rejected. I say that it is always the
-bounden duty of the University to give her prizes to her own children if
-they have proved themselves worthy of them. Not to do so is to
-discourage learning and to drive away students. Now, the Professorship
-of Arabic was vacant; the most brilliant Oriental scholar whom the
-University has produced in this century—perhaps in any century—became a
-candidate for it; he was the only Cambridge man who could possibly be a
-candidate; the Heads of Houses passed him by and elected a scholar of
-wide reputation indeed, but not a member of the University.
-
-‘There were other circumstances which made the election more
-disappointing. It was known, before the election, that Dr Wright had
-been spoken to on the subject; it was also known that he would not stand
-because the stipend of the post, only 300_l._ a year, was not sufficient
-to induce him to give up the British Museum. It seemed, therefore, that
-the result of Palmer’s candidature would be a walk over. But the day
-before the election the Master of Queens’—then Dr Phillips, who was
-himself a Syriac scholar—went round to all the electors, and informed
-them that Dr Wright would be put up on the following day. He was put up;
-he was elected; and very shortly afterwards was made a Fellow of Queens’
-probably in consequence of an understanding with Dr Phillips that, in
-the event of his election to the Professorship, an election to a Queens’
-Fellowship should follow. Of course, one has nothing to say against the
-Fellowship. Probably a Queens’ Fellowship was never more honourably and
-usefully bestowed; but yet the man who ought to have obtained the
-Professorship, the man to whom it belonged, was kept out of it. Palmer
-was the kindest-hearted and most forgiving of men, and the last to think
-or speak evil; but this was a deliberate and uncalled-for injustice, an
-insult to his reputation which could never be forgotten. It embittered
-the whole of his future connexion with the University: it never was
-forgotten or forgiven[96].’
-
-We notice two errors of fact in the above narrative. The election did
-not take place in 1871, but in 1870; and secondly, the Professorship was
-then worth only £70 a year. The stipend was not raised to £300 until the
-following November. The second of these errors is not of much
-importance; but the first is very material, as we shall show presently.
-
-We will next give an exact narrative of what actually took place.
-Professor Williams, who had held the Arabic chair since 1854, died in
-the Long Vacation of 1870, and on October 1 the Vice-Chancellor
-announced the vacancy, and fixed the day of election for Friday, October
-21. The only candidates who presented themselves in the ordinary way
-were Palmer and the Rev. Stanley Leathes, M.A., of Jesus College, a
-gentleman who had obtained the Tyrwhitt Hebrew Scholarship in 1853. It
-was thought that his merits were little known, and that he would not
-prove a formidable opponent; and Palmer, as Mr Besant rightly states,
-looked upon the Professorship as as good as won. However, on the day
-before, or the day but one before, the election, the President of
-Queens’ College left a card on each of the electors, to say that Dr
-Wright would be voted for. One of these cards was given to Palmer, we do
-not know by whom. He showed it to a friend, who asked, ‘What does it
-mean?’ ‘It means that it is all up with me,’ was Palmer’s reply; and
-events proved that he was right in his forebodings. When the electors
-met, the Masters of Trinity Hall and Emmanuel were not present, and the
-Master of Gonville and Caius declined to vote. The remaining fourteen
-voted in the following way:—for Dr Wright, eight; for Mr Palmer, five;
-for Mr Leathes, one. Dr Wright, therefore, was declared to be elected.
-
-It will be seen from what is here stated—and the accuracy of our facts
-is, we know, beyond question—that it was not the Heads of Houses in
-their collective capacity who rejected Palmer, but less than half of
-them. Again, we submit that there is no evidence that those who voted
-against him were actuated by either of the prejudices which Mr Besant
-imputes to them. A high place in a tripos is no longer regarded at
-Cambridge as indispensable, unless the candidate be trying for a post
-the duties of which are in direct relation to the tripos in which he has
-sought distinction. Four years afterwards, the resident members of the
-Senate chose as Woodwardian Professor of Geology a gentleman who had
-taken an ordinary degree, in opposition to one who had been placed
-thirteenth in the first class of the mathematical tripos, on the ground
-that they believed him to be a better geologist than his opponent. It
-will be said they were not the Heads of Colleges; but we would remark
-that, even in the election we are discussing, the case against them
-breaks down on this point; for the successful candidate was not even a
-member of the University, and surely an indifferent degree is better
-than no degree at all. As to the second prejudice against Palmer, we
-simply dismiss it with contempt. We never heard of a Cambridge elector
-who was influenced by hearsay evidence; and, as a matter of fact, Palmer
-was supported by the Master of his own College, who must have known more
-about his habits than all the other Heads put together. If we consider
-the result arrived at by the light of subsequent events, it is natural
-for those who, like his biographer and ourselves, are strongly
-prepossessed in Palmer’s favour, to regret that he was unsuccessful; and
-we are delighted to find Mr Besant asserting, as he does, that
-University distinctions ought to be given, _ceteris paribus_, to
-University men. But if we try to put ourselves in the position of the
-electors, and survey the two candidates as they surveyed them, there is,
-we feel bound to assert, ample justification for the selection they
-made, having regard to the particular post to be filled at that time.
-They had, in fact, to choose between a tried and an untried man. Dr
-Wright was known to have received a regular education in Oriental
-languages in Germany and in Holland, and to be thought highly of by the
-most competent judges in those countries. He had given proof of sound
-scholarship in various publications, and it was considered by several
-scholars in the University that the studies to which he had given
-special attention, viz.—Syriac, Samaritan, Ethiopic, and the Semitic
-group of languages generally—would be specially useful there. He had
-held a Professorship in Trinity College, Dublin, where he had been
-distinguished as a teacher; he was personally known in Cambridge, not
-merely to Dr Phillips, but to the University at large, at whose hands he
-had received the honorary degree of Doctor of Law in 1868. Moreover, he
-was already an honorary Fellow of Queens’ College, and therefore it was
-not strange that a Society which had already gone so far should signify
-to him their intention of proceeding a step further, in the event of his
-consenting to come and reside at Cambridge as a Professor. He was
-accordingly elected Fellow January 5, 1871[97].
-
-Palmer, on the other hand, had submitted to the electors testimonials
-which testified to his wonderful knowledge of Hindustani, Persian, and
-Arabic as spoken languages; he was known to have given special attention
-to the languages of India; he had catalogued the Oriental MSS. in the
-Libraries of the University, of King’s College, and of Trinity College;
-he had translated Moore’s _Paradise and the Peri_ into Arabic verse; and
-he had published a short treatise on the Sufistic and Unitarian
-Theosophy of the Persians. But here the direct evidence of his
-acquirements ceased; and it is at this point that the date of the
-election becomes material. None of his more important works had as yet
-appeared. The official Report of his journeys in the East was not
-published until January 1871; and the preface to his _Desert of the
-Exodus_ is
-
-dated June of the same year[98]. The Heads, therefore, could not know
-that he ‘had relied on his knowledge of the language for safety in a
-dangerous expedition.’
-
-After a disappointment so severe as the loss of the much-coveted
-professorship, it might have been expected that Palmer’s connexion with
-Cambridge would soon have been severed; that he would have sought and
-obtained a lucrative appointment elsewhere. On the contrary, it was
-written in the book of fate, as one of his favourite Orientals would
-have said, that he should not only remain at Cambridge, but remain there
-in connexion with Oriental studies. Cambridge has two chairs of Arabic:
-a Professorship founded by Sir Thomas Adams in 1632; and a Readership,
-founded by King George I. in 1724, at the instance of Lancelot
-Blackburn, Bishop of Exeter and Lord Almoner. It is endowed with an
-income of £50 a year, paid out of the Almonry bounty, but reduced by
-fees to £40. 10_s._ If, however, the income be small the duties are
-none—or, rather, none are attached to the office as such; and moreover
-the Reader is technically regarded as a Professor, and has a Professor’s
-privilege of retaining a College Fellowship for life as a married man.
-The previous holder of the office, the Rev. Theodore Preston, Fellow of
-Trinity College, had regarded it as a sinecure, and moreover had
-generally been non-resident. On his resignation in 1871, the Lord
-Almoner for the time being, the Hon. and Rev. Gerald Wellesley, Dean of
-Windsor, gave the office to Palmer. At last, therefore, he seemed to
-have obtained his reward—congenial occupation in a place which had been
-the first to find him out and help him, where he had many devoted
-friends, and where he was now enabled to establish himself as a married
-man; for on the very day after he received his appointment he married a
-lady to whom he had been engaged for some years.
-
-Palmer took a very different view of his duties as Reader in Arabic from
-what his predecessor had done. He delivered his inaugural lecture on
-Monday, 4 March, 1872, choosing for his subject ‘The National Religion
-of Persia; an Outline Sketch of Comparative Theology[99],’ and during
-the Easter and Michaelmas terms he lectured on six days in each week,
-devoting three days to Persian and three to Arabic. To these subjects
-there was subsequently added a course in Hindustani. In consequence of
-this large amount of voluntary work the Council of the Senate
-recommended (February 24, 1873)[100] ‘that a sum of £250 per annum
-should be paid to the present Lord Almoner’s Reader out of the
-University Chest,’ and that he should be authorized to receive a fee of
-£2. 2_s._ in each term for each course of lectures from every student
-attending them, provided he declared in writing his readiness to
-acquiesce in certain regulations, of which the first was: ‘That it shall
-be his ordinary duty to reside within the precincts of the University
-for eighteen weeks during term time in every academical year, and to
-give three courses of lectures—viz. one course in Arabic, one in
-Persian, and one in Hindustani.’ The Senate accepted this proposal March
-6, 1873, and Palmer signed the new regulations five days afterwards. In
-recording this transaction Mr Besant remarks: ‘It must be acknowledged
-that the University got full value for their money.’ We reply to this
-sneer that the University asked no more from Palmer than it asked from
-every other professor whose salary was augmented. The clause imposing
-residence had been accepted in the same form by all the other
-professors; and one course of lectures in each term is surely the very
-least that a teaching body can require from one of its staff. It must
-also be remembered that the Lord Almoner’s Readership is an office to
-which the University does not appoint, which therefore it cannot
-control, and which, until Palmer held it, had been practically useless.
-He, however, being disposed to reside, and to discharge his self-imposed
-duties vigorously, the University came forward with an offer which was
-meant to be generous, in recognition of his personal merits; for the
-whole arrangement, it will be observed, had reference to the _present_
-Reader only—that is, to himself. The precise amount offered, £250, was
-evidently selected with the intention of placing the Lord Almoner’s
-Reader on the same footing as a professor, for the salaries of nearly
-all the professorial body had been already raised to £300; and, if a
-comparison between the Reader and the Professor of Arabic be inevitable,
-it may be remarked that while the University offered £250 to the former,
-they offered only £230 to the latter. The intention, we repeat, was
-generous, and we protest with some indignation against Palmer’s bitter
-words: ‘The very worst use a man can make of himself is to stay up at
-Cambridge and work for the University.’ The truth is that University
-life did not suit him, and though he tried hard for ten years to believe
-that it did, the attempt ended in failure, and it is much to be
-regretted that it was ever made.
-
-We must pass rapidly over the next ten years. They were years of
-incessant labour, labour which must have been often most painful and
-irksome, for it had to be undertaken in the midst of heavy sorrow,
-ill-health, pecuniary difficulties—everything, in short, which damps a
-man’s energies and takes the heart out of his work. His married life
-began brightly enough: he had an assured income of nearly £600 a year,
-which he could increase at pleasure, and we know did increase, by
-literary work. In 1871 he entered at the Middle Temple, probably with
-the intention of practising at the Indian bar at some future time; but
-after he had given up all thoughts of India he joined the Eastern
-Circuit, and attended assizes and quarter sessions regularly. He had a
-fair amount of business, and is said to have made a good advocate,
-though he could have had little knowledge of law, and, in fact, regarded
-his legal work as a relaxation from severer studies. These he pursued
-without intermission. Besides his lectures, which he gave regularly, he
-produced work after work with amazing rapidity. In 1871, in addition to
-the _Desert of the Exodus_, he published a _History of Jerusalem_,
-written in collaboration with his friend Mr Besant; in 1873 he undertook
-to write an Arabic Grammar, which appeared in the following year; in
-1874 he wrote _Outlines of Scripture Geography_, and a _History of the
-Jewish Nation_, for the Christian Knowledge Society, and began a Persian
-Dictionary, of which the first part was published in 1876; in 1876—77 he
-edited the works of the Arabian poet Beda ed din Zoheir for the Syndics
-of the University Press, the text appearing in 1876 and the translation
-in 1877; and during the next few years he was at work upon a _Life of
-Haroun Alraschid_, a new translation of the Koran, and a revision of
-Henry Martyn’s translation of the New Testament into Persian. Besides
-this vast amount of solid work it would be easy to show that he produced
-nearly as great a quantity of that other literature which, when we
-consider the labour which it entails upon him who writes it, it is
-surely a misnomer to call ‘light.’ Professor Nicholls, of Oxford, gives
-an account, in a most interesting appendix to Mr Besant’s book, of the
-quantity of Persian, Arabic, and Hindustani which Palmer was continually
-writing. In the last-mentioned language there were a poem on the
-marriage of the Duke of Edinburgh, and a wonderful account of the visit
-of the Shah to England, which occupied thirty-six columns of the
-_Akhbar_, a space equivalent to about twenty columns of the _Times_;
-and, although Palmer admitted that ‘the writing of such things is a
-laborious and artificial task to me, as I am not as familiar with the
-Urdú of everyday life as I am with the Persian,’ he still went on
-writing them. How familiar he was with Arabic and Persian is shown by
-the curious fact that whenever he was under strong emotion he would
-plunge abruptly into one or other language, sometimes writing a whole
-letter in it, sometimes only a sentence or two, or a few verses. Besides
-these Oriental ‘trifles’ as he would probably have called them, we find
-continual contributions to English periodical literature, and three
-volumes of poetry: _English Gipsy Songs in Romany_ (1875); the _Song of
-the Reed, and other Pieces_ (1876); and _Lyrical Songs_, &c. by John
-Ludwig Runeberg (1878). In the first of these he collaborated with Mr
-Leland, whom we mentioned before, and Miss Janet Tuckey; and in the last
-with Mr Magnusson; but the second is entirely his own. We regret that we
-cannot find room for a specimen of these graceful verses. Those who have
-leisure to look into the _Song of the Reed_, or the translation of
-Zoheir, will find themselves introduced to a new literature by one who,
-if not a poet, was unquestionably, as Mr Besant says, a versifier of a
-high order, and in the very front rank of translators.
-
-We have said that most of this work—were it grave or gay, it mattered
-not—had to be got through in the midst of serious anxieties. Mrs
-Palmer’s health began to fail before they had been married long, and it
-soon became evident that her lungs were affected. It was necessary that
-she should leave Cambridge. In the spring of 1876, Wales was tried, with
-results which were so reassuring that it was decided to complete her
-cure (as it was then believed) by a winter in Paris. There, however, she
-got worse instead of better, and early in the following year her husband
-began to realize that she would die. In the autumn of 1877, they
-returned home to try Wales once more, and then, as a last resource,
-Bournemouth. There, in the summer of 1878, Mrs Palmer died. The expenses
-of so long an illness, added to journeyings to and fro, and the cost of
-keeping up two establishments (for he was obliged to continue his
-Cambridge lectures all the while), crippled his resources, and produced
-embarrassments from which he never became wholly free. His own health,
-too, never strong, gave way under his fatigues and worries, and he
-became only not quite so ill as his wife. Yet he never complained; never
-said a word about his troubles to any of his friends. Those who were
-most with him at this dreary time have recorded that he always met them
-with a smiling face, and went about his work as calmly as if he had been
-well and happy.
-
-It was fortunate for him that he had a singularly joyous nature, which
-could never be saddened for long together. He was always surrounded by a
-pleasant atmosphere of cheerfulness, which not only did good to those
-about him, but had a salutary effect upon himself, enabling him to
-maintain his elasticity and vigour, even in the face of sorrow and
-ill-health. Most things have their comic side, if only men are not blind
-to it; and he could see the humorous aspect of the most melancholy or
-the most perilous situation. To the last he was full of life and fun.
-Though he no longer, as of old, wrote burlesques, he could draw clever
-caricatures of his friends and acquaintances; tell stories which
-convulsed his hearers with laughter; and sing comic songs—especially a
-certain Arab ditty, in which he turned himself into an Arab minstrel
-with really wonderful power of impersonation. Again, whatever he came
-across—especially in great cities like London or Paris—was full of
-interest for him. Without being a philanthropist, or, indeed, having a
-spark of humanitarian sentiment in his nature, he took a pleasure in
-investigating his fellow-creatures, talking to men and finding out all
-about them. He was endowed in the highest degree with the gift of
-sympathy; and this, while it made him the most loveable of friends, made
-him also a singularly acute investigator, and gave him a power of
-influencing others which was truly wonderful. He possessed, too, great
-manual dexterity, and took a pleasure in finding out how all those
-things were done which depend for their success upon sleight of hand;
-and in all such he became a proficient himself. He was a first-rate
-conjuror, and besides doing the tricks, ordinary and extraordinary, of
-professed conjurors, he took much satisfaction in reproducing the most
-startling phenomena of spiritualism, which he regarded as a debased form
-of conjuring—‘a swindle of the most palpable and clumsy kind.’ It was in
-such pursuits that he found the recreation which other men find in hard
-exercise. Of this he took very little. Even in his younger days he did
-not care for games, and his one attempt at cricket was nearly fatal to
-the wicket-keeper, whom he managed to hit on the head with his bat; but
-he was an expert gymnast, and loved boating and fishing in the Fens, to
-which he used to retire from time to time with one of his friends. It
-may be doubted whether he cared about the sport and the fresh air so
-much as the absolute repose; the old-world character of that curious
-corner of England; the total absence of convention. There he could dress
-as he pleased; and he took full advantage of his liberty. It is recorded
-that once, as he was coming home to College, he happened to meet the
-Master, Dr Bateson, who, casting his eye over the water-boots and
-flannels, stained with mud and weather, in which the learned Professor
-had encased himself, remarked, ‘This is Eastern costume, I suppose.’
-‘No, Master; Eastern Counties costume,’ was the reply.
-
-It is pleasant to be able to record that the happiness which had been so
-long delayed came at last. In about a year after his wife’s death he
-married again. His choice was fortunate, and for the last three years of
-his life he was able to enjoy that greatest of all luxuries—a thoroughly
-happy home. He stood sorely in need of such consolation, for in other
-directions he had plenty to distress and worry him. His pecuniary
-difficulties pressed upon him as hardly as ever, and his relations with
-the University began to be somewhat strained. He had had the
-mortification of seeing Professor Wright’s salary raised to £500 a year,
-with no hint of any corresponding proposition being made for him[101];
-and when the Commissioners promulgated their scheme his office was not
-included in it, a suggestion for raising his salary which had been made
-by the Board of Oriental Studies being wholly disregarded by them.
-Moreover, the undertaking to deliver three courses of lectures in each
-year turned out to be infinitely more laborious than he had expected.
-Candidates for the Indian Civil Service increased in number; and the
-pupils of any given term were pretty sure to want to go on with their
-work in the next, when he was teaching a different language, so that he
-was compelled in practice to give, not one, but two, or even three,
-courses in each term. Moreover, the elementary nature of much of this
-instruction—the ‘teaching boys the Persian alphabet,’ as he called
-it—became every year more and more irksome. We are not surprised that he
-got disgusted with the University; but at the same time we cannot agree
-with Mr Besant that the University was wholly to blame. They were in no
-wise responsible for the conduct of the Commissioners; in fact, all that
-could be done to make them take a different view was done. Had Palmer
-resided continuously in the University, and pressed his own claims,
-things might have been very different. But this he had been unable to
-do, for reasons which, as we have seen, were beyond his own control, and
-for which, therefore, he is not to be blamed; but the fact cannot be
-denied that for some years he had been practically non-resident. There
-was also another cause which has to be taken into consideration—his own
-disposition. The life of a University is a peculiar life, which does not
-suit everybody, and certainly did not suit him. He felt ‘cabined,
-cribbed, confined,’ in it; and he said afterwards that ‘he never really
-began to live till he was emancipated from academic trammels.’ Our
-wonder is, not that he left Cambridge when he did, but that he remained
-so long connected with it. The final break took place in 1881, when he
-voluntarily rescinded the engagement which he had made to lecture, and,
-retaining the Readership and the Fellowship at S. John’s College—neither
-of which he could afford to resign—took up his abode in London, where he
-obtained a place on the staff of the _Standard_ newspaper. He readily
-adapted himself to this new life, and soon became a successful writer.
-One of the assistant-editors at that time, Mr Robert Wilson, has
-recorded that
-
-‘Palmer considered his career as a journalist in London, short as it
-was, one of the pleasantest episodes of his life. Those who were
-associated with him in that career professionally can say that they
-reckoned his companionship one of the brightest and happiest of their
-experiences. He was
-
- The dearest friend to me, the kindest man,
- The best-conditioned and unwearied spirit
- In doing courtesies;
-
-and what he was to me he was to all who worked with him.’
-
-It will be well, before we relate the heroic achievement with which the
-career of our friend closed, to try to estimate his position as an
-Oriental scholar, for as such he will be remembered, especially in
-Cambridge. For this purpose Mr Besant has, most judiciously, supplied
-ample materials to those competent to use them, by printing an essay by
-Professor Nicholls, of Oxford, which we have already quoted, and a paper
-by Mr Stanley Lane Poole. The former points out Palmer’s extraordinary
-facility in the use of Persian and Arabic, and gives a minute, and in
-the main highly laudatory, criticism of some of his performances, which
-ends with these words: ‘In him England loses her _greatest_ Oriental
-linguist, and _readiest_ Oriental scholar.’ From the latter we will
-quote a few sentences:
-
-‘Palmer was a scholar of the kind that is born, not made. No amount of
-mere teaching could develop that wonderful instinct for language which
-he possessed. He stood in strongly-marked contrast to the other scholars
-of his time. Most of them were brought up on grammars and dictionaries;
-he learned Arabic by the ear and mouth. Others were careful about their
-conjugations and syntax; Palmer dashed to the root of all grammatical
-rules, and spoke or wrote so and so because it would not be spoken or
-written any other way. To him strange idioms that a book-student could
-not understand were perfectly clear; he had used them himself in the
-Desert again and again[102].’
-
-He then proceeds to examine Palmer’s principal Arabic works, and decides
-that while the edition of Zoheir is the most finished of them, and the
-translation represents the original with remarkable skill, the version
-of the Koran ‘is a very striking performance.’
-
-‘It has the grave fault of immaturity; it was written, or rather
-dictated, at great speed, and is consequently defaced by some oversights
-which Palmer was incapable of committing if he had taken more time over
-the work. But, in spite of all the objections that may be urged against
-it, his translation has the true Desert ring in it; we may quarrel with
-certain renderings, puzzle over occasional obscurities, regret certain
-signs of haste or carelessness; but we shall be forced to admit that the
-translator has carried us among the Bedawí tents, and breathed into us
-the strong air of the Desert, till we fancy we can hear the rich voice
-of the Blessed Prophet himself as he spoke to the pilgrims on
-Akabah[103].’
-
-Lastly, Mr Poole points out the peculiar excellence of Palmer’s Arabic
-Grammar, which is arranged on the Arab system, in bold defiance of the
-usual custom of treating Arabic in the same way that one treats Latin.
-To these favourable criticisms of works beyond our powers of
-appreciation we should like to add a word of praise of our own for the
-historical introduction to the Koran, in which the career of Mahomet is
-sketched in a few bold, vigorous lines, and the scope and object of the
-work are analysed and explained. We regret that Palmer was not able to
-devote more time to history; the above _Introduction_, and the _Life of
-Haroun Alraschid_, seem to us to show that he would have excelled in
-that style of composition. He could read the native authorities with
-facility, and he knew how to put his materials to a good use. But alas!
-all these peaceful studies were to be closed for ever by an enterprise
-as masterly in its execution as it was terrible in its conclusion.
-
-The suppression of Arabi’s revolt in Egypt created the greatest
-enthusiasm in this country. The British Public dearly loves a war, and
-every event in which our troops were concerned was eagerly read and
-proudly commented on by enthusiastic sympathizers. But there were
-probably not many who so much as read the scanty paragraphs which noted,
-first, the anxiety respecting the fate of some Englishmen who had gone
-into the Desert on a certain day in August 1882; and, subsequently, the
-certainty of their murder. Palmer’s wonderful achievement has been told
-for the first time by Mr Besant with a fulness of detail, a vividness of
-descriptive power, and, we may add, a bitterness of grief, that only
-those who read it carefully more than once can appreciate as such a
-piece of work deserves to be appreciated. We shall try to set before our
-readers the principal circumstances of those eventful days, treading in
-his steps, and often using his very words.
-
-Early in the month of June 1882, when it became evident that the
-Egyptian revolt must be put down by force, two great causes of anxiety
-arose: (1) the safety of the Suez Canal; (2) the amount of support which
-Arabi was likely to receive, and the allies on whom he could depend.
-These two questions were of course closely connected with each other;
-and it is now known that as regards the second of them, Arabi hoped to
-obtain the support of the Arabs of the Desert on both sides of the
-Canal, and by their aid to seize, and, if possible, to destroy, the
-Canal itself. These Arabs, it is important to recollect, rise or remain
-quiet at the command of their sheikhs. The sheikhs, therefore, had to be
-won over. This he hoped to accomplish by the assistance of the governors
-of the frontier castles of El Arish on the Mediterranean, Kulat Nakhl,
-Suez, Akabah, and Tor on the west coast of the Sinaitic Peninsula, all
-of whom, at the beginning of the rebellion, were his frantic partisans.
-He had therefore an easy means of access to the Bedouin sheikhs. The
-number of men whom they could put into the field was estimated by Palmer
-himself at about 50,000; but this was not all. It was feared that if a
-single tribe joined Arabi, it would be followed by all the others, and
-that the Bedouin of the Syrian and Sinaitic deserts might presently be
-joined by their kinsfolk of Arabia and the Great Desert, a countless
-multitude.
-
-It was on the evening of Saturday, June 24, that Captain Gill, whose
-unhappy fate it was to perish with Palmer on the expedition which they
-planned together, was sent to him from the Admiralty, to ask him for
-information respecting ‘the character, the power, the possible movement,
-of the Sinai Arabs.’ The interview was short, but long enough for Palmer
-to sketch the position of affairs, and to convince Gill that a man whom
-the Government could thoroughly trust must be sent out to arrange
-matters personally with the sheikhs. When Gill had left, Palmer said to
-his wife, ‘They must have a man to go to the Desert for them; and they
-will ask me, because there is nobody else who can go.’ On Monday Captain
-Gill came again, and the whole question was carefully talked over.
-
-‘It was agreed that no time ought to be lost in detaching the tribes
-from Arabi, in preventing any injury to the Canal, and in quieting
-fanaticism, which might assume such proportions as to set the whole East
-aflame. It now became perfectly evident to Gill that Palmer was the only
-man who knew the sheikhs, and could be asked to go, and could do the
-work; it was also perfectly evident to Palmer that he would be urged to
-undertake this difficult and delicate mission; he had, in fact, already
-laid himself open by speaking of the ease with which these people may be
-managed by one who can talk with them. When Gill left him on that Monday
-morning he was already more than half-persuaded to accept the mission.’
-
-It is evident that after this interview Captain Gill returned to the
-Admiralty, and gave a glowing account to his superiors of the man whom
-he had discovered, and the information he had obtained; for in the
-course of the same afternoon Palmer received an invitation to breakfast
-with Lord Northbrook on the following morning, Tuesday, June 27, which
-he accepted. The interest which he had already excited is proved by the
-fact
-
-‘that all the notes and reports which Gill had made during the
-interviews on the subject were already set up in type and laid on the
-table. The whole conversation at breakfast was concerning the tribes,
-and how they might be prevented from giving trouble. Palmer stated again
-his belief that the sheikhs might, if some one could be got to go, be
-persuaded to sit down and do nothing, if not to take an active part
-against the rebels.’
-
-At this point it is material to notice that the Government did not send
-for Palmer and ask him to undertake a certain mission to the East;
-neither did Palmer communicate with the Government and volunteer, in the
-ordinary sense of that word; but that in the course of three successive
-interviews it became evident to the Government that the mission must be
-undertaken by somebody; and to Palmer, that if he did not go himself the
-chance would be lost. No one equally fit for such a mission was
-available at that moment; no one knew the sheikhs personally as he did,
-and could travel among them as an old friend, for it must always be
-remembered that the country he was about to visit was the same which he
-had traversed with Drake in 1869-70. He did not exactly wish to go; he
-was too fondly devoted to his wife and children to find any pleasure in
-courting dangers of which he was fully sensible; but he seems to have
-felt that his duty to his country demanded the sacrifice; and perhaps
-the thought may have crossed his mind that, if he ran the risk and came
-out of it safe and successful, his fortune would be made; and therefore,
-when Lord Northbrook inquired, ‘Do you know anyone who would go?’ he
-replied, ‘I will go myself.’
-
-This decision was not arrived at until Thursday, June 29. On the
-following evening he left London, and on Tuesday, July 4, he was on
-board the _Tanjore_, between Brindisi and Alexandria, writing to his
-wife:
-
-‘I am sure this trip will do me an immense deal of good, for I wanted a
-change of air and complete rest from writing, and now I have got both.
-Of course, the position is not without its anxieties, but I have no
-fear.... It is such a chance!’
-
-Such a chance! It was worth while running the risk, for, though there
-was danger in it, there was fame and fortune beyond the danger: there
-would be no more debt and difficulty; no more days and nights of
-uncongenial toil. No wonder as he sat under the awning, ‘like a tent,’
-as he said, and did nothing, that these thoughts came into his mind, and
-found their way on to his paper—it was a chance indeed!
-
-It seems certain that the plan of the enterprise had been laid down
-before Palmer left London, though no formal instructions were given to
-him in writing. It was understood between him and the Government that he
-was to travel about in the Desert and Peninsula of Sinai, and ascertain
-the disposition of the tribes; secondly, that he was to attempt the
-detachment of the said tribes from the Egyptian cause, in order to
-effect which he was to make terms with the sheikhs; thirdly, that he was
-to take whatever steps he thought best for an effective guard of the
-banks of the Canal, and for the repair of the Canal, in case Arabi
-should attempt its destruction. Lastly, he was instructed, probably at
-Alexandria, to ascertain what number of camels could be purchased, and
-at what price.
-
-Arrived at Alexandria, Palmer put himself under the orders of Admiral
-Lord Alcester, then Sir Beauchamp Seymour, who, after a few words of
-welcome and encouragement, ordered him to go at once to the Desert and
-begin work. It was decided that he should proceed by steamer to Jaffa,
-thence to Gaza, and across the Desert to Tor in the Sinaitic Peninsula,
-where he could be taken up and join the fleet at Suez. On the morning of
-July 9 he reached Jaffa, where he bought his camp-equipage and stores,
-hired a servant, and opened communications with certain Arabs of the
-Desert, whom he ordered to meet him at Gaza. We know the details of this
-time from a long letter which he wrote to his wife just before he left
-Jaffa.
-
-‘It is bad enough here where I find plenty of people to talk to and be
-civil to me; but how will it be when I am in the Desert with no one but
-wild Arabs to talk to? Not that I am a bit afraid of them, for they were
-always good friends to me; but it will be lonely, and you may be sure
-that when I sit on my camel in the burning sun, or lie down in my little
-tent at night, my thoughts will always be with you and our dear happy
-home. I am quite sure of succeeding in my mission, and don’t feel
-anything to fear except the being away for a few months.... I feel very
-homesick, but quite confident.’
-
-He got to Gaza on July 13, and on July 15 plunged into the Desert. Here
-Professor Palmer disappears, and we have instead a Syrian officer,
-dressed in Mohammedan costume, known as the Sheikh Abdullah, the name
-which had been given to him by the Arabs on his former journey. The
-expedition occupied just a fortnight, for Suez was reached on August 1.
-He was fortunately able to keep a brief journal, which he sent home by
-post from Suez. This invaluable document, with two or three letters
-written to friends, and a formal Report addressed from Suez to the
-Government, but not yet printed, enables us to ascertain what he did,
-and what sufferings and dangers he endured in the accomplishment of it.
-It was the middle of the summer, and apparently an unusually hot and
-stormy summer, for we read of even the natives being overcome by the
-heat, wind, and dust. His business admitted of no delay; whether well or
-ill, he must ride forward, in the full glare of the sun, with the
-thermometer ‘at 110 in the shade in the mountains, and in the plains
-about twice that’; and yet never show, by the slightest hint, that he
-was either overcome by the physical exertion, or alarmed at the imminent
-peril which he ran at every moment. So well was the bodily frame
-sustained by the brave heart within, that he could write cheerfully, nay
-humorously, even before he had reached a place of safety. Here is an
-extract from one of his letters, dated ‘Magharah, in the Desert of the
-Tih, July 22’:
-
-‘This country is not exactly what you would call, in a truthful spirit,
-safe just now. I have had to dodge troops and Arabs, and Lord knows
-what, and am thankful and somewhat surprised at the possession of a
-whole skin....
-
-‘I wish to remark that about the fifth consecutive hour (noon) of the
-fifth consecutive day’s camel-ride, with a strong hot wind blowing the
-sand in your face, camel-riding loses, as an amusement, the freshness of
-one’s childhood’s experience at the Zoo....
-
-‘I am now two days from Suez, and before the third sun sets shall be
-either within reach of beer and baths, or be able to dispense altogether
-with those luxuries for the future. The very equally balanced
-probabilities lend a certain zest to the journey....
-
-‘My man stole some melons from a patch near some water (if I may use the
-expression), and I feel better for the crime. Still I am dried up, and
-burnt, and thirsty, and bored.’
-
-Let us now extract from the Journal a few passages bearing directly on
-the main object of the journey. All of these, we ought to state are
-fully corroborated by the subsequently written Report, and by incidental
-allusions in the telegrams embodied in the Blue Book.
-
-‘_July 15._—My sheikh has just come, and I have had a long and very
-satisfactory talk with him. I think the authorities will be very pleased
-with the report I shall have for them.
-
-‘_July 16._—I now know where to find and how to get at every sheikh in
-the Desert, and I have already got the Teyáhah, the most warlike and
-strongest of them all, ready to do anything for me. When I come back I
-shall be able to raise 40,000 men! It was very lucky that I knew such an
-influential tribe.
-
-‘_July 18._—I have been quite well to-day, but as usual came in very
-fatigued. I had an exciting time, having met the great sheikh of the
-Arabs hereabouts[104]. I, however, quite got him to accept my views....
-It was really a most picturesque sight to see the sheikh ride into my
-camp at full gallop with a host of retainers, all riding splendid camels
-as hard as they could run; when they pulled up, all the camels dropped
-on their knees, and the men jumped off and came up to me. I had heard of
-their coming, so was prepared, and not at all startled, as they meant me
-to be. I merely rose quietly, and asked the sheikh into my tent.
-
-‘_July 19._—I have got hold of some of the very men whom Arabi Pasha has
-been trying to get over to his side, and when they are wanted I can have
-every Bedawin at my call from Suez to Gaza.
-
-‘_July 20._—The sheikh, who is the brother of Suleiman, is one who
-engages all the Arabs not to attack the caravan of pilgrims which goes
-to Mecca every year from Egypt, so that he is the _very man_ I wanted.
-He has sworn by the most solemn Arab oath that, if I want him, he will
-guarantee the safety of the Canal even against Arabi Pasha.... In fact,
-I have already done the most difficult part of my task, and as soon as I
-get precise instructions the thing is done, and a thing which Arabi
-Pasha failed to do, and on which the safety of the road to India
-depends.... Was I not lucky just to get hold of the right people?... I
-have seen a great many other sheikhs, and I know that they will follow
-my man, Sheikh Muslih.
-
-‘_July 21._—I am anxious to get to Suez, because I have done all I
-wanted by way of preliminaries, and as soon as I get precise
-instructions, I can settle with the Arabs in a fortnight or three weeks,
-and get the whole thing over. As it is, the Bedouins keep quite quiet,
-and will not join Arabi, but will wait for me to give them the word what
-to do. They look upon Abdullah Effendi—that is what they call me—as a
-very grand personage indeed!
-
-‘_July 22._—I have got the man who supplies the pilgrims with camels on
-my side too, and as I have promised my big Sheikh 500_l._ for himself,
-he will do anything for me.... It may seem a vain thing to say, but I
-did not know that I could be so cool and calm in the midst of danger as
-I am, and I must be strong, as I have endured _tremendous fatigue_, and
-am in first-rate health. I am very glad that the war has actually come
-to a crisis, because now I shall really have to do my big task, and _I
-am certain of success_.
-
-‘_July 26._—I have had a great ceremony to-day, eating bread and salt
-with the Sheikhs, in token of protecting each other to the death[105].’
-
-This Journal, it will be remarked, speaks of the expedition as
-preliminary to something else. What this was is explained by the Report
-above alluded to, and by the telegrams which Sir William Hewett and Sir
-Beauchamp Seymour sent to the Admiralty after Palmer’s arrival at Suez.
-On August 4 Sir William Hewett telegraphs:
-
-‘Professor Palmer confident that in four days he will have 500 camels,
-and within ten or fifteen days, 5,000 more.
-
-‘He waits return of messenger sent for 500, so he cannot start for
-Desert before Monday.’
-
-On August 6 Sir Beauchamp Seymour telegraphed to the Admiralty:
-
-‘Palmer, in letter of August 1 at Suez, writes that, if precisely
-instructed as to services required of Bedouin, and furnished with funds,
-he believes he could buy the allegiance of 50,000 at a cost of from
-20,000_l._ to 30,000_l._’
-
-On the receipt of this telegram the Admiralty telegraphed to Sir William
-Hewett:
-
-‘Instruct Palmer to keep Bedouins available for patrol or transport on
-Canal. A reasonable amount may be spent, but larger engagements are not
-to be entered into until General arrives and has been consulted.’
-
-The Admiralty must have been satisfied with what Palmer had accomplished
-in the Desert, or they would not have directed him to proceed with his
-‘big task’; and it came out afterwards that in consequence of promises
-made to him one at least of the tribes refused to join Arabi. Meanwhile
-he was appointed Interpreter-in-Chief to her Majesty’s Forces in Egypt,
-and placed on the Admiral’s staff. It is important to note this, as it
-gave him the command of money, brought him into prominence, and paved
-the way for the disaster which was so soon to overtake him. Captain Gill
-joined him at Suez on the morning of the same day, August 6. He brought
-£20,000 with him, which he considered to be paid to Palmer, as appears
-from his Journal, and Palmer took the same view. Sir William Hewett,
-however, after the receipt of Lord Northbrook’s telegram, determined to
-limit the preliminary expenditure to £3,000, which was paid to Palmer on
-August 8. Soon after Gill’s arrival at Suez, he and Palmer had a long
-discussion, in which they agreed to combine their respective duties.
-Gill had been ordered to cut the telegraph wires from Kartarah to
-Constantinople, and so destroy Arabi’s communications with Turkey, and
-Palmer had made arrangements for a meeting of the sheikhs at Nakhl. We
-have seen that the Journal mentions presents to the sheikhs (as much as
-£500 had been promised to Misleh), and these would have to be conveyed
-to them before they were likely to arm their followers. The rest of the
-£20,000 was intended to be spent in fair payment for services rendered
-when the General should give the order to engage the Bedouin; and the
-word ‘buy,’ in Sir Beauchamp Seymour’s telegram of August 6, need not be
-interpreted to mean ‘bribe.’ The purchase of camels was another object
-which Palmer had before him in going to the Desert; but this, we take
-it, was quite subsidiary to the former, though perhaps, as a matter of
-policy, it was occasionally made prominent, in order to disarm
-suspicion. That much more important business than buying camels was
-intended is also proved by a letter from Palmer to Admiral Hewett, in
-which he said that ‘it would be most desirable that an officer of her
-Majesty’s Navy should accompany me on my journey to the Desert, as a
-guarantee that I am acting on the part of her Majesty’s
-Government[106].’
-
-It must now be mentioned that on Palmer’s first journey, when staying in
-the camp of Sheikh Misleh, he had been introduced by him to a man of
-about seventy years of age, of commanding stature, and haughty,
-peremptory manner, named Meter ibn Sofieh. This man Misleh had
-represented to be the Sheikh of the Lehewat tribe, occupying all the
-country east of Suez. This was not true. Meter was not a sheikh of the
-Lehewats, and the Lehewats as a tribe do not live east of Suez, but on
-the south border of Palestine. Meter was a Lehewat, but he was simply
-the head of a family who had left the tribe, and taken up their abode
-near Suez, where they had collected together two or three other
-families, who called themselves the Sofieh Tribe, but had no power or
-influence. Palmer, however, believed Meter’s story about himself, called
-him his friend, and trusted him implicitly. It was Meter whom he sent
-into Suez from Misleh’s camp to fetch his letters; Meter who conducted
-him thence to the place called ‘The Wells of Moses’ between July 27 and
-July 31; Meter with whom he corresponded respecting his second journey;
-and there is little doubt that it was Meter who betrayed him.
-
-In the Report which Palmer addressed to the Admiralty on August 1 he
-stated that when he started on his second journey a company of 300 or
-400 Bedouin should go with him, ‘for the sake of effect.’ Most
-unfortunately, this precaution was not taken. On August 7, Meter,
-accompanied by his nephew, Salameh ibn Ayed, came to Moses’ Wells, and
-asked Mr Zahr, one of the native Christians who reside there, to read a
-letter which he had received from Palmer. The letter, signed ‘Abdullah,’
-contained a request that Meter would bring down one hundred camels and
-twenty armed men. Meter then crossed over to Suez by water, Mr Zahr’s
-son going with him, saw Palmer, who did not, so far as we know, express
-surprise that he came without men or camels, and in the evening was
-presented to Consul West and Admiral Hewett, from whom he received a
-naval officer’s sword, as a mark of confidence and respect. This sword
-Meter subsequently gave secretly to Mr Zahr’s son to take care of for
-him, saying that he was going to the Desert with some English gentlemen,
-and was afraid that the Bedouin might kill him if they saw him with a
-sword, as they were not quiet at that time. After the murder, Mr Zahr’s
-son brought the sword to the English Consul, and told the above story.
-
-The following day was spent in making preparations for the journey.
-During the afternoon, Palmer received a package containing three bags,
-each containing £1,000 in English sovereigns. These bags were taken
-intact into the Desert. The party, consisting of Professor Palmer,
-Captain Gill, Lieutenant Charrington, of the _Euryalus_ (who had been
-selected by Palmer out of seven officers who volunteered to go with
-him), Gill’s dragoman, a native Christian, and the servant whom Palmer
-had engaged at Jaffa, a Jew, named Bokhor, crossed over to Moses’ Wells
-in a boat after sunset, and passed the night in a tent supplied by Mr
-Zahr. Next morning they started soon after sunrise, and, after the usual
-midday halt, pitched their camp for the night in Wady Kahalin, a shallow
-watercourse, about half-a-mile wide, and distant eighteen miles from
-Moses’ Wells. So far their proceedings can be followed with certainty;
-but after this it becomes a most difficult task to compose an exact
-narrative of what befell them. We have followed the account drawn up by
-Colonel Warren, through whose persevering energy some of the murderers
-were brought to justice, supplementing it, in a few places, by facts
-stated in the Blue Book, generally on the same authority.
-
-On Thursday, August 10, the travellers were unable to start at dawn as
-they had intended, because it was found that two of their camels had
-been stolen during the night, probably with the intention of delaying
-the start, and so giving time to warn the Bedouin appointed to waylay
-them. Several hours elapsed before the camels were found, and they were
-not able to start until 3 p.m. Meter is said to have suggested that the
-baggage should be left to follow slowly (both the stolen camels and
-those which had been sent out to bring them back being tired), and that
-the three Englishmen and the dragoman should ride forward with him,
-taking with them only their most valuable effects, among which was a
-black leather bag containing the £3,000, and Palmers despatch-box
-containing £235 more. At about 5 p.m. they reached the mouth of the Wady
-Sudr. This valley is described as a narrow mountain-gorge, bounded by
-precipices which, on the northern side, are from 1,200 to 1,600 feet in
-height; on the southern side they are much lower, not exceeding 300 or
-400 feet. They turned into the Wady, and rode up it, intending no doubt
-not to halt again until they reached Meter’s camp, at a place called
-Tusset Sudr. Shortly before midnight they were suddenly attacked by a
-party of about twenty-five Bedouin, who fired upon them, disabled one of
-the camels, and took prisoners Palmer, Gill, Charrington, and the
-dragoman. The accounts of the attack are very conflicting, but it
-appears certain that Meter deserted his charge at once, and escaped up
-the Wady to his own camp, which he reached at sunrise; while his nephew,
-Salameh ibn Ayed, who had been riding with Palmer on one of his uncle’s
-camels, rode rapidly off in the opposite direction, down the Wady,
-taking with him the bag containing the £3000, and the despatch-box. It
-has been affirmed that he struck Palmer off the camel; but, as it is
-stated in evidence that the attacked party knelt down behind their
-camels and fired at their assailants, the truth of this rumour may be
-doubted. It is certain, however, that had he not been at least a thief,
-if not a traitor, he would have warned the men in charge of the baggage
-of what had occurred, for it was proved afterwards, by the tracks of his
-camel, that he had passed within a few feet of them; or, if he really
-missed them in the dark, that he would have gone straight on to Moses’
-Wells and given the alarm there, or even to Suez, as it was deposed he
-was desired to do. As it was, he rode straight on to the mouth of the
-Wady, and thence by a circuitous route to Meter’s camp, having hid part
-of the money and the despatch-box in the Desert. What he did with the
-remainder will probably never be known.
-
-Meanwhile the four prisoners were stripped of everything except their
-underclothing, which, being of European make, was useless to Arabs, and
-taken down to a hollow among the rocks about 200 yards from the place of
-attack. Here they were left in charge of two of the robbers. The rest,
-disappointed at finding no money, rode off, some to pursue Salameh, some
-to look for the baggage. They were presently followed by one of the two
-guards, so that for several hours the Englishmen were left with only one
-man to watch them. The drivers were just loading their camels for a
-start, when they were attacked, disarmed, and the baggage taken from
-them. Palmer’s servant was made prisoner, but the camel-drivers were not
-molested, and were even permitted to take their camels away with them.
-The robbers then retraced their steps, and rode up the valley for about
-three miles. There they halted, and laid out the spoil, with the view of
-dividing it; but they could not agree, and finally each kept what he had
-taken. This matter settled, they mounted their camels again, and went to
-look after their prisoners, taking Palmer’s servant with them.
-
-We will now return to Meter ibn Sofieh. On arriving at his own camp he
-collected his four sons and several other Bedouin, and came down to the
-place of attack. This they were able to recognize by the dead or wounded
-camel, which had not then been removed. Finding nobody there, they
-shouted, and were answered by the prisoners in the hollow. Meter and
-another went down to them and found them unguarded, their guard having
-run away on the approach of strangers. Had Meter really come to save
-them—and it is difficult to explain his return from any other motive
-than that of a late repentance—there was not a moment to be lost. Much
-valuable time, however, was wasted in useless expressions of pity and
-exchange of Bedouin courtesies, and they had hardly reached Meter’s
-camels before the hostile party came in sight. It is reported that
-Meter’s men said, ‘Let us protect the Englishmen,’ and raised their
-guns; but that Meter answered, ‘No, we must negotiate the matter,’ and
-allowed his men to be surrounded by a superior force. What happened next
-will never be known with certainty. Meter himself swore that he offered
-£30 for each of the five; others, that he offered thirty camels for the
-party; while there is a general testimony that Palmer offered all they
-possessed if their lives could be spared, adding, ‘Meter has all the
-money.’ The debate did not last long, not more than half an hour, and
-then Meter retired, it being understood that the five[107] prisoners
-were all to be put to death. The manner of the execution of this foul
-design had next to be determined, and it seems to have been regarded as
-a matter requiring much nicety of arrangement. The captors belonged to
-two tribes, the Debour and the Terebin, and it was finally arranged that
-two should be killed by the Debour, and three by the Terebin. The men
-who were to strike the blow were next selected, one for each victim; and
-when this had been done the prisoners were driven before their captors
-for upwards of a mile, over rough ground, to the place of execution. It
-was now near the middle of the day, and the unfortunate men had no means
-of protecting their heads from the August sun. It is to be hoped,
-therefore, that they were nearly unconscious before the spot was
-reached. At that part of the Wady Sudr a ledge or plateau of rock, some
-twenty feet wide, runs for a considerable distance along the steep face
-of the cliffs; and below it the torrent cuts its way through a narrow
-channel, not more than eighteen feet wide, with precipitous sides, about
-fifty feet high. At the spot selected for the murder a mountain stream,
-descending from the heights above, works its way down the cliffs to the
-water below. The bed of this stream was then dry; but it would be a
-cataract in the rainy season, and might be trusted to obliterate all
-traces of the crime. The prisoners were forced down the mountain side
-until the plateau was reached, and then placed in a row facing the
-torrent, the selected murderer standing behind each victim. Some of the
-Bedouin swore that they were all shot at a given signal, and that their
-bodies fell over the cliff; others that Abdullah was shot first, and
-that the remaining four, seeing him fall, sprang forward, some down the
-cliff, some along the edge of the gully. Three were killed, so they
-said, before they reached the bottom; the fourth was despatched in the
-torrent-bed by an Arab who followed him down. There is, however, reason
-for believing that some at least were wounded or killed before they were
-thrown into the abyss; for the rocks above were deeply stained with
-blood. It may be that one or more of them had been wounded in the first
-encounter, or intentionally maimed by their captors; and this may
-explain what seems to us so strange, that they made no effort to escape
-during the long hours they were left unguarded. At the moment of death
-Palmer alone is said to have lifted up his voice, and to have uttered a
-solemn malediction on his murderers. He knew the Arab character well,
-and he may have thought that the last chance of escape was to terrify
-his captors by the thought of what would come to pass if murderous hands
-were laid upon him and his companions.
-
-Justice was not slow to overtake the criminals. In less than two months
-Colonel Warren, to whom the direction of the search-expedition was
-entrusted[108], had discovered who they were, and had found some
-scattered remains of their unfortunate victims in the gulf which they
-hoped would conceal them for ever. In January 1883 he read the solemn
-burial service of the Church at the spot in the presence of the brother
-and sister of Lieutenant Charrington; after which, according to military
-custom, the officers present fired three volleys across the torrent. On
-the hill above they raised a huge cairn, 17 feet in diameter, and 13
-feet in height, surmounted by a cross, which the Bedouin were charged,
-at their peril, to preserve intact. Of the actual murderers three were
-executed, as also were two headmen for having incited them to the crime.
-Others were imprisoned for various terms of years, and the Governor of
-Nakhl, who was proved to have been privy to the murder, and near the
-place at the time, was imprisoned for a year and dismissed the service.
-The end of Meter ibn Sofieh was strangely retributive. He had led the
-party out of their way into an ambuscade[109], probably for the paltry
-gain of £3000, for we have seem that his nephew escaped with the gold,
-and £1000 was afterwards found in the place where he knew it was hid; he
-had betrayed the man with whom he had solemnly eaten bread and salt in
-Misleh’s camp only a month before; he hid himself in the Desert for
-awhile, then he gave himself up, and told as much of the story as he
-probably dared to tell; then he fell ill—his manner had been strange
-ever since the murder, it was said—he was taken to the hospital at Suez,
-and there he died. These, however, were only instruments in the hands of
-others. The influence which Sheikh Abdullah was exercising in the Desert
-was soon known at Cairo, and the Governor of El Arish was sent out to
-bring him in dead or alive; the Bedouin swore that Arabi had promised
-£20 for every Christian head; the murder itself was planned at Cairo, by
-men high in place, for Colonel Warren complains over and over again that
-the Shedides thwarted his proceedings, and let guilty men escape. And
-after the guilt of Egypt comes the guilt of Turkey: Hussein Effendi, a
-Turkish notable at Gaza—a man who might have been of the greatest
-service—was not allowed by the Porte to help in bringing the guilty to
-justice; and there were other indications that further inquiry was not
-desired. The murder in the Wady Sudr is one more count in the long
-indictment against the Turk which the Western Powers will one day be
-compelled to hear; and, after hearing, to pronounce sentence.
-
-The remains discovered by Colonel Warren were reverently gathered
-together and sent home to England, and in April, 1883, they were
-interred in the crypt of S. Paul’s Cathedral. A single tablet, placed
-near the grave, records the names of the three Englishmen and their
-faithful attendants who died for their country in the Wady Sudr, and now
-find a fitting resting-place among those whose deeds have won for them a
-world-wide reputation.
-
- Not once or twice in our rough island-story
- The path of duty was the way to glory.
-
-
-
-
- FRANCIS MAITLAND BALFOUR.
-
-
-On Sunday evening last the news reached Cambridge that Professor Balfour
-had met with a fatal accident in the Alps near Courmayeur[110]. It was
-only in November of last year that we drew attention to the
-extraordinary merits of his _Treatise on Comparative Embryology_, then
-just completed[111]. We felt that a ‘bright particular star’ had risen
-on the scientific horizon; and we expected, from what we knew of the
-great abilities and unremitting energy of the author, that year by year
-his reputation would be increased by fresh discoveries. But
-
- Cut is the branch that might have grown full straight,
- And burned is Apollo’s laurel bough;
-
-the pride which the University took in one of her most popular and
-distinguished members is changed to an outburst of passionate regret;
-and all that his friends can do is to attempt a brief record of a
-singularly brilliant career, a tribute of affection to be laid upon his
-grave.
-
-Mr Balfour was a younger son of the late Mr J. M. Balfour of
-Whittinghame, near Prestonkirk, and of the late Lady Blanche Balfour, a
-sister of Lord Salisbury. He entered at Trinity College, Cambridge, from
-Harrow, in October 1870. He brought from school the reputation of being
-a clever boy, whom the masters liked and respected, but of not
-sufficient ability to distinguish himself remarkably at Cambridge. Those
-who expressed this opinion overlooked the fact that he had already
-evinced a decided bent for Natural Science, and had published a brief
-memoir on the geology of his native county, Haddingtonshire. In his very
-first term he was fortunately induced to attend the biological lectures
-of the Trinity Prælector in Physiology, Mr Michael Foster; he made rapid
-progress, and at Easter 1871 he obtained the Natural Science Scholarship
-at Trinity College. He at once commenced original research in the
-direction in which he was afterwards to be so distinguished; and after
-two years’ work published a paper on _The Development of the Chick_ in
-the _Microscopical Journal_ for July, 1873. Indeed, we believe that the
-time spent on this and kindred investigations diminished somewhat the
-brilliancy of his degree, for he was placed second instead of first, as
-had been expected, in the Natural Sciences Tripos of 1873.
-
-In November of that year he was nominated by the Board of Natural
-Science Studies to work at the Zoological Station at Naples, then lately
-established by Dr Anton Dohrn. His object in going there was to continue
-his investigations on Development, and before starting he had determined
-to study the Elasmobranch Fishes (Sharks and Rays), as it seemed likely,
-from their pristine characters, that their development would throw great
-light on the early history of vertebrate animals. The result showed how
-wisely he had made his selection. He made discoveries of the highest
-value in reference to the development of certain organs, and the origin
-of the nerves from the spinal cord—points which had baffled the most
-acute previous observers. These were not merely valuable for the history
-of the special group from which they were derived, but threw a flood of
-light upon the connexion between vertebrates and invertebrates, and
-their derivation from a common ancestry; views which he expanded
-afterwards in his work on Embryology. The results of his Neapolitan
-researches were embodied in the dissertation upon which he rested his
-candidature for a Fellowship at Trinity College; and were afterwards
-printed in the _Philosophical Transactions_ for 1875. Fortunately for
-him, a Natural Science Fellowship was vacant in 1874, to which he was
-elected, in consequence of the value of this dissertation. It is what is
-called an open secret that its great merits were at once recognized by
-Professor Huxley, to whom it had been referred.
-
-From that time forward Balfour devoted himself unremittingly to
-continuous research in preparation for his systematic treatise on
-Embryology, the plan of which he had already sketched out, and which was
-finally completed and published in 1881. Before this appeared, however,
-he had published numerous papers of great value, covering nearly the
-whole range of his subject. Many of these will be found in the
-_Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science_, of which he was one of the
-editors. As an original investigator he had no equal. He was skilful in
-manipulation, and observed rapidly and exactly, so that no point escaped
-his notice. His mind was calm and wholly free from prejudice, with a
-singularly broad and original grasp, which enabled him to seize, with
-readiness and sureness, the principle which lay under a number of
-apparently discordant facts. At the same time, like every true genius,
-he was singularly modest and retiring, always ready to depreciate the
-value of his own work, and to put forward that of others, especially of
-men younger than himself. We know of many students, now rising to
-distinction, who owe their first success to his generous encouragement,
-and, we may add, in some cases to his bountiful assistance, given with a
-delicacy which doubled the value of the gift. It was this strong desire
-to encourage others to work at Natural Science that induced him, in
-1875, to undertake a class in Animal Morphology, or, as it used to be
-called, Comparative Anatomy. At first only a few students presented
-themselves, and one small room at the New Museums was sufficient for
-their accommodation. The class, however, grew with surprising rapidity;
-and, after Mr Balfour’s appointment as Natural Science Lecturer to
-Trinity College, it became necessary to build new rooms for his use.
-During the year 1881 the numbers had reached an average of nearly sixty
-in each term; and just before he left England for the excursion which
-has ended so fatally he had superintended the plans for a yet further
-extension of the Museum Buildings.
-
-His reputation as a successful teacher soon became known far and wide;
-students came from a distance to work under his direction; and he
-received tempting offers to go elsewhere. It need no longer be a secret
-that, after the death of Professor Wyville Thompson, the Chair of
-Natural History at Edinburgh was offered to him; or that, after the
-death of Professor Rolleston, he was strongly urged by the leading men
-in Natural Science at Oxford to accept the Linacre Professorship of
-Anatomy and Physiology. But he was devoted to Cambridge, and nothing
-would induce him to leave it. His refusal of posts so honourable induced
-the University, somewhat tardily perhaps, to recognize his merits, and a
-new Professorship was established in the course of last term for that
-especial purpose. We extract a few sentences from the Report in which
-the Council of the Senate recommended this step[112]:
-
-The successful and rapid development of biological teaching in
-Cambridge, so honourable to the reputation of the University, has been
-formally brought to the notice of the Council. It appears that the
-classes are now so large that the accommodation provided but a few years
-ago has already become insufficient, and that plans for extending it are
-now occupying the attention of the Museums and Lecture-Rooms Syndicate.
-
-It is well known that one branch of this teaching, viz. that of Animal
-Morphology, has been created in Cambridge by the efforts of Mr F. M.
-Balfour, and that it has grown to its present importance through his
-ability as a teacher and his scientific reputation.
-
-The service to the interests of Natural Science thus rendered by Mr
-Balfour having been so far generously given without any adequate
-Academical recognition, the benefit of its continuance is at present
-entirely unsecured to the University, and the progress of the department
-under his direction remains liable to sudden check.
-
-It has been urgently represented to the Council that the welfare of
-biological studies at Cambridge demands that Mr Balfour’s department
-should be placed on a recognized and less precarious footing, and in
-this view the Council concur. They are of opinion that all the
-requirements of the case will be best met by the immediate establishment
-of a ‘Professorship of Animal Morphology’ terminable with the tenure of
-the first Professor.
-
-It is a melancholy satisfaction, when we think how short his life
-was—for he would not have been thirty-one years of age until November
-next—that so many honours had been showered upon him. He became a Fellow
-of the Royal Society in 1878; in the autumn of 1881 he received the
-Royal Medal; and in 1882 he was elected a member of the Council. He was
-President of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, and became General
-Secretary of the British Association at the York Meeting in August 1881.
-
-But it is not merely as a man of science that Mr Balfour will be
-remembered. He was not one of those enthusiasts who can see nothing
-beyond the limits of their own particular studies. He was a man of wide
-sympathies and interests. He devoted much time and attention to College
-and University affairs; and was an active member of numerous Syndicates,
-to whose special business he applied himself with infinite energy. He
-was also a keen politician on the Liberal side, and an ardent University
-reformer. His complete mastery of facts, his retentive memory, and his
-admirable powers of reasoning, made him a formidable antagonist in
-argument; but, though he rarely let an opportunity for vindicating his
-own opinions go by without taking full advantage of it, we never heard
-that he either lost a friend or made an enemy. He was so thoroughly a
-man “who bore without abuse the grand old name of gentleman,” that he
-could never be a mere disputant. He approached every subject with the
-earnestness of sincere conviction, and he invariably gave his opponents
-credit for a sincerity equal to his own. It was only when he found
-himself opposed to presumption, shallowness, or ignorance, that the
-natural playfulness of his manner ceased, his mild and delicate features
-darkened to an unwonted sternness, and his habitually gentle voice grew
-cold and severe. We have heard it said that he was too uniformly
-earnest, that he took life too seriously, and that he lacked the saving
-grace of humour. But his earnestness was perfectly genuine, and he would
-have joined hands with the Philistines in scorning the follies of the
-“intense.” With the undergraduates he was immensely popular. Besides his
-great success as a teacher, he had the inestimable gift of sympathy;
-they felt that they had in him a friend who thoroughly understood them,
-and they trusted him implicitly; while the members of his own special
-class regarded him with a veneration which it has been the lot of few
-teachers to inspire. Nor was his influence upon men older than himself
-less remarkable. They were fascinated by his exquisite courtesy; his
-quiet, high-bred dignity; his respect for the opinions and feelings of
-others. No one of late years has exerted so strong a personal influence
-in the University. It was the vigour of this personality which enabled
-Natural Science to take the place it now occupies in Cambridge life. He
-began to teach at a time when the rising popularity of science was
-regarded with dislike and suspicion by not a few persons. He left it
-accepted as one of the studies of the place. What will happen now that
-he has been taken away it is hard to foresee. We hope and believe that
-Natural Science is too deeply rooted at Cambridge to be permanently
-affected by even his loss. We trust that the strong efforts which will
-be made to keep together the school which he had created may be
-successful; but we fear that it will soon be evident that the members of
-the University have lost not merely a very dear friend, but also a
-master.
-
-_29 July, 1882._
-
-
-
-
- HENRY BRADSHAW.
-
-
-The past twelve months have been singularly fatal to Cambridge; but no
-loss has caused grief so widespread and so sincere as that of the
-distinguished scholar and man of letters who passed quietly away while
-sitting at his library-table on the night of last Wednesday week[113].
-If proof were needed of the respect in which he was held, we have only
-to point to the vast assemblage of past and present members of the
-University which filled the chapel of King’s College on Monday last to
-do honour to his funeral. Nor will the grief be confined to Cambridge.
-Though Mr Bradshaw rarely quitted his own University, and took no
-trouble to bring himself into notice, few men were more highly
-appreciated, both at home and abroad. It is hardly necessary to observe
-that this recognition of his merits was of no sudden growth. We can
-recall the time when he was working silently and unknown, and when even
-a small circle of devoted friends had not realised the extent and
-thoroughness of those studies which he carefully kept in the background.
-But gradually the world of letters became aware that there were many
-points in bibliography and kindred subjects which could not be set on a
-right footing unless the inquirer were willing to pay a visit to him. No
-one who did so had any cause to regret his journey. He was certain to be
-received with a courtesy which, we regret to say, is nowadays commonly
-called old-fashioned, and to find himself before he left far richer than
-when he came. Mr Bradshaw was the most unselfish of men; and the stores
-of his knowledge were invariably laid open, freely and ungrudgingly, to
-every inquirer, provided he was satisfied that the work proposed would
-be thoroughly well done. He was modest to a fault; and we believe that
-he really preferred to remain in the background, while others, at his
-suggestion and with his help, worked out the subjects in which he took
-special interest. It was no fault of theirs if his share in their work
-remained a secret. His generous wish to help others forward made him
-refuse more than once, as we well know, to allow his name to appear in
-connexion with work that he had really done; and posterity will have to
-tax its ingenuity to discover, from a few words in a preface or a line
-in a note, how much belongs of right to him. Nor was it only in subjects
-with which he was specially familiar that his help was valuable. He
-seemed equally at home in all branches of knowledge. He knew so
-thoroughly how materials should be used, and in what form the results
-would be best presented, that, whether the subject were art, or
-archeology, or history, or bibliography, or early English texts, his
-clear and accurate judgment went straight to the point, and reduced the
-most tangled facts to order. But, devoted student as he was, he was no
-bookworm. He took the liveliest interest in all that was going on around
-him. His strong common sense, his kind, charitable nature, and his habit
-of going to the bottom of every question presented to him, enabled him
-to sympathize with those who had arrived at conclusions widely different
-from his own. As a younger man he was too reserved, too diffident of
-himself, to feel at ease in the society of men of his own standing. He
-thought they disliked him, and this idea increased his natural
-sensitiveness and his love of retirement. The truth was that he was too
-honest to be popular. Like Alceste in _Le Misanthrope_, he would rebuke
-insincerity and pretentiousness with a few blunt stern words that made
-the offender tremble; and, if he disliked anybody, as happened
-sometimes, he took no pains to conceal it. Hence he was respected, but
-he was not liked. By slow degrees, however, the natural geniality of his
-disposition gained the upper hand, and the warm heart which beat under
-that calm exterior was allowed to assert itself. The old severity of
-denunciation, instead of being exercised on individuals, was reserved
-for slovenly work, unjust criticism, or unfair treatment. He began to go
-more into society, in which he took a keen pleasure, though he would
-rarely allow himself to spend what he called an idle evening. At all
-times he had sought the company of young people. At a period when
-undergraduates hardly ventured to speak to men older than themselves,
-his quiet kindness attracted them to him, and obtained their confidence.
-In him they were certain of a friend whose sympathy never failed them,
-and from whom, no matter what trouble or difficulty had befallen them,
-they were sure of advice and help. Many a man now successful in life may
-thank him for the influence which, exercised at a critical time,
-determines a career for good; and not a few have been enabled by his
-generosity to begin the studies in which they are now distinguished.
-
-The events of such a life are not numerous. Mr Bradshaw was born 2
-February, 1831. He was educated at Eton College, on the foundation, and
-came up to King’s College, Cambridge, in February, 1850. He proceeded to
-the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1854. At that time members of King’s
-College were not obliged to submit themselves to University
-examinations, but he and some others availed themselves of the
-permission then accorded to them to do so, and he was placed tenth in
-the second class of the Classical Tripos. Soon afterwards he accepted a
-mastership at S. Columba’s College, near Dublin, then under the
-direction of his old friend, the late Mr George Williams; but finding
-tuition, after a few months’ trial, uncongenial to his tastes, he
-returned to Cambridge, and to those studies which ended only with his
-life. His connexion with the University Library began two years
-afterwards. In 1856 he was appointed principal assistant, a post which
-he resigned in 1858. In 1859 he returned to the Library as Keeper of the
-Manuscripts, an office specially created for the purpose of retaining
-his services, the value of which had even then been discovered. This
-office he held until 1867, when, on the resignation of Mr J. E. B.
-Mayor, he was elected librarian. From a boy he had been distinguished
-for a love of books; but it was not until his return to Cambridge from
-Ireland that he was able to devote himself seriously and systematically
-to the study of bibliography in its widest sense, with all that is
-subsidiary to it. Most of us know what a dreary subject bibliography is
-when treated from the ordinary point of view. In his hands, however, it
-acquired a human interest. He studied specimens of early printing, not
-for themselves, but for the sake of the men who produced them. In
-following out this system he went far more thoroughly than an ordinary
-bibliographer cares to do into every particular of the book before him.
-Paper, type, signature, tailpiece, were all taken into account, so as to
-settle not only who printed the volume, but in what relation he stood to
-his predecessors and successors.
-
-Bradshaw had an unerring eye for detecting small differences in style, a
-memory which never failed him, and an instinct of discovery little short
-of marvellous. Again and again in well-known libraries, both in England
-and on the Continent, he has been able, after a brief examination, to
-point out important facts which scholars who had worked there for the
-best part of their lives had failed to notice.
-
-In the same spirit of discovery he applied himself to the study of
-Chaucer. Silently and secretly, as was his wont, he examined all the
-manuscripts within his reach, and then set to work to determine (1) what
-was Chaucer’s own work; (2) what is the real order of the _Canterbury
-Tales_. In the course of his researches it occurred to him that the
-rhymes used would prove a test of what was Chaucer’s and what was not.
-Without assistance from any one he wrote out a complete rhyme-list—an
-astonishing labour for an individual, when it is remembered that the
-_Tales_ contain some eight thousand lines, every one of which must have
-been registered twice, and many three or four times. The labour,
-however, was not thrown away. The rhymes employed turned out to be a
-true test, and Mr Bradshaw was enabled to publish in 1867 ‘The Skeleton
-of Chaucer’s _Canterbury Tales_: an attempt to distinguish the several
-Fragments of the Work as left by the Author.’ We regret to say that this
-pamphlet of fifty-four octavo pages is all that the world is ever likely
-to see of this splendid piece of work. With characteristic
-self-depreciation he says, in a note appended in 1871, ‘Mr Furnivall’s
-labours have put far out of date any work that I have ever done upon
-this subject’; but it is gratifying to turn to Mr Furnivall, and read,
-‘There is only one man in the world, I believe, who thoroughly
-understands this subject, Mr Henry Bradshaw.’ He welcomed Mr Furnivall
-with habitual generosity, and placed in his hands, without reserve, all
-that he had got ready for the edition of Chaucer which he at one time
-intended to publish himself. Publication, however, was what he could
-rarely be persuaded to attempt. It was not criticism that he feared; but
-he had set up in his own mind such a lofty standard of excellence that
-he could not bear to abandon a piece of work while it was yet possible
-to add some trifling detail, or to correct some imperfection which his
-own fastidious taste would alone have been able to detect. It is sad to
-think how much has perished with him. His excellent memory enabled him
-to dispense with notes to a far greater extent than most persons, and
-those which he did put down were written on a system to which we fear it
-will be impossible now to find the key. What he actually published
-amounts to very little. When we have mentioned eight short octavo
-pamphlets, which he called ‘Memoranda’; a few papers printed by the
-Cambridge Antiquarian Society; some communications to _Notes and
-Queries_ and other periodicals; and an admirable edition of the new
-_Statutes for the University of Cambridge, and for the Colleges within
-it_, we fear that the list is complete. He had made important
-discoveries respecting the old Breton language in connexion with the
-early collection of canons known as the _Hibernensis_, and had collected
-materials for a Breton glossary which would have placed him in the first
-rank of philologers; he had worked at Irish literature with the special
-object of elucidating the history of early Irish printing; in knowledge
-of ancient service-books he was probably second to none, and at the time
-of his death he was writing a preface to the new edition of the Sarum
-Breviary; and, lastly, he had made considerable progress towards a
-catalogue of the fifteenth-century books in the University Library. On
-all these subjects considerable materials exist; but who is fit to take
-his place and make use of them?
-
-_20 February, 1886._
-
-
-
-
- WILLIAM HEPWORTH THOMPSON.
-
-
-The death of the Master of Trinity College has severed almost the last
-of the links which connect the present life of Cambridge with the past.
-From 1828 until his death[114] in 1886 his connexion with his college
-was unbroken; for a brief absence soon after his election to a
-Fellowship, and the periods of canonical residence at Ely need hardly be
-taken into account. He was, therefore, up to a certain point, a typical
-Trinity man of the older school; a firm believer in the greatness of his
-college, and in the obligation laid upon him personally to increase that
-greatness by every means in his power. But he did not admire blindly. He
-could recognize, if he did not welcome, the necessity for changes in the
-old order from time to time; and he was known throughout the best period
-of his intellectual life as a Liberal and a reformer. He was a rare
-combination of a student without pedantry, and a man of the world
-without foppishness, or want of principle.
-
-As an undergraduate he was fortunate in obtaining the friendship of men
-who afterwards became celebrated in the world of letters, most of them
-members of that famous coterie of which Tennyson and Hallam were the
-most notable figures. Indeed it is not impossible that the poet may have
-intended to include Thompson himself among those who
-
- “held debate, a band
- Of youthful friends, on mind and art
- And labour, and the changing mart,
- And all the framework of the land.”
-
-In their society he laid the foundation of that wide knowledge of
-literature, that keen interest in whatever was going forward, that habit
-of weighing all things in the nicely-adjusted balance of thoughtful
-criticism, which made what he wrote so valuable, and what he said so
-delightful. Nor, after he had obtained his Fellowship, and was free to
-do as he liked, was he content to become a student and nothing more. He
-was careful to add a knowledge of men and manners to what he was
-learning from books. He travelled abroad, and acquired a competent
-knowledge of more than one modern language; he was fond of art, and a
-good judge of pictures and sculpture. Nor did he forget the friends of
-his undergraduate days. He was a welcome, and we believe a frequent,
-guest at their houses both in town and country, where his fine presence,
-his courteous bearing, and his quiet, epigrammatic conversation were
-keenly appreciated. To the influence of these social surroundings he
-owed that absence of narrowness which is inseparable from a University
-career, if it be not tempered by influences from the outside.
-
-Academic lives usually contain few details to arrest the biographer, and
-his was no exception to the rule. His father was a solicitor at York,
-and he was born in that city 27 March, 1810. He was educated at a
-private school, which he left when thirteen years old, and was then
-placed under the care of a tutor, with whom he remained until he came up
-to Trinity in the Michaelmas Term, 1828, as one of the pupils of Mr
-Peacock, afterwards Dean of Ely. To his watchful care and sound advice
-Thomson felt himself under deep obligation, and in after-life he used to
-describe him as “the best and wisest of tutors.” It had been at first
-intended that he should enter as a sizar; but this decision was reversed
-at the last moment, and he matriculated as a pensioner. He obtained a
-scholarship in 1830, and one of the Members’ prizes for a Latin Essay in
-1831. At that time candidates for Classical Honours could not present
-themselves for the Classical Tripos until they had satisfied the
-examiners for the Mathematical. Thompson must have devoted a
-considerable portion of his time to that subject, for he appears in the
-Tripos of 1832 as tenth Senior Optime. In the Classical Tripos of the
-same year he obtained the fourth place, being beaten by Lushington,
-Shilleto, and Dobson, the first of whom beat him again in the
-examination for the Chancellor’s medals, of which he won only the
-second. He was elected Fellow of his College in 1834. His reputation as
-a scholar marked him out for immediate employment as one of the
-assistant-tutors; but for a time either no vacancy presented itself, or
-men senior to himself were appointed. Meanwhile he accepted a mastership
-in a school at Leicester, work which, we believe, he did not find
-congenial. In October 1837 he was recalled to Cambridge by the offer of
-an assistant-tutorship. In 1844, on the retirement of Mr Heath, he
-became tutor, an office which he held until he obtained the Regius
-Professorship of Greek in 1853. The other candidates on that occasion
-were Shilleto and Philip Freeman, but the electors were all but
-unanimous in their choice of Thompson. In the spring of 1866, on the
-death of Dr Whewell, he was appointed to the Mastership of Trinity
-College.
-
-In attempting to estimate the value of his work as a classical teacher,
-it must be remembered that he was the direct heir of the system
-introduced into Trinity College by Hare and Thirlwall. We are not aware
-that he attended the lectures of the former, though he may well have
-done so, but we have heard from his own lips that he derived great
-benefit from those of the latter, which were as systematic as Hare’s had
-been desultory. Those distinguished scholars, while not neglecting an
-author’s language, were careful to direct the attention of their pupils
-to his matter. They did not waste time unduly on the theories of this or
-that commentator, though they had carefully digested them, but they
-showed how their author might be made to explain himself. In fine, the
-discovery of his thoughts, not the dry elucidation of his words, was the
-object of their teaching. Translation, again, received from them a
-larger share of attention than it had done from their predecessors. In
-this particular Thompson attained an unrivalled excellence. His
-translations never smelt of the lamp, though it may be easily imagined
-that this perfection had not been arrived at without much preliminary
-study. But, when presented to the class, toil was carefully kept out of
-sight. The lecturer stood at his desk and read his author into English,
-with neither manuscript nor even notes before him, as though the
-translation was wholly unpremeditated, in a style which reflected the
-original with exact fidelity, whatever the subject selected might be. He
-seemed equally at home in a dialogue of Plato, a tragedy of Euripides in
-which, like the _Bacchae_, the lyric element predominates, or a comedy
-of Aristophanes. He did not labour in vain. The lecture-room was crowded
-with eager listeners; and the happiest renderings were passed from mouth
-to mouth, and so made the round of the University. But we are glad to
-think that his fame as a scholar rests on a firmer foundation than
-traditions of the lecture-room, however brilliant. The author of his
-choice was Plato, and though ill-health and a too fastidious criticism
-of his own powers, which made him unwilling to let a piece of work go
-out of his hands so long as there was any chance of making it better,
-stood in the way of the complete edition, or, at any rate, translation,
-of the author, which he once meditated, yet he has left enough good work
-behind him to command the gratitude of future scholars. To this study he
-was doubtless directed, in the first instance, by natural predilection;
-but, if we mistake not, he was confirmed in it by the scholars
-above-mentioned, either directly or by their suggesting to him the study
-of Schleiermacher, whose writings were first introduced to English
-readers by their influence. That critic’s theory—that Plato had a
-comprehensive and precise doctrine to teach, which he deliberately
-concealed under the complicated machinery of a series of dialogues,
-leaving his readers to combine and interpret for themselves the dark
-hints and suggestions afforded to them—was followed by Thompson with
-great learning, unerring tact, and firm grasp. His editions of the
-_Phaedrus_ (1868) and the _Gorgias_ (1871) are models of what an
-edition, based on these principles, ought to be; and the paper on the
-_Sophistes_, long lost sight of in the _Transactions_ of the Cambridge
-Philosophical Society, but republished in the _Journal of Philology_
-(1879), is a masterpiece. Nor must we omit an introductory lecture on
-the _Philebus_, written in 1855, and published in the same journal
-(1882), which is a piece of literature as well as a piece of criticism;
-or the learned and instructive notes to Archer Butler’s _Lectures on the
-History of Ancient Philosophy_, the first edition of which appeared in
-1855.
-
-Thompson discharged the difficult duties of a college tutor with
-admirable patience and discretion. Those who knew him imperfectly called
-him cold, hard, and sarcastic; and his bearing towards his brother
-Fellows gave occasionally, we must admit, some colour to the accusation.
-But in reality he was an exceedingly modest man, diffident of himself,
-reserved, and at first somewhat shy in the society of those whom he did
-not know well. Again, it must be recollected that nature had dealt out
-to him a measure of ‘irony, that master-spell,’ of a quality that a
-Talleyrand might have envied. Hence, especially when slightly nervous,
-he got into a habit of letting his words fall into well-turned sarcastic
-sentences almost unconsciously. The most ordinary remark, when uttered
-by him, became an epigram. We maintain, however, that he never said an
-unkind word intentionally, or crushed anybody who did not richly deserve
-it. For the noisy advocate of crude opinions, or the pretender to
-knowledge which he did not possess, were reserved those withering
-sentences which froze the victim into silence, and, being carefully
-treasured up by his friends, and repeated at intervals, clung to him
-like a brand. To his own pupils Thompson’s demeanour was the reverse of
-this. At a time when the older men of the University—with the exception,
-perhaps, of Professor Sedgwick—were not in sympathy with the rising
-generation, he made them feel that they had in him a friend who would
-really stand _in loco parentis_ to them. Somewhat indolent by nature, on
-their behalf he would spare no trouble; but, on the other hand, he would
-allow of no interference. ‘He is a pupil of mine, you had better leave
-him to me,’ he would say to the Seniors, when an undergraduate on his
-‘side’ got into trouble; but it may be questioned whether many a
-delinquent would not have preferred public exposure to the awful
-half-hour in his tutor’s study by which his rescue was succeeded. Nor
-did his interest in his pupils cease when they left college. He was
-always glad to see them or to write to them, and few, we imagine, took
-any important step in life without consulting him.
-
-When Thompson became Greek Professor, a canonry at Ely was still united
-to the office—an expedient for augmenting the salary which, we are glad
-to say, will not trouble future Professors. To most men, trained as he
-had been, the new duties thus imposed upon him would have been
-thoroughly distasteful; and we are not sure that he ever took a real
-pleasure in his residences at Ely. In fact, more than one bitter remark
-might be quoted to prove that he did not. Notwithstanding, he made
-himself extremely popular there, both with the Chapter and the citizens,
-and he soon became a good preacher. It is to be regretted that only one
-of his sermons—that on the death of Dean Peacock—has been printed; that
-one is in its way a masterpiece.
-
-He became Master rather late in life, when the habits of a bachelor
-student had grown upon him; and he lacked the superabundant energy of
-his great predecessor. But notwithstanding, the twenty years of his
-Mastership were years of activity and progress; and he took his due
-share of University and College business. He was alive to the necessity
-for reform, and the statutes framed in 1872, as well as those which
-received the royal assent in 1882, owed much to his criticism and
-support. It should also be recorded that he was an excellent examiner,
-appreciating good work of very different sorts. Gradually, however, as
-his health grew worse, he was compelled to give up much that he had been
-able to do when first elected, and to withdraw from society almost
-entirely. Yet he did not become a mere lay figure. Even strangers who
-caught a glimpse in chapel of that commanding presence, the dignity of
-which was enhanced by singularly handsome features, and silvery
-hair[115], were compelled to recognize his power. There was an innate
-royalty in his nature which made his Mastership at all times a reality,
-and he contrived, from the seclusion of his study, to exert a stronger
-influence and to maintain a truer sympathy with the Society than
-Whewell, with all his activity, had ever succeeded in
-
-establishing. His very isolation from the worry and bustle of the world
-gave authority to his advice; those who came to seek it felt, as they
-sat by his armchair, that they were listening to one who was not
-influenced by considerations of the moment, but who was giving them some
-of the garnered treasures of mature experience.
-
-_9 October, 1886._
-
-
-
-
- COUTTS TROTTER.
-
-
-The Society of Trinity College had long been aware of the critical
-condition of their Vice-Master’s health, and his numerous friends in the
-wider circle of the University had shared their alarm. And yet, though
-everybody had been expecting the worst for several weeks, the news that
-the end had really come[116] fell upon the University with the stunning
-force of a wholly unexpected event. The full extent of the loss can only
-be measured by time; for the moment we can but feel that the University
-of Cambridge misses an influence which pervaded and animated every
-department of her affairs. For the last fifteen years no one has been so
-completely identified with what may be termed modern Cambridge; no one
-has been admitted to so large a share in her councils, or has devoted
-himself with such unremitting diligence to the administration of her
-complex organization.
-
-Mr Trotter proceeded to his degree in 1859. He was thirty-seventh
-wrangler, and third in the second class of the Classical Tripos. It is
-evident, however, that his acquirements must not be measured by his
-place in these two Triposes, for he was soon after elected to a
-Fellowship in his college, where, as is well known, the proficiency of
-candidates is tested by a fresh examination. After his election he took
-Holy Orders, and devoted himself for a time to active clerical work. For
-this, however, after a fair trial, he found himself unsuited, and,
-resigning his curacy, he returned to college. Between the years 1865 and
-1869 he spent a considerable portion of his time in German universities.
-In 1869 he became Lecturer in Natural Science in Trinity College, and in
-due course succeeded to the Tutorship. In 1874 he was elected a member
-of the Council of the Senate—a position which he occupied, without
-interruption, until his death. In early life he had been a staunch
-Conservative; but, as time went on, his views changed, and he became not
-only a Liberal in politics, but an ardent University reformer. In the
-latter capacity he threw himself energetically into the movement for
-reform which led to the present University and College statutes—to
-which, in their actual shape, he largely contributed. We have said that
-he was a Liberal and a reformer. This position placed him, it is almost
-needless to remark, in direct antagonism to many of those with whom he
-was called upon to act; but his conciliatory manners, his excellent
-temper, and his perfect straightforwardness, not only disarmed
-opposition, but enabled him to make friends even among those who
-differed from him most widely. In fact, what was sometimes called in
-jest ‘the Trotterization of the University’ was so complete that he had
-come to be regarded as indispensable; and his name will be found at one
-time or another on all the more important Boards and Syndicates. But it
-was not merely his knowledge of University business and detail that
-placed him there. He was gifted with an intelligence of extraordinary
-quickness. He could grasp the bearings of a complicated question swiftly
-and readily—disentangle it, so to speak, from all that was not strictly
-essential to it—and while others were still talking about it, doubtful
-how to act, he would commit to paper a draft of a report which was
-commonly accepted by those present as exactly resuming the general sense
-of the meeting. He was in favour of a wide enlargement of University
-studies, especially in the scientific direction—a course which was
-impossible without funds; but at the same time no man ever loved his
-college more dearly than he did—no man held more closely to the old idea
-of duty to the college as a corporation; and it may be added that no
-Vice-Master ever dispensed the hospitality incidental to the office with
-greater geniality.
-
-We have dwelt on Mr Trotter’s University career at some length; but let
-it not be supposed that he was immersed in the details of University
-business to the exclusion of other subjects. Though modest and retiring
-almost to a fault, his interests were wide, and his knowledge extensive
-and accurate. He had no mean acquaintance with physical science, on
-which he gave collegiate lectures; he spoke and read several modern
-languages, and was familiar with their literature; he took great
-interest in music; he travelled extensively, and had a singularly minute
-knowledge of out-of-the-way parts of the Alps, and of the little visited
-country towns of Italy, to which he was attracted partly by their
-history, partly by their art-treasures. He wrote easily and clearly,
-though he never cared to cultivate a particularly elegant style; and as
-a speaker he was always forcible, and sometimes exceedingly happy in the
-utterance of tersely-worded, epigrammatic sentences, which resumed much
-thought in few words.
-
-We have dwelt of necessity in these brief remarks almost exclusively on
-Mr Trotter’s public career. But there was another side to his character.
-He was a generous and warm-hearted friend, whose friendship was all the
-more sincere because it was so quiet and undemonstrative. Few had the
-rare privilege of his intimacy; but those few will never forget that
-kindly face, that bright smile of welcome, that charity which found
-excuses for everybody—that liberality which, while it eschewed
-publicity, was always ready to help the deserving, whether it was a
-cause or an individual.
-
-_10 December, 1887._
-
-
-
-
- RICHARD OKES.
-
-
-The death of Dr Okes, though he had reached the mature age of
-ninety-one, has taken the University by surprise[117]. He had become an
-institution of the place. While everything around him changed, and old
-things became new, his venerable figure remained unaltered, like a
-monument of an older faith which has survived the attacks of successive
-iconoclasts, to tell the younger generation what manner of men the Dons
-of the past had been. He was fond of saying that the first public event
-he could distinctly remember was the battle of Trafalgar. He had been a
-Master at Eton when Goodall was Provost and Keate Head-master, and he
-had begun to rule over King’s College when the University of Cambridge
-differed as widely from what it is now as the Europe of Napoleon from
-its present condition. Still, his load of years sat so lightly upon him,
-his interest in what was going forward was still so keen, that there
-seemed to be no reason why he should not complete his century of life.
-The slight infirmities from which he suffered did not prevent him, until
-quite lately, from attending service in chapel, at least on Sundays; his
-hearing was but little affected; his sight was good; and he could still
-enjoy the society of his friends. Only a few days before his death he
-was reading Miss Burney’s _Evelina_ to his daughters. When it became
-known on Sunday last that he had really passed away, it was hard to
-believe that the sad news could possibly be true.
-
-Richard Okes was born in Cambridge, 15 December, 1797. His father,
-Thomas Verney Okes, was a surgeon in extensive practice. Tradition is
-silent respecting the future Provost’s childhood and early education;
-but, as in those days boys began their lives at Eton at a very early
-age, it is probable that when he was little older than a child he was
-sent to fight his battles among the collegers, in what even devoted
-Etonians have called ‘a proverb and a reproach’—Long Chamber. In 1816,
-when he was rather more than eighteen, he obtained a scholarship at
-King’s College; but it appears from the University records that he did
-not formally matriculate until November in the following year. In those
-days, be it remembered, King’s College was a very different place from
-what it is now, both structurally and educationally. The magnificent
-site, on which Henry VI. intended to place an equally magnificent
-college, was occupied by no structures of importance except the Chapel,
-and the Fellows’ Building, part of a second grand design which, like the
-first, was never completed. The scholars, or at all events the greater
-part of them, were packed into Old Court—the small, irregular quadrangle
-west of the University Library, to which the founder intended originally
-to limit his college. It must have been a curious structure—picturesque
-and interesting from an archeological point of view, but unwholesome and
-uncomfortable as a place of residence. The very nicknames given to some
-of the chambers—“the Tolbooth,” “the Block-house,” and the like—are a
-sufficient proof of their discomfort. In one of these, on the ground
-floor, facing Clare Hall, young Okes resided; and until a few months
-ago, when the last remnant of this part of the old college was absorbed
-by the University Library, the present generation could form a fairly
-correct idea of the gloom and damp that their ancestors were obliged to
-put up with. But members of Kings College had to endure something far
-worse than physical discomfort. It had been the object of their founder
-to make his college independent of the University, and, as a consequence
-of these well-intentioned provisions, scholars of King’s were not
-allowed to compete for University honours, but obtained their degrees as
-a matter of course. The result is not difficult to conceive. In every
-society there will be some whose love of letters, or whose ardour for
-distinction, is so strong that nothing can check it; but, as a rule, the
-young Etonians who were obliged to spend three years in Cambridge threw
-learning to the winds, and enjoyed to their hearts’ content the liberty,
-not to say license, of their new surroundings. It was a bad state of
-things; and that Okes felt it to be so is proved by the eagerness with
-which he, a strong Conservative, set himself to get it abolished as soon
-as he had the power to do so. We do not claim for the late Provost any
-specially studious habits as a young man; he was too genial and too fond
-of society to have ever been a very hard reader; but his scholarship in
-after years would not have been as accurate as it certainly was had he
-wasted his time at Cambridge; and, as a proof that he aimed at
-distinction, it should be mentioned that he obtained Sir William
-Browne’s prize for Greek and Latin Epigrams in 1819 and 1820. To the
-very end of his life he was fond of writing Latin verse; and when the
-Fellows of his college congratulated him on his ninetieth birthday in
-Latin and English poems, he replied in half-a-dozen Latin lines which
-many a younger scholar could not have turned so neatly.
-
-He proceeded to his degree in 1821, and was in due course elected Fellow
-of his college. Soon afterwards he returned to Eton as an
-Assistant-Master. Mr Gladstone was one of the first set of boys who, in
-Eton phrase, were ‘up to him’ in school. He filled his difficult
-position with a judicious blending of severity and kindliness that made
-him thoroughly respected by everybody, and at the same time beloved by
-those boys who saw enough of him to discover that his dignified and
-slightly pompous demeanour concealed a singularly warm and sympathetic
-heart. His house was well-conducted and deservedly popular; and though
-in those days masters did not see much of their pupils in private, he
-contrived to turn several of his boys into life-long friends. In 1838 he
-became Lower Master—an office which he held until he returned to
-Cambridge in 1850. While in that influential position he introduced at
-least one reform into the school; he got what was called ‘an
-intermediate examination’ established, by which the collegers were
-enabled to test their capacities before submitting to the final
-examination which was to determine their chances of obtaining a
-scholarship at King’s.
-
-In November 1850, the Provostship of King’s College having been vacated
-by the death of the Rev. George Thackeray, Dr Okes was elected his
-successor. So anxious was he to abolish the anomalous position of
-King’s-men with regard to University degrees that, on his way from Eton
-to Cambridge to be inducted into his new dignity, he stayed a few hours
-in London to take counsel with the Bishop of Lincoln, as Visitor of the
-college, on the best way of effecting an alteration. The needful
-negotiations were pressed forward without loss of time, and on the 1st
-May, 1851, the college informed the University of their willingness to
-abolish the existing state of things. The University, as might have been
-expected, took time to consider the matter; and it was not until
-February 18, 1852, that the Senate accepted the proposed reform.
-Meanwhile Dr Okes had been elected Vice-Chancellor, and, in virtue of
-that office, had the pleasure of signing the report which concluded the
-negotiations. His year of office as Vice-Chancellor ended, he took but
-little part in University business. He served on the Council of the
-Senate from 1864 to 1868, and he was occasionally a member of
-Syndicates; but, with these exceptions, he devoted himself to the
-affairs of his college.
-
-When he returned to the University the ancient constitution still
-subsisted, and it may be doubted whether he could ever have brought
-himself into cordial sympathy with the changes inaugurated by the
-statutes which came into operation in 1858. The abolition of the old
-_Caput_, and the virtual dethronement of the Heads of Colleges, must
-have seemed to him to be changes which savoured of sacrilege. Still,
-when a reform had been once carried he accepted it loyally, and never
-tried by underhand devices to thwart its provisions, or to diminish its
-force. He was too straight-forward to pretend that he liked change, but
-he was too honest to take away with one hand the assent that he gave
-with the other. In regard to his own college he was before all things an
-Etonian, and he clung to the ancient system by which King’s was
-recruited exclusively from Eton. But, when it was decided, in 1864, to
-throw the college open, under certain restrictions, to all comers, he
-offered no violent resistance to the scheme, though he did not like it;
-and it may be doubted whether he ever felt that the newcomers were
-really King’s-men. His sense of duty, as well as his natural kindliness,
-compelled him to accept them; but he looked upon them as aliens. This
-strong conservative bias, opposed to the liberal instincts of a society
-which his own reform had created, sometimes brought him into collision
-with his Fellows; but such differences were not of long duration. He was
-never morose. He never bore a grudge against any one. His sense of
-humour, and his natural gaiety of spirits, carried him through
-difficulties which his habitual tone of mind would hardly have enabled
-him to surmount. When his portrait was painted by Herkomer, the artist
-showed him as he lived, with a smile on his kind face. It was objected
-that so jocose a countenance was at variance with the dignity of his
-position. ‘What would the Provost of King’s be without his jokes?’ was
-the reply of a sarcastic contemporary. The remark had a deeper meaning
-than its author either imagined or intended.
-
-_1 December, 1888._
-
-
-
-
- HENRY RICHARDS LUARD[118].
-
-
-Nearly half a century has elapsed since Dr Luard became a member of
-Trinity College. When he came up, the University was a very different
-place from what it is now; the Statutes of Elizabeth were still in
-force; and the only study which obtained official recognition was that
-of mathematics. It is true that a Classical Tripos existed, but anybody
-who wished to be examined in it was obliged to obtain an honour in
-Mathematics first. The first Commission was not appointed until 1850,
-the year in which he proceeded to the degree of Master of Arts. Nor were
-the changes that resulted from their labours so sweeping as to alter, to
-any overt and material extent, the character of the University. The
-University of our own time, due to more recent legislation, did not come
-into being until he had reached middle life.
-
-These prefatory sentences are necessary to explain his character, which
-has often been misunderstood. He passed his youth and many years of his
-manhood in the old University, and though he was compelled,
-intellectually, to admit the advantage of many of the changes which have
-taken place in recent years, I doubt if he ever cordially accepted them.
-He was a man of the older generation, who had lived down into the
-present, and though he made friends in it, and derived many substantial
-advantages from it, he was always casting lingering looks behind, and
-sighing for a past which he could not recall. He remembered the time
-when the resident Fellows of his college were few in number, when they
-all lived in college rooms, and met every day at the service in Chapel
-or the dinner in Hall, and commonly took their daily exercise, a walk or
-a ride, in each other’s company. As his older friends passed away, he
-found a difficulty in making new ones; he felt out of his element; he
-was distracted by the multiplicity of tastes and studies; and vehemently
-disapproved of the modifications in the collegiate life which the new
-statutes have brought about. Though he himself, by a strange irony of
-fate, was the first Fellow to take advantage of the power of marrying
-and still retaining the Fellowship, he bitterly regretted that such a
-clause had ever become law; and it is hardly too much to say that he
-predicted the ruin of the college from such an innovation. And yet he
-was by no means an unreasoning or unreasonable Conservative. In many
-matters he was a Reformer; I have even heard him called a Radical; but,
-when his beloved college was concerned, the force of early association
-was too strong, and he regarded fundamental change as sacrilege.
-
-Luard was fourteenth wrangler in 1847, a place much lower than he had
-been led to expect. The cause of his failure is said to have been
-ill-health. His disappointment, however, was speedily consoled by a
-Fellowship, a distinction to which he is said to have aspired from his
-earliest years. A friend who sat next him when he was a student at
-King’s College, London, remembers his writing down, “Henry Richards
-Luard, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge,” and asking, “How do you
-think that looks?” But, though he was really a first-rate mathematician,
-his heart was elsewhere. He delighted in classical studies, especially
-Greek, and to the end of his life continued to collect early editions,
-and more, to read Greek authors. Not long ago, in the interval between
-two pieces of hard work, I think between two volumes of his edition of
-Matthew Paris, I found him reading the _Supplices_ of Euripides. He
-complained that it was dull, but he went through with it. His
-acquaintance with Greek scholarship was very accurate and remarkable. He
-knew all about the emendations in which the scholars of the last century
-displayed their ingenuity; he spoke of Bentley, Porson, Gaisford,
-Elmsley, and the rest, as though they had been his personal friends, and
-he could quote from memory, even to the last, many of their most
-brilliant achievements. For Porson he had a special cult, and the Life
-of him which he contributed to the _Cambridge Essays_ (1857) is a model
-of what such a composition should be, as remarkable for good taste and
-temperate criticism, as for erudition. He resented any slights on Porson
-as almost a personal affront; and spoke with unmeasured denunciation of
-any edition of a Greek Play, or other classical work, in which Porson
-did not seem to be fully appreciated. He had a priceless collection of
-_Porsoniana_, books which had belonged to Porson, and had been annotated
-by him, with notices of his life and labours, all of which he bequeathed
-to the Library of Trinity College; and he edited Porson’s
-_Correspondence_, and the _Diary of Edward Rud_, which throws so much
-light on the history of the college during the stormy reign of Dr
-Bentley. It must be confessed that Luard’s affection for these giants of
-classical criticism rather blinded him to the merits of their successors
-in our own time. He had a particular dislike for English notes; and I
-had rather not try to remember what I have heard him say about English
-translations printed side by side with the original text.
-
-Let it not be supposed, however, that Luard confined his attention in
-literature to the classics. He was an insatiable reader of books on all
-subjects, and if the book was a new one he was particular that his copy
-should be uncut. He liked to read sitting in his armchair, and to cut
-the leaves as he went along. What he began, he considered it a point of
-honour to finish. It was a joke against him that he had read every word
-of _The Cornhill Magazine_, which he had taken in from the beginning;
-and I have heard him admit, more than once, that this was really the
-case. I think it quite likely that he had submitted the volumes
-published under the authority of the Master of the Rolls, to the same
-searching investigation; for he could give a curiously minute account of
-the merits and demerits of each work, supported, as usual with him, by
-numerous quotations, cited with much volubility of utterance, and, it
-may be added, with unerring accuracy. The pace at which he got through a
-ponderous volume—without skipping, be it remarked—was really
-astonishing, and when he had come to the end he could not only give a
-clear and connected account of what he had read, but it became part of
-himself, and he could quote long afterwards any passage that had
-specially struck him.
-
-The variety of Luard’s interests at all periods of his life, was
-remarkable, especially when it is remembered that he was a genuine
-student, with a horror of superficiality, and a conscientious
-determination to do whatever he took in hand as well as it could be
-done. But he was no Dry-as-dust. He was keenly alive to all that was
-passing in the world, and unlike a contemporary Cambridge antiquary who
-was once heard to ask, “Is the _Times_ still published?” he not only
-read the paper through every day, but had his own very definite opinions
-on men and measures. There was nothing narrow about him; he was a
-patriotic Englishman, but he did not ignore the existence of the
-Continent, and his favourite relaxation was foreign travel. As a young
-man he had travelled extensively, not only in Europe, but in Egypt,
-where he had ascended the Nile as far as the second cataract: and, as he
-grew older, he still sought refreshment in going over parts of his old
-tours, especially in those by-ways of Central Italy which lie within the
-limits of what he affectionately called “dear old Umbria.” He spoke more
-than one foreign language fluently; and, being entirely destitute of
-British angularity, and British prejudices in politics and religion, he
-always got on exceedingly well with foreigners, especially with foreign
-ecclesiastics. I feel that I am saying only what is literally true when
-I affirm that few Englishmen have understood the creed and the practice
-of the Roman clergy in Italy so thoroughly as he did. In illustration of
-this view I would refer my readers to an article called _Preaching and
-other matters in Rome in 1879_ which he contributed to the _Church
-Quarterly Review_[119]. Further, he took an intelligent interest in
-antiquities of all sorts, and had an acquaintance with art that was
-something more than respectable. Here his excellent memory stood him in
-good stead, for he never forgot either a picture which he had once seen,
-or the place in which he had seen it.
-
-In politics he called himself a Tory, and he certainly did vote on that
-side; but he was in no sense of the word a party-man. For instance, when
-his friend Mr George Denman came forward as a Liberal candidate for the
-representation of the University in 1855, Luard was an active member of
-his committee. His knowledge of Italy made him watch the course of
-events there in 1859 with an enthusiastic sympathy, which was divided
-almost equally between the Italians and their French allies. With a
-curious perversity, which was not uncommon in his appreciation of men
-and his judgment of events, he hated Garibaldi as much as he admired
-Victor Emmanuel and Cavour. But from the first he never doubted of the
-cause of freedom, and astonished his Conservative friends by offering a
-wager across the high table at Trinity as to the time it would take the
-combined French and Italian forces to occupy Milan. So far as I can
-remember, he was right almost to the very day.
-
-From his boyhood Luard had been an ardent collector of books, and it was
-probably this taste that induced him to take a further excursion into
-the past, and begin the study of manuscripts. Professor Mayor tells me
-that the influence and example of Dr S. R. Maitland turned his attention
-to the Middle Ages in the widest sense—their history, their literature,
-and their life. This may well have been the case, for I know, from many
-conversations, that he had the profoundest respect and admiration for Dr
-Maitland’s character, and for the thoroughness of his studies and
-criticisms. I do not know how Luard acquired his very accurate knowledge
-of medieval handwriting; but I remember that in 1855 or 1856 he gave me
-some lessons of the greatest value. In the second of these years the
-first volume of the Catalogue of Manuscripts in the University Library
-was published, into the preparation of which he had thrown himself with
-characteristic enthusiasm. As time went on, the direction of the work
-was left more and more to him; he became the editor, and to him the
-excellent index, published in 1867, is mainly, if not entirely, due.
-
-From the study of manuscripts to their transcription and publication the
-transition is easy, and we need therefore find no difficulty in
-accounting for his employment by the Master of the Rolls. He began his
-work on that series in 1858 by editing certain _Lives of Edward the
-Confessor_, written in old French. This work, on which he had bestowed
-infinite pains, was not free from errors. The study of the language in
-which it is written was not understood at that time as it is now, and it
-is no discredit to Luard’s memory to admit that he was not fully
-prepared for the task. But such mistakes as he made are no justification
-for the savage and personal attack to which he was subjected, eleven
-years afterwards, by a critic who ought to have known better. I do not
-feel that this is the place to criticise, or even to mention, the long
-list of historical works that Luard subsequently edited, the last of
-which appeared not long before his death. His labours in this field of
-research have been better appreciated in Germany than in England, but
-even here scholars like Bishop Stubbs and Professor Freeman have spoken
-with cordial appreciation of the value of his work. It is worth noting
-too that here his passion for old methods of editing deserted him;
-nothing can be more thoroughly modern than his treatment of these
-ancient records. Nor can I leave this part of my subject without
-noticing his indexes. He was the very prince of index-makers; every
-sheet, before it was finally passed for press, was fully indexed, with
-the result that not only were mistakes recognised and corrected, but the
-index itself, worked out on a definite system conceived from the
-beginning, was carried through to a satisfactory conclusion without
-haste or weariness, and became a real catalogue of the subjects referred
-to in the work itself.
-
-Luard was Registrary of the University from 1862 to his death in 1891.
-To this work he brought the same painstaking accuracy, and the same
-unselfish readiness to endure hard work, that distinguished his other
-labours. The ordinary duties of his office were discharged with
-marvellous rapidity, and almost painful attention to detail; and the
-records were admirably re-arranged. Mr Romilly, his predecessor, had
-brought order out of confusion, and prepared an excellent catalogue on
-modern lines; but Luard went a step farther. He bound the contents of Mr
-Romilly’s bundles in a series of volumes, each of which he indexed with
-his own hand. These separate indexes were then transcribed, and finally
-bound together so as to form a complete catalogue of the contents of the
-Registry. Every paper can now be found with the least possible loss of
-time, while each bound volume contains a complete history of the subject
-to which it relates, so far as it can be illustrated by documents in the
-Registry.
-
-Luard’s duties as Registrary, added to the continuous strain of his
-historical work, would have been enough for most people; but he never
-forgot that he was a clergyman, as well as a man of letters, and he took
-care always to have some active clerical work to do. He was an eloquent
-preacher, and his sermons in the College Chapel used to be listened to
-with an interest that we did not always feel in what was said to us from
-that pulpit. They were plain, practical, persuasive; the compositions of
-one who was not above his congregation; who had nothing donnish about
-him, but who spoke to the undergraduates as one who had passed through
-the same temptations as themselves, and who was, therefore, in a
-position to show them the right road. On the same principles, for the
-twenty-seven years during which he was Vicar of Great S. Mary’s, he
-laboured in the parish in a spirit of true sympathy. There was no
-fussiness about him; he did not take part in movements; he did not
-‘work’ a parish as a modern clergyman does, on the principle of
-perpetual worry, leaving neither man, nor woman, nor child at peace for
-a moment; he led his people to better things by gentle measures; he
-sympathized with their troubles; he relieved their necessities; in a
-word, he exercised an unbounded influence over them, while refraining
-from interference in matters of moral indifference. His memory will long
-be venerated there for active benevolence, and punctual discharge of all
-that it became him to do. I have heard that the full extent of his
-charities will never be known. He hated display, and avoided reference
-to what he was about unless it was necessary to stimulate others by
-mentioning it; but those who know best tell me that his labours among
-the poor were unremitting, and that his generosity knew no limits.
-
-Nor should it be forgotten, in even the most summary record of Luard’s
-life at Cambridge, that it was he who got Great S. Mary’s restored in
-the true sense of the word, by removing the excrescences which the
-taste, or, rather, want of taste, of the last century had piled up in
-it. He pulled down the carved work thereof—the hideous ‘Golgotha’—with
-axes and hammers, and exhibited to an astonished and by no means
-complacent University the noble church in the unadorned simplicity of
-its architecture. The restoration of the University Church to something
-like its ancient arrangement will be an enduring monument of his
-parochial life.
-
-He was a High Churchman, but a High Churchman with a difference. He
-belonged to the school of Pusey and Liddon rather than to that of the
-modern Ritualist, whose doings were as alien to his convictions and
-feelings as those of the party whom he scornfully styled ‘those
-Protestants.’ I have heard him called narrow and intolerant. I beg leave
-to refer such detractors to the sermon preached by him on the Sunday
-after the death of Frederick Denison Maurice. And this brings me to what
-was, perhaps, the leading principle of his whole life—his absolute
-honesty and fearlessness. He held certain beliefs and certain opinions
-himself, which he cherished, and which were of vital importance to
-himself; but he did not shut his eyes to the possibility that others who
-held diametrically opposite views might be in the right also. And if he
-found a man sincere, no considerations of party, of respectability, of
-imaginary dangers concealed behind opinions held to be heretical, would
-prevent him from speaking out and proclaiming his admiration.
-
-In manners Luard had much of the stately courtesy which we commonly
-ascribe to the last century, joined to a vivacious impulsiveness due, no
-doubt, to his French extraction. This impulsiveness led him into a
-rapidity of thought and utterance which often caused him to be
-misunderstood. He said what came first into his thoughts, and corrected
-it afterwards; but, unfortunately for him, people remembered the first
-words used, and forgot the explanation. Hence he was often
-misunderstood, and credited with opinions he did not really hold. He
-delighted in society, and few men knew better how to deal with it, or
-how to make his house an agreeable centre of Cambridge life. In this he
-was ably seconded by his admirable wife, _qui savait tenir un salon_, as
-the French say, more successfully than is usual in this country. Without
-her help he would hardly have been able to find the time required for
-his continual hospitalities. The house was different from any other
-house that I have ever known, and reflected, more directly, the peculiar
-gifts and tastes of its owner. The pictures, the china, the books that
-lined the walls, bespoke the cultivated scholar; but the modern volumes
-that lay on the tables showed that he was no dry archaeologist, but full
-of enthusiasm for all that was best in modern literature. He had a keen
-sense of humour, and an admirable memory; and when the conversation
-turned that way, would tell endless stories of Cambridge life, or repeat
-page after page of his favourite Thackeray. At the same time he did not
-engross the conversation, but drew his guests out, and led each
-insensibly to what was interesting to him or to her. It is sad to think
-that all this has passed away; that exactly one month after Luard’s
-death his friends stood again beside his grave to see his only child
-laid in it; that his house will pass into alien hands; and that his
-library will share the fate of similar collections. ‘_Eheu! quanto minus
-est cum aliis versari quam tui meminisse._’
-
-
-
-
- RICHARD OWEN[120].
-
-
-A scientific naturalist who lived in England in the second quarter of
-this present century may be accounted a fortunate man. On the one hand
-was the vast field of the universe, undivided, unallotted; on the other,
-a public eager for instruction. At the present day, when men go to and
-fro, and knowledge is increased, we find it hard to realize the
-isolation of England until after the close of the great war, or the fear
-of invasion that absorbed men’s thoughts until after Trafalgar. That
-fear removed, the modern development of the nation began. The number of
-those who resorted to the Universities increased by leaps and bounds.
-Public school life, as we understand it, was developed. As a natural
-consequence, the flower of the English youth were no longer content with
-the knowledge that had satisfied their fathers and grandfathers. The old
-paths were too narrow for them. The convulsions which had shaken the
-continent had not been without their effect even here; and when Europe
-was again open, account had to be taken of the work of continental
-thinkers. Their achievements must be mastered, continued, developed. It
-was allowed on all hands, except by that small class who can neither
-learn nor forget, that the time for a new departure in scientific
-education had arrived. It was the good fortune of Richard Owen to be
-ready just when he was wanted, to take occasion by the hand, and to
-become the leader in biological research.
-
-How did he effect this? How did a young man, launched on the great world
-of London with no powerful connexions,
-
- ‘Break his birth’s invidious bar,
- And grasp the skirts of happy chance,
- And breast the blows of circumstance
- And grapple with his evil star?’
-
-To take a metaphor from our representative system, Owen was the member
-for biological science in the parliament of letters for nearly half a
-century. And yet he was not a great thinker; his name is not associated
-with any far-reaching generalization, or any theory fruitful of wide
-results. As a comparative anatomist, and as a paleontologist, he did
-plenty of good and solid work. But these pursuits are most commonly
-those of a recluse. The man who engages in them must be content, as a
-general rule, with the four walls of his laboratory, and the applause of
-a small circle of experts. Not so Professor Owen, as he was most
-commonly designated, even after he had received knighthood. He contrived
-to lead an essentially public life; to be seen everywhere; to have his
-last paper talked about in fashionable drawing-rooms quite as much as in
-learned societies. How did he effect this? We think that the answer to
-our question is to be found—first, in the general eagerness for
-scientific instruction which was one of the characteristics of the age
-in which he lived; and, secondly, in his own many-sidedness. He was by
-no means one of those authors ‘who are all author,’ against whom Byron
-launched some of his most brilliant sarcasms. He was a man of science;
-but he was also a polished gentleman of varied accomplishments.
-
-It is to be regretted that such a man has not found a biographer more
-competent than his grandson and namesake; but the reader who reaches the
-end of the second volume will be rewarded by a masterly essay by Mr
-Huxley on Owen’s place in science. This is a remarkable composition; not
-merely for what it says, but for what it does not say; and we recommend
-those who would understand it thoroughly, not merely to read it more
-than once, but to cultivate the useful art of reading between the lines.
-Of a very different nature to _The Life of Owen_ is the article which
-Sir W. H. Flower has contributed to the _Dictionary of National
-Biography_. It is of necessity much compressed, but it contains all that
-is really essential for the proper comprehension of Owen’s scientific
-career, and praise and blame are meted out with calm impartiality. For
-ourselves, we have a sincere admiration for Owen, but an admiration
-which does not exclude a readiness to admit that he had defects. In what
-we are about to say we do not propose to draw a fancy portrait. If we
-nothing extenuate, we shall set down naught in malice. In a word, we
-shall try to present him as he was, not as he might have been.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Richard Owen was born at Lancaster, 20 July, 1804. His father was a West
-India merchant; his mother, Catherine Parrin, was descended from a
-French Huguenot family. She is said to have been a woman of refinement
-and intelligence, with great skill in music, a talent which she
-transmitted to her son. In appearance she was handsome and
-Spanish-looking, with dark eyes and hair. Owen delighted to dwell on his
-mother’s charm of manner, and all that he owed to her early training and
-example. We can well believe this, and the Life is full of touching
-references to her solicitude for her darling son. The interest she felt
-in all that he did even led her to read through his scientific papers
-and his catalogue of the Hunterian collection, with what profit to
-herself we are not informed. Her husband died in 1809; but the family
-seem to have been left in fairly affluent circumstances, and continued
-to live, as before, at Lancaster. Owen’s education began at the
-grammar-school there in 1810, when he was six years old, and ended in
-1820, when he was apprenticed to a local surgeon. Of his schooldays but
-little record has been preserved. One of the masters described him as
-lazy and impudent; he is said to have had no fondness for study of any
-kind except heraldry; and his sister used to relate that as a boy he was
-‘very small and slight, and exceedingly mischievous.’
-
-Those who value the records of boyhood for the sake of traces of the
-tastes which made the man celebrated, will be rewarded by the perusal of
-the pages which record Owen’s four years as a surgeon’s apprentice at
-Lancaster. Not only will they find that he worked diligently at the
-curative side of his profession, but that, his master being surgeon to
-the gaol, he had the opportunity of attending post-mortem examinations,
-and so laid the foundation of his knowledge of the structure of the
-human frame. Here too we catch a glimpse of the future comparative
-anatomist; but the story of ‘The Negro’s Head,’ here given in the words
-used by Owen when he told it himself, is unfortunately too long for
-quotation, and is certainly far too good to be spoilt by abbreviation.
-
-In October 1824 Owen matriculated at the University of Edinburgh. There,
-in addition to the courses that were obligatory, he attended the
-‘outside’ lectures in comparative anatomy delivered by Dr John Barclay.
-From these he derived the greatest benefit, and used in after-years to
-speak of Barclay with affectionate regard, as ‘my revered preceptor.’ It
-is noteworthy that, while at Edinburgh, Owen and one of his friends
-founded a students’ society, which at his suggestion was called, by a
-sort of prophetic instinct, the Hunterian Society. Barclay must have
-decided very quickly that he had to do with no common pupil, for at the
-end of April 1825, when Owen had been barely six months in Edinburgh, he
-advised him to move to St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, and study
-under Dr. Abernethy, then near the close of his brilliant but eccentric
-career. Armed with a letter of introduction from Barclay, Owen set out
-for London, where he had ‘literally not one single friend.’ No wonder
-that he felt ‘an indescribable sense of desolation’ as he walked up
-Holborn, and that ‘the number of strange faces that kept passing by
-increased that feeling.’ What happened next is very characteristic of
-the strange mixture of roughness and kindness which was natural to his
-new patron.
-
-‘Abernethy had just finished lecturing, and was evidently in anything
-but the best of tempers, being surrounded by a small crowd of students
-waiting about to ask him questions. Owen was just screwing up his
-courage to attack this formidable personage and state his business, when
-Abernethy suddenly turned upon him and said: “And what do you want?”
-After presenting the letter Abernethy glanced at it for a moment,
-stuffed it into his pocket, and vouchsafed the gracious reply of “Oh!”
-As this did not seem to point to anything very definite, Owen was
-turning to go, when Abernethy called after him: “Here; come to breakfast
-to-morrow morning at eight,” and presenting him with his card, added,
-“That’s my address.” What were the terms in which Dr Barclay had spoken
-of him Owen never knew, but he thought they must have been favourable,
-for when he presented himself next morning at Abernethy’s residence, and
-was anticipating anything but an agreeable _tête-à-tête_ with the great
-doctor, he found him, to his surprise, considerably smoothed down and
-quite pleasant in his manner. The result of the meeting was that
-Abernethy offered him the post of prosector for his lectures’ (i. 30).
-
-A year later (August 18, 1826) Owen obtained the membership of the
-College of Surgeons, and set up as a medical practitioner in Carey
-Street, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, where he gradually obtained a small
-practice among lawyers.
-
-We have no wish to underrate Owen’s brilliant talents, or his
-perseverance, or his power of sustained work with a definite end in
-view; but at the same time it would be absurd to deny that he had
-good-fortune to thank for a large part of his first successes. What else
-made Abernethy, at their first interview, give him just the appointment
-best calculated to bring his peculiar gifts into the light of day? What
-else made the same patron procure his appointment, two years later, as
-assistant-conservator of the Hunterian collections, out of which all his
-future celebrity was developed? He might have been ‘exceedingly well
-informed in all that relates to his profession, an excellent anatomist,
-and sober and sedate very far beyond any young man I ever knew,’ as one
-who was in a position to know said of him in 1830, and yet have ‘bloomed
-unseen,’ an obscure practitioner in ‘the dusky purlieus of the law,’ had
-not the fickle goddess selected him as the special recipient of her
-favours.
-
-Owen’s active life in London divides itself naturally into two periods,
-each containing nearly thirty years. The first, during which he was
-connected with the Royal College of Surgeons, extended from 1827 to
-1856; the second, during which he was nominally superintendent of the
-biological side of the British Museum, from 1856 to 1883.
-
-Those who would rightly understand his work during the former period
-must of necessity take into account the history and extent of the vast
-collection which he was expected to catalogue and to develop, for it
-dominated and directed all his studies. It was formed by the celebrated
-surgeon, John Hunter, between 1763 and 1793, in which year he died. In
-studying it, one is at a loss what to admire most—the beauty of the
-specimens themselves, and the admirable clearness with which those
-preserved in spirit have been dissected and mounted; or the labour and
-self-denial which brought them together in the midst of the incessant
-occupations of a large practice; or the almost prophetic instinct which
-divined what posterity would require in the way of such aids to study.
-It was Hunter’s object to illustrate the phenomena of life in all
-organisms, whether in health or in disease. For this purpose he
-collected as widely as he could. There is an osteological series, and a
-physiological series (in spirit), which exhibits the different organs,
-digestive, circulatory, and the like, in order, and traces their
-development from the simplest to the most complicated form. To the
-Invertebrata he had devoted special attention. He had secured, through
-his friend Sir Joseph Banks, many of the treasures collected during
-Cook’s voyages; and he had purchased rarities as occasion offered. Of
-insects he had a large collection. Nor were his observations limited to
-the animal kingdom. Whenever any physiological process could be
-illustrated by vegetable life, vegetables were pressed into the service.
-Nor did he fail to recognize the truth—which some persons still refuse
-to accept—that the remains of extinct animals are only in their proper
-place when side by side with those still living on the earth. ‘His
-collection of fossils,’ says Owen in one of his prefaces, ‘was the
-largest and most select of any in this country.’
-
-To contain this collection Hunter had built a special museum in Castle
-Street, Leicester Square, which was open to public inspection on certain
-days. After his death his executors, in accordance with his will,
-offered the collection to the Government. ‘Buy preparations?’ exclaimed
-Mr Pitt; ‘why, I have not money enough for gunpowder!’ Ultimately,
-however, the House of Commons agreed to give £15,000 for it, just
-one-fifth of the sum that Hunter is said to have spent upon it. Next
-arose the further question, who should take care of it. The Royal
-Society, it is said, did not consider it ‘an object of importance to the
-general study of natural history’; the British Museum was literary, not
-scientific; and finally, in 1799, the Corporation of Surgeons, as it was
-then called, accepted it, under the condition that a proper catalogue
-should be made, a conservator appointed, and twenty-four lectures in
-explanation of it delivered annually in the college. Soon afterwards the
-Corporation of Surgeons became the Royal College of Surgeons, and a
-building, to which Parliament contributed £27,500, was built for its
-reception. This was opened in 1813.
-
-When Owen was appointed assistant-conservator of these collections
-thirty-four years had elapsed since Hunter’s death. During that time
-they had been preserved from damage by the devoted care of Mr William
-Clift, who, after being Hunter’s assistant for a short time, had been
-appointed conservator, first by the executors, and subsequently by the
-college. The general arrangement had been prescribed by Hunter, but no
-descriptive catalogue existed, as it had been, unfortunately, Hunter’s
-habit to trust to his memory for the history of his specimens. Further,
-though lists, more or less imperfect, drawn up either by Hunter himself
-or under his direction, had been preserved, the bulk of his papers had
-been destroyed by Sir Everard Home, his brother-in-law and executor.
-‘There is but one thing more to be done—to destroy the collection,’ was
-Clift’s remark when he heard of this act of cynical wickedness. In the
-scarcity, therefore, of documentary evidence, other expedients had to be
-resorted to for the identification of the specimens which Hunter had
-dissected, or had preserved entire in spirit. As Owen remarks in the
-preface to the first volume of his descriptive catalogue (published in
-1833), ‘It was necessary to consult the book of Nature.’ At first it was
-no easy matter to procure the animals required; but after the
-establishment of the Zoological Society this difficulty was in a great
-measure removed, and more than two hundred dissections were made by Owen
-in the course of the work incident to the preparation of the first
-volume of the catalogue.
-
-This sketch of the Hunterian collections, which we would gladly have
-worked out in greater detail had our space allowed us to do so, will
-perhaps be sufficient to indicate to our readers the nature of the field
-of research on which Owen was about to enter. It was, in fact, an
-undiscovered country, of which he was to be the pioneer. One would like
-to know whether he had any idea of what the work he was about to
-undertake implied; and whether he had any misgivings as to his own
-fitness for it. He was only twenty-three years old, so perhaps, as youth
-is sanguine, he entered upon it with a light heart, thinking—if he
-paused to think—that he had strength of will sufficient to compensate
-for defect of years and knowledge. ‘On vieillit vite sur les champs de
-bataille.’ His previous training must have been in the main
-professional; he could have gained at most only a glimpse of comparative
-anatomy at the feet of Dr Barclay; the great writers on the subject,
-Buffon, Daubenton, Cuvier, and the rest, must have been mere names to
-him. Moreover, he was obliged, for lucre’s sake, to continue the
-profession of a surgeon, and, though he gradually dropped it, he must,
-for some time at least, have spent a good deal of time over it. Besides
-this, he probably assisted Clift in the brief catalogue of the Hunterian
-collections that appeared between 1833 and 1840. But, while thus
-engaged, he found time for study. For three years he attempted no
-original work; and when he did begin to write (his first paper is dated
-9 November, 1830), it is evident that the previous years had been spent
-in wise preparation. There is no trace of the novice in the papers that
-followed each other in quick succession; they evince a complete mastery
-of the subject from the historical, as well as from the anatomical,
-side. The mere number of these communications, addressed principally to
-the Zoological Society, is almost past belief. Before the end of 1855
-more than 250 had appeared, many of which were of considerable length,
-and enriched with elaborate drawings made by himself. But what is more
-surprising still is the versatility displayed in their composition.
-Nowadays a biologist is compelled to specialize. By ‘the custom of the
-country,’ to borrow a legal phrase, he selects his own subject, and is
-expected not to poach on that of his neighbours. But when Owen began to
-work, these laws existed not, or at any rate not for him. The very
-nature of his work obliged him to study in quick succession the most
-diverse structures; and, as death does not accommodate itself to human
-convenience, he could not tell from day to day what animals would be
-sent from the Zoological Gardens to his dissecting-room. An excellent
-bibliography of his works at the end of the second volume of the _Life_
-enables us to trace his studies in detail. For our present purpose we
-will only point out that between 1831 and 1835 he had written papers
-(among many others) on the orang-outang, beaver, Thibet bear, gannet,
-armadillo, seal, kangaroo, tapir, cercopithecus, crocodile, toucan,
-hornbill, pelican, flamingo, besides various Invertebrates.
-
-While Owen was preparing himself for his serious attack on the catalogue
-an event occurred which had an important influence on his scientific
-development. Cuvier came to England to collect materials for his work on
-fishes, and naturally visited the Hunterian collection. Owen has
-preserved a singularly modest account of his introduction to the great
-French naturalist:
-
-‘In the year 1830 I made Cuvier’s personal acquaintance at the Museum of
-the College of Surgeons, and was specially deputed to show and explain
-to him such specimens as he wished to examine. There was no special
-merit in my being thus deputed, the fact being that I was the only
-person available who could speak French, and who had at the same time
-some knowledge of the specimens. Cuvier kindly invited me to visit the
-Jardin des Plantes in the following year’ (i. 49).
-
-Accordingly, Owen spent the month of August 1831 in Paris. It has been
-frequently stated, says his biographer, that Cuvier and his collection
-‘made a great impression on Owen, and gave a direction to his
-after-studies of fossil remains,’ a position which he contests on the
-ground that neither Owen’s diary nor his letters describing the visit
-warrant such a conclusion. We do not attach much importance to this
-argument, but we feel certain that the Museum of the Jardin des Plantes,
-from its unfortunate subdivision into departments widely separated
-structurally from each other, could not have stimulated anybody in that
-particular direction. That Cuvier was, to a very large extent, Owen’s
-master in comparative anatomy is undeniable; he quotes him with respect,
-not to say with reverence, in almost every page of his writings, and the
-‘Prix Cuvier’ adjudged to him in 1857 probably gave him more pleasure
-than all his other distinctions. Cuvier’s method, as set forth in _Les
-Ossemens Fossiles_, of illustrating and explaining extinct animals by
-comparison with recent was closely followed by his illustrious disciple.
-But this principle might easily have been learnt—and in our judgment was
-learnt—by a study of his works at home. On the other hand, Owen has
-stated, in unequivocal terms, the direction in which Cuvier did exert a
-special influence upon him. In his _Anatomy of Vertebrates_ (iii. 786),
-published in 1868, he says:
-
-‘At the close of my studies at the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, in 1831, I
-returned strongly moved to lines of research bearing upon the then
-prevailing phases of thought on some general biological questions.
-
-‘The great Master in whose dissecting-rooms, as well as in the public
-galleries of comparative anatomy, I was privileged to work, held that
-“species were not permanent”; and taught this great and fruitful truth,
-not doubtfully or hypothetically, but as a fact established inductively
-on a wide and well-laid basis of observation.’
-
-Further, Owen had the opportunity of listening to some of the debates
-between Cuvier and Geoffrey Saint-Hilaire on the question of how new
-species may originate; and ‘on returning home,’ he adds, ‘I was guided
-in all my work with the hope or endeavour to gain inductive ground for
-conclusions on these great questions.’ Here, then, was the definite
-educational result which Owen gained from his visit. It had, moreover,
-another consequence. It made him known to the French naturalists, then
-in the front rank of science. His scientific acquirements, coupled with
-his agreeable manners and facility in speaking and writing French, made
-him a _persona grata_ in Paris. In 1839 he was elected a corresponding
-member of the Institute, and read more than one paper there in French.
-
-We have already mentioned the long line of scientific papers which, from
-1830 onwards, were the result of Owen’s indomitable energy. This series
-was now to be interrupted for a moment by the famous _Memoir on the
-Pearly Nautilus_, a quarto volume of sixty-eight pages, illustrated by
-eight plates, drawn by himself. The shell of the nautilus, as most
-persons know, has always been fairly common; but the animal which was
-given to the Museum of the College of Surgeons in 1831 was, we believe,
-the first, or nearly the first, which had ever reached this country, and
-Owen was most fortunate in having the chance of describing such a
-rarity. His essay, elaborate and exhaustive as it is, was dashed off in
-less than a year. It was received with a general chorus of praise. Dr
-Buckland spoke of it as ‘Mr Owen’s admirable work,’ and they were soon
-in correspondence on the way in which the nautilus sinks and rises in
-the water. Milne Edwards translated it into French, and Oken into
-German. Nor has the contemporary verdict been reversed by that of
-posterity. Mr Huxley says of the _Memoir_ that it
-
-‘placed its author, at a bound, in the first rank of monographers. There
-is nothing better in the _Mémoires sur les Mollusques_, I would even
-venture to say nothing so good, were it not that Owen had Cuvier’s great
-work for a model; certainly, in the sixty years that have elapsed since
-the publication of this remarkable monograph it has not been excelled’
-(ii. 306).
-
-This essay seems to have given Owen a taste for the group to which the
-nautilus belongs. At the conclusion of the _Memoir_ he proposed a new
-arrangement of it, now generally accepted, which includes the fossil as
-well as the recent forms; and, as occasion presented itself, he
-described other species and genera. The merit of a memoir on the fossil
-group called ‘belemnites,’ from the Oxford Clay, was the cause assigned
-for the award to him of the gold medal of the Royal Society in 1846.
-
-Between 1833 and 1840 the long-desired catalogue, in five quarto
-volumes, made its appearance. Sir William Flower calls it ‘monumental’;
-a singularly happy epithet, for it commemorates, as a monument should
-do, alike the founder of the Museum and the industrious anatomist who
-had minutely described the four thousand specimens of which the
-‘physiological series’—or, as we should now say, the series of
-organs—then consisted. Nor, though the arrangement is obsolete, can the
-work itself be regarded as without value, even at the present time. It
-has already served as a model for the catalogues of many other museums,
-and has taken its place in the literature of the subject. It is, in
-fact, an elaborate treatise on comparative anatomy from the point of
-view of the modifications of special organs. The thirteen years spent
-over it can hardly appear an excessively long time when we remember the
-work involved, and also the fact that the college had from the first
-recognized the duty of filling up gaps in the collection as occasion
-offered. Many of the specimens recorded in this catalogue had been
-prepared by Owen himself.
-
-During the years that Owen spent upon the catalogue his position at the
-College of Surgeons was gradually becoming assured. He had begun as
-assistant-curator at £120 a year, but with no prospects, as the place of
-curator was expected to be given to Mr Clift’s son on his father’s
-retirement. But in 1832 the younger Clift died suddenly from the effects
-of an accident, and Owen remained as sole assistant at £200. In July
-1833 his salary was raised to £300, and in 1835 he was enabled to marry
-Caroline Clift, Mr Clift’s only daughter. From this time until 1852,
-when the Queen gave him the delightful cottage at Sheen which he lived
-in till his death, he had apartments within the building of the College
-of Surgeons. They were small, and inconvenient in many ways. Owen was in
-the habit of turning his study into a dissecting-room, and his wife’s
-diary contains many amusing references to the pervading odours caused by
-the examination of a rhinoceros or an elephant, or to such disturbances
-as the following: ‘Great trampling and rushing upstairs past our bedroom
-door. Asked Richard if the men were dancing the polka on the stairs. He
-said, “No; what you hear is the body being carried upstairs. They are
-dissecting for fellowship to-day!”’ But, on the other hand, the
-proximity to the library and the museum, which he could enter at any
-hour of the night or day, must have greatly helped one who worked so
-incessantly. Ultimately, in 1842, Owen became sole curator, with Mr
-Quekett as his assistant. This was, no doubt, a dignified position, but
-it had its drawbacks. Owen’s golden time at the college was the period
-between 1827 and 1842, when the business details were taken off his
-hands by the painstaking and methodical Clift. After 1842 he was held
-responsible, as curators usually are, for much that he regarded as
-irksome routine. This he performed in a perfunctory fashion that did not
-please the Council, and difficulties arose between that body and their
-distinguished servant which time only rendered more acute. It may be
-that the Council were not sufficiently sensible of the honour reflected
-upon the college by possessing ‘the first anatomist of the age’; and
-Owen, on his side, may have been too fond of doing work which brought
-‘grist to the mill,’ and applause, and troops of friends, without being
-directly connected with the college. However this may have been, it is
-beyond dispute that Owen’s removal, in 1856, to the British Museum, was
-a fortunate solution of a difficulty which otherwise would probably have
-ended in an explosion.
-
-It has been already mentioned that when the Hunterian Museum was
-entrusted to the care of the College of Surgeons it had been stipulated
-that its contents should be illustrated by an annual course of
-twenty-four lectures. Up to 1836 this course had been divided between
-the professors of anatomy and surgery; but in that year Owen was
-appointed first Hunterian Professor of Comparative Anatomy and
-Physiology. To the last days of his life he constantly referred to the
-pleasure which this appointment gave him when first conferred upon him;
-nor did this feeling wear off as time went on. He gave his lectures
-regularly, with the same keen interest and thoroughness of preparation,
-down to 1855. At first he confined himself strictly to his prescribed
-subject; but gradually he widened his field, and introduced whatever
-views or subjects happened to be interesting him. Most of the lectures
-were worked up into books afterwards. He was an admirable lecturer—in
-fact, he was better as a lecturer than as a writer; for it must be
-confessed that his scientific style is often pedantic and cramped, and
-he seems to use words rather for the sake of concealing his thoughts
-than of imparting them. It is interesting to learn what pains he took
-with his early lectures—how he rehearsed them to his wife, or to a
-friend, till he got used to the work, and could estimate exactly how
-much would fill the allotted hour. We cannot refrain from quoting Mrs
-Owen’s account of the first lecture:
-
-‘So busy all the morning; had hardly time to be nervous, luckily for me.
-R. robed in the drawing-room, and took some egg and wine before going
-into the theatre. He then went in and left me. At five o’clock a great
-noise of clapping made me jump, for I timed the lecture to last a
-quarter of an hour longer; but R., it seems, cut it short rather than
-tire Sir Astley Cooper too much. All went off as well as even I could
-wish. The theatre crammed, and there were many who could not get places.
-R. was more collected than he or I ever supposed, and gave this awful
-first lecture almost to his own satisfaction! We sat down a large party
-to dinner. Mr Langshaw and R. afterwards played two of Corelli’s
-sonatas’ (i. 109).
-
-These lectures, more than anything that he wrote, made Owen famous, and
-procured for him a passport into society. To understand this, which
-appears almost a phenomenon at the present day, it must be remembered
-that the lecture-mania had not become one of the common diseases of
-humanity in 1836, and that it was still considered proper for great
-people to play the part of Mecenas to those who were distinguished in
-science or in letters. Hence, when the news spread abroad that a young
-and hitherto unknown lecturer was discoursing eloquently on a new
-subject in a building which few had heard of and none had seen,
-curiosity carried fashion into Lincoln’s Inn Fields, and certain dukes
-and earls, who cultivated a taste for natural history _dans leur moments
-perdus_, set the example of sitting at the feet of the new Gamaliel;
-more serious persons followed, and by-and-by a Hallam, a Carlyle, and a
-Wilberforce might be seen there side by side with the lights of medicine
-and surgery.
-
-To most men the work which these lectures, together with the catalogue,
-entailed, would have been sufficient. But Owen loved diversity of
-occupations; and one of his fortunate accidents presently threw an
-attractive paleontological subject in his way. It happened in this wise.
-Readers of the _Life of Charles Darwin_ will remember his
-disappointment, on his return home from the now classic voyage of the
-_Beagle_, to find that zoologists cared but little for his collections;
-that, in fact, Lyell and Owen were the only two who wished to possess
-any of his specimens. The latter, who had been introduced to him by the
-former, was not slow to grasp the scientific value of the extinct
-animals whose bones Darwin had dug with his own hands out of the
-fluviatile deposits of South America. He began with a huge skull—‘the
-head of an animal equalling in size the hippopotamus’—and described it
-before the Geological Society, in 1837, under the name of _Toxodon
-platensis_. Further, as Mr Huxley points out:
-
-‘It is worthy of notice, that in the title of this memoir there follow,
-after the name of the species, the words “referable by its dentition to
-the Rodentia, but with affinities to the Pachydermata and the
-herbivorous Cetacea,” indicating the importance in the mind of the
-writer of the fact that, like Cuvier’s _Anoplotherium_ and
-_Paleotherium_, _Toxodon_ occupied a position between groups which, in
-existing Nature, are now widely separated’ (ii. 308).
-
-The same writer bids us remark that this ‘maiden essay in paleontology
-possesses great interest’ from another point of view, for ‘it is with
-reference to Owen’s report on _Toxodon_ that Darwin remarks in his
-_Journal_: “How wonderfully are the different orders, at the present
-time so well separated, blended together in different points in the
-structure of _Toxodon_.”’ Soon afterwards Owen described the rest of
-Darwin’s fossil specimens in the geological part of _The Zoology of the
-‘Beagle’ Voyage_.
-
-Two years later, in 1839, a second and still more sensational
-_trouvaille_ came into his hands. A fragment of bone was offered for
-sale to the College of Surgeons, with the statement that it had been
-obtained in New Zealand from a native, who said that it was the bone of
-a great extinct eagle. Out of this fragment there ultimately grew that
-phalanx of huge extinct birds to which Owen gave the name of _Dinornis_
-(bird of wonder), on which he occupied himself till his death. His
-recognition of the true origin of this fragment was, no doubt, a
-wonderful instance of his osteological sagacity; but it is a
-misrepresentation of fact to say that he evolved the whole of an extinct
-bird out of a fragment of bone six inches long. What he did do, and how
-he did it, shall be told in his own words:
-
-‘As soon as I was at leisure I took the bone to the skeleton of the ox,
-expecting to verify my first surmise [that it was a marrow-bone, like
-those brought to table wrapped in a napkin]; but, with some resemblance
-to the shaft of the thigh-bone, there were precluding differences. From
-the ox’s humerus, which also affords the tavern delicacy, the
-discrepancy of shape was more marked. Still, led by the thickness of the
-wall of the marrow-cavity, I proceeded to compare the bone with
-similar-sized portions of the skeletons of the various quadrupeds which
-might have been introduced and have left their remains in New Zealand;
-but it was clearly unconformable with any such portions.
-
-‘In the course of these comparisons I noted certain obscure superficial
-markings on the bone, which recalled to mind similar ones which I had
-observed on the surface of the long bones in some large birds. Thereupon
-I proceeded with it to the skeleton of the ostrich. The bone tallied in
-point of size with the shaft of the thigh-bone in that bird, but was
-markedly different in shape. There were, however, the same superficial
-reticulate impressions on the ostrich’s femur which had caught my
-attention in the exhaustive comparison previously made with the
-mammalian bones.
-
-‘In short, stimulated to more minute and extended examinations, I
-arrived at the conviction that the specimen had come from a bird, that
-it was the shaft of a thigh-bone, and that it must have formed part of
-the skeleton of a bird as large as, if not larger than, the full-sized
-male ostrich, with this more striking difference, that whereas the femur
-of the ostrich, like that of the rhea and eagle, is pneumatic, or
-contains air, the present huge bird’s bone had been filled with marrow,
-like that of a beast[121].’
-
-The suggestion was received with sceptical astonishment, and the paper
-in which Owen announced it to the Zoological Society (November 12, 1839)
-narrowly escaped exclusion from the _Transactions_ of that body on the
-ground of its improbability. But confirmation was not slow to arrive,
-though in a direction that was not then expected. The bone was not
-fossilized; it was therefore naturally concluded that there existed
-somewhere in New Zealand—then but partially explored—a race of birds of
-gigantic stature and struthious affinities. We have no space to tell the
-story of the extinction of the moa, as the natives call it—surely the
-most weird and curious of all ‘the fairy-tales of science’; but to Owen
-certainly belongs the credit of having been the first to point the way
-to the great discovery. No work of his created so much excitement.
-Society, headed by Prince Albert, hurried to inspect the huge remains,
-of which a large series soon reached this country, and to be introduced
-to the fortunate necromancer, at whose bidding a phantom procession of
-strange creatures had suddenly stepped out of the past into the present.
-
-From this time forward Owen continued to pay as much attention to
-extinct as to recent animals, as his numerous publications testify. The
-work fascinated and excited him.
-
-‘There was no hunt,’ he declared, ‘so exciting, so full of interest, and
-so satisfactory when events prove one to have been on the right scent,
-as that of a huge beast which no eye will ever see alive, and which,
-perhaps, no mortal eye ever did behold. Such a chase is not ended in a
-day, in a week, nor in a season. One’s interest is revived and roused
-year by year as bit by bit of the petrified portions of the skeleton
-comes to hand. Thirty such years elapsed before I was able to outline a
-restoration of _Diprotodon australis_’ [the gigantic extinct kangaroo].
-
-In 1841 appeared his ‘_Description of the Skeleton of an Extinct
-Gigantic Sloth (Mylodon robustus)_, with observations on the osteology,
-natural affinities, and probable habits of the megatheroid quadrupeds in
-general’—‘a masterpiece both of anatomical description and of reasoning
-and inference,’ as Sir W. Flower calls it. He demonstrated its
-affinities with the sloths on osteological and dental grounds, and then
-reasoned out its habits from its configuration; showing that a creature
-so vast could not have ascended trees, but must have pulled them down to
-browse on them at its leisure. Then came the work on British Fossil
-Mammals and Birds, with a long series of memoirs, growing in importance
-as evidences of new forms, discovered in all parts of the world, came
-pouring in, as though his own reputation had attracted them; on the
-Triassic Labyrinthodonts of Central England; on the extinct fauna of
-South Africa and Australia; on the Reptiles of the Wealden and other
-formations in England, published by the Paleontographical Society, of
-which he was one of the first and most ardent supporters; on the
-_Archæopteryx_ from Solenhofen; on the Great Auk; and on the Dodo, one
-of the representations of which, in an old Dutch picture, he had the
-good fortune to discover. It is, indeed, as Mr Huxley remarks, ‘a
-splendid record: enough, and more than enough, to justify the high place
-in the scientific world which Owen so long occupied.’
-
-These researches did not pass unrewarded. In 1838 the Geological Society
-gave to Owen the Wollaston Gold Medal for his work on Darwin’s
-collections, and it happened, by a fortunate coincidence, that Whewell,
-his fellow-townsman and school-fellow, occupied the chair on the
-occasion. In subsequent years he was twice invited to be president of
-that society; but on both occasions he was compelled to decline. Next,
-in 1841, Sir Robert Peel offered him a pension of £200 from the Civil
-List, protesting in a very gracious letter that he knew nothing about
-his political opinions, but merely wished ‘to encourage that devotion to
-science for which you are so eminently distinguished.’ This offer, which
-was gratefully accepted, laid the foundation of an intercourse between
-Owen and Sir Robert which ripened by-and-by into something like
-friendship. Dinners in London were succeeded by visits to Drayton, at
-one of which Owen amused the company with a microscope which he had
-brought with him (of course quite accidentally); and, finally, his
-portrait was painted for the gallery there, as a pendant to that of
-Cuvier. In 1845 Owen refused knighthood.
-
-At this point in Owen’s career it will be convenient to pause for a
-moment and describe very briefly what manner of man it was that was
-rapidly becoming a leading figure in London society. We remember him
-from an earlier date than we care to mention, but, as we have no turn
-for portrait-painting, we gladly accept Sir W. Flower’s lifelike sketch:
-
-‘Owen was tall and ungainly in figure, with massive head, lofty
-forehead, curiously round, prominent, and expressive eyes, high
-cheek-bones, large mouth, and projecting chin, long, lank, dark hair,
-and, during the greater part of his life, smooth-shaven face and very
-florid complexion.’
-
-His manners were distinguished for ceremonious courtesy, coupled with
-the formal exactness of a punctilious Frenchman. His bows were not
-easily forgotten. His enemies said, and his friends could not deny, that
-they varied with the rank of the person to whom he was presented. In
-fact Owen might have said, with Sir Pertinax Macsycophant, ‘I naver in
-my life could stond straight i’ th’ presence of a great mon; but awways
-boowed, and boowed, and boowed, as it were by instinct.’
-
-Next to what he called ‘my dear comparative anatomy,’ Owen loved music,
-and was at one time no mean performer, both vocally and instrumentally.
-Music was his constant recreation in an evening, and he has even been
-known to take his violoncello out with him to parties. He was a frequent
-attendant at concerts and operas, and when Weber’s _Oberon_ was first
-performed in London he went to hear it thirty nights in succession. The
-stage also had attractions for him, and he and his wife had many friends
-in the dramatic profession. Macready in _Henry the Fifth_, Charles Kean
-in _Louis XI._ and _Richard III._, and many minor stars, gave him great
-pleasure; and it was on the stage of Drury Lane Theatre, while joining
-the actors in singing the National Anthem on the occasion of the Queen’s
-first state visit, that he met Charles Dickens, who afterwards became
-his intimate friend. ‘London,’ he once said, ‘is the place for
-interchange of thought’; and it was a relief to him to lay his habitual
-pursuits aside for a few hours, and exchange ideas with men whose lives
-lay in lines wholly different from his own. He found dining-out a
-relaxation—the hours were earlier in those days—and gradually, as his
-social gifts were discovered, he was much in request. No man could tell
-a story better, and his general conversation was brilliant and original.
-He had the happy art of dilating on his own pursuits without being
-either a pedant or a bore. Consequently he was a member of many
-societies who, ‘greatly daring, dined,’ as, for instance, the Abernethy
-Club, the Literary Society, and The Club, founded by Dr Johnson, an
-exclusive society limited to forty members, in which he occupied the
-place once filled by Oliver Goldsmith. He also promoted the Royal
-Literary Fund and the Actors Benevolent Fund—where his after-dinner
-eloquence was much appreciated. He was a good chess-player, and was
-often matched, successfully, with some of the first players of the day,
-as Landseer, Staunton, and the Duke of Brunswick. His acquaintance with
-literature was wider than might have been expected from his absorbing
-occupations in other directions, and his retentive memory enabled him to
-quote pages of Milton, Shakespeare, and other standard writers. He was
-also an ardent novel-reader. Mrs Owen kept him well supplied with the
-novels of the day; and he sat up half the night over _Eugene Aram_, the
-serial stories of Dickens, _Vanity Fair_, _Shirley_, and _The Mill on
-the Floss_, which we are glad to find he preferred to all the rest of
-George Eliot’s stories. Apart from his social proclivities, he managed
-to get acquainted with most of the celebrated people of the day. They
-either came to see him and the museum he directed, or they asked him to
-call on them. Among those whom he met in this way we may mention Mrs
-Fry, Miss Edgeworth, Turner, Samuel Warren, Emerson, Guizot, the younger
-Dumas, Fanny Kemble, Tennyson, Macaulay, and Carlyle, who described him
-as ‘the man with the glittering eyes,’ and decided that he was ‘neither
-a fool nor a humbug.’ In his own especial line of science he was
-intimate with Lord Enniskillen, Sir Philip Egerton, Prince Lucien
-Bonaparte, Sedgwick, Murchison, Lyell; and subsequently took a keen
-interest in the researches of Livingstone, whom he helped with the first
-record of his African work. ‘Poor Livingstone!’ he says; ‘he does not
-know what it is to write a book.’ When Owen could find time for a
-holiday, which was but seldom, he enjoyed fishing and grouse-shooting;
-but his delight in Nature was so keen that probably sport was what he
-least valued in these excursions.
-
-It was natural that, as Owen’s reputation grew, he should be involved in
-some of the schemes for improving the condition of the people which from
-time to time engaged the attention of Government. In 1843 he served on a
-commission of inquiry into the health of towns, and exercised himself
-over sewers, slaughter-houses, and such-like abominations. In 1846 he
-was on the Metropolitan Sewers Commission, which grew out of the former,
-and he did much good work in hunting up evidence about the spread of
-cholera and typhus from imperfect drainage. In the course of this he
-incurred considerable unpopularity, and was contemptuously nick-named
-‘Jack of all Trades.’ The work became so heavy and absorbing that he
-thought of resigning; but when Lord Morpeth urged him to remain, on the
-ground that they could ill spare his ‘enlightened philanthropy,’ he not
-only withdrew his resignation, but consented to serve on a commission to
-consider the state of Smithfield Market and the meat supply of London
-(1849), a subject on which he held very decided opinions. Probably his
-zoological qualifications, coupled with his knowledge of what had been
-effected on the Continent in the way of establishing extramural
-slaughter-houses, had much to do with abolishing the market. He was also
-on the Preliminary Committee of Organization for the Great Exhibition of
-1851, and chairman of the jury on raw materials, alimentary substances,
-&c. Similar services were performed by him for the exhibition held at
-Paris in 1855.
-
-He was also a mark for many of those questions, serious and absurd
-alike, which are presented for solution to men of science. A firm of
-undertakers asked him how much they ought to charge for embalming Mr
-Beckford; a grave Oriental from the Turkish Embassy submitted to his
-examination the bowl of a tobacco-pipe which he believed to have been
-made out of the beak of a Phœnix; his opinion was sought by the Home
-Office on the window-tax, and by Charles Dickens on the publicity of
-executions; his microscopical skill was brought to bear on the so-called
-contemporary annotations of Shakespeare; and he demolished one of the
-many sea-serpents in which a marvel-loving public from time to time
-believes. He showed very conclusively that it was probably a large seal.
-His letter to the _Times_ on the subject excited a good deal of
-attention, and Prince Albert dubbed him ‘the serpent-killer.’ He was
-also to a certain extent responsible for the models of extinct animals
-in the gardens of the Crystal Palace at Sydenham, and was rewarded for
-his trouble by a dinner in the spacious carcase of the Iguanodon.
-
-In 1856—it is said, through the influence of Lord Macaulay—Owen was
-appointed Superintendent of the Department of Natural History at the
-British Museum, with a salary of £800 a year. The new officer was to
-stand towards the collections of natural history in the same relation
-that the librarian did towards the books and antiquities, and to be
-directly responsible, as he was, to the trustees. Great advantages were
-expected to result from this new departure, and Owen was warmly
-congratulated. Professor Sedgwick wrote:
-
-‘I trust that your move to the British Museum is for your happiness. If
-God spare your health, it will be a grand move for the benefit of
-British science. An _Imperator_ was sadly wanted in that vast
-establishment’ (ii. 19).
-
-With Lord Macaulay, anxiety for Owen himself had been paramount:
-
-‘I am extremely desirous that something should be done for Owen. I
-hardly know him to speak to. His pursuits are not mine; but his fame is
-spread over Europe. He is an honour to our country, and it is painful to
-me to think that a man of his merit should be approaching old age amidst
-anxieties and distresses. He told me that eight hundred a year, without
-a house in the Museum, would be opulence to him’ (ii. 15).
-
-A little foresight might have saved much disappointment. The subordinate
-officers, whom Owen was expected to influence, owed no allegiance to
-him, and resented his intrusion; they had long been practically
-independent within their own departments, and desired to remain so. Such
-a situation would have been difficult even for a born leader of men; but
-for Owen, whose gifts did not lie in that direction, it meant either
-resignation or acceptance of the inevitable. He chose the latter, and,
-dropping the sword of a despot, assumed the peaceful mantle of a
-constitutional sovereign. His reputation did good service to the
-collections in the way of attracting specimens of all kinds from all
-parts of the world; and he exerted himself with exemplary diligence to
-obtain special _desiderata_; but otherwise his duties as administrator
-soon became little more than nominal. There was, however, one subject
-connected with the Museum which had long engaged his attention, and
-which he had the pleasure to see settled before he died, though not
-entirely on the lines he had at first laid down.
-
-It had been manifest for a considerable period that the British Museum
-was too small for the various collections, and two years before Owen’s
-arrival Dr Gray, keeper of zoology, had made a definite request for
-additional accommodation. The trustees, after much consideration, agreed
-to a small, but wholly inadequate, extension of one of the galleries.
-Owen did not act hastily, but, having thoroughly mastered the subject,
-addressed a report to the trustees in 1859, in which he showed that,
-having regard to the congestion of the existing galleries, the quantity
-of specimens stored out of sight, and the probable rate of increase, a
-space of ten acres ought to be acquired at once. This report was
-accompanied by a plan, drawn by himself, in which several special
-features may be noticed. A central hall was to contain an epitome of
-natural history—specimens selected to show the type-characters of the
-principal groups—called in subsequent editions of the plan the
-Index-Museum; adjoining this hall there was to be a lecture-theatre;
-zoology was to include physical ethnology, for which a gallery measuring
-150 feet by 50 feet was to be provided; the Cetacea, stuffed specimens
-and skeletons, were to have a long gallery to themselves; and lastly,
-paleontology was no longer to be separated from zoology, but the gallery
-containing the one was to be readily entered from the gallery containing
-the other. A plan so novel, so enlightened, so truly imperial as this,
-was far too much in advance of the age to meet with anything except
-opposition and ridicule. When it was debated in the House of Commons, Mr
-Gregory, M.P. for Galway, got it referred to a Select Committee,
-regretting, in reference to its author, ‘that a man whose name stood so
-high should connect himself with so foolish, crazy, and extravagant a
-scheme.’ Owen’s first idea had been to purchase the land required at
-Bloomsbury; but on this point he had no very decided personal opinion,
-and, yielding to that of the majority of men of science, he advocated by
-lecture, by conversation, and in print, the removal of the collections
-of natural history to a new and distant site. For this scheme he
-fortunately secured the powerful advocacy of Mr Gladstone, then
-Chancellor of the Exchequer, who moved (May 12, 1862) for leave to bring
-in a Bill to effect it. These excellent intentions were thwarted by Mr
-Disraeli, who, knowing no more about science than he did about
-primroses, saw only a chance of obstructing a political opponent; and
-once more the scheme was adjourned. The adjournment, however, was of
-short duration, for in 1863 Parliament voted the purchase of five acres
-at South Kensington, which Owen presently persuaded the Government to
-increase to eight; but further delays, extending over nearly twenty
-years, ensued, and when Owen resigned in 1883 the collections were not
-yet completely arranged in their new home.
-
-The Museum as completed is widely different from that which Owen
-originally prescribed. The gallery of ethnology is gone; the Cetacea are
-relegated, as at Bloomsbury in former days, to a cellar; there is no
-lecture-theatre; and, in fact, the index-museum is almost the only
-special feature which has survived, but even this was not arranged by
-himself. On one vital question of arrangement, moreover, Owen allowed
-his own views to be overruled. So early as 1842 he had reported to the
-Council of the College of Surgeons on the expediency of combining the
-fossil and recent osteological specimens, pointing out that
-
-‘the peculiarities of the extinct mastodon, for example, cannot be
-understood without a comparison with the analogous parts of the elephant
-and tapir; nor those of the ichthyosaurus without reference to the
-skeletons of crocodiles and fishes. The proper position of such
-specimens in the Museum is, therefore, between those series of skeletons
-of which they present transitional or intermediate structures.’
-
-An arrangement of the recent and fossil collections in accordance with
-these most reasonable and philosophical views appears in all the
-versions of the plan until the last; now it has entirely disappeared,
-and the two collections are disposed in opposite wings of the building
-widely severed from each other. Owen had no special turn for
-organization, and he was probably in a minority of one against his
-colleagues on this point. Besides this, his fighting days were over, and
-he preferred peace to an ideal arrangement of which his contemporaries
-could not see the advantages.
-
-Owen turned his enforced leisure at the British Museum to good account,
-and proceeded, with renewed activity, to occupy himself in various
-directions. In 1857 he gave lectures on paleontology at the Royal School
-of Mines, and his first course seems to have evoked the enthusiasm of
-his earlier days. Said Sir Roderick Murchison:
-
-‘I never heard so thoroughly eloquent a lecture as that of yesterday....
-It is the first time I have had the pleasure of seeing our British
-Cuvier in his true place, and not the less delighted to listen to his
-fervid and convincing defence of the principle laid down by his great
-precursor. Everyone was charmed, and he will have done more (as I felt
-convinced) to render our institution favourably known than by any other
-possible method’ (ii. 61).
-
-Soon afterwards he was appointed (1859-61) Fullerian Professor of
-Physiology at the Royal Institution. Here again he chose ‘Fossil
-Mammals’ as his subject. In later years he gave frequent lectures on
-this and kindred subjects in the larger provincial towns. Nor must we
-omit the lectures to the Royal children at Buckingham Palace, which he
-delivered at the request of Prince Albert in 1860. These lectures, which
-were much appreciated by those for whom they were intended, laid the
-foundations of a close friendship between Owen and the Royal Family.
-
-It must not, however, be supposed that these occupations diverted him
-from osteology. It was during this period that he wrote many of the
-paleontological memoirs to which we have already alluded. He continued
-to publish paper after paper on _Dinornis_ as fresh material
-accumulated; and he composed, among others, his monograph on the Aye-Aye
-(1863), which perhaps excited as much attention as that on the Nautilus
-thirty years before.
-
-Between 1866 and 1868 he published his elaborate treatise _On the
-Anatomy of Vertebrates_, obviously intended to be the standard work on
-the subject for all time. But alas for the fallacies of hope! It is an
-immense store-house of information, founded in the main upon his own
-observations and dissections; and from no similar work will advanced
-students derive so much assistance. But, unfortunately, no revision of
-his own papers was attempted; the novel classification employed has
-never been accepted by any school of zoologists; and the only result of
-the proposed division of the Mammalia into four sub-classes, according
-to their cerebral characteristics, was a controversy from which Owen
-emerged with his reputation for scientific accuracy seriously impaired,
-if not irretrievably ruined. He had stated, not merely in the work of
-which we are speaking, but in others—as, for instance, in the Rede
-Lecture delivered at Cambridge in 1859—that certain divisions of the
-human brain were absent in the apes. It was proved over and over again,
-in public and private, that this assertion was contrary to fact, and
-contrary to his own authorities; but he could never be persuaded to
-retract, or even to modify, his statements.
-
-At the end of the third volume of the _Anatomy_ are some ‘General
-Conclusions,’ which contain, so far as human intelligence can penetrate
-the meaning of Owen’s ‘dark speech,’ his final views on the origin of
-species. We have already shown that his mind was first turned to this
-momentous question during his visit to Paris in 1831, and that
-subsequently, during his work on the Physiological and Osteological
-Catalogues of the Museum of the College of Surgeons, it was continually
-in his thoughts. During this period he read, and was profoundly
-influenced by, Oken’s _Lehrbuch der Naturphilosophie_, a translation of
-which was published by the Ray Society, in 1847, at his instance. In his
-_Archetype and Homologies of the Vertebrate Skeleton_ (1848) he says:
-
-‘The subject of the following essay has occupied a portion of my
-attention from the period when, after having made a certain progress in
-comparative anatomy, the evidence of a greater conformity to type,
-especially in the bones of the head of the vertebrate animals, than the
-immortal Cuvier had been willing to admit, began to enforce a
-reconsideration of his conclusions, to which I had previously yielded
-implicit assent.’
-
-Out of the study here indicated there grew a revision of the vertebrate
-skeleton, in which the homologues (_i.e._ the same organs in different
-animals, under every variety of form and function) were recognized, and
-a new system of osteological nomenclature was proposed. In this Owen did
-excellent work, which has been generally accepted. But in his anxiety to
-recognize and account for ‘the one in the many,’ he adopted Oken’s idea
-of the skeleton being resolvable into a succession of vertebræ, and
-evolved the idea of an archetype. It is almost inconceivable that the
-clear-headed and sagacious interpreter, whose sober conclusions we have
-indicated through a long series of zoological and paleontological
-memoirs, should have ever adopted these transcendental speculations. But
-there was evidently a metaphysical side to his mind, and he took a keen,
-almost a puerile, delight in this child of his fancy. He even had a seal
-engraved with a symbolical representation of it. To show that we are not
-exaggerating we will quote his own account of his views when sending the
-seal to his sister:
-
-‘It represents the archetype, or primal pattern—what Plato would have
-called the “Divine Idea”—on which the osseous frame of all vertebrate
-animals has been constructed. The motto is “The One in the Manifold,”
-expressive of the unity of plan which may be traced through all the
-modifications of the pattern, by which it is adapted to the varied
-habits and modes of life of fishes, reptiles, birds, beasts, and human
-kind. Many have been the attempts to discover the vertebrate archetype,
-and it seems now generally felt that it has been found’ (i. 388).
-
-But, assuming Owen to have really discovered the one, he was as far off
-as ever from the origin of the many. And on this subject he never did
-reach any definite conclusion. He admits, it is true, a theory which
-sounds very like evolution:
-
-‘Thus, at the acquisition of facts adequate to test the moot question of
-links between past and present species, as at the close of that other
-series of researches proving the skeleton of all Vertebrates, and even
-of Man, to be the harmonized sum of a series of essentially similar
-segments, I have been led to recognize species as exemplifying the
-continuous operation of natural law, or secondary cause; and that, not
-only successively, but progressively; from the first embodiment of the
-Vertebrate idea under its old Ichthyic vestment until it became arrayed
-in the glorious garb of the human form[122].’
-
-In this quotation he is in the main stating the views he held in 1849,
-for the latter portion of it is from his essay _On the Nature of Limbs_,
-published in that year. But the nature of the secondary cause which
-produced species cannot be concluded from his works. He fiercely
-contested Darwin’s theory of natural selection, both in conversation and
-in periodicals. To the last he clung to a notion of a ‘vital property,’
-which is thus described in the _Anatomy_ (iii. 807):
-
-‘So, being unable to accept the volitional hypothesis, or that of
-impulse from within, or the selective force exerted by outward
-circumstances, I deem an innate tendency to deviate from parental type,
-operating through periods of adequate duration, to be the most probable
-nature, or way of operation, of the secondary law, whereby species have
-been derived one from the other.’
-
-In 1883 Owen resigned his office at the British Museum and retired into
-private life. His remaining years were passed at Sheen in a tranquil and
-apparently happy old age. In 1884 he was gazetted a K.C.B., and, on Mr
-Gladstone’s initiative, his pension was augmented by £100 a year. But,
-though it pleased him to be always pleading poverty, he was really a
-comparatively wealthy man, and when he died left £30,000 behind him. His
-wife died in 1873, and his only son in 1886; but a solitude which might
-have been painful was enlivened by the presence of his son’s widow and
-her seven children. Owen delighted in the country. He had a genuine love
-for outdoor natural history, and ‘the sight of the deer and other
-animals in the park, the birds and insects in the garden, the trees,
-flowers, and varying aspects of the sky, filled him with enthusiastic
-admiration.’ He died, literally of old age, on Sunday, 18 January, 1892.
-
-It is much to be regretted that one who worked at his own subjects with
-such untiring zeal should have left behind him almost nothing to
-perpetuate his name with the great mass of the people. Mr Huxley remarks
-that, ‘whether we consider the quantity or the quality of the work done,
-or the wide range of his labours, I doubt if, in the long annals of
-anatomy, more is to be placed to the credit of any single worker’ (ii.
-306); but he presently adds this caution: ‘Obvious as are the merits of
-Owen’s anatomical work to every expert, it is necessary to be an expert
-to discern them’ (ii. 332). He gave popular lectures, but they were not
-printed[123]; he wrote what he intended to be a work for all time, but
-it has faded out of recollection, and the whole theory of the archetype
-is now as dead as his own Dinornis. Nor was he at pains to surround
-himself with a circle of pupils who might have handed down the teaching
-of the Master to another generation, as Cuvier’s teaching was handed
-down by his pupils. It was one of Owen’s defects that he was repellent
-to younger men. In a word, he was secretive, impatient of interference,
-and preferred to be _aut Cæsar aut nullus_. Credit was to him worth
-nothing if it was to be divided. Again, brilliant as were his talents
-and assured as was his position, he could not recognize the truth that
-men may sometimes err, and that the greatest gain rather than lose by
-admitting it. During the whole of his long life we believe that he never
-owned to a mistake. Not only was what he said law, but what others
-ventured to say—especially if it ‘came between the wind and his
-nobility’—was to be brushed aside as of no moment. We believe that this
-feeling on his part explains his refusal to accept the Darwinian theory.
-As we have shown, he went half way with it, and then dropped it, because
-it had not been hammered on his own anvil. This unfortunate antagonism
-to other workers, coupled with his readiness to enter into controversy,
-and the acrimony and dexterity with which he handled his adversaries,
-naturally discouraged those who would otherwise have been only too happy
-to sit at the feet of the Nestor of English zoology; and during the last
-thirty years of his life he became gradually more and more isolated.
-Moreover, there was, or there was thought to be, a certain want of
-sincerity about him which no amount of external courtesy could wholly
-conceal. In a word, he was compact of strange contradictions. He had
-many noble qualities; and yet he could not truly be called great, for
-they were warped and overshadowed by many moral perversities. Had he
-lived in the previous century his portrait might have been sketched by
-Pope:
-
- ‘But were there one whose fires
- True genius kindles and fair fame inspires;
- Blest with each talent and each art to please,
- And born to write, converse, and live with ease;
- Should such a man, too fond to rule alone,
- Bear, like the Turk, no brother near the throne,
- View him with scornful yet with jealous eyes,
- And hate for arts that caused himself to rise;
-
- * * * * * * *
-
- Like _Cato_, give his little senate laws,
- And sit attentive to his own applause;
- While wits and templars every sentence raise,
- And wonder with a foolish face of praise—
- Who but must laugh, if such a man there be?
- Who would not weep, if _Atticus_ were he!’
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY J. AND C. F. CLAY, AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
-
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-
-
-
-
-CAMBRIDGE DESCRIBED & ILLUSTRATED. Being a Short History of the Town and
- University. By THOMAS DINHAM ATKINSON; with an Introduction by JOHN
- WILLIS CLARK, M.A., F.S.A., Registrary of the University, late
- Fellow of Trinity College. With Twenty-Nine Steel Plates, numerous
- Illustrations and Maps. 8vo. 21_s._ net.
-
-_DAILY CHRONICLE._—“He has conferred a favour upon all lovers of
-literature and its early seats by going at much length and with great
-care into the questions not only of municipality, but of the University
-and the colleges.... A good thing well done.”
-
-_DAILY NEWS._—“All Cambridge men will be interested in the many quaint
-and curious descriptions of mediæval manners and customs of the
-University Town which Mr. Atkinson has collected. To all with
-archæological interests we strongly recommend the volume.”
-
-_ACADEMY._—“His book will be welcomed by all those who desire to get, in
-the compass of a single volume, a comprehensive view of both Town and
-University. The illustrations throughout the volume are well drawn and
-excellently reproduced.”
-
-_MORNING POST._—“A volume which is copiously illustrated by excellent
-plates, drawings, and maps, and to which an admirable general index
-lends an additional value.”
-
-_SPECTATOR._—“We hail this interesting volume, which attempts to do what
-has heretofore been neglected (save in Cooper’s monumental work),—viz.
-combine in one survey the general history and description of both the
-University and town of Cambridge.”
-
-_CAMBRIDGE REVIEW._—“This most interesting and beautiful book.... To
-most of us this compact volume will come not so much as a luxury, but as
-one of that class of commodities known to economists as being
-‘conventionally necessary.’”
-
-_LITERATURE._—“Throughout deserves the highest praise.”
-
- London: Macmillan and Company, Limited.
-
- Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes.
-
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-
-A CONCISE GUIDE TO THE TOWN AND UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE in Four Walks.
- By JOHN WILLIS CLARK, M.A., F.S.A., Registrary of the University,
- formerly Fellow of Trinity College. With Map and 75 Illustrations.
- Price 1_s._ net, or in limp cloth cover with pocket and duplicate of
- the map, 2_s._ net.
-
-_TIMES._—“All intelligent visitors to Cambridge, however short their
-stay, will be grateful to Mr. J. W. Clark, the Registrary of the
-University, for his excellent _Concise Guide to the Town and University
-of Cambridge in Four Walks_. It is not often that the casual visitor to
-a place of great historical and architectural interest like Cambridge
-finds so competent a _cicerone_ as Mr. Clark to tell him what he can see
-and what is best worth seeing in the time at his disposal.”
-
-_ATHENÆUM._—“Mr. J. Willis Clark has written _A Concise Guide to
-Cambridge_ of unusual excellence.”
-
-_DAILY CHRONICLE._—“An ideal guide-book by a former Fellow of Trinity.”
-
-_MANCHESTER GUARDIAN._—“Mr. Clark’s varied accomplishments raise this
-little book quite out of the category of ordinary popular guide-books.”
-
-_ACADEMY._—“In a book of its size the information is, of course, much
-condensed, but so far as it goes it is excellent.”
-
- LIBRARIES IN THE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE PERIODS. The Rede Lecture,
- delivered June 13, 1894. By J. W. CLARK, M.A., F.S.A. Crown 8vo.
- 2_s._ 6_d._ net.
-
- Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes.
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Friends at Cambridge and Elsewhere, by
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Friends at Cambridge and Elsewhere, by
-J. Willis Clark
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Old Friends at Cambridge and Elsewhere
-
-Author: J. Willis Clark
-
-Release Date: August 18, 2016 [EBook #52846]
-
-Language: English
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-
-
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The footnotes have been re-sequenced for uniqueness across the
-text, and moved to the end of the text. Links are provided for
-convenience of navigation. Footnote 95 (originally footnote 1
-on p. 227) has two separate references in the text, both of
-which are retained.</p>
-
-<div class='epubonly'>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover page has been fabricated, based on the original title
-page, and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There were very few and minor typographical flaws in
-the copy from which this version is derived. These have been
-corrected, with no further notice.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>Old Friends at Cambridge</span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>and Elsewhere</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_colo.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>Old Friends at Cambridge <br /> and Elsewhere</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>by</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>J. Willis Clark, M.A.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>Registrary of the University of Cambridge</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>formerly Fellow of Trinity College</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>London</div>
- <div class='c002'>Macmillan and Co. Limited</div>
- <div>Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>1900</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>All Rights reserved</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class="blackletter">Cambridge:</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>PRINTED BY J. AND C. F. CLAY,</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_7 c006'>I have frequently been asked to write
-my <cite>Memoirs</cite>, or I should rather say, my
-<cite>Recollections</cite>. I have serious doubts as to
-whether I recollect anything of value; and,
-even if I do, I have no time at present to
-commit it to paper. But, as the University,
-when I first knew it, was a very different
-place from what it is now; and as it has
-fallen to my lot to write several biographical
-notices of distinguished Cambridge men, in
-the course of which I have noted incidentally
-a good many of the constitutional and social
-changes of later years, I venture to republish
-what I have written. Such compositions, many
-of which were dashed off on the spur of the
-moment, under the influence of strong feeling,
-with no opportunity for correction or amplification,
-are, I am aware, defective as a serious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>record of lives which ought to have been told
-at greater length. But, that they gain in
-sincerity what they lose in detail, will, I hope,
-be conceded by those who take the trouble to
-read them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Most of these articles are reprinted as they
-were written, with only obvious and necessary
-corrections. The Life of Dr Whewell has been
-slightly enlarged; and that of Bishop Thirlwall
-has been revised, though not substantially
-altered. Any merit that this Life may possess
-is due to the kindness of the late Master of
-my College, Dr Thompson. I myself had
-never so much as seen Thirlwall, and undertook
-the article with great reluctance. But
-my difficulties vanished as soon as I had
-consulted Dr Thompson. He had been one
-of Thirlwall’s intimate friends, and not only
-supplied me with information about him which
-I could not have learnt from any other source,
-but revised the article more than once when
-in type.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The article on Dr Luard is practically new.
-Soon after his death I contributed a short
-sketch of his Life to the <cite>Saturday Review</cite>,
-and afterwards another, in a somewhat different
-style, to a Trinity College Magazine called <cite>The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>Trident</cite>. Out of these, with some additions,
-the present article has been composed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has been suggested to me that an article
-on Richard Owen, in a series devoted entirely,
-with that exception, to Cambridge men, needs
-justification. I would urge in my defence that
-the Senate coopted Owen by selecting him,
-in 1859, as the first recipient of an honorary
-degree under the new statutes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>My cordial thanks are due to Dr Jackson,
-Fellow and Prælector of Trinity College, for
-much valuable criticism, and assistance in preparing
-the volume for the press.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I have also to thank the proprietors of the
-<cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, and those of the
-<cite>Saturday Review</cite>, for their kindness in allowing
-me to reprint articles of which they hold the
-copyright.</p>
-
-<div class='c008'><span class='large'>JOHN WILLIS CLARK.</span></div>
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='sc'>Scroope House, Cambridge.</span></div>
- <div class='line in8'><em>1 January, 1900.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='16%' />
-<col width='66%' />
-<col width='16%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>William Whewell</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, April, 1882.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Connop Thirlwall</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, April, 1883.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_153'>153</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, July, 1891.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Edward Henry Palmer</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_201'>201</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, October, 1883.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Francis Maitland Balfour</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_282'>282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>, 29 July, 1882.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Henry Bradshaw</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_292'>292</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>, 10 February, 1886.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>William Hepworth Thompson</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_302'>302</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>, 9 October, 1886.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Coutts Trotter</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_314'>314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>, 10 December, 1887.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Richard Okes</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_319'>319</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>, 1 December, 1888.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Henry Richards Luard</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_328'>328</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>, 9 May, 1891.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>The Trident</cite>, June, 1891.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Richard Owen</span></td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#Page_344'>344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, July, 1895.</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>WILLIAM WHEWELL<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c011'><sup>[1]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Full materials for the life of Dr Whewell
-are at last before the public. We say ‘at last,’
-because ten years elapsed from his death in
-1866 before the first instalment of his biography
-appeared, and fifteen years before the second.
-Haste, therefore, cannot be pleaded for any
-faults which may be found in either of them.
-Nor, indeed, is it our intention to carp at
-persons who have performed a difficult task
-as well as they could. Far rather would we
-take exception to the strange resolution of
-Dr Whewell’s executors and friends to have
-his life written in separate portions. It was
-originally intended that there should be three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>of these published simultaneously: (1) the
-scientific, (2) the academic, (3) the domestic.
-As time went on, however, it was found impossible
-to carry out this scheme; and Mr
-Todhunter published the first instalment before
-anyone had been found to undertake either
-of the others. At last, after repeated failures,
-the second and third portions were thrown
-together, and entrusted to Mrs Stair Douglas,
-Dr Whewell’s niece by marriage. The defects
-of such a method are obvious; events scarcely
-worth telling once are told twice; documents
-that would have been useful to one biographer
-appear in the work of the other, and the like.
-For this, however, the authors before us deserve
-less blame than the scheme which they were
-compelled to follow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Few lives, we imagine, have been so many-sided
-as to need a double, not to say a triple,
-narrative in order to set them fully before
-the public; and we assert most distinctly that
-Dr Whewell was the last man whose biography
-should have been so treated. His life, notwithstanding
-his diverse occupations and his
-widespread interests, presented a singular unity,
-due to his unflinching determination to subordinate
-his pursuits, his actions, and his thoughts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>to what he felt to be his work in the world, viz.
-the advancement, in the fullest sense the word
-can be made to bear, of his College and his
-University. He himself made no attempt to
-subdivide his time, so as to carry out some
-special work at the expense of other occupations.
-He found time for everything. His extraordinary
-energy, and his power of absorbing
-himself at a moment’s notice in whatever he had
-to do, whether scientific research or University
-business, enabled him to get through an astonishing
-amount of work in a single day. Much
-of what he did must have been very irksome
-and repulsive to him. He particularly disliked
-detail, especially that relating to finance. ‘I
-hate these disgusting details,’ was his way of
-putting aside, or trying to put aside, economical
-discussions at College meetings; and it was
-often hard to make him understand the real
-importance of these apparently small matters.
-Again, he always found time to go into society;
-to keep himself well acquainted with all that
-was going forward in politics, literature, art,
-music, science; and to carry on a vast correspondence
-with relatives, friends, and men of
-science in England and on the Continent. A
-considerable number of these letters have of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>course perished; but the extent of the collection
-is evident from Mr Todhunter’s statement that
-he had examined more than 3,500 letters written
-to Dr Whewell, and more than 1,000 written
-by him. His opinion of the latter, after this
-wide experience, is well worth quotation:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I do not think that adequate justice can be rendered
-to Dr Whewell’s vast knowledge and power by any person
-who did not know him intimately, except by the examination
-of his extensive correspondence; such an examination
-cannot fail to raise the opinion formed of him by the study
-of his published works, however high that opinion may be.
-The evidence of his attainments and abilities which is
-furnished by the fact that he was consulted and honoured
-by the acknowledged chiefs of many distinct sciences is
-most ample and impressive. United with this intellectual
-eminence we find an attractive simplicity and generosity of
-nature, an entire absence of self-seeking and assertion, and
-a warm concern in the fortunes of his friends, even when
-they might be considered in some degree as his rivals.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The academic side of Dr Whewell’s life has
-no doubt been imperfectly related in both the
-works before us; and the due recognition of his
-merits will have to wait until the intellectual
-history of the University during the nineteenth
-century shall one day be written. On the other
-hand, we owe our warmest thanks to Mrs Stair
-Douglas for having brought prominently into
-notice, as only an affectionate woman could do,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>the softer side of Dr Whewell’s character. No
-one who did not know him as she did could
-have suspected the almost feminine tenderness,
-the yearning for sympathy, which were concealed
-under that rough exterior. These qualities,
-though much developed by his marriage, were
-characteristic of him throughout his whole life.
-The following passage, which has not before
-been printed, from a letter written in 1836 to
-the Marchesa Spineto, his oldest and most
-valued Cambridge friend, while he was busy
-writing his <cite>History of the Inductive Sciences</cite>,
-shows how necessary female sympathy was to
-him even when he was most occupied:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It appears to me long since I have seen you, and I am
-disposed to write as if your absence were a disagreeable
-and unusual privation; although it is very likely that if you
-had been here I might have seen just as little of you and
-might have felt just as lonely. And perhaps if I send you
-this sheet of my ruminations, it will find you in the middle
-of a new set of interests and employments, with only a little
-bit of your thoughts and affections at liberty to look this
-way; and so I shall be little the better for the habit you
-have taught me of depending upon you for unvarying
-kindness and love. Perhaps you will tell me I am unjust
-in harbouring such a suspicion, but do not be angry with
-me if I am; for you know such thoughts come into my
-head whether I will or no; and then go away the sooner
-for being put into words.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>University life changes with such rapidity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>that no matter how great a man may have been,
-it is inevitable that he should soon become little
-more than a tradition to those who succeed
-him. Few of the present Fellows of Trinity
-College can have even seen Dr Whewell; and
-though his outward appearance has been handed
-down to posterity by a picture in the Lodge, a
-bust in the Library, and a statue in the Chapel,
-neither canvas nor marble, no matter how skilfully
-they may be handled, can convey the
-impression which that king of men made upon
-his contemporaries. These portraits give a fairly
-just idea of his lofty stature, broad shoulders,
-and large limbs, but the features are inadequately
-rendered in all of them. The proportions are
-probably correct, but the expression has been
-lost. The artists have been so anxious to
-render the philosopher, that they have forgotten
-the man. His expression, except on very
-solemn occasions, was never so grave as they
-have made it. His bright blue eye had nearly
-always a merry twinkle in it, and his broad
-mouth was ever ready to break into a smile.
-His nature was essentially joyous; and he
-dearly loved a good joke, a funny story, or a
-merry party of friends, in which his laugh was
-always the loudest, and his pleasure the keenest.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>Nor did he disdain the pleasures of the table; a
-good dinner, followed by a good bottle of port,
-was not without its charm for him, though it
-may be doubted whether he enjoyed these
-matters for their own sake so much as for the
-society they brought with them. He could not
-bear to be alone, and was not particular into
-what company he went, provided he could get
-good conversation, and plenty of it. He used
-to say that he liked to hear a dinner in ‘full
-cry’; and, if we may adopt his own simile
-without offence to the memory of one whom we
-love and revere, he was himself the leader of
-the pack. He could hardly be called a good
-talker; he was too fond of the sound of his own
-loud cheery voice, and engrossed the conversation
-too much. He would take up a subject
-started by somebody else, and handle it in a
-masterly fashion, as if he were in a lecture
-room, while the rest sat by and listened. He
-laid down the law, too, in a style that did not
-admit of reply. We remember an occasion
-when the conversation turned on Longfellow’s
-<cite>Golden Legend</cite>, then just published, and Whewell
-was asked to say what he thought of it. ‘I
-think it is a bad echo of a bad original, Goethe’s
-<cite>Faust</cite>,’ thundered out the great man; after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>which, of course, there was a dead silence.
-Again, he was no respecter of persons, nor
-was he too careful to observe the ordinary
-rules of politeness. If anybody said a silly
-thing, even if the person were a lady, and in
-her own house, he thought nothing of crushing
-her with ‘Madam, no one but a fool would have
-made that observation’; but his company was
-so delightful, his stores of information so varied
-and so vast, his readiness to communicate them
-so unusual, and his memory so retentive, that
-these eccentricities in ‘Rough Diamond,’ as a
-clever University <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>jeu d’esprit</em></span> called him, were
-readily forgiven. He was far too well aware
-of his own supremacy to be afraid of unbending;
-and years after he became Master of Trinity he
-has been seen to kneel down on the carpet to
-play with a Skye terrier. He was a special
-favourite with young people, especially with
-young ladies, from the heartiness with which he
-threw himself into their pursuits and pleasures,
-talked with them, romped with them, wrote
-verses and riddles and translated German poems
-for their amusement, and assisted approvingly
-at the musical parties which were the fashion
-when he was a young man. There were indeed
-several houses in Cambridge and its neighbourhood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>in which we should have ventured to say
-that he was ‘a tame cat,’ had there been anything
-feline in that rugged and vehement
-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who wish to draw for themselves
-a life-like portrait of Whewell in his best days
-must take into account the fact that his health
-was always excellent. There is a legend that
-as a boy he was delicate; but, if this were
-ever the case, which we doubt, he put it aside
-with other childish things. When he came to
-man’s estate no rebellious liver ever troubled
-his repose, or made him look upon life with
-a jaundiced eye. It was his habit to sit up late;
-but, notwithstanding, he appeared regularly at
-morning chapel, then at 7 a.m., fresh and
-radiant, and ready for the day’s work. This
-vigour of body enabled him to appreciate everything
-with a keenness which age could not
-dull, nor the most poignant grief extinguish,
-except for very brief intervals. He thoroughly
-appreciated ‘the mere joy of living’; and whatever
-was going forward attracted him so
-powerfully that he was never satisfied until
-he had found out all about it. He went everywhere:
-to public ceremonials and exhibitions; to
-new plays, new music, new pictures; to London
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>drawing-rooms and smart country houses; to
-quiet parsonages and canonical residences; to
-foreign cities and English cathedrals; always
-deriving the keenest enjoyment from what
-he saw, and delighting in new experiences
-because they were new. There was but one
-exception to the universality of his interests.
-When he was a resident Fellow of Trinity, it
-was the fashion for College Dons to dabble in
-politics, and more than one of his Trinity
-friends made their fortune by their Liberal
-opinions. He did not imitate their example.
-He always described himself as no politician.
-As a young man he seemed inclined to take
-a Liberal line, for he opposed a petition from
-the University against the Roman Catholic
-claims in 1821, and in the following year voted
-against ‘our dear, our Protestant Bankes’ for
-the same reason. But in those stormy days of
-the Reform Bill, when so many ancient friendships
-were destroyed, he took no decided line;
-and latterly he abstained from politics altogether.
-We do not mean that he shut his eyes to what
-was going forward in the world—far from it,
-but he seemed to consider that one Administration
-was as good as another, and provided
-no violent change was threatened, he left the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>destinies of the Empire to take care of themselves.
-As he grew older, his mind became
-engrossed by thoughts of the suffering which
-even the most glorious achievements must of
-necessity entail. The events of the Indian
-Mutiny, for instance, were followed by him
-with the closest interest; but he was more
-frequently heard to deplore the severity dealt
-out to the natives than to admire the heroism
-of their victims.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whewell’s natural good health was no doubt
-maintained by his love of open air exercise.
-No matter how busy he was, or how bad the
-weather, he rarely missed his daily ride. On
-most afternoons he might be seen on his grey
-horse ‘Twilight,’ usually with his inseparable
-friend Dr Worsley, either galloping across
-country, or joining quieter parties along the
-roads. He was never a good rider, but a very
-bold one, as will be seen from the following
-story, the accuracy of which we once tested by
-reference to Sebright, the veteran huntsman of
-the Fitzwilliam hounds. Whewell was staying
-with Viscount Milton, we believe in 1828.
-One morning his host said to him at breakfast,
-‘We are all going out hunting; what would you
-like to do?’ He replied, ‘I have never been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>out hunting, and I should like to go too.’ So
-he was mounted on a first-rate horse, well up
-to his weight, and told to keep close to the
-huntsman. Whewell did as he was bid, and
-followed him over everything. They had an
-unusually good run across a difficult country, in
-the course of which Sebright took an especially
-stout and high fence. Looking round to see
-what had become of the stranger, he found
-him at his side, safe and sound. ‘That, sir,
-was a rasper,’ he said. ‘I did not observe that
-it was anything more than ordinary,’ replied
-Whewell. So on they went, till at last his
-horse pulled up, quite exhausted, to Whewell’s
-great indignation, who exclaimed, ‘I thought
-a hunter never stopped.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We are not presumptuous enough to suppose
-that we can add any new facts to those which
-have been already collected in the volumes
-before us; but we think that even after their
-publication there is room for a short essay,
-which shall bring into prominence certain points
-in Whewell’s academic career, and attempt to
-determine the value of what he did for science
-in general, and for his own College and University
-in particular. His life divides itself
-naturally into three periods of about equal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>length, the first extending from his birth in
-1794 to his appointment as assistant-tutor of
-Trinity College in 1818, the second from 1818
-to his appointment as Master in 1841, and the
-third from 1841 to his death in 1866.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whewell came up to Cambridge at the
-beginning of the Michaelmas Term, 1812.
-Those who are familiar with the exciting
-spectacle presented by the splendid intellectual
-activity of the Cambridge of to-day—accommodating
-itself with flexibility and readiness to
-requirements the most diverse, appointing new
-teachers in departments of study the most
-unusual and the most remote on the bare
-chance of their services being required, flinging
-open its doors to all comers, regardless of sex,
-creed, or nationality, and thronged with students
-whose numbers are increasing year by year,
-eager to take advantage of the instruction
-which their elders are equally eager to supply
-them with—will find it difficult, if not impossible,
-to imagine the totally different state of things
-which existed at that time. Were we asked to
-express its characteristic by a single word, we
-should answer, dulness. It must be remembered
-that communication in those days was slow;
-news did not arrive until it was stale; travelling,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>especially for passengers, was expensive, so
-that, at least for the shorter vacations, many
-persons did not leave Cambridge at all; and
-some remained there during the whole year—we
-might say, in some cases, during their whole
-lives. For the same reasons strangers rarely
-visited the University. The same people dined
-and supped together day after day, with no
-novelty to diversify their lives or their conversation.
-No wonder that they became narrow,
-prejudiced, eccentric, or that their habits were
-tainted with the grosser vices which there was
-no public opinion to repudiate. The undergraduates,
-most of whom came from the upper
-classes, were few. In the fifteen years between
-1800 and 1815 the yearly average of those who
-matriculated did not exceed 205: less than
-one-fourth of those who now present themselves<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c011'><sup>[2]</sup></a>.
-The only road to the Honour Degree
-was through the Mathematical Tripos. The
-amusements were as little varied as the studies.
-There was riding for those who could afford it;
-and a few boated and played cricket or tennis;
-but the majority contented themselves with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>walk. With the undergraduates, as with their
-seniors, the habit of hard drinking was unfortunately
-still prevalent. But the great changes
-through which the country passed between 1815
-and 1834 produced a totally different state of
-things. The old order changed; slowly and
-almost imperceptibly at first, but still it changed.
-As the wealth of the country increased, a new
-class of students presented themselves for education;
-ideas began to circulate with rapidity;
-old forms of procedure and examination were
-given up; academic society was purified from
-its coarseness and vulgarity, and lost much of
-its exclusiveness; new studies were admitted
-upon an all but equal footing with the old ones;
-and, lastly, the new political principles asserted
-themselves by gradually sweeping away, one
-after another, all restrictive enactments. This
-last change, however, was not consummated
-until 1871. The other changes with which
-what may be called modern Cambridge was
-inaugurated are thus enumerated with characteristic
-force by Professor Sedgwick in one
-of his ‘Letters to the Editor of the <cite>Leeds
-Mercury</cite>,’ written in 1836, with which he
-demolished that infamous slanderer of the
-University, Mr R. M. Beverley:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>‘It is most strange that in a letter on the present state
-of Cambridge no notice should be taken of the noble
-institutions which have of late years risen up within it; of
-the glories of its Observatory; of the newly-chartered body,
-the Philosophical Society, organized among its resident
-members in the year 1819, and now known to the world
-of science by its “Transactions,” the records of many
-important original discoveries; of the new Collections in
-Natural History; of the magnificent new Press; of the new
-School and Museum of Comparative Anatomy; of the
-noble extension of the collegiate buildings, made at some
-inconvenience and much personal cost to the present
-Fellows, and entailing on them and their successors the
-weight of an enormous debt; of the general spirit of
-inquiry pervading the members of the academic body,
-young and old; of the eight or nine <em>new courses</em> of public
-lectures (established within the last twenty-five years) both
-on the applied sciences and the ancient languages; of the
-general activity of the professors, and of their correspondence
-with foreign establishments organized for objects like
-their own, whereby Cambridge is now, at least, an integral
-part of the vast republic of literature and science; of the
-crowded class at the lecture of Modern History [by Professor
-Smyth]; of the great knowledge of many of our
-younger members in modern languages; of the recent
-Professorship of Political Economy bestowed on a gentleman
-[Mr Pryme] who had been lecturing for years, and was
-a firm and known supporter of Liberal opinions.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Whewell came to the University
-these improvements had not been so much as
-thought of. He was himself to be the prime
-mover in bringing several of them about. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>must be remembered, however, while we confess
-to a special enthusiasm for our hero, that he
-did not stand alone as the champion of intellectual
-development in the University. Indeed
-it will become evident as we proceed that he
-was not naturally a reformer. He had so
-strong a respect for existing institutions that he
-hesitated long before he could bring himself to
-sanction any change, no matter how self-evident
-or how salutary. As a young man, however,
-he found himself one of a large body of enthusiastic
-workers, who, while they differed
-widely, almost fundamentally, on the methods
-to be employed, were all animated by the same
-spirit, and stimulated one another to fresh
-exertions in the common cause. It was one of
-the most remarkable characteristics of the period
-of which Professor Sedgwick has sketched the
-results, that it was hardly more distinguished
-for the changes produced than for the men who
-brought them about.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But to return to the special subject of our
-essay. Of Whewell’s boyhood, school days,
-and undergraduateship, few details have been
-preserved. His father was a master carpenter,
-residing at Lancaster, where William, the eldest
-of his seven children, was born in 1794. His
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>father is mentioned as a man of probity and
-intelligence; but his mother, whom he unfortunately
-lost when he was only eleven years
-old, appears to have been a woman of superior
-talents and considerable culture, who enriched
-the ‘Poet’s Corner’ of the weekly <cite>Lancaster
-Gazette</cite> with occasional contributions in verse.
-William was about to be apprenticed to his
-father, when his superior intelligence attracted
-the attention of Mr Rowley, curate of the
-parish and master of the grammar school. The
-father objected at first: ‘He knows more about
-parts of my business than I do,’ he said, ‘and
-has a special turn for it.’ However, after a
-week’s reflection, he yielded, mainly out of
-deference to Mr Rowley, who further offered to
-find the boy in books, and educate him free of
-expense. Of his school experiences, Professor
-Owen, who was one of his schoolfellows, has
-contributed some delightful reminiscences. After
-mentioning that he was a tall, ungainly youth,
-he adds:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘The rate at which Whewell mastered both English
-grammar and Latin accidence was a marvel; and before
-the year was out he had moved upward into the class
-including my elder brother and a dozen boys of the same
-age. Then it was that the head-master, noting to them
-the ease with which Whewell mastered the exercises and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>lessons, raised the tale and standard. Out of school I
-remember remonstrances in this fashion: “Now, Whewell,
-if you say more than twenty lines of Virgil to-day, we’ll
-wallop you.” But that was easier said than done. I have
-seen him, with his back to the churchyard wall, flooring
-first one, then another, of the “walloppers,” and at last
-public opinion in the school interposed. “Any two of you
-may take Whewell in a fair stand-up fight, but we won’t
-have any more at him at once.” After the fate of the first
-pair, a second was not found willing. My mother thought
-“it was extremely ungrateful in <em>that boy Whewell</em> to have
-discoloured both eyes of her eldest so shockingly.” But
-Mr Rowley said, “Boys will be boys,” and he always let
-them fight it fairly out.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In after years Whewell spoke of the good
-training he had received in arithmetic, geometry,
-and mensuration from Mr Rowley; but it is
-believed that his recollections of his first school
-were not wholly agreeable; and probably he
-was not sorry when he was removed to the
-grammar school at Heversham, in Westmoreland.
-This took place in 1810. The reason
-for it was that he might compete for an exhibition
-of 50<em>l.</em> per annum, at Trinity College,
-which he was so fortunate as to obtain. At his
-second school he paid great attention to classical
-studies, and practised versification in Greek
-and Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In October 1812 he commenced residence
-at Trinity College as a sub-sizar. His first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>University distinction was the Chancellor’s
-gold medal for English Verse, the subject
-being ‘Boadicea.’ In after years he was
-fond of expressing the theory that ‘a prize-poem
-should be a prize-poem’: by which he
-probably meant that the subject should be
-treated in a conventional fashion, with no eccentric
-innovations of style or metre. It must
-be admitted that his own work conformed
-exactly to this standard. The poem was welcomed
-with profound admiration in the family
-circle at home; but his old master took a
-different view of the question. Professor Owen
-relates that Mr Rowley called one day at his
-mother’s house, and began as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘“I’ve sad news for you, Mrs Owen, to-day. I’ve just
-had a letter from Cambridge; that boy Whewell has ruined
-himself, he’ll never get his Wranglership now!” “Why,
-good gracious, Mr Rowley, what <em>has</em> Whewell been doing?”
-“Why, he has gone and got the Chancellor’s gold medal
-for some trumpery poem, ‘Boadicea,’ or something of that
-kind, when he ought to have been sticking to his mathematics.
-I give him up now. Taking after his poor mother,
-I suppose.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The letters which he wrote home give us
-some pleasant glimpses of his College life, which
-he evidently thoroughly enjoyed. For the first
-time in his life he had access to a good library—that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>of Trinity College—and he speaks of ‘an
-inconceivable desire to read all manner of books
-at once,’ adding that at that very moment there
-were two folios and six quartos of different
-works upon his table. The success which he
-afterwards achieved is a proof that he entered
-heartily into the studies of the place; and
-among his friends were men who were studious
-then, and afterwards became eminent. Among
-these we may mention Mr, afterwards Sir John,
-Herschel, Mr Richard Jones, Mr Julius Charles
-Hare, and Mr Charles Babbage. A correspondent
-of his, writing so late as 1841, recalls
-the ‘Sunday morning philosophical breakfasts,’
-at which they used to meet in 1815; and there
-are indications in the letters of similar feasts of
-reason and flows of soul. It must, on the other
-hand, be admitted that a few indications of an
-opposite character may be produced. He admits,
-in a half-bantering, half-serious way, that
-he had laid himself open to the charge of
-idleness; and he describes the diversions of
-himself and his friends during the long vacation
-of 1815 as ‘dancing at country fairs, playing
-billiards, tuning beakers into musical glasses,’
-and the like. It need be no matter of surprise
-that a young man of high spirits and strong
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>bodily frame, brought up in the seclusion of
-Lancashire, should have taken the fullest advantage
-of the first opportunity which presented
-itself of appreciating the lighter and brighter
-side of existence. This, however, was all.
-Whewell knew perfectly well where to stop.
-No scandal ever attached itself to his name;
-and he ‘wore the white flower of a blameless
-life’ through a period when the customs prevalent
-in the University were such as are more
-honoured in the breach than in the observance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He proceeded to the degree of Bachelor of
-Arts in 1816, when he was second Wrangler
-and second Smith’s Prize-man. On both occasions
-he was beaten by a Mr Jacob, of Caius
-College, who was his junior by two years.
-It is a Cambridge tradition that Mr Jacob’s
-success was a surprise to everybody, for he had
-intentionally affected to be an idle man, and
-showed himself on most days riding out in
-hunting costume, the truth being that he kept
-his books at a farm-house, where he pursued
-his studies in secrecy and quiet. He was a
-young man of the greatest promise; and it was
-expected that he would achieve a conspicuous
-success at the Bar. But his lungs were affected,
-and he died of consumption at an early age.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>As Mr Todhunter remarks, his fame rests
-mainly on the fact that he twice outstripped
-so formidable a competitor as the future Master
-of Trinity. Whewell mentions him as ‘a very
-pleasant as well as a very clever man,’ and
-adds, ‘I had as soon be beaten by him as by
-anybody else.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The labours of reading for the degree over,
-Whewell had leisure to turn his studies in any
-direction whither his fancy led him. No doubt
-he fully appreciated the, to him, unusual position,
-for he tells his sister that few people could
-be ‘more tranquilly happy than your brother,
-in his green plaid dressing-gown, blue morocco
-slippers, and with a large book before him.’
-The time had come, however, when he was to
-experience the first of the inevitable inconveniences
-of a College life. Two of his most
-intimate friends, Herschel and Jones, left Cambridge,
-and he bitterly deplores their loss.
-Indeed it probably needed all the attachment
-to the place, which he proclaims in the same
-letter, to prevent his following their example.
-He appears at one time to have thought
-seriously of going to the Bar. He began,
-however, to take pupils: an occupation which
-becomes a singularly absorbing one, especially
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>when the tutor takes the interest in them which
-apparently he did. One of those with whom
-he spent the summer of 1818, in Wales, Mr
-Kenelm Digby, afterwards author of the <cite>Broadstone
-of Honour</cite>, who admits that he was so
-idle that his tutor would take no remuneration
-from him, has recorded that—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I had reason to regard Whewell as one of the most
-generous, open-hearted, disinterested, and noble-minded men
-that I ever knew. I remember circumstances that called
-for the exercise of each of those rare qualities, when they
-were met in a way that would now seem incredible, so fast
-does the world seem moving away from all ancient standards
-of goodness and moral grandeur.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This testimony is important, if only for
-comparison with the far different feelings with
-which his more official pupils regarded him in
-after years. In these occupations he spent
-the two years succeeding his degree; for the
-amount of special work done for the Fellowship
-Examination was probably not great. He was
-elected Fellow in October 1817; and in the
-summer of the following year was made one
-of the assistant-tutors. With this appointment
-the first part of his University career ends, and
-the second begins.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His connexion with the educational staff of
-Trinity College, first as assistant-tutor, then as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>sole tutor, lasted for just twenty years. These
-were the most occupied of his busy life; and
-in justification of what we said at the outset of
-the multifarious nature of his occupations, we
-proceed to give a rapid chronological sketch of
-them. His career as an author began, in 1819,
-with an <cite>Elementary Treatise on Mechanics</cite>. It
-went through seven editions, in each of which,
-as Mr Todhunter says, ‘the subject was revolutionized
-rather than modified; and the preface
-to each expounded with characteristic energy
-the paramount merits of the last constitution
-framed.’ The value of the work was greatly
-impaired by these proceedings, for an author
-can hardly expect to retain the unwavering
-confidence of his readers while his own opinions
-are in constant fluctuation. In 1820 he was
-Moderator, and travelled abroad for the first
-time. In 1821 he was working at geology
-seriously, and took a geological tour in the Isle
-of Wight with Sedgwick, who had been made
-Woodwardian Professor three years before.
-Later in the year he explored the Lake Country,
-and was introduced to Mr Wordsworth. Their
-acquaintance subsequently ripened into a friendship,
-which appears in numerous letters, and
-notably in the dedication prefixed to the <cite>Elements
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>of Morality</cite>. A <cite>Treatise on Dynamics</cite>
-was published in 1823, which was treated in
-much the same fashion as its fellow on <cite>Mechanics</cite>.
-The summer vacation was spent in a
-visit to Paris for the first time, and an architectural
-tour in Normandy with Mr Kenelm
-Digby. In 1824 he took a prominent part in
-the resistance to the Heads of Colleges in their
-attempt to nominate to the Professorship of
-Mineralogy; and later in the year he went
-again to Cumberland with Sedgwick, ‘rambling
-about the country, and examining the strata’;
-visiting Southey and Wordsworth; and, in the
-intervals of geology, seeing cathedrals and
-churches. In 1825, as the chair of Mineralogy
-was about to be vacated by Professor Henslow,
-promoted to that of Botany, Whewell announced
-himself a candidate; and by way of preparation
-spent three months in Germany, studying
-crystallography at the feet of Professor Mohs,
-of Freiburg: a subject on which he had already
-made communications to the Royal Society and
-to the Cambridge Philosophical Society. This
-was his first introduction to Germany, in whose
-language and literature he thenceforward took
-the greatest interest. He even modified his
-way of writing English in accordance with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>German custom, as is shown by the plentiful
-scattering of capitals through his sentences,
-and by a certain ponderosity of style which
-savours of German originals. The dissensions
-as to the mode of election to the Mineralogical
-chair caused it to remain vacant for three years;
-so that Whewell, about the choice of whom
-there never seems to have been any doubt, had
-no immediate opportunity of turning to account
-his newly-acquired knowledge. He therefore,
-with even more than characteristic energy,
-turned his attention to two most opposite subjects,
-Theology, and the Density of the Earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the summer of 1826 he commenced a
-series of investigations on the latter subject at
-Dolcoath Mine, Cornwall, in conjunction with
-Mr Airy. The essential part of the process
-was to compare the time of vibration of a
-pendulum at the surface of the earth with the
-time of vibration of the same pendulum at a
-considerable depth below the surface. Unfortunately
-the experiments, which were renewed
-in 1828, failed to lead to any satisfactory result,
-partly through an error in the construction of
-the pendulum, partly through a singular fatality,
-by which, on both occasions, they were frustrated
-by a serious accident. The account he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>gives of himself, and of the way in which the
-researches were regarded by the Cornishmen,
-is too amusing not to be quoted. It is contained
-in a letter to his friend Lady Malcolm,
-and is dated ‘Underground Chamber, Dolcoath
-Mine, Camborne, Cornwall, June 10, 1826:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I venture to suppose that you never had a correspondent
-who at the time of writing was situated as your present
-one is. I am at this moment sitting in a small cavern
-deep in the recesses of the earth, separated by 1,200 feet of
-rock from the surface on which you mortals tread. I am
-close to a wooden partition which has been fixed here by
-human hands, through which I ever and anon look, by
-means of two telescopes, into a larger cavern. That larger
-den has got various strange-looking machines, illumined
-here and there by unseen lamps, among which is visible a
-clock with a face most unlike common clocks, and a brass
-bar which swings to and fro with a small but never-ceasing
-motion. I am clad in the garb of a miner, which is
-probably more dirty and scanty than anything you may
-have happened to see in the way of dress. The stillness of
-this subterranean solitude is interrupted by the noise, most
-strange to its walls, of the ticking of my clock, and the
-chirping of seven watches. But besides these sounds it has
-noises of its own which my ear catches now and then. A
-huge iron vessel is every quarter of an hour let down
-through the rock by a chain above a thousand feet long,
-and in its descent and ascent dashes itself against the sides
-of the pit with a violence and a din like thunder; and at
-intervals, louder and deeper still, I hear the heavy burst of
-an explosion when gunpowder has been used to rend the
-rock, which seems to pervade every part of the earth like
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>the noise of a huge gong, and to shake the air within my
-prison. I have sat here for some hours, and shall sit five or
-six more, at the end of which time I shall climb up to the
-light of the sky in which you live, by about sixty ladders,
-which form the weary upward path from hence to your
-world. I ought not to omit, by way of completing the
-picturesque, that I have a barrel of porter close to my
-elbow, and a miner stretched on the granite at my feet,
-whose yawns at being kept here so many hours, watching my
-inscrutable proceedings, are most pathetic. This has been
-my situation and employment every day for some time, and
-will be so for some while longer, with the alternation of
-putting myself in a situation as much as possible similar, in
-a small hut on the surface of the earth. Is not this a
-curious way of spending one’s leisure time? I assure you
-I often think of Sir John’s favourite quotation from Leyden,
-“Slave of the dark and dirty mine! What vanity has
-brought thee here?” and sometimes doubt whether sunshine
-be not better than science.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘If the object of my companion and myself had been to
-make a sensation, we must have been highly gratified by the
-impression which we have produced upon the good people
-in this country. There is no end to the number and
-oddity of their conjectures and stories about us. The most
-charitable of them take us to be fortune-tellers; but for the
-greater part we are suspected of more mischievous kinds of
-magic. A single loud, insulated, peal of thunder, which was
-heard the first Sunday after our arrival, was laid at our
-door; and a staff which we had occasion to plant at the top
-of the cliff, was reported to have the effect of sinking all
-unfortunate ships which sailed past.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘I could tell you many more such histories; but I
-think this must be at least enough about myself, if I do
-not wish to make the quotation from Leyden particularly
-applicable.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Whewell had been ordained priest on Trinity
-Sunday, 1826, and this circumstance had probably
-directed him to a more exact study of
-theology than he had previously attempted.
-The result was a course of four sermons before
-the University in February 1827. The subject
-of these, which have never been printed, may
-be described as the ‘Relation of Human to
-Divine Knowledge.’ They attracted considerable
-attention when delivered; and it was even
-suggested that the author ought to devote
-himself to theology as a profession, and try to
-obtain one of the Divinity Professorships; but
-the advice was not taken. A theological tone
-may, however, be observed in most of his
-scientific works; he loved to point out analogies
-between scientific and moral truths, and to
-show that there was no real antagonism between
-science and revealed religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In 1828 the new Professor of Mineralogy
-entered upon his functions, and after his manner
-rushed into print with an <cite>Essay on Mineralogical
-Classification and Nomenclature</cite>, in which
-there is much novelty of definition and arrangement.
-He was conscious that he had been
-somewhat precipitate; for he writes to his
-friend, Mr Jones, who was trying to make
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>up his mind on certain problems of political
-economy, and declined to print until he had
-done so:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I avoid all your anxieties about authorship by playing
-for lower stakes of labour and reputation. While you work
-for years in the elaboration of slowly-growing ideas, I take
-the first buds of thought and make a nosegay of them without
-trying what patience and labour might do in ripening
-and perfecting them<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c011'><sup>[3]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At the beginning of the year 1830 there
-appeared an anonymous publication entitled
-<cite>Architectural Notes on German Churches, with
-Remarks on the Origin of Gothic Architecture</cite>.
-The author need not have tried to conceal his
-name; in this, as in other similar attempts, his
-style betrayed his identity at once. The work
-went through three editions, in each of which
-it was characteristically altered and enlarged,
-so that what had appeared as an essay of 118
-pages in 1830, was transformed into a work of
-348 pages in 1842. Architecture had been from
-the first one of Whewell’s favourite studies. In
-a letter to his sister in 1818 he speaks of a visit
-to Lichfield and Chester for the purpose of studying
-their cathedrals; many of his subsequent
-tours were undertaken for similar objects; and
-his numerous note-books and sketch-books (for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>he was no mean draughtsman) contain ample
-evidence of the pains he bestowed on perfecting
-himself in architectural details. The theory,
-or ‘ground-idea,’ as his favourite Germans
-would have called it, which he puts forward,
-is, that the pointed arch, even if it was really
-introduced from the East, which he evidently
-doubts, was improved and developed through
-the system of vaulting, which the Gothic
-builders learnt from the Romans. This theory
-has not been generally accepted; but the mere
-statement of it may have been of value, as the
-author suggests, ‘in the way of bringing into
-view relations and connexions which really
-exerted a powerful influence on the progress of
-architecture’; and the sketch of the differences
-between the classical and the Gothic styles is
-certainly extremely good. It has been sometimes
-suggested that the whole book was
-written in a spirit of rivalry to the <cite>Remarks
-on the Architecture of the Middle Ages</cite>, by
-Professor Willis. A glance at the dates of
-publication is enough to refute this view; for
-the work of Professor Willis was published in
-1835, the first edition of Dr Whewell’s in 1830.
-In the course of this summer he made an
-architectural tour with Mr Rickman in Devon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>and Cornwall; and, as if in order that his
-occupations might be as sharply contrasted as
-possible, investigated also the geology of the
-neighbourhood of Bath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In 1831 we find Whewell reviewing three
-remarkable books: Herschel’s <cite>Discourse on the
-Study of Natural Philosophy</cite>; Lyell’s <cite>Principles
-of Geology</cite>, vol. i.; and Jones <cite>On the
-Distribution of Wealth</cite>. As Mr Todhunter
-remarks, scarcely any person but himself could
-have ventured on such a task. These reviews
-are not merely critical; they contain much of
-the author’s own speculations, much that went
-beyond the interest of the moment, and might
-be considered to possess a permanent value.
-Herschel was delighted with his own share.
-He writes to Whewell, thanking him for ‘the
-splendid review,’ and declaring that he ‘should
-have envied the author of any work, if a
-stranger, which could give occasion for such a
-review.’ Lyell wrote in much the same strain;
-and we are rather surprised that he did so;
-for his reviewer not only stubbornly refused to
-accept his theory of uniformity of action, in
-opposition to the cataclysmic views of the
-Huttonians, but treated the whole question in
-a spirit of good-humoured banter, in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>even Herschel thought that he had gone too
-far. The article on his friend Mr Jones’ work—which
-appeared in the <cite>British Critic</cite>—is
-rather an exposition of his views, which were
-original, than a criticism. It was Whewell’s
-first appearance in print on any question of
-political economy, except a short memoir in the
-Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical
-Society, called a <cite>Mathematical Exposition of
-some Doctrines of Political Economy</cite>; and
-therefore marks a period when he had added
-yet one more science to those which he had
-already mastered. In this year he gave much
-time to a controversy which was agitating the
-University on the question of the best plans
-to be adopted for a new Public Library; and
-contributed a bulky pamphlet to the literature
-of the subject, in opposition to his friend
-Mr Peacock. The whole question is a very
-interesting one; but our space will not allow
-us to do more than mention it, as another
-instance of the diversity of Whewell’s interests.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The next year (1832) was even a busier
-one than its predecessor; he was occupied in
-revising some of his mathematical text-books;
-in drawing up a Report on Mineralogy for the
-British Association, described as ‘an example
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>of the unrivalled power with which he mastered
-a subject with which his previous studies had
-had but little connexion’; and in writing one
-of the Bridgewater Treatises, a work which,
-with most men, would have been enough to
-occupy them fully during the whole of the
-three years which had elapsed since the President
-of the Royal Society had selected him as
-one of the eight writers who should carry out
-the intentions of the Earl of Bridgewater.
-The subject of his treatise is <cite>Astronomy and
-General Physics considered with reference to
-Natural Theology</cite>. It is one of Whewell’s
-most thoughtful and justly celebrated works,
-on which he must have bestowed much time.
-During the intervals, however, of its composition,
-he had not only written the reviews we
-have mentioned, and others also, to which we
-can only allude, but had commenced those
-researches on the Tides, which are embodied
-in no fewer than fourteen memoirs in the
-Transactions of the Royal Society, and for
-which he afterwards received the Royal Medal.
-No wonder that even he began to feel overworked,
-and resigned the Professorship of
-Mineralogy early in the year. He writes to
-his friend Mr Jones, whom he was always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>striving to inspire with some of his own restless
-activity of thought and composition:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I am plunging into term-work, hurried and distracted
-as usual; the only comfort is the daily perception of what I
-have gained by giving up the Professorship. If I can work
-myself free so as to have a little command of my own time,
-I think I shall be wiser in future than to mortgage it so far.
-Quiet reflexion is as necessary as fresh air, and I can
-scarcely get a breath of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>His friend must have smiled as he read
-this, for he probably knew what such resolutions
-were worth. Whewell might have said,
-with Lord Byron—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'>‘I make</div>
- <div class='line'>A vow of reformation every spring,</div>
- <div class='line'>And break it when the summer comes about’;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>for, notwithstanding these promises and many
-others like them, we shall find that in future
-years he took upon himself a greater rather
-than a less amount of work, which he did not
-merely <em>get through</em> in a perfunctory fashion,
-but discharged with a thoroughness as rare as
-it is marvellous.</p>
-<p class='c007'>The Bridgewater Treatise appeared in 1833,
-a year in which he delivered an address to the
-British Association, at its meeting at Cambridge;
-contributed a paper <cite>On the Use of
-Definitions</cite> to the Philological Museum; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>increased his stock of architectural and geological
-knowledge by tours with Messrs Rickman,
-Sedgwick, and Airy. He was now generally
-recognized as the first authority on scientific
-language; and we find Professor Faraday
-deferring to him on the nomenclature of electricity.
-In 1834 he invented an <em>anemometer</em>,
-or instrument for measuring the force and
-direction of the wind; it was employed for
-some time at York, by Professor Phillips, but
-has since been superseded by more convenient
-contrivances.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The real meaning of his longing for leisure
-soon became manifest. In July 1834 he expounds
-to his friend Mr Jones the plan of
-the <cite>History and Philosophy of the Inductive
-Sciences</cite>, which he was prosecuting vigorously.
-This great work occupied him, <em>almost</em> to the
-exclusion of other matters, for the whole of
-1835 and 1836. We say <em>almost</em>, because, even
-at this time, with his usual habit of taking up
-some new subject just before he had completed
-an extensive labour on an old one, he was
-beginning to study systematic morality, and
-in 1835 published a preface to Sir James
-Mackintosh’s <cite>Dissertation on the Progress of
-Ethical Philosophy</cite>, a subject which he further
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>considered in 1837, when he preached before
-the University <cite>Four Sermons on the Foundation
-of Morals</cite>. In this year he succeeded
-Mr Lyell as President of the Geological
-Society, an office which must have been given
-to him rather in recognition of his general
-scientific attainments and the work he had
-done in the kindred science of mineralogy,
-than on account of any special publications on
-geology. He seems to have made an excellent
-President. Sir Charles Lyell<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c011'><sup>[4]</sup></a> speaks of him
-with enthusiasm, and points out his sacrifices
-of time, not only in attending the meetings of
-the Society, but in supervising the details of
-its organization. The extra work which the
-office involved is thus described in a letter to
-his sister, dated November 18, 1837:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘My old complaint of being overwhelmed with business,
-especially at this time of year, is at present, I think, rather
-more severe than ever. For, besides all my usual employments,
-I have to go to London two days every fortnight as
-President of the Geological Society, and am printing a
-book which I have not yet written, so that I am obliged
-often to run as fast as I can to avoid the printers riding
-over me, so close are they at my heels. I am, in addition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>to all this, preaching a course of sermons before the
-University; but this last employment, though it takes time
-and thought, rather sobers and harmonizes my other occupations
-than adds anything to my distraction.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In this same year (1837) the <cite>History of the
-Inductive Sciences</cite> was published, to be followed
-in less than three years by the <cite>Philosophy</cite> of
-the same. This encyclopædic publication—for
-the two books must be considered together—marks
-the conclusion of that part of his life
-which had been devoted, in the main, to pure
-science; and it gives the reason for his having
-thrown himself into occupations so diverse. It
-was not his habit to write on that which he
-had not completely mastered; and he therefore
-thought, wrote, and published on most of the
-separate sciences while tracing their history and
-developing their philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this rapid sketch we have not been able
-to do more than indicate the principal works
-which Whewell had had in hand. It must not
-be forgotten that at the same time he was
-engaged in a large and ever-increasing correspondence;
-writing letters—which, as he used
-to say himself, ought to be ‘postworthy’—not
-merely to scientific men, as we know from Mr
-Todhunter’s book, but—as we now know from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Mrs Stair Douglas—to his sisters and other
-ladies, on all sorts of subjects which he thought
-would interest them. Then he was a wide
-reader, as is proved by notes he made on the
-books which he had read from 1817 to 1830:
-‘books in almost all the languages of Europe;
-histories of all countries, ancient or modern;
-treatises on all sciences, moral and physical.
-Among the notes is an epitome of Kant’s
-<span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><cite>Kritik der reinen Vernunft</cite></span>, a work which
-exercised a marked influence on all his speculations
-in mental philosophy.’ Whatever he read,
-he read thoroughly. Mr Todhunter illustrates
-this by a story given on the authority of one
-of his oldest friends. He was found reading
-Henry Taylor’s <cite>Philip van Artevelde</cite>, which
-then had just appeared. Not content with
-the poem alone, however, he had Froissart
-by his side, and was carefully comparing the
-modern drama with the ancient chronicle.
-Lastly—and we put the subject we are now
-about to mention last, not because it was least,
-but because it was, or ought to have been, the
-most important of all his occupations—he held
-the office of tutor of one of the three <em>sides</em>, as
-they were called, into which Trinity College
-was then divided, first alone, and next in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>conjunction with Mr Perry, from 1823 to
-1838.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At that time the College was far smaller
-than it is at present, and a tutor was able,
-if he chose, to see much more of his pupils,
-to form some appreciation of their tastes and
-capacities, and personally to direct their studies.
-A man who combines the varied qualities which
-a thoroughly good tutor ought to possess is
-not readily found. It is a question of natural
-fitness rather than of training. In the first
-place, he must be content to forego all other
-occupations, and to be at the beck and call
-of his pupils and their parents whenever they
-may choose to come to him. Secondly, he
-must never forget that the dull, the idle, and
-the vicious demand even more care and time
-than the clever and the industrious. It may
-seem almost superfluous to mention that nothing
-which concerns his pupils must be beneath his
-notice. Petty details which concern their daily
-life, their rooms, their bills, their domestic
-relations, their amusements, have all to be
-referred to the tutor; and the most trivial of
-these may not seldom be of the greatest importance
-in giving occasion for exercising influence
-or administering advice. We are sorry to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>have to admit that Whewell was hardly so
-successful as he ought to have been in discharging
-these arduous duties. The period of
-his tutorship was, as we have shown, precisely
-that during which he was most occupied with
-his private studies; he threw his energies into
-them, and disposed of his College work in a
-perfunctory fashion. His letters are full of
-such passages as: ‘I have got an infinitude
-of that trifling men call business on my hands’;
-‘During the last term I have been almost too
-busy either to write or read. I took upon
-myself a number of employments which ate
-up almost every moment of the day’; and
-the like; and his delight at having transferred
-the financial part of the work to his colleague
-Mr Perry, in 1833, was unbounded. The result
-was inevitable; he could not give the requisite
-time to his pupils, and, in fact, hardly knew
-some of them by sight. A story used to be
-current about him which is so amusing that
-we think it will bear repeating. We do not
-vouch for its accuracy; but we think that it
-would hardly have passed current had it not
-been felt to be applicable. One day he gave
-his servant a list of names of certain of his
-pupils whom he wished to see at a wine-party
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>after Hall, a form of entertainment then much
-in fashion. Among the names was that of
-an undergraduate who had died some weeks
-before. ‘Mr Smith, sir; why he died last term,
-sir!’ objected the man. ‘You ought to tell me
-when my pupils die,’ replied the tutor sternly;
-and Whewell could be stern when he was vexed.
-Again, his natural roughness of manner was
-regarded by the undergraduates as indicating
-want of sympathy. They thought he wanted
-to get rid of them and their affairs as quickly
-as possible. Those who understood him better
-knew that he was really a warm-hearted friend;
-and we have seen that with his private pupils
-he had been exceedingly popular; but those
-who came only occasionally into contact with
-him regarded him with fear, not with affection.
-On the other hand, he was inflexibly
-just, whatever gossip or malevolence may
-have urged to the contrary. He had no
-favourites. No influence of any kind could
-make him swerve from the lofty standard
-of right which he had prescribed for himself.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c007'>We left Whewell completing the <cite>Philosophy
-of the Inductive Sciences</cite>; and for the future we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>shall find him turning his attention exclusively—so
-far as he could be said to do anything
-exclusively—to Moral Philosophy. In 1838 he
-was elected to the Knightbridge Professorship,
-founded in 1677 by the Rev. John Knightbridge,
-who directed his Professor of ‘Moral Theology
-or Casuistical Divinity,’ as he termed it, to read
-five lectures in the Public Schools in every term,
-and, at the end of it, to deliver them, fairly
-written out, to the Vice-Chancellor. Various
-pains and penalties were enjoined against those
-who failed to perform these duties; but, notwithstanding,
-the office had remained a sinecure
-for more than a century; indeed we are doubtful
-whether it had ever been anything else. The
-suggestion that Whewell should become a
-candidate for it was made by his old friend,
-Dr Worsley, Master of Downing, who was
-Vice-Chancellor in that year, and, by virtue
-of his office, one of the electors. Whewell
-determined to inaugurate a new era, and at
-once commenced a course of lectures, which
-were regularly continued in subsequent years.
-We have seen that he had prepared himself
-for these pursuits by previous studies; and
-his letters show that he had made up his
-mind to devote himself to them for some years
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>to come. In 1845 he produced his <cite>Elements
-of Morality</cite>, wherein the subject is treated
-systematically; and subsequently he wrote, or
-edited, works devoted to special parts of it, as
-<cite>Lectures on the History of Moral Philosophy
-in England</cite>; <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Grotius de Jure Belli et Pacis</cite></span>;
-and the <cite>Platonic Dialogues for English Readers</cite>.
-The permanent influence which Grotius exercised
-upon his mind is marked by his munificent
-foundation of a Professorship and Scholarships
-in International Law, in connexion with two
-additional courts for Trinity College, one of
-which was built during his life-time, while for
-the other funds were provided by his Will. The
-most sober-minded of men may sometimes be
-a visionary; and the motto <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Paci sacrum</em></span>, which
-Whewell placed on the western façade of his
-new buildings, would seem to prove that he
-seriously believed that his foundation would
-put an end to war, and inaugurate ‘a federation
-of the world.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As time went on, and Whewell approached
-his fiftieth year, he began to feel that ‘College
-rooms are no home for declining years.’ His
-friends were leaving, or had left; he did not
-make new ones; and he was beginning to
-lead a life of loneliness which was very oppressive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>to him. In 1840 he thought seriously
-of taking a College living, but his friend Mr
-Hare dissuaded him; and the letters that passed
-between them on this subject are among the
-most interesting in Mrs Stair Douglas’ volume.
-In 1841 he made up his mind to settle in
-Cambridge as a married man, with his Professorship
-and his ethical studies as an employment.
-The lady of his choice was Miss Cordelia
-Marshall. They were married on October 12,
-1841, and on the very same day, Dr Wordsworth,
-Master of Trinity, wrote to him at
-Coniston, where he was spending his honeymoon,
-announcing his intention of resigning,
-‘in the earnest <em>desire</em>, <em>hope</em>, and <em>trust</em>, that
-<em>you</em> may be, and <em>will</em> be, my successor.’ The
-news, which seems to have been quite unexpected,
-spread rapidly among the small circle
-of Whewell’s intimate friends; and succeeding
-posts brought letters from Dr Worsley and
-others, urging him ‘not to linger in his hymeneal
-Elysium,’ but to go up to London at once,
-and solicit the office from the Prime Minister,
-Sir Robert Peel. Dr Whewell describes himself
-as ‘vehemently disturbed’; most probably
-he was unwilling to comply with what seems
-to us to have been extraordinary advice. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>did comply, however, and went to London,
-where he found a letter from Sir Robert, offering
-him the Mastership. It is pleasant to be
-able to record that the offer was made spontaneously,
-before any solicitations had reached
-the Minister. Whewell accepted it on October
-18; had an interview with Sir Robert on the
-19th; returned to Coniston by the night mail;
-and on the 23rd (according to Mr Todhunter)
-had sufficiently recovered from his excitement
-to sit down to compose the first lecture of a
-new course on Moral Philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The appointment was felt to be a good one,
-though it must be admitted that there were
-dissentient voices. It was notorious that Dr
-Wordsworth had resigned soon after the fall of
-Lord Melbourne’s administration, in order to
-prevent the election of either Dean Peacock or
-Professor Sedgwick, both of whom were very
-popular with the Fellows. The feeling in College,
-therefore, was rather against the new
-Master than with him. Nor was he personally
-popular. We now know, from the letters which,
-in reply to congratulations, he wrote to Lord
-Lyttelton, Bishop Thirlwall, Mr Hare, and
-others, how diffident he was of his fitness for
-the office, and how anxious to discharge its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>high duties becomingly. Mr Hare had evidently
-been giving advice with some freedom,
-as was his wont, for Whewell replies:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I perceive and feel the value of the advice you give me,
-and I have no wish, I think, either to deny or to defend the
-failings you point out. In a person holding so eminent a
-station as mine will be, everything impatient and overbearing
-is of course quite out of place; and though it may
-cost me some effort, my conviction of this truth is so strong
-that I think it cannot easily lose its hold. As to my love of
-disputation, I do not deny that it has been a great amusement
-to me; but I find it to be so little of an amusement to
-others that I should have to lay down my logical cudgels
-for the sake of good manners alone.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The writer of these sentences was far too
-straightforward not to have meant every word
-that he wrote; and we feel sure that he tried
-to carry out his good intentions. We are compelled,
-however, to admit that he failed. He
-<em>was</em> impatient and he <em>was</em> overbearing; or he
-was thought to be so, which, so far as his
-success as a Master went, came to the same
-thing. He had lived so long as a bachelor
-among bachelors—giving and receiving thrusts
-in argument, like a pugilist in a fair fight—that
-he had become somewhat pachydermatous. It
-is probable, too, that he was quite ignorant of
-the weight of his own blows. He forgot those
-he received, and expected his antagonist to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>an equally short memory. Again, the high view
-which he took of his position as Master laid him
-open to the charge of arrogance. We believe
-the true explanation to be that he was too conscientious,
-if such a phrase be admissible; too
-inflexible in exacting from others the same
-strict obedience to College rules which he imposed
-upon himself. There are two ways,
-however, of doing most things; and he was
-unlucky in nearly always choosing the wrong
-one. For instance, his hospitality was boundless;
-whenever strangers came to Cambridge,
-they were entertained at Trinity Lodge; and,
-besides, there were weekly parties at which
-the residents were received. The rooms are
-spacious, and the welcome was intended to be
-a warm one; but the parties were not successful.
-Even at those social gatherings he never forgot
-that he was Master; compelling all his guests
-to come in their gowns, and those who came
-only after dinner to wear them during the
-entire evening. Then an idea became current
-that no undergraduate might sit down. So far
-as this notion was not wholly erroneous, it was
-based on the evident fact that the great drawing-room,
-large as it is, could not contain more than
-a very limited number of guests, supposing them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>all to sit; and that the undergraduates were
-obviously those who ought to stand. A strong
-feeling against anybody, however, resembles a
-popular panic; argument is powerless against
-it; and the victim of it must be content to wait
-until his persecutors are weary with fault-finding.
-In Dr Whewell’s case it seemed to matter very
-little what he did, or what he left undone; he
-was sure to give offence. The inscription commemorating
-himself on the restored oriel window
-of the Lodge<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c011'><sup>[5]</sup></a>; the motto, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Lampada tradam</em></span>,
-which he adopted for his arms; his differences
-with Her Majesty’s judges about their entertainment
-at the Lodge; his attempts to stop the
-disorderly interruptions of undergraduates in
-the Senate House; and a hundred other similar
-matters, were all made occasions for unfavourable
-comment both in and out of College. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>comic literature of the day not unfrequently
-alluded to him as the type of the College Don
-and the University Snob; and in 1847, when
-he actively promoted the election of the Prince
-Consort as Chancellor, a letter in the <cite>Times</cite>
-newspaper, signed ‘Junius,’ informed Prince
-Albert that he had been made ‘the victim
-chiefly of one man of notoriously turbulent
-character and habits. Ask how HE is received
-by the University whenever he appears,’ &amp;c.;
-and a second letter, signed ‘Anti-Junius,’ affecting
-to reply to these aspersions, described in
-ironical language, with infinite humour, ‘the
-retiring modesty, the unfeigned humility, the
-genuine courtesy’ of the ‘honoured and beloved
-Whewell<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c011'><sup>[6]</sup></a>.’ We are happy to be able to say
-that he outlived much of this obloquy; his
-temper grew gradually softer—a change due
-partly to age, partly to the genial influence of
-both his wives; and before the end came he
-had achieved respect, if not popularity. The
-notion that he was arrogant and self-asserting
-may still be traced in the epigrams to which the
-essay on <cite>The Plurality of Worlds</cite> gave occasion.
-Sir Francis Doyle wrote:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>‘Though you through the regions of space should have travelled,</div>
- <div class='line'>And of nebular films the remotest unravelled,</div>
- <div class='line'>You’ll find, though you tread on the bounds of infinity,</div>
- <div class='line'>That God’s greatest work is the Master of Trinity.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Even better than this was the remark that
-‘Whewell thinks himself a fraction of the universe,
-and wishes to make the denominator as
-small as possible.’ These, however, were harmless
-sallies, at which he was probably as much
-amused as any one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No one who knew Whewell well can avoid
-admitting, as we have done, that there was much
-in his manner and conduct that might with
-advantage have been different. But what we
-wish to maintain is that these defects were not
-essential to his character: that they arose either
-from a too precise adherence to views that were
-in themselves good and noble, or from a certain
-vehemence and impulsiveness that swept him
-away in spite of himself, and landed him in
-difficulties over which he had to repent at
-leisure. And in this place let us draw attention
-to one of his most pleasing traits—his generosity.
-We do not merely refer to the numerous cases
-of distress which he alleviated, delicately and
-secretly, but to the magnanimity of temperament
-with which he treated those from whom he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>had differed, or whose conduct he had condemned.
-He had no false notions of dignity.
-If he felt that he had said what he had better
-have left unsaid, or overstepped the proper
-limits of argument, he would sooth the bruised
-and battered victims of his sledgehammer with
-some such words as these: ‘I am afraid that
-I was hasty the other day in what I said to you.
-I am very sorry.’ He never bore a grudge, or
-betrayed remembrance of a fault, or repeated
-a word of scandal. There was nothing small
-or underhand about him. He would oppose
-a measure of which he disapproved, fairly and
-openly, by all legitimate expedients; but, when
-beaten, he cordially accepted the situation, and
-never alluded to the subject again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His conduct at the contested election for
-a University Representative in 1856 affords a
-good illustration of what we have here advanced.
-The candidates were Mr Walpole and Mr
-Denman; and it was decided, after conference
-with their rival committees, that the poll should
-extend over five days, on four of which votes
-were to be taken in the Public Schools from
-half-past seven to half-past eight in the evening,
-in addition to the usual hours in the Senate
-House, namely, from ten to four. The proceedings
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>excited an unusual interest among the
-undergraduates, who on the first morning occupied
-the galleries of the Senate House in
-force, and made such a noise that the University
-officers could not hear each others’ voices, and
-the business was transacted in dumb show.
-In consequence they represented to the Vice-Chancellor
-that they could not do their work
-unless he ‘took effectual means for the prevention
-of this inconvenience.’ Whewell hated
-nothing so much as insubordination, and had on
-former occasions addressed himself to the repression
-of this particular form of it. It is
-therefore probable that he was not indisposed
-to take the only step that, under the circumstances,
-seemed likely to be effectual, namely,
-to exclude the undergraduates from the Senate
-House for the rest of the days of polling. On
-the second and third days peace reigned within
-the building, but, when the Vice-Chancellor
-appeared outside, he was confronted by a
-howling mob, through which he had to make
-his way as best he could. He was advised to
-go by the back way; but, with characteristic
-pluck, he rejected this counsel, and went out
-and came in by the front gate of his College.
-A few Masters of Arts acted as a body-guard;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>but further protection was thought necessary,
-and on the third afternoon the University beheld
-the extraordinary spectacle of the Vice-Chancellor
-proceeding along Trinity Street with
-a prize-fighter on each side of him. On the
-evening of that day Mr Denman withdrew from
-the contest, a step which probably averted a
-serious riot. When the excitement had subsided
-a little Whewell drew up a printed
-statement, which, though marked <em>Private</em>, is
-in fact an address to the undergraduate members
-of the University. He points out the necessity
-for acting as he had done, both as regards the
-business in hand and because it was his duty to
-enforce proper behaviour in a public place as
-a part of education. He concludes with the
-following passage:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I the more confidently believe that the majority of the
-Undergraduates have a due self-respect, and a due respect
-for just authority temperately exercised, because I have ever
-found it so, both as Master of a College, and as Vice-Chancellor.
-One of the happiest recollections of my life is
-that of a great occasion in my former Vice-Chancellorship<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c011'><sup>[7]</sup></a>,
-when I had need to ask for great orderliness and considerable
-self-denial on the part of the Undergraduates. This
-demand they responded to with a dignified and sweet-tempered
-obedience which endeared them to me then,
-as many good qualities which I have seen in successive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>generations of students have endeared them to me since.
-And I will not easily give up my trust that now, as then,
-the better natures will control and refine the baser, and that
-it will be no longer necessary to put any constraint upon
-the admission of Undergraduates to the Galleries of the
-Senate-house.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After the poll had been declared the Proctors
-brought him a list of the rioters. He said, ‘The
-election is over, they will not do it again,’ and
-threw the record into the fire. Not long afterwards
-he went, as was his frequent custom, to
-a concert of the University Musical Society.
-The undergraduates present rose and cheered
-him. Whewell was so much affected, that he
-burst into tears, and sat for some time with
-his face hidden in the folds of his gown.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who recollect Whewell, or even those
-who know him only by his portraits, will smile
-incredulously at an assertion we are about to
-make. But it is true, no matter how severely
-it may be criticised. Whewell was, in reality,
-an extremely humble-minded man, diffident of
-himself, and sure of his position only when he
-had the approval of his conscience for what he
-was doing. Then he went forward, regardless
-of what might bar his passage, and too often
-regardless also of those who chanced to differ
-from him. The few who were admitted to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>inner circle of his friendship alone knew that
-he really was what his enemies called him in
-sarcastic mockery, modest and retiring. If he
-appeared to be, as one virulent pamphlet said
-he was, an ‘imperious bully<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c011'><sup>[8]</sup></a>,’ the manner which
-justified such a designation was manner only,
-and due not to arrogance but to nervousness.
-He disliked praise, even from his best friends,
-if he thought that it was not exactly merited.
-For instance, when Archdeacon Hare spoke
-enthusiastically of his condemnation of ‘Utilitarian
-Ethics’ in the <cite>Sermons on the Foundation
-of Morals</cite>, and exclaimed: ‘May the mind
-which has compast the whole circle of physical
-science find a lasting home, and erect a still
-nobler edifice, in this higher region! May he
-be enabled to let his light shine before the
-students of our University, that they may
-see the truth he utters<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c011'><sup>[9]</sup></a>,’ Whewell requested
-that the passage might be altered in a new
-edition. He wrote (26 February, 1841):</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘You have mentioned me in a manner which I am
-obliged to say is so extremely erroneous that it distresses
-me. The character which you have given of me is as far as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>possible from that which I deserve. You know, I think,
-that I am very ignorant in all the matters with which you
-are best acquainted, and the case is much the same in all
-others. I was always very ignorant, and am now more and
-more oppressed by the consciousness of being so. To
-know much about many things is what I never aspired at,
-and certainly have not succeeded in. If you had called
-me a persevering framer of systems, or had said that in
-architecture, as in some other matters, by trying to catch
-the principle of the system, I had sometimes been able
-to judge right of details, I should have recognised some
-likeness to myself; but what you have said only makes me
-ashamed. You will perhaps laugh at my earnestness about
-this matter, for I am in earnest; but consider how you
-would like praise which you felt to be the opposite of what
-you were, and not even like what you had tried to be<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c011'><sup>[10]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It would be unbecoming to intrude domestic
-matters into an essay like the present, in which
-we have proposed to ourselves a different object;
-but we cannot wholly omit to draw
-attention to the painful, but deeply interesting,
-chapters in which Mrs Stair Douglas describes
-her uncle’s grief at the loss of his first wife in
-1855, and of his second wife in 1865. His
-strong nature had recovered after a time from
-the first of these terrible shocks, under which
-he had wisely distracted his mind by the
-composition of his essay on <cite>The Plurality of
-Worlds</cite>, and by again accepting the Vice-Chancellorship.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>The second, however, fell
-upon him with even greater severity. He
-was ten years older, and therefore less able to
-bear up against it. Lady Affleck died a little
-before midnight on Saturday, April 1, 1865;
-and her heart-broken husband, true to his
-theory that the chapel service ought to be
-regarded as family prayers, appeared in his
-place at the early service on Sunday morning,
-not fearing to commit to the sympathies of his
-College ‘the saddest of all sights, an old man’s
-bereavement, and a strong man’s tears<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c011'><sup>[11]</sup></a>.’ We
-can still recall the look of intense sorrow on
-his face; a look which, though he tried to
-rouse himself, and pursue his usual avocations,
-never completely wore off. He survived her
-for rather less than a year, dying on March 6,
-1866, from injuries received from a fall from
-his horse on February 24 previous. It was
-at first hoped that these, like those he had
-received on many similar occasions, for he
-used to say that he had measured the depth
-of every ditch in Cambridgeshire by falling
-into it, were not serious; but the brain had
-sustained an injury, and he gradually sank.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>His last thoughts were for the College. On
-the very last morning he signified his wish that
-the windows of his bedroom might be opened
-wide, that he might see the sun shine on the
-Great Court, and he smiled as he was reminded
-that he used to say that the sky never looked
-so blue as when framed by its walls and
-turrets. Among the numerous tributes to his
-memory which then appeared, none we think
-are more appropriate than the following lines,
-the authorship of which we believe we are right
-in ascribing to the late Mr Tom Taylor<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c011'><sup>[12]</sup></a>:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Gone from the rule that was questioned so rarely,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Gone from the seat where he laid down the law;</div>
- <div class='line'>Gaunt, stern, and stalwart, with broad brow set squarely</div>
- <div class='line in2'>O’er the fierce eye, and the granite-hewn jaw.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘No more the Great Court shall see him dividing</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Surpliced crowds thick round the low chapel door;</div>
- <div class='line'>No more shall idlers shrink cowed from his chiding,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Senate-house cheers sound his honour no more.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Son of a hammer-man: right kin of Thor, he</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Clove his way through, right onward, amain;</div>
- <div class='line'>Ruled when he’d conquered, was proud of his glory,—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Sledge-hammer smiter, in body and brain.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Sizar and Master,—unhasting, unresting;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Each step a triumph, in fair combat won—</div>
- <div class='line'>Rivals he faced like a strong swimmer breasting</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Waves that, once grappled with, terrors have none.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>‘Trinity marked him o’er-topping the crowd of</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Heads and Professors, self-centred, alone:</div>
- <div class='line'>Rude as his strength was, that strength she was proud of,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Body and mind, she knew all was her own.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘“Science his strength, and Omniscience his weakness,”</div>
- <div class='line in2'>So <em>they</em> said of him, who envied his power;</div>
- <div class='line'>Those whom he silenced with more might than meekness,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Carped at his back, in his face fain to cower.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Milder men’s graces <em>might</em> in him be lacking,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Still he was honest, kind-hearted, and brave;</div>
- <div class='line'>Never good cause looked in vain for his backing,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Fool he ne’er spared, but he never screened knave.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘England should cherish all lives from beginning</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Lowly as his to such honour that rise;</div>
- <div class='line'>Lives, of fair running and straightforward winning,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Lives, that so winning, may boast of the prize.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘They that in years past have chafed at his chiding,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>They that in boyish mood strove ’gainst his sway,</div>
- <div class='line'>Boys’ hot blood cooled, boys’ impatience subsiding,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Reverently think of “the Master” to-day.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Counting his courage, his manhood, his knowledge,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Counting the glory he won for us all,</div>
- <div class='line'>Cambridge—not only his dearly loved College—</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Mourns his seat empty in chapel and hall.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Lay him down here—in the dim ante-chapel,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Where <span class='sc'>Newton’s</span> statue looms ghostly and white,</div>
- <div class='line'>Broad brow set rigid in thought-mast’ring grapple,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Eyes that look upward for light—and more light.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘So should he rest—not where daisies are growing:</div>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='sc'>Newton</span> beside him, and over his head</div>
- <div class='line'>Trinity’s full tide of life, ebbing, flowing,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Morning and evening, as he lies dead.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>‘Sailors sleep best within boom of the billow,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Soldiers in sound of the shrill trumpet call:</div>
- <div class='line'>So his own Chapel his death-sleep should pillow,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Loved in his life-time with love beyond all.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have not thought it necessary to go
-through the events of Whewell’s Mastership
-in order, because progressive development of
-thought and occupation had by that time ended,
-and his efforts were chiefly directed towards
-establishing in the University the changes
-which his previous studies had led him to
-regard as necessary, and which, from the vantage-ground
-of that influential position, he was
-enabled to enforce. In his own College, so far
-as its education was concerned, he had little to
-do except to maintain the high standard which
-already existed. As tutor he had been successful
-in increasing the importance of the paper
-of questions in Philosophy in the Fellowship
-Examination; and subsequently he had introduced
-his <cite>Elements of Morality</cite>, his preface
-to Mackintosh’s <cite>Ethical Philosophy</cite>, and his
-edition of Butler’s <cite>Three Sermons</cite> into the
-examination at the end of the Michaelmas
-Term. None, however, of those fundamental
-measures which have achieved for Trinity College
-its present position of pre-eminence will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>in the future be associated with his name, unless
-the abolition of the Westminster Scholars be
-thought sufficiently important to be classed in
-this category. On the contrary, it is remarkable
-what slight influence he exerted on the
-College while Master. He saw but little of
-any of the Fellows, and became intimate with
-none. In theory he was a despot, but in
-practice he deferred to the College officers;
-and, with the exception of certain domestic
-matters, such as granting leave to studious
-undergraduates to live in College during the
-Long Vacation, and the formation of a cricket-ground
-for the use of the College, to which he
-and Lady Affleck both contributed largely, he
-originated nothing. As regards the constitution
-of the College, he was strongly opposed to
-change. The so-called Reform of the Statutes
-in 1842 amounted to nothing more than the
-excision of certain obsolete usages, and the
-accommodation in some few other points of the
-written law to the usual practice of the College.
-The proposals for a more thorough reform
-brought forward by certain of the Fellows in
-1856, when called together in accordance with
-the Act of Parliament passed in that year,
-met with his vehement disapproval. It was a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>mental defect with him that he could never be
-brought to see that others had as much right
-as himself to hold special views. If he saw no
-defect in a statute or a practice, no one else
-had any right to see one. Here is a specimen
-of the language he used respecting the junior
-Fellows, all, it must be remembered, men of
-some distinction, whom he himself had had a
-hand in electing:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It is a very sad evening of my College life, to have the
-College pulled in pieces and ruined by a set of schoolboys.
-It is very nearly that kind of work. The Act of Parliament
-gives all our Fellows equal weight for certain purposes, and
-the younger part of them all vote the same way, and against
-the Seniors. Several of these juveniles are really boys,
-several others only Bachelors of Arts, so we have crazy work,
-as I think it<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c011'><sup>[13]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As regards the University, as distinct from
-the College, he deserves recognition as having
-effected important educational changes. These
-range over the whole of his life, commencing
-with the novelties which he introduced, in conjunction
-with Herschel, Peacock, and Babbage,
-into the study of mathematics, so early as 1819.
-It was his constant endeavour, whatever office
-he held—whether Moderator, Examiner, or
-College lecturer—to keep the improvement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>and development of the Mathematical Tripos
-constantly before the University. But, before
-we enumerate the special improvements or
-developments with which he may be credited,
-let us consider what was his leading idea. He
-held that every man who was worth educating
-at all, had within him various faculties, such as
-the mathematical, the philological, the critical,
-the poetical, and the like; and that the truly
-liberal education was that which would develop
-all of these, some more, some less, according to
-the individual nature. A devotion to ‘favourite
-and selected pursuits’ was a proof, according to
-him, of ‘effeminacy of mind.’ We are not sure
-that he would have been prepared to introduce
-one or more classical papers into the Mathematical
-Tripos, though he held that a mere
-mathematician was not an educated man; but
-he was emphatic in wishing to preserve the
-provisions by which classical men were obliged
-to pass certain mathematical examinations. He
-did not want ‘<em>much</em> mathematics’ from them,
-he said, writing to Archdeacon Hare in 1842;
-‘but a man who either cannot or will not understand
-Euclid, is a man whom we lose nothing
-by not keeping among us.’ He was no friend
-to examinations. He ‘repudiated emulation as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>the sole spring of action in our education,’ but
-did not see his way to reducing it. It was
-probably this feeling that made him object to
-private tuition so strongly as he always did.
-In opposition to private tutors, he wished to
-increase attendance at Professors’ lectures; and
-succeeded in ‘connecting them with examinations,’
-as he called it; in other words, in making
-attendance at them compulsory for precisely
-those men who were least capable of deriving
-benefit from the highest teaching which the
-University can give, namely, the candidates for
-the Ordinary Degree.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first definite novelty in the way of
-public examinations which he promoted was
-the examination in Divinity called, when first
-established, the Voluntary Theological Examination.
-Whewell was a member of the
-Syndicate which recommended it, in March,
-1842; and subsequently, he took a great
-interest in making it a success. As Vice-Chancellor,
-he brought it under the direct
-notice of the Bishops. Subsequently, in 1845,
-he advocated, in his essay <cite>Of a Liberal Education
-in General</cite>, the establishment of ‘a General
-Tripos including the Inductive Sciences, or
-those which it was thought right by the University
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>to group together for such a purpose.’
-The basis of University education was still
-to be the Mathematical Tripos; but, after a
-student had been declared a Junior Optime, he
-was free to choose his future career. He might
-become a candidate either for the Classical
-Tripos, or for the suggested new Tripos, or
-for any other Tripos that the University should
-subsequently decide to establish. With these
-views it was natural that Whewell should be in
-favour of the establishment of a Moral Sciences
-Tripos (to include History and Law), and of a
-Natural Sciences Tripos; and in consequence
-we find him not only a member of the Syndicate
-which suggested them, but urging their acceptance
-upon the Senate (1848). Further, he
-offered two prizes of £15 each, so long as he
-was Professor, to be given annually to the two
-students who shewed the greatest proficiency
-in the former examination. It is worth noticing
-that he did not insist upon a candidate becoming
-a Junior Optime before presenting
-himself for either of these new Triposes, but
-was satisfied with the Ordinary Degree. He
-wished to encourage, by all reasonable facilities,
-the competition for Honours in them; but
-when the Senate (in 1849) threw open the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Classical Tripos to those who had obtained a
-first class in the examination for the Ordinary
-Degree, he deplored it as a retrograde step.
-Before many years, however, had passed, he
-had modified his views to such an extent that
-he could sign (in 1854) a Report which began
-by stating ‘that much advantage would result
-from extending to other main departments of
-study, generally comprehended under the name
-of Arts, the system which is at present established
-in the University with regard to
-Candidates for Honours in the Mathematical
-Tripos’; and proceeded to advocate the establishment
-of a Theological Tripos, and the
-concession, with reference to the Classical
-Tripos, the Moral Sciences Tripos, and the
-Natural Sciences Tripos, that in and after
-1857 students who obtained Honours in them
-should be entitled to admission to the degree
-of Bachelor of Arts. We may therefore claim
-Whewell as one of the founders of the modern
-system of University education.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whewell’s wish to develop Professorial
-tuition has been already alluded to. It may
-be doubted if he would have been so earnest
-on the subject had he foreseen the development
-of teaching by the University as opposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>to teaching by the colleges, which a large
-increase in the number of Professors was
-certain to bring about. So far back as 1828,
-he had brought before the University the want
-of proper lecture-rooms and museums; and, as
-a matter of course, he promoted the erection
-of the present museums in 1863. We are
-justified, therefore, in claiming for him no
-inconsiderable share in that development of
-natural science which is one of the glories of
-Cambridge; and when we see the crowds
-which throng the classes of the scientific professors,
-lecturers, and demonstrators, we often
-wish that he could have been spared a few
-years longer to enter into the fruit of his
-labours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As regards the constitution of the University
-he earnestly deprecated the interference of a
-Commission. He held that ‘University reformers
-should endeavour to reform by efforts
-within the body, and not by calling in the
-stranger.’ He therefore worked very hard as
-a member of what was called the ‘Statutes
-Revision Syndicate,’ first appointed in 1849,
-and continued in subsequent years. His views
-on these important matters have been recorded
-by him in his work on a Liberal Education.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>It is worth remarking that while he was in
-favour of so advanced a step as making College
-funds available for University purposes, he
-strenuously maintained the desirability of preserving
-that ancient body, the <em>Caput</em>. One of
-the most vexatious provisions of its constitution
-was that each member of it had an absolute
-veto on any grace to which he might object.
-As the body was selected, the whole legislative
-power of the University was practically vested
-in the Heads of Houses, who are not usually
-the persons best qualified to understand the
-feeling of the University. Dr Whewell has
-frequently recorded, in his correspondence, his
-vexation when graces proposed by himself were
-rejected by this body; and yet, though he knew
-how badly the constitution worked, his attachment
-to existing forms was so great, that he
-could not be persuaded to yield on any point
-except the mode of election.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have spoken first of Whewell’s work in
-his College and University, because it was to
-them that he dedicated his life. We must now
-say a word or two on his literary and scientific
-attainments. He wrote an excellent English
-style, which reflects the personality of the
-writer to a more than usual extent. As might
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>be expected from his studies and tone of mind,
-he always wrote with clearness and good sense,
-though occasionally his periods are rough and
-unpolished, defects due to his habit of writing
-as fast as he could make the pen traverse the
-paper. But, just as it was not natural to him
-to be grave for long together, we find his most
-serious criticisms and pamphlets—nay, even his
-didactic works—lightened by good-humoured
-banter and humorous illustrations. On the
-other hand, when he was thoroughly serious
-and in earnest, his style rose to a dignified
-eloquence which has rarely been equalled, and
-never surpassed. For an illustration of our
-meaning we beg our readers to turn to the
-final chapters of the <cite>Plurality of Worlds</cite>. He
-was always fond of writing verse; and published
-more than one volume of poems and translations,
-of which the latter are by far the most meritorious.
-Nor must we forget his valiant efforts
-to get hexameters and elegiacs recognized as
-English metres. Example being better than
-precept, he began by printing a translation of
-Goethe’s <span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><cite>Hermann und Dorothea</cite></span>, in the metre
-of the original, which he at first circulated
-privately among his friends; but subsequently
-he discussed the subject in several papers, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>which he laid down the rules which he thought
-were required for successful composition of the
-metre. His main principle is to pay attention
-to accent, not to quantity, and to use trochees
-where the ancients would have used spondees;
-in other words, where according to the classical
-hexameter we should have two strong syllables,
-we are to have a strong syllable followed by a
-weak one. Here is a short specimen from the
-<cite>Isle of the Sirens</cite>:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Over the broad-spread sea the thoughtful son of Ulysses</div>
- <div class='line'>Steered his well-built bark. Full long had he sought for his father,</div>
- <div class='line'>Till hope, lingering, fled; for the face of the water is trackless.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then rose strong in his mind the thought of his home and his island;</div>
- <div class='line'>And he desired to return; to behold his Ithacan people,</div>
- <div class='line'>Listen their just complaints, restrain the fierce and the lawless.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs Stair Douglas has acted wisely in reprinting
-the elegiacs written after the death of
-Mrs Whewell. We cannot believe that the
-metre will ever be popular; but in the case
-of this particular poem eccentricities of style
-will be forgiven for the sake of the dignified
-beauty of the thoughts. With the exception of
-<cite>In Memoriam</cite>, we know of no finer expression
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>of Christian sorrow and Christian hope. We
-will quote a few lines from the first division
-of the poem, in which the bereaved husband
-describes the happiness which his wife had
-brought to him:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Blessed beyond all blessings that life can embrace in its circle,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Blessed the gift was when Providence gave thee to me:</div>
- <div class='line'>Gave thee, gentle and kindly and wise, calm, clear-seeing, thoughtful,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thee to me as I was, vehement, passionate, blind:</div>
- <div class='line'>Gave me to see in thee, and wonder I never had seen it,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Wisdom that shines in the heart dearer than Intellect’s light;</div>
- <div class='line'>Gave me to find in thee, when oppressed by loneliness’ burden,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Solace for each dull pain, calm from the strife of the storm.</div>
- <div class='line'>For O, vainly till then had I sought for peace and contentment,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Ever pursued by desires, yearnings that could not be still’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>Ever pursued by desires of a heart’s companionship, ever</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Yearning for guidance and love such as I found them in thee.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is painful to be obliged to record that
-Whewell’s executors found that the copyright
-of his works had no mercantile value. He
-perhaps formed a true estimate of his own
-powers when he said that all that he could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>do was to ‘systematize portions of knowledge
-which the consent of opinions has brought
-into readiness for such a process<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c011'><sup>[14]</sup></a>.’ His name
-will not be associated with any great discovery,
-or any original theory, if we except his memoir
-on Crystallography, which is the basis of the
-system since adopted; and his researches on
-the Tides, which have afforded a clear and
-satisfactory view of those of the Atlantic, while
-it is hardly his fault if those of the Pacific were
-not elucidated with equal clearness<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c011'><sup>[15]</sup></a>. It too
-often happens that those who originally suggest
-theories are forgotten in the credit due to those
-who develop them; and we are afraid that this
-has been the fate of Whewell. Even as a
-mathematician he is not considered really great
-by those competent to form a judgment. He
-was too much wedded to the geometrical fashions
-of his younger days, and ‘had no taste for the
-more refined methods of modern analysis<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c011'><sup>[16]</sup></a>.’ In
-science, as in other matters, his strong conservative
-bias stood in his way. He was
-constitutionally unable to accept a thorough-going
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>innovation. For instance, he withstood
-to the last Lyell’s uniformity, and Darwin’s
-evolution<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c011'><sup>[17]</sup></a>. Much, therefore, of what he wrote
-will of necessity be soon forgotten; but we hope
-that some readers may be found for his <cite>Elements
-of Morality</cite>, and that his great work on the
-Inductive Sciences may hold its own. It is
-highly valued in Germany; and in England
-Mr John Stuart Mill, one of the most cold
-and severe of critics, who differed widely from
-Whewell in his scientific views, has declared
-that ‘without the aid derived from the facts and
-ideas contained in the <cite>History of the Inductive
-Sciences</cite>, the corresponding portion of his own
-<cite>System of Logic</cite> would probably not have been
-written.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have felt it our duty to point out these
-shortcomings; but it is a far more agreeable
-one to turn from them, and conclude our essay
-by indicating the lofty tone of religious enthusiasm
-which runs through all his works. As
-Dr Lightfoot pointed out in his funeral sermon,
-‘the world of matter without, the world of thought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>within, alike spoke to him of the Eternal Creator
-the Beneficent Father; and even his opponent,
-Sir David Brewster, who more strongly than all
-his other critics had denounced what he termed
-the paradox advanced in <cite>The Plurality of
-Worlds</cite>, that our earth may be ‘the oasis in
-the desert of the solar system,’ was generous
-enough to admit that posterity would forgive
-the author ‘on account of the noble sentiments,
-the lofty aspirations, and the suggestions, almost
-divine, which mark his closing chapter on
-the future of the universe.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONNOP THIRLWALL<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c011'><sup>[18]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Until a few years ago biographies of
-Bishops were remarkable for that decent dullness
-which Sydney Smith has noted as a
-characteristic of modern sermons. The narrative
-reproduced, with painful fidelity, the oppressive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>decorum and the conventional dignity; but
-kept out of sight the real human being which
-even in the Georgian period must have existed
-beneath official trappings. But in these matters,
-as in others, there is a fashion. The narratives
-which describe the lives of modern Bishops
-reflect the change that has come over the
-office. As now-a-days ‘a Bishop’s efficiency is
-measured, in common estimation, by his power
-of speech and motion<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c011'><sup>[19]</sup></a>,’ his biography, if he
-has overtopped his brethren in administration,
-or eloquence, or statesmanship, becomes an
-entertaining, and sometimes even a valuable,
-production. It reflects the ever-changing incidents
-of a bustling career; it is spiced with
-good stories; and it reveals, more or less
-indiscreetly, matters of high policy in Church
-and State, over which a veil has hitherto been
-drawn. In a word, it is the portrait of a real
-person, not of a lay figure: and, if the artist be
-worthy of his task, a portrait which faithfully
-reproduces the original. The life of Bishop
-Thirlwall could not have been treated in quite
-the same way as the imaginary biography we
-have just indicated; but, in good hands, it might
-have been made quite as entertaining, and much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>more valuable. Dr Perowne has told us that
-his life was not eventful. It was not, in the
-ordinary sense of that word. He rarely quitted
-his peaceful retreat at Abergwili; but, paradoxical
-as it sounds, he was no recluse. He
-took part in spirit, if not in bodily presence, in
-all the important events, political, religious, and
-literary, of his time; and when he chose to
-break silence, in speech or pamphlet, no one
-could command a more undivided attention, or
-exercise a more powerful influence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What manner of man was this? By what
-system of education had his mind been developed?
-What were his tastes, his pursuits,
-his daily life? To these questions, which are
-surely not unreasonable, the editors of the
-five volumes before us vouchsafe no adequate
-reply, for the meagre thread of narrative which
-connects together the <cite>Letters Literary and
-Theological</cite>, may be left out of consideration.
-Thirlwall’s life, as we understand the word, has
-yet to be written; and we fear that death has
-removed most of those who could perform the
-task in a manner worthy of the subject. For
-ourselves, all that we propose to do is to try to
-set forth his talents and his character, by the
-help of the materials before us, and of such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>personal recollections as we have been able to
-gather together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Connop Thirlwall was born February 11,
-1797. His father, the Rev. Thomas Thirlwall,
-minister of Tavistock Chapel, Broad Court,
-Long Acre, Lecturer of S. Dunstan, Stepney,
-and chaplain to the celebrated Thomas Percy,
-Lord Bishop of Dromore, resided at Mile End.
-We can give no information about him except
-the above list of his preferments; and of
-Connop’s mother we only know that her husband
-describes her as ‘pious and virtuous,’
-and anxious to ‘promote the temporal and
-eternal welfare’ of her children. She had the
-satisfaction of living long enough to see her
-son a bishop<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c011'><sup>[20]</sup></a>. Connop must have been a
-fearfully precocious child. In 1809 the fond
-father published a small duodecimo volume
-entitled ‘<cite>Primitiæ; or, Essays and Poems on
-Various Subjects, Religious, Moral, and Entertaining</cite>.
-By Connop Thirlwall, eleven years
-of age.’ The first of these essays is dated
-‘June 30, 1804. Seven years old’; and in the
-preface the father says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘In the short sketch which I shall take of the young
-author, and his performance, I mean not to amuse the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>reader with anecdotes of extraordinary precocity of genius;
-it is, however, but justice to him to state, that at a very
-<em>early</em> period he read English so well that he was taught
-Latin at three years of age, and at four read Greek with
-an ease and fluency which astonished all who heard him.
-From that time he has continued to improve himself in
-the knowledge of the Greek, Latin, French, and English
-languages. His talent for composition appeared at the age
-of seven, from an accidental circumstance. His mother, in
-my absence, desired his elder brother to write his thoughts
-upon a subject for his improvement, when the young author
-took it into his head to ask her permission to take the pen
-in hand too. His request was of course complied with,
-without the most remote idea he could write an intelligible
-sentence, when in a short time he composed that
-which is first printed, “On the Uncertainty of Life.” From
-that time he was encouraged to cultivate a talent of which
-he gave so flattering a promise, and generally on a Sunday
-chose a subject from Scripture. The following essays are
-selected from these lucubrations.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>We will quote a passage from one of these
-childish sermons, written when he was eight
-years old. The text selected is, ‘Behold, I
-will add unto thy days fifteen years’ (Isaiah
-xiii. 6); and, after some commonplaces on the
-condition of Hezekiah, the author takes occasion
-from the day, January 1, 1806, to make the
-following reflections:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I shall now consider what resolutions we ought to form
-at the beginning of a new year. The intention of God in
-giving us life was that we might live a life of righteousness.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>The same ever is His intention in preserving it. We ought,
-then, to live in righteousness, and obey the commandments
-of God. Do we not perceive that another year is come,
-that time is passing away quickly, and eternity is approaching?
-and shall we be all this while in a state of sin, without
-any recollection that the kingdom of heaven is nearer at
-hand? But we ought, in the beginning of a new year, to
-form a resolution to be more mindful of the great account
-we must give at the last day, and live accordingly: we
-ought to form a resolution to reform our lives, and walk in
-the ways of God’s righteousness; to abhor all the lusts of
-the flesh, and to live in temperance; and resolve no more
-to offend and provoke God with our sins, but repent of
-them. In the beginning of a new year we should reflect a
-little: although we are kept alive, yet many died in the
-course of last year; and this ought to make us watchful<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c011'><sup>[21]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There is not much originality of thought
-in this; indeed, it is impossible to avoid the
-suspicion that the paternal sermons, to which
-the author doubtless listened every Sunday,
-suggested the form, and possibly the matter,
-of these essays. What meaning could a child
-of eight attach to such expressions as ‘the lusts
-of the flesh,’ or ‘repentance,’ or ‘eternity’?
-Still, notwithstanding this evident imitation of
-others in the matter, the style has a remarkable
-individuality. Indeed, just as the portrait of
-the child which is prefixed to the volume recalls
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>forcibly the features of the veteran Bishop at
-seventy years of age, we fancy that we can
-detect in the style a foreshadowing of some of
-the qualities which rendered that of the man
-so remarkable. There is the same orderly
-arrangement of what he has to say, the same
-absence of rhetoric, the same logical deduction
-of the conclusion from the premisses. As we
-turn over the pages of the volume we are
-struck by the extent of reading which the
-allusions suggest. The best English authors,
-the most famous men of antiquity, are quoted
-as if the writer were familiar with them. The
-themes, too, are singularly varied. We find
-‘An Eastern Tale,’ which, though redolent of
-<cite>Rasselas</cite>, is not devoid of originality, and has
-considerable power of description; an ‘Address’
-delivered to the Worshipful Company of Drapers
-at their annual visit to Bancroft’s School, which
-is not more fulsome than such compositions
-usually are; and, lastly, half a dozen poems,
-which are by far the best things in the book.
-Let us take, almost at random, a few lines from
-the last: ‘Characters often Seen, but little
-Marked: a Satire.’ A young lady, called
-Clara, is anxious to break off a match, and
-lays her plot in the following fashion:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>‘The marriage eve arrived, she chanced to meet</div>
- <div class='line'>The unsuspecting lover in the street;</div>
- <div class='line'>Begins an artful, simple tale to tell.</div>
- <div class='line'>“I’m glad to see your future spouse so well,</div>
- <div class='line'>But I just heard—” “What?” cries the curious swain.</div>
- <div class='line'>“You may not like it; I must not explain.”</div>
- <div class='line'>“What was the dear, delusive creature at?”</div>
- <div class='line'>“Oh! nothing, nothing, only private chat.”</div>
- <div class='line'>“A pack of nonsense! it cannot be true!</div>
- <div class='line'>As if, dear girl, she could be false to you<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c011'><sup>[22]</sup></a>!”’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here, again, there may not be much originality
-of thought, but the versification is excellent,
-and the whole piece of surprising merit, when
-we reflect that it was written by a child of
-eleven. Yet, whatever may be the worth of this
-and other pieces in the volume before us as a
-promise of future greatness, we cannot but pity
-the poor little fellow, stimulated by the inconsiderate
-vanity of his parents to a priggish
-affectation of teaching others when he ought to
-have been either learning himself or at play
-with his schoolfellows; and we can thoroughly
-sympathize with the Bishop’s feelings respecting
-the book. The lady to whom the <cite>Letters to a
-Friend</cite> were written had evidently asked him
-for a copy, and obtained the following answer:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I am sure that if you knew the point in my foot which
-gives me pain you would not select that to kick or tread
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>upon; and I am equally sure that if you had been aware of
-the intense loathing with which I think of the subject of
-your note you would not have recalled it to my mind. When
-Mrs P——, in the simplicity of her heart, and no doubt
-believing it to be an agreeable topic to me, told me at dinner
-on Thursday that she possessed the hated volume, it threw
-a shade over my enjoyment of the evening, and it was with
-a great effort that, after a pause, I could bring myself to
-resume the conversation. If I could buy up every copy for
-the flames, without risk of a reprint, I should hardly think
-any price too high. Let me entreat you never again to
-remind me of its existence<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c011'><sup>[23]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In 1809 young Thirlwall was sent as a day-scholar
-to the Charterhouse, the choice of a
-school having very likely been determined by
-the fact that his father resided at the east end
-of London. The records of his school days
-are provokingly incomplete; nay, almost a
-blank. We should like to know whether he
-was ever a boy in the ordinary sense of the
-word; whether he played at games<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c011'><sup>[24]</sup></a>, or got
-into mischief, or obtained the distinction of a
-flogging. As far as his studies were concerned,
-he was fortunate in going to the Charterhouse
-when that excellent scholar Dr Raine was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>head master, and in being the contemporary
-of several boys who afterwards distinguished
-themselves, among whom may be specially
-mentioned his life-long friend, Julius Charles
-Hare, and George Grote, with whom, in after
-years, he was to be united in a common field of
-historical research. His chief friend, however,
-at this period was not one of his schoolfellows,
-but a young man named John Candler<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c011'><sup>[25]</sup></a>, a
-Quaker, resident at Ipswich. Several of the
-letters addressed to him during the four years
-spent at Charterhouse have fortunately been
-preserved. When we remember that these
-were written between the ages of twelve and
-sixteen, they must be regarded as possessing
-extraordinary merit. They are studied and
-rather stilted compositions, evidently the result
-of much thought and labour, as was usual in
-days when postage cost eightpence; but they
-reveal a wonderfully wide extent of reading,
-and an interest in passing events not usual in
-so ardent a student as the writer evidently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>had even then become. Young Candler was
-‘a friend to liberty,’ and an admirer of Sir
-Francis Burdett. His correspondent criticizes
-with much severity the popular hero and the
-mob, who, ‘after having broken the ministerial
-windows and pelted the soldiers with
-brickbats, have gone quietly home and left him
-to his meditations upon Tower Hill.’ Most
-thoughtful boys are fond of laying down the
-lines of their future life in their letters to their
-schoolfellows; but how few there are who do
-not change their opinions utterly, and end by
-adopting some profession wholly different from
-that which at first attracted them! This was
-not the case with Thirlwall. We find him
-writing at twelve years old in terms which he
-would not have disdained at fifty. ‘I shall
-never be a bigot in politics,’ he says; ‘whither
-my reason does not guide me I will suffer
-myself to be led by the nose by no man<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c011'><sup>[26]</sup></a>.’ ‘I
-would ask the advocates for confining learning
-to the breasts of the wealthy and the noble, in
-whose breasts are the seeds of sedition and
-discontent most easily sown? In that of the
-unenlightened or well-informed peasant? In
-that of a man incapable of judging either of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>the disadvantages of his station or the means
-of ameliorating it?... These were long since
-my sentiments<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c011'><sup>[27]</sup></a>.’ And, lastly, on the burning
-question of Parliamentary Reform: ‘Party
-prejudice must own it rather contradictory to
-reason and common sense that a population of
-one hundred persons should have two representatives,
-while four hundred thousand are
-without one. These are abuses which require
-speedy correction<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c011'><sup>[28]</sup></a>.’ He had evidently been
-taken to see Cambridge, and was constantly
-looking forward to his residence there. His
-anticipations, however, were not wholly agreeable.
-At that time he did not care much for
-classics. He thought that they were not
-‘objects of such infinite importance that the
-most valuable portion of man’s life, the time
-which he passes at school and at college, should
-be devoted to them.’ In after-life he said that
-he had been ‘injudiciously plied with Horace
-at the Charterhouse,’ and that, in consequence,
-‘many years elapsed before I could enjoy the
-most charming of Latin poets<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c011'><sup>[29]</sup></a>.’ He admits,
-however, that he is looking forward ‘with hope
-and pleasing anticipation to the time when I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>shall immure myself’ at Cambridge; and he
-makes some really admirable reflections, most
-unusual at that period, on University distinctions
-and the use to be made of them:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘There is one particular in which I hope to differ from
-many of those envied persons who have attained to the most
-distinguished academical honours. Several of these seem
-to have considered the years which they have spent at the
-University, not as the time of preparation for studies of a
-more severe and extended nature, but as the term of their
-labours, the completion of which is the signal for a life of
-indolence, dishonourable to themselves and unprofitable to
-mankind. Literature and science are thus degraded from
-their proper rank, as the most dignified occupations of a
-rational being, and are converted into instruments for procuring
-the gratification of our sensual appetites. This will
-not, I trust, be the conduct of your friend. Sorry indeed
-should I be to accept the highest honours of the University
-were I from that time destined to sink into an obscure and
-useless inactivity<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c011'><sup>[30]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>An English translation of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Pensées</cite></span> of
-Pascal had fallen in his way; and, in imitation
-of that great thinker, he had formed a resolution,
-of which he begs his friend to remind
-him in future years, to devote himself wholly
-to such studies (among others to the acquisition
-of a knowledge of Hebrew) as would fit him
-for the clerical profession. We shall see that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>he never really faltered from these intentions;
-for, though he was at one time beset with
-doubts as to his fitness to perform the practical
-duties of a clergyman, he was from first to
-last a theologian, and only admitted other
-studies as ancillary to that central object.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirlwall left Charterhouse in December
-1813, and proceeded to Trinity College, Cambridge,
-in October of the following year. How
-he spent the interval has not been recorded:
-possibly, like many other boys educated at a
-purely classical school, he was doing his best to
-acquire an adequate knowledge of mathematics,
-to his deficiency in which there are frequent
-references. He was so far successful in his
-efforts that he obtained the place of 22nd
-senior optime in 1818, when he proceeded in
-due course to his degree. Meanwhile, however
-great his distaste for the classics might
-have been at school, he had risen to high
-distinction in them; for he obtained the Craven
-University scholarship when only a freshman,
-as well as a Bell scholarship, and in the year
-of his degree the first Chancellor’s medal<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c011'><sup>[31]</sup></a>.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>In the autumn of the same year he was elected
-Fellow of his college. It is provoking to have
-to admit that our history of what may be termed
-the first part of his Cambridge career must
-begin and end here. Of the second portion,
-when he returned to his college and became
-assistant tutor, we shall have plenty to say
-hereafter; but of his undergraduate days no
-record has been preserved. He had the good
-fortune to know Trinity College when society
-there was exceptionally brilliant; among his
-contemporaries were Sedgwick, Whewell, the
-two Waddingtons, his old friend Hare, who
-gained a Fellowship in the same year as himself,
-and many others who contributed to make
-that period of University history a golden age.
-We can imagine him in their company ‘moulding
-high thought in colloquy serene,’ and taking
-part in anything which might develop the
-general culture of the place; but beyond the
-facts that he was secretary to the Union Society
-in 1817, when the ‘debate was interrupted by
-the entrance of the proctors, who laid on its
-members the commands of the Vice-Chancellor
-to disperse, and on no account to resume their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>discussions<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c011'><sup>[32]</sup></a>,’ and that he had acquired a high
-reputation for eloquence as a speaker there<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c011'><sup>[33]</sup></a>,
-we know nothing definite about him. He does
-not appear to have made any new friends; but
-as Julius Hare was in residence during the
-same period as he was, the two doubtless saw
-much of each other; and it is probably to him
-that Thirlwall owed the love of Wordsworth
-which may be detected in some of his letters,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>his fondness for metaphysical speculation, and
-his wish to learn German. The only letters
-preserved are addressed to his old correspondent
-Mr Candler, and to his uncle Mr John
-Thirlwall, and they give us no information
-relevant to Cambridge. In writing to the latter
-he dwells on his fondness for ancient history,
-on his preference for that of Greece over that
-of Rome; he records the addition of the Italian
-and German languages to his stock of acquirements;
-and he describes with enthusiasm his
-yearning for foreign travel, which each year
-grew stronger:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I certainly was not made to sit at home in contented
-ignorance of the wonders of art and nature, nor can I
-believe that the restlessness of curiosity I feel was implanted
-in my disposition to be a source of uneasiness rather than
-of enjoyment. Under this conviction I peruse the authors
-of France and Italy, with the idea that the language I am
-now reading I may one day be compelled to speak, and that
-what is now a source of elegant and refined entertainment
-may be one day the medium through which I shall disclose
-my wants and obtain a supply of the necessaries of daily
-life. This is the most enchanting of my day dreams; it has
-been for some years past my inseparable companion. And,
-apt as are my inclinations to fluctuate, I cannot recollect
-this to have ever undergone the slightest abatement<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c011'><sup>[34]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The letter from which we have selected the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>above passage was written to his uncle in 1816;
-in another, written a few months later to his
-friend Mr Candler, he enters more fully into
-his difficulties and prospects. The earlier portion
-of the letter is well worth perusal for the
-insight it affords into the extent of his reading
-and the originality of his criticisms; but it is
-the concluding paragraph which is specially
-interesting to a biographer. We do not know
-to what influences the change was due, but it
-is evident that his mind was passing through
-a period of unrest; his old determinations had
-been, at least for the moment, uprooted, and
-he looked forward with uncertain eyes to an
-unknown future. ‘My disinclination to the
-Church,’ he says, ‘has grown from a motive
-into a reason.’ The Bar had evidently been
-suggested to him as the only alternative, and
-on that dismal prospect he dilates with unwonted
-bitterness. It would take him away
-from all the pursuits he loved most dearly, and
-put in their place ‘the routine of a barren and
-uninteresting occupation,’ in which not only
-would the best years of his life be wasted, but—and
-this is what he seems to have dreaded
-most—his loftier aspirations would be degraded,
-and, when he had become rich enough
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>to return to literature, he would feel no inclination
-to do so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Fellowship examination of 1818 having
-ended in Thirlwall’s election, he was free to go
-abroad, and at once started alone for Rome.
-At that time Niebuhr was Prussian Envoy
-there, and Bunsen his Secretary of Legation.
-Thirlwall was so fortunate as to bring with him
-a letter of introduction to Madame Bunsen,
-who had been a Miss Waddington, cousin to
-Professor Monk, and had married Bunsen
-about a year before Thirlwall’s visit. The
-following amusing letter from Madame Bunsen
-to her mother gives an interesting picture of
-Thirlwall in Rome:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘<em>March 16, 1819.</em>—Mr Hinds and Mr Thirlwall are
-here.... My mother has, I know, sometimes suspected that
-a man’s abilities are to be judged of in an <em>inverse ratio</em> to
-his Cambridge honours; but I believe that rule is really not
-without exception, for Mr Thirlwall is certainly no dunce,
-although, as I have been informed, he attained high honours
-at Cambridge at an earlier age than anybody except, I
-believe, Porson. In the course of their first interview
-Charles heard enough from him to induce him to believe
-that Mr Thirlwall had studied Greek and Hebrew in good
-earnest, not merely for <em>prizes</em>; also, that he had read
-Mr Niebuhr’s Roman History proved him to possess no
-trifling knowledge of German; and, as he expressed a wish
-to improve himself in the language, Charles ventured to
-invite him to come to us on a Tuesday evening, whenever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>he was not otherwise engaged, seeing that many Germans
-were in the habit of calling on that day. Mr Thirlwall
-has never missed any Tuesday evening since, except the
-<span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>moccoli</em></span> night and one other when it rained dogs and cats.
-He comes at eight o’clock, and never stirs to go away till
-everybody else has wished good night, often at almost
-twelve o’clock. It is impossible for any one to behave more
-like a man of sense and a gentleman than he has always
-done—ready and eager to converse with anybody that is at
-leisure to speak to him, but never looking fidgety when by
-necessity left to himself; always seeming animated and
-attentive, whether listening to music, or trying to make out
-what people say in German, or looking at one of Goethe’s
-songs in the book, while it is sung. And so there are a
-great many reasons for our being <em>very much</em> pleased with
-Mr Thirlwall; yet I rather suspect him of being very cold,
-and very dry; and although he seeks, and seeks with general
-success, to understand everything, and in every possible way
-increase his stock of ideas, I doubt the possibility of his
-understanding anything that is to be <em>felt</em> rather than <em>explained</em>,
-and that cannot be reduced to a system. I was led
-to this result by some most extraordinary questions that he
-asked Charles about <cite>Faust</cite> (which he had borrowed of us,
-and which he greatly admired nevertheless, attempting a
-translation of one of my favourite passages, which, however,
-I had not pointed out to him as being such), and also
-by his great fondness for the poems of Wordsworth, two
-volumes of which he insisted on lending to Charles. These
-books he accompanied with a note, in which he laid great
-stress upon the necessity of reading the author’s <em>prose essays
-on his own poems</em>, in order to be enabled to relish the latter.
-Yet Mr Thirlwall speaks of Dante in a manner that would
-seem to prove a thorough taste for his poetry, as well as that
-he has really and truly studied it; for he said to me that he
-thought no person who had taken the trouble to understand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>the whole of the <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><cite>Divina Commedia</cite></span> would doubt about preferring
-the “<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Paradiso</span>” to the two preceding parts, an
-opinion in which I thoroughly agree<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c011'><sup>[35]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘As Mr Thirlwall can speak French sufficiently well to
-make himself understood, and as he has <em>something to say</em>,
-Charles found it very practicable to make him and Professor
-Bekker acquainted, though Professor Bekker has usually the
-great defect of <em>never</em> speaking but when he is prompted by his
-own inclination, and of never being <em>inclined to speak</em> except
-to persons whom he has long known—that is, to whose faces
-and manners he has become accustomed, and whose understanding
-or character he respects or likes.... In conclusion,
-I must say about Mr Thirlwall, that I was prepossessed in
-his favour by his having made up in a marked manner to
-Charles, rather than to myself. I had no difficulty in getting
-on with him, but I had all the advances to make; and I
-can never think the worse of a young man, just fresh from
-college and unused to the society of women, for not being
-at his ease with them at first<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c011'><sup>[36]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It is vexatious that Thirlwall’s biographers
-should have failed to discover—if indeed they
-tried to discover—any information about his
-Roman visit, to which he always looked back
-with delight, occasioned as much by the friends
-he had made there as by ‘the memorable scenes
-and objects’ he had visited<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c011'><sup>[37]</sup></a>. So far as we
-know, the above letter is the only authority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>extant. We should like to have heard whether
-Thirlwall had, or had not, any personal intercourse
-with Niebuhr, whom we have reason to
-believe he never met; and to what extent
-Bunsen influenced his future studies. We find
-it stated in Bunsen’s life that he determined
-Thirlwall’s wavering resolutions in favour of
-the clerical profession<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c011'><sup>[38]</sup></a>. This, as we shall
-presently shew, is clearly a mistake; but, when
-we consider the strong theological bias of
-Bunsen’s own mind, it does seem probable that
-he would direct his attention to the modern
-school of German divinity. We suspect that
-Thirlwall had been already influenced in this
-direction by the example, if not by the direct
-precepts, of Herbert Marsh, then Lady Margaret’s
-Professor of Theology at Cambridge<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c011'><sup>[39]</sup></a>,
-who had stirred up a great controversy by
-translating Michaelis’ <cite>Introduction to the New
-Testament</cite>, and by promoting a more free
-criticism of the Gospels than had hitherto been
-thought permissible. However this may be,
-it is certain that the friendship which began
-in Rome was one of the strongest and most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>abiding influences which shaped Thirlwall’s
-character, and just half a century afterwards
-we find him referring to Bunsen as a sort
-of oracle in much the same language that
-Dr Arnold was fond of employing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We must pass lightly and rapidly over the
-next seven years of Thirlwall’s life. He entered
-as a law student at Lincoln’s Inn in February
-1820, and in 1827 returned to Cambridge. In
-the intervening period he had given the law a
-fair trial; but the more he saw of it the less he
-liked it. It is painful to think of the weary
-hours spent over work of which he could say,
-four years after he had entered upon it, ‘It can
-never be anything but loathsome to me<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c011'><sup>[40]</sup></a>’; ‘my
-aversion to the law has not increased, as it
-scarcely could, from the first day of my initiation
-into its mysteries’; or to read his pathetic
-utterances to Bunsen, describing his wretchedness,
-and the delight he took in his brief
-excursions out of law into literature, consoling
-himself with the reflection that perhaps he
-gained in intensity of enjoyment what he lost
-in duration. With these feelings it would have
-been useless for him to persevere; but we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>doubt if the time spent in legal work was so
-entirely thrown away as he imagined. It might
-be argued that much of his future eminence as
-a bishop was due to his legal training. As a
-friend has remarked, ‘he carried the temper,
-and perhaps the habit, of Equity into all his
-subsequent work’; and to the end of his life
-he found a special delight in tracking the
-course of the more prominent <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>causes célèbres</em></span>
-of the day, and expressing his judgment upon
-them<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c011'><sup>[41]</sup></a>. Even in these years, however, law was
-not allowed to engross his whole time. From
-the beginning he had laid this down as a fixed
-principle. He spent his vacations in foreign
-travel, and every moment he could snatch from
-his enforced studies was devoted to a varied
-course of reading, of which the main outcome
-was a translation of Schleiermacher’s <cite>Critical
-Essay on the Gospel of S. Luke</cite><a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c011'><sup>[42]</sup></a>, to which his
-friend Hare had introduced him. Why should
-Thirlwall have selected, as a specimen of the
-new school of German theology, a work which,
-at this distance of time, does not appear to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>specially distinguished for merit or originality<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c011'><sup>[43]</sup></a>?
-It is evident, from what he says in his <cite>Introduction</cite>,
-that he had a sincere admiration for
-the talents of Dr Schleiermacher, whom he
-describes as ‘this extraordinary writer,’ whose
-fate it has been ‘to open a new path in every
-field of literature he has entered, and to tread
-all alone.’ But the real motive for the selection
-is to be found, we think, in the opportunity it
-afforded him for studying the whole question
-of the origin and authorship of the synoptic
-Gospels, and, as the title page informs us, for
-dealing with the contributions to the literature
-of the subject which had appeared since Bishop
-Marsh’s <cite>Dissertation on the Origin and Composition
-of our three first Canonical Gospels</cite>,
-published in 1801. In this direct reference to
-Marsh’s work we find a confirmation of our
-theory that Thirlwall owed to him his position
-as a critical theologian, though we can hardly
-imagine a greater difference than that which
-must have existed in all other matters between
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>the passionate Toryism of the one and the
-serene Liberalism of the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirlwall’s gallant attempt to follow an
-uncongenial profession could have but one
-termination; and we can imagine his friends
-watching with some curiosity for the moment
-and the cause of the final rupture. The
-moment was probably determined by the prosaic
-consideration that his fellowship at Trinity
-College would terminate in October 1828,
-unless he were in Priest’s Orders. We do
-not mean that he became a clergyman in
-order to secure a comfortable yearly income;
-but, that having decided in favour of the
-clerical profession, joined to those literary pursuits
-which his position as a fellow of Trinity
-College would allow, he took the necessary
-steps in good time. He returned to Cambridge
-in 1827, and, having been ordained deacon in
-the same year, and priest in the year following,
-at once undertook his full share of college and
-University work<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c011'><sup>[44]</sup></a>. His friend Hare had set
-the example in 1822 by accepting a classical
-lectureship at Trinity College at the urgent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>request of Mr Whewell, then lately appointed
-to one of the tutorships<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c011'><sup>[45]</sup></a>, and Thirlwall had
-paid visits to him in the Long Vacations of
-1824 and 1825. It is probable that at one of
-these visits the friends had planned their translation
-of Niebuhr’s <cite>History of Rome</cite>, for the
-first volume was far advanced in 1827, and was
-published early in 1828. The second did not
-appear until 1832. The publication of what
-Thirlwall rightly terms ‘a wonderful masterpiece
-of genius’ in an English dress marked
-an epoch in historical and classical literature
-in this country. Yet, notwithstanding its pre-eminent
-excellence, the work of the translators
-was bitterly attacked in various places, and
-particularly in a note appended to an article
-in the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>, a criticism which
-would long ago have been forgotten if it had
-not called forth a reply which we have heard
-described as ‘Hare’s bark and Thirlwall’s bite<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c011'><sup>[46]</sup></a>.’
-The pamphlet consists of sixty-three pages, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>which sixty belong to the former, and a ‘Postscript,’
-of little more than two, to the latter.
-It is probable that Hare’s elaborate vindication
-of his author, his brother translator, and himself,
-had but little effect on any one; Thirlwall’s
-indignant sarcasms—worthy of the best days
-of that controversial style in which he subsequently
-became a master—are still remembered
-and admired. We will quote a few sentences,
-of an application far wider than the criticism to
-which they originally referred. The reviewer
-had expressed pity that the translators should
-have wasted ‘such talents on the drudgery of
-translation.’ Thirlwall took exception to the
-phrase, and pointed out that their intellectual
-labour did not deserve to be so spoken of.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘On the other hand, intellectual labour prompted and
-directed by no higher consideration than that of personal
-emolument appears to me to deserve an ignominious name;
-nor do I think such an employment the less illiberal, however
-great may be the abilities exerted, or the advantages
-purchased. But I conceive such labour to become still
-more degrading, when it is let out to serve the views and
-advocate the opinions of others. It sinks another step
-lower in my estimation, when, instead of being applied to
-communicate what is excellent and useful, it ministers to the
-purpose of excluding from circulation all such intellectual
-productions as have not been stampt with the seal of the
-party to which it is itself subservient. But when I see it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>made the instrument of a religious, political, or literary
-proscription, forging or pointing calumny and slander to
-gratify the malice of hotter and weaker heads against all
-whom they hate and fear, I have now before me an instance
-of what I consider as the lowest and basest intellectual
-drudgery. I leave the application of these distinctions to
-the <span class='sc'>Quarterly Reviewer</span>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In 1831 the two friends started the publication
-of the <cite>Philological Museum</cite>. It had a
-brief but glorious career. Only six numbers
-were published, but they contained ‘more solid
-additions to English literature and scholarship’
-than had up to that time appeared in any
-journal. We are glad to see that seven of
-Thirlwall’s contributions have been republished,
-and that among them is the well-known essay
-<cite>On the Irony of Sophocles</cite>. Those who read
-these articles, and still more those who turn
-to the volumes from which they have been
-extracted, and look through the whole series
-of Thirlwall’s contributions, will be as much
-impressed by the writer’s erudition as by his
-critical insight; and, if a translation from the
-German should fall under their notice, they
-will not fail to remark the extraordinary skill
-with which he has turned that difficult language
-into sound English. Thirlwall would have
-smiled with polite incredulity had any one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>told him that he was setting an example in
-those writings of his which would bear fruit
-in years to come; but we maintain that this
-is what really happened. More than one of
-his successors in the field of classics at Cambridge
-was directly stimulated by what he had
-done to undertake an equally wide course of
-reading; and it may be argued with much
-probability that the thoroughness and breadth
-of illustration with which classical subjects are
-treated by the lecturers in Trinity College is
-derived from his initiative.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In 1832, when Hare left Cambridge, his
-friend succeeded him as assistant tutor, to
-give classical lectures to the undergraduates
-on Whewell’s ‘side.’ For a time all went
-well. His lectures were exceedingly popular
-with those capable of appreciating them, as
-was shown by the large attendance not only
-of undergraduates, but of the best scholars
-in the college, men who had already taken
-their degrees, and who were working for the
-Fellowship Examination or for private improvement.
-They were remarkable for translations
-of singular excellence, and for an exhaustive
-treatment of the subject, as systematic as Hare’s
-had been desultory, as we learn from traditions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>of them which still survive, and from two
-volumes of notes which now lie before us,
-taken down at a course on the Ethics of
-Aristotle. Moreover Thirlwall was personally
-popular. He was the least ‘donnish’ of the
-resident Fellows, and sought the society of
-undergraduates, inviting the men who attended
-his lectures to walk with him or to take wine
-at his rooms after Hall. He delighted in a
-good story, and used to throw himself back
-in his chair, his whole frame shaking with
-suppressed merriment, when anything struck
-his fancy as especially humorous. He had
-one habit which, had it been practised with
-less delicacy, might have marred his popularity.
-He was fond of securing an eager but inconsiderate
-talker, whom he drew out, by a series
-of subtle questions, for the amusement of the
-rest. So well known was this peculiarity
-among his older friends that after one of his
-parties a person who had not been present
-has been heard to inquire from another who
-had just left his rooms, ‘Who was fool to-day?’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In 1834 Thirlwall’s connection with the
-educational staff of the college was rudely
-severed by a controversy respecting the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>admission of Dissenters to degrees. This
-debate has been long since forgotten in the
-University; but the influence which it exercised
-on Thirlwall’s future career, as well as its own
-intrinsic interest, point it out for particular
-notice. We had occasion in a recent article<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c011'><sup>[47]</sup></a>
-to sketch the changes which took place in
-the University between 1815 and 1830. It
-will be remembered that the stormy period
-of our political history which is associated with
-the first Reform Bill fell between those dates.
-It was hardly to be expected that Cambridge
-should escape an influence by which the country
-was so profoundly affected. Indeed, it may be
-cited as a sign of the absorbing interest of that
-question, that it did affect the University very
-seriously; for there is ample evidence that
-in the previous century external events, no
-matter how important, had made but little
-impression. In 1746 we find the poet Gray
-lamenting that his fellow academicians were
-so indifferent to the march of the Pretender;
-and even the French Revolution excited but
-a languid enthusiasm, though Dr Milner, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>Vice-Chancellor, and his brother Heads, did
-their best to draw attention to it by expelling
-from the University Mr Frend, of Jesus
-College, for writing a pamphlet called <cite>Peace
-and Union</cite>, which advocated the principles of
-its leaders. With the Reform Bill of 1830,
-however, the case was very different. Sides
-were eagerly taken; discussions grew hot and
-angry; old friends became estranged; and,
-years afterwards, when children of the next
-generation asked questions of their parents
-about some one whose name was mentioned
-in their hearing, but with whom they were
-not personally acquainted, it was not unusual
-for them to be told: ‘That is Mr So-and-so;
-he used to be very intimate with us before
-the Reform Bill; but we never speak now.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the grievances then discussed was
-the exclusion of Dissenters from participation
-in the advantages of the Universities.
-The propriety of imposing tests at matriculation,
-and on proceeding to degrees, especially to
-degrees in the faculties of law and physic,
-had been from time to time debated, both in
-the University and in the House of Commons.
-The ancient practice had, notwithstanding, been
-steadily maintained. On one occasion, in 1772,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>the House had even gone so far as to decline,
-by a majority of 146, to receive a petition
-on the subject. In December 1833, however,
-Professor Pryme offered Graces to the Senate
-for appointing a Syndicate to consider the
-abolition or the modification of subscription
-on graduation. The ‘Caput<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c011'><sup>[48]</sup></a>’ rejected them.
-In February of the following year, Dr Cornwallis
-Hewett, Downing Professor of Medicine,
-offered a similar Grace to consider the subject
-with special reference to the faculty of medicine.
-This also was rejected by the ‘Caput’ on the
-veto of the Vice-Chancellor, Dr King, President
-of Queens’ College. These two rejections,
-following so closely upon each other, made
-it evident that the authorities of the University
-were not disposed so much as to consider the
-subject. It was therefore determined to extend
-the field of the controversy, and at once to
-apply to the Legislature. A meeting was held
-at Professor Hewett’s rooms in Downing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>College, at which it was agreed to present an
-identical petition to both Houses of Parliament.
-The document began by stating the attachment
-of the petitioners to the Church of England,
-and to the University as connected therewith;
-and further, their belief ‘that no civil or ecclesiastical
-polity was ever so devised by the
-wisdom of man as not to require, from time
-to time, some modification from the change
-of external circumstances or the progress of
-opinion.’ They then suggested—this was the
-word employed—</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘“That no corporate body, like the University of Cambridge,
-can exist in a free country in honour and safety
-unless its benefits be communicated to all classes as widely
-as may be compatible with the Christian principles of its
-foundation”; and urged “the expediency of abrogating
-by legislative enactment every religious test exacted from
-members of the University before they proceed to degrees,
-whether of Bachelor, Master, or Doctor, in Arts, Law, or
-Physic.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This petition was signed by sixty-two resident
-members of the Senate. Among them were
-two Masters of Colleges, Dr Davy, of Caius,
-and Dr Lamb, of Corpus Christi; and nine
-Professors, Hewett, Lee, Cumming, Clark,
-Babbage, Sedgwick, Airy, Musgrave, Henslow;
-some of whom were either Conservatives, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>very moderate Liberals. It was presented to
-the House of Lords by Earl Grey, and to
-the House of Commons by Mr Spring-Rice,
-member for the town of Cambridge. As might
-have been expected, it was met, after an interval
-of about ten days, by a protest, signed by
-110 residents; which was shortly followed by
-a counter-petition to Parliament, signed by 258
-members of the Senate, mostly non-residents—a
-number which would no doubt have been
-greatly enlarged had there been more time
-for collecting signatures<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c011'><sup>[49]</sup></a>. These expressions
-of opinion, however, which showed that even
-resident members of the University were not
-unanimous in desiring the proposed relief, while
-non-residents were probably strongly opposed
-to it, did not prevent the introduction of a
-Bill into the House of Commons to make it
-‘lawful for all his Majesty’s subjects to enter
-and matriculate in the Universities of England,
-and to receive and enjoy all degrees in learning
-conferred therein (degrees in Divinity alone
-excepted), without being required to subscribe
-any articles of religion, or to make any declaration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>of religious opinions respecting particular
-modes of faith and worship.’ The third reading
-of this Bill was carried by a majority of 89;
-but it was rejected in the House of Lords by
-a majority of 102.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It will easily be imagined that these proceedings
-were watched with the greatest interest
-at Cambridge. Public opinion had risen to
-fever-heat, and a plentiful crop of pamphlets
-was the result. It is difficult nowadays to
-read without a smile these somewhat hysterical
-productions, with their prophecies of untold
-evils to come, should the fatal measure suggested
-by the petitioners ever pass into the
-Statute-book. Among these pamphlets that
-which most concerns our present purpose was
-by Dr Thomas Turton, then Regius Professor
-of Divinity, and afterwards Lord Bishop of
-Ely, entitled, <cite>Thoughts on the Admission of
-Persons, without regard to their Religious
-Opinions, to certain Degrees in the Universities
-of England</cite>. Dr Turton was universally respected,
-and his pamphlet attracted great
-attention on that account, and also from the
-ability and ingenuity of the argument. He
-adopted the comparative method; and endeavoured
-to prove that evils would ensue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>from the intercourse of young men who differed
-widely from one another in theological beliefs,
-by tracing the history of the Theological Seminary
-for Nonconformists, commenced by the
-celebrated Dr Doddridge, in 1729, at Northampton,
-and subsequently removed to Daventry
-in 1751. The gauntlet thus thrown down was
-taken up by Thirlwall, who lost but little time
-in addressing to him a <cite>Letter on the Admission
-of Dissenters to Academical Degrees</cite>. After
-stating briefly that what he was about to say
-would be said on his own responsibility, and
-that he did not come forward as ‘the organ
-or advocate’ of those who had taken the same
-side as himself, many of whom, he thought,
-would not agree with him, he proceeded to
-attack the analogy between Cambridge and
-Daventry which Dr Turton had attempted
-to establish. ‘Our colleges,’ he boldly asserted,
-‘are not theological seminaries. We have no
-theological colleges, no theological tutors, no
-theological students.’ The statement was literally
-true; it might even be said to be as
-capable of demonstration as any simple mathematical
-proposition; but uttered in that way,
-in a controversial pamphlet, in support of a
-most unpopular cause, it must have sounded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>like the blast of a hostile trumpet. This,
-however, was not all. Dr Turton had claimed
-for the Universities the same privilege which
-was enjoyed by Nonconformists, viz. the possession
-of colleges where ‘those principles of
-religion alone are taught which are in agreement
-with their own peculiar views.’ Thirlwall,
-therefore, proceeded to inquire whether the
-colleges, though not theological seminaries,
-might be held to be schools for religious
-instruction. This question again he answered in
-the negative; and his opponent having placed
-in the foremost rank among the privileges long
-exercised by the Universities (1) the relation
-of tutor to pupil, (2) the chapel services, (3)
-the college lectures, he proceeded to examine
-whether these could ‘properly be numbered
-among the aids to religion which this place
-furnishes.’ To him it appeared impossible,
-under any circumstances, to instil religion into
-men’s minds against their will. ‘We cannot
-even prescribe exercises, or propose rewards
-for it, without killing the thing we mean to
-foster.’ The value of the three aids above
-enumerated had been, he thought, greatly
-exaggerated; and compulsory attendance at
-chapel—‘the constant repetition of a heartless,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>mechanical service’—he denounced as a positive
-evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘My reason for thinking that our daily services might
-be omitted altogether, without any material detriment to
-religion, is simply that, as far as my means of observation
-extend, with an immense majority of our congregation it is
-not a religious service at all, and that to the remaining few
-it is the least impressive and edifying that can well be
-conceived<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c011'><sup>[50]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He had no fault to find with the decorum
-of the service, but he criticised it as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘If this decorum were to be carried to the highest
-perfection, as it might easily be, if it should ever become a
-mode and a point of honour with the young men themselves,
-the thing itself would not rise one step in my estimation.
-I should still think, that the best which could be said of it
-would be, that at the end it leaves every one as it found
-him, and that the utmost religion could hope from it would
-be to suffer no incurable wounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘As to any other purposes, foreign to those of religion,
-which may be answered by these services, I have here no
-concern with them. I know that it is sometimes said that
-the attendance at chapel is essential to discipline; but I
-have never been able to understand what kind of discipline
-is meant: whether it is a discipline of the body, or of the
-mind, or of the heart and affections. As to the first, I am
-very sensible of the advantage of early rising; but I think
-this end might be attained by a much less circuitous process;
-and I suppose that it will hardly be reckoned among the
-uses of our evening service, that it sometimes proves a
-seasonable interruption to intemperate gaiety. But I confess
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>that the word discipline, applied to this subject, conveys to
-my mind no notions which I would not wish to banish: it
-reminds me either of a military parade, or of the age when
-we were taught to be <em>good</em> at church<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c011'><sup>[51]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As a remedy for the existing state of things
-he suggested a weekly service, ‘which should
-remind the young men of that to which they
-have, most of them, been accustomed at home.’
-Such a service as this, he thought, ‘would
-afford the best opportunity of affording instruction
-of a really religious kind, which should
-apply itself to their situation and prospects,
-and address itself to their feelings.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Next he took the college lectures in divinity,
-and proceeded to show, that, for the most part,
-they had no claim to be called theological.
-This part of his pamphlet excited even greater
-dissatisfaction than the other; and it must be
-admitted that it was by far the weakest part
-of his case. His statements under this head
-were presently examined, and completely refuted,
-by Mr Robert Wilson Evans, then a
-resident Fellow of Trinity, who published a
-detailed account of the lectures on the New
-Testament which he had given during the past
-year in his own college.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>Up to this time Mr Whewell had taken
-no part in the controversy, because he had
-felt himself unable ‘fully to agree with either
-of the contending parties.’ But his position as
-tutor of the college whence the denunciation
-of the existing system had emanated—for the
-system of Trinity College was practically the
-system of all the other colleges in the University
-also—compelled him, though evidently
-with the greatest reluctance, to break silence.
-He argued that Thirlwall’s opinion, that we
-cannot prescribe exercises or propose rewards
-for religion without killing that which we fain
-would foster, strikes at the root of all connexion
-between religion and civil institutions, such
-as an Established Church and the like; that
-external influences have always been recognized
-by Christian communities, and must have been
-used even in the case of those services at home
-which his opponent approved. Chapel service
-is nothing more than family prayers. If, therefore,
-we teach our students that compulsion is
-destructive of all religion, shall we not make
-them doubt the validity of the religion which
-was instilled into their minds at home? The
-aim of such ordinances and safeguards is to
-throw a religious character over all the business
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>of life; to bind religious thought upon us by
-the strongest of all constraints—the constraint
-of habit. He admitted that all was not perfect
-in the chapel services as they existed; and
-lamented that the task of those who wished
-to make the undergraduates more devout would
-henceforward be harder than it had ever been
-before, through their consciousness of a want
-of unanimity among their instructors. A stated
-method is of use in religion as it is in other
-studies. What would become of men under
-the voluntary system? It is interesting to
-remark that in a subsequent pamphlet written
-a few months later—in September 1834—he
-spoke in favour of such a change in the Sunday
-service as Thirlwall had suggested. Towards
-the close of his Mastership this change
-was effected, and a sermon was introduced at
-the second of the two morning services on
-Sundays. We are not aware, however, that
-the movement which resulted in this alteration
-was regarded with any special favour by the
-Master<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c011'><sup>[52]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>Thirlwall’s pamphlet is dated May 21, 1834;
-Whewell’s four days later. On the 26th the
-Master, Dr Wordsworth, wrote to Mr Thirlwall,
-calling upon him to resign the assistant-tutorship.
-The words used were:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I trust you will find no difficulty in resigning the
-appointment of assistant-tutor which I confided to you somewhat
-more than two years ago. Your continuing to retain
-it would, I am convinced, be very injurious to the good
-government, the reputation, and the prosperity of the college
-in general, to the interests of Mr Whewell in particular, and
-to the welfare of the young men, and of many others.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In another passage he went further still:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘With respect to the letter itself, I have read it with
-some attention, and, I am sorry to say, with extreme pain
-and regret. It appears to me of a character so out of
-harmony with the whole constitution and system of the
-college that I find some difficulty in understanding how a
-person with such sentiments can reconcile it to himself to
-continue a member of a society founded and conducted on
-principles from which he differs so widely.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The Heads of Houses of that day regarded
-themselves as seated upon an academic Olympus,
-from whose serene heights they surveyed
-the common herd beneath them with a sort of
-contemptuous pity; and they not only exacted,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>but were commonly successful in obtaining, the
-most precise obedience from their subjects. In
-Trinity College, however, at least since the
-days of Dr Bentley, the Master had usually
-been in the habit of consulting the Seniors
-before taking any important step; but, on this
-occasion, it is quite clear that the Seniors were
-not consulted. The Master probably thought
-that as he appointed the assistant-tutors he
-could also remove them. We believe, however,
-that even in those days the Master usually
-consulted the tutors before appointing their
-subordinates; and common courtesy would
-have suggested a similar course of action
-before dismissing a distinguished scholar<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c011'><sup>[53]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirlwall lost no time in obeying the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>Master’s commands, and then issued a circular
-to the Fellows of the college, enclosing a copy
-of the Master’s letter, in order that they might
-learn what was ‘the power claimed by the
-Master over the persons engaged in the public
-instruction of the college, and the manner in
-which it has been exercised;’ and, secondly,
-that he might learn from them how far they
-agreed with the Master as to the propriety
-of his continuing a member of the Society.
-On this point he entreated each of them to
-favour him with a ‘private, explicit, and unreserved
-declaration’ of his opinions. It is
-needless to say that one and all desired to
-retain him among them; and the Master’s
-conduct was condemned by a large majority.
-It must not, however, be supposed that Thirlwall’s
-own conduct was held to be free from
-fault. He was much blamed for having resigned
-so hastily, without consulting any one,
-as it would appear, except Whewell and Perry.
-Moreover, many of the Fellows, among whom
-was Mr Hare, condemned the Master’s action,
-and censured Thirlwall’s rashness in publishing
-such sentiments while holding a responsible
-office, with almost equal severity. This feeling
-explains, as we imagine, the very slight resistance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>made to an act which, under any other
-circumstances, would have caused an explosion.
-The Fellows felt that the victim had put himself
-in the wrong; and that, much as they
-regretted the necessity of submission, it was the
-only course to be taken. Thirlwall mentions
-in a letter to Professor Pryme that when he
-showed the Masters communication to Whewell,
-the latter ‘expressed great regret,’ but ‘did
-not intimate that there could be any doubt
-as to our connexion being at an end.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has often been said that Whewell did
-not exert himself as he might have done to
-avert the catastrophe. We are glad to know,
-as we now do most distinctly, from a letter
-written by him to Professor Sedgwick<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c011'><sup>[54]</sup></a>, full
-of grief at what had happened, and of apprehension
-at its probable consequences, that he
-had done all in his power to stay the Master’s
-hand. He does not say, in so many words,
-that the Master had consulted him <em>before</em> he
-sent the letter; but he does say that ‘the
-Master’s request to him (Mr Thirlwall) to
-resign the tuition I entirely disapprove of,
-and expressed my opinion against it to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>Master as strongly as I could.’ If Thirlwall
-felt some resentment against Whewell at first—as
-we believe he did—the feeling soon died
-away, and towards the end of September he
-wrote him a long letter which ended with the
-following passage:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Besides the explanations which I desired, your letter
-has afforded me a still higher satisfaction, in shewing me
-that I am indebted to you for an obligation on which I
-shall always reflect with pleasure and gratitude—in the
-attempt which you made to avert the evil which my imprudence
-had drawn upon me. And as this is the strongest
-proof you could have given of the desire you felt to continue
-the relation in which we stood with one another, so it
-encourages me to hope that I may still find opportunities,
-before I leave this place, of co-operating with you, though
-in a different form, for the like ends. But at all events I
-shall never cease to retain that esteem and regard with
-which I now remain yours most truly,</p>
-
-<div class='c018'><span class='sc'>C. Thirlwall</span><a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c011'><sup>[55]</sup></a>.’</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>In reviewing the whole controversy at a
-distance of more than half a century, with, we
-must admit, a strong bias in Thirlwall’s favour,
-it is impossible not to admit that he had made
-a mistake. In all questions of college management
-it is most important that the authorities
-should appear, at any rate, to be unanimous;
-and the words ‘my imprudence,’ which occur
-in the passage quoted above from his letter to
-Whewell, indicate that by that time he had
-begun to take the same view himself. It is
-easy to see how he had been drawn into an
-opposite course. He had never considered
-that he had anything to do with the chapel
-discipline; he had agreed to attend himself,
-but he did not consider that such attendance
-implied approval of the system. His own
-attendance, as we learn from a contemporary,
-was something more than formal; he was
-rarely absent, morning or evening; and his
-behaviour was remarkable for reverence and
-devotion. With him, religion had nothing to
-do with discipline; and it was infinitely shocking
-to his pure and thoughtful mind to defile
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>things heavenly with things earthly. The far
-too rigorous rules of attendance which were then
-in force had exasperated the undergraduates,
-and their behaviour, without being absolutely
-profane, was careless and irreverent. Talking
-was very prevalent, especially on surplice nights,
-when the service is choral. Thirlwall probably
-knew, from the friendly intercourse which he
-maintained with the younger members of the
-College, what their feelings were, and determined
-to do his best to get a system altered
-which produced such disastrous results. It
-must be remembered that at that time the
-Act of Uniformity prevented any shortening
-of the service. Whewell’s mind was a very
-different one. Without being a bigot, he had
-a profound respect for the existing order of
-things; shut his eyes to any defects it might
-have, even when they were pointed out to
-him; and regarded attempts to subvert it, or
-even to weaken it, as acts of profanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It will be readily conceived that these events
-rendered Cambridge no pleasant place of residence
-for Thirlwall, deprived of his occupation
-as a teacher and unsupported by any particularly
-strong force of liberal opinion in the University.
-Yet he had the courage to make the experiment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>of continuing to live in college. He went
-abroad for the Long Vacation of 1834, and
-returned at the beginning of the October term.
-In a few weeks, however, the course of his life
-was changed by an unexpected event. Lord
-Melbourne’s first Ministry broke up, and just
-as Lord Chancellor Brougham was regretting
-that Sedgwick and Thirlwall were the only
-clergymen who had deserved well of the Liberal
-party for whom he had been unable to provide,
-came the news of the death of a gentleman who
-was both canon of Norwich and rector of Kirby
-Underdale, a valuable but very secluded living
-in Yorkshire. He at once offered the canonry
-to Sedgwick and the rectory to Thirlwall. Both
-offers were accepted, we believe, without hesitation;
-and both appointments, though evidently
-made without regard to the special fitness of the
-persons selected, were thoroughly successful.
-Sedgwick threw himself into the duties of a
-cathedral dignitary with characteristic vigour;
-and Thirlwall, whose only experience of parochial
-work had been at Over, in Cambridgeshire,
-a small village without a parsonage, of which he
-was vicar for a few months in 1829, became a
-zealous and popular parish priest. We are
-told that ‘the recollection still survives of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>regular services with full and attentive congregations,
-including incomers from neighbouring
-villages; of the frequent visits to the village
-school; of the extempore prayers with his
-flock, of which the larger number were Dissenters;
-of the assiduous attentions to the sick
-and poor.’ And his old friend Hare, writing to
-Whewell in 1840, describes his work in his
-parish as ‘perfect,’ and holds up his example as
-‘an encouragement’ to his correspondent to go
-and do likewise<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c011'><sup>[56]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirlwall did not revisit Cambridge until
-1842, when he stayed in Trinity College for
-two days during the installation of the Duke
-of Northumberland as Chancellor. Such an
-occasion, however, does not give much opportunity
-for judging of the real state of the
-University. He paid a similar visit in 1847,
-when Prince Albert was installed. After this
-he did not see Cambridge again until the
-spring of 1869, when he stayed at Trinity
-Lodge with his old friend Dr Thompson, and
-on Whitsunday, May 16, preached before the
-University in Great S. Mary’s Church. He
-has himself recorded that he was never so
-much pleased with the place since he went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>up as a freshman, and has given an amusing
-description of a leisurely stroll round the backs
-of the colleges and through part of the town<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c011'><sup>[57]</sup></a>,
-which, he might have added, he insisted upon
-taking without a companion. Those who conversed
-with him on that occasion remember
-that he was much struck by the changes which
-had taken place in the University since he had
-left it; and that he observed with pleasure the
-increased numbers of the undergraduates, and
-the movement and activity which seemed to
-reign everywhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was at Kirby Underdale that Thirlwall
-wrote the greater part of the work on which his
-reputation as a scholar and a man of letters will
-chiefly rest—his <cite>History of Greece</cite>—of which
-the first volume had been published before
-he finally left Cambridge<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c011'><sup>[58]</sup></a>. It is, perhaps,
-fortunate for the world that he had bound
-himself to produce the volumes at regular
-intervals<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c011'><sup>[59]</sup></a>, and that his editor, Dr Dionysius
-Lardner (whom he used to call ‘Dionysius
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>the Tyrant’), was not a man to grant delays;
-for, had the conditions been easier, parochial
-cares and new interests might have retarded
-the production of it indefinitely, or even stopped
-it altogether. From the first Thirlwall had
-applied himself to the work with strenuous
-and unremitting energy. At Cambridge he
-used to work all day until half-past three o’clock
-in the afternoon, when he might be seen leaving
-his rooms for a half-hour’s rapid walk before
-dinner in Hall, then served at four o’clock;
-and in the country he is said to have spent
-sixteen hours of the twenty-four in his study.
-We do not know what was the original design
-of the work, as part of the <cite>Cabinet Cyclopædia</cite>,
-but we have it on Thirlwall’s own authority
-that it was ‘much narrower than that which
-it actually reached<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c011'><sup>[60]</sup></a>,’ and before long it was
-further expanded into eight goodly octavos.
-The first of these was scarcely in the hands of
-the public when Grote’s <cite>History of Greece</cite>, published,
-like its predecessor, volume by volume,
-began to make its appearance. It was mentioned
-above that Grote and Thirlwall had
-been school-fellows; but, though they met not
-unfrequently in London afterwards, Thirlwall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>knew so little of his friend’s intentions that
-he had been heard to say, ‘Grote is the man
-who ought to write the History of Greece.’
-When it did appear, he at once welcomed it
-with enthusiasm. ‘High as my expectations
-were of it,’ he writes to Dr Schmitz, ‘it has
-very much surpassed them all, and affords an
-earnest of something which has never been
-done for the subject either in our own or any
-other literature<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c011'><sup>[61]</sup></a>’; and to Grote himself, when
-the publication of four volumes had enabled
-him to form a maturer judgment, he not only
-used stronger words of praise, but contrasted
-it with his own History in terms which for
-generosity and sincerity can never be surpassed.
-After alluding to ‘the great inferiority’ of his
-‘own performance,’ he concludes as follows:
-‘I may well be satisfied with that measure
-of temporary success and usefulness which has
-attended it, and can unfeignedly rejoice that it
-will, for all highest purposes, be so superseded<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c011'><sup>[62]</sup></a>.’
-It would be beside our present purpose to
-attempt a comparison of the relative merits of
-these two works, which, by a curious coincidence,
-had been elaborated simultaneously.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>They have many points of resemblance. Both
-originated in a desire to apply to the history
-of Greece those principles of criticism which
-Niebuhr had applied so successfully to the
-history of Rome; both were intended to
-counteract the misrepresentations of Mitford;
-both were the result of long and careful
-preparation. Grote has a decided advantage
-in point of style; he writes vigorous, ‘newspaper’
-English, as might be expected from a
-successful pamphleteer; while Thirlwall’s periods
-are laboured and somewhat wooden. Grote
-has infused animation into his work by being
-always a partisan. We do not mean that he
-wilfully misrepresents facts; he certainly does
-not; but he unconsciously finds ‘extenuating
-circumstances’ for those with whom he sympathizes,
-and condemns remorselessly those
-whose springs of action are alien to his own.
-Thirlwall, on the contrary, holds the judicial
-balance with a firm hand. In estimating character
-his serene intellect is never warped by
-partisanship, or by a wish to present old facts
-under a new face; while from his scholarship
-and critical power there is no appeal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After a residence of five years at Kirby
-Underdale Thirlwall was unexpectedly made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Bishop of S. David’s by Lord Melbourne.
-Lord Houghton, an intimate friend of both
-the Bishop and the Minister, has recorded
-that Lord Melbourne was in the habit not
-merely of reading, but of severely judging
-and criticising the writings of every divine
-whom he thought of promoting. By some
-accident the translation of Schleiermacher’s
-essay had fallen in his way soon after it
-appeared; he had formed a high opinion of
-Thirlwall’s share in the work, and so far back
-as 1837 had done his best to send the author
-to Norwich instead of Dr Stanley. On this
-occasion the bishops whom the Minister consulted
-regarded the orthodoxy of the views
-sustained in the essay as questionable, and
-Thirlwall’s promotion was deferred. In 1840,
-however, Lord Melbourne got his way, and
-the bishopric of S. David’s was offered in due
-form to the Rector of Kirby Underdale. His
-first impulse was to refuse; but his friends
-persuaded him to go to London, and at least
-have an interview with Lord Melbourne. We
-do not vouch for the literal accuracy of the
-following scene, but it is too amusing not to
-be related. The time is the forenoon; the
-place, Lord Melbourne’s bedroom. He is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>supposed to be in bed, surrounded by letters
-and newspapers. On Thirlwall’s entrance he
-delivers the following allocution:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Very glad to see you; sit down, sit down. Hope you
-are come to say you accept? I only wish you to understand
-that I don’t intend, if I know it, to make a heterodox
-bishop. I don’t like heterodox bishops. As men they may
-be very good anywhere else, but I think they have no
-business on the bench. I take great interest,’ he continued,
-‘in theological questions, and I have read a good deal of
-those old fellows,’ pointing to a pile of folio editions of
-the Fathers. ‘They are excellent reading, and very amusing.
-Some time or other we must have a talk about them. I
-sent your edition of Schleiermacher to Lambeth, and asked
-the Primate (Howley) to tell me candidly what he thought
-of it; and look, here are his notes in the margin. Pretty
-copious, you see. He does not concur in all your opinions,
-but he says there is nothing heterodox in your book. Had
-he objected I would not have appointed you<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c011'><sup>[63]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>We should like to know how Thirlwall
-answered this strange defender of the faith;
-but tradition is silent on the point. Before
-leaving, however, the offer was accepted; and,
-with as little delay as possible, the Bishop
-removed to his diocese and entered upon his
-duties.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirlwall’s life as a bishop did not differ
-much, at least in its outward surroundings,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>from his life as a parish clergyman. The
-palace at S. David’s having been allowed to
-fall to ruin, the Bishop is compelled to live
-at Abergwili, a small village near Carmarthen,
-distant nearly fifty miles from his cathedral.
-Most persons would have regretted the isolation
-of such a position, but to Thirlwall the enforced
-solitude of Abergwili was thoroughly congenial.
-There he could read, as he delighted to do,
-‘literally from morning till night.’ Except in
-summer time he rarely quitted ‘Chaos,’ as he
-called his library, where books lined the walls
-and shared with papers and letters the tables,
-chairs, and floor. It is curious that a man
-with so orderly a mind should have had such
-disorderly habits. His letters are full of references
-to lost papers; and when offers to
-arrange his drawers were made he would answer
-regretfully, ‘I can find nothing in them now,
-but if they were set to rights for me I should
-certainly find nothing then.’ Books accompanied
-him to his meals; and when he went
-out for a walk or a drive he read steadily
-most of the time. He does not seem to have
-had any favourite authors; he read eagerly
-new books in all languages and on all subjects.
-We believe that he took no notes of what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>he read; but his singularly powerful memory
-enabled him to seize all that he wanted, and,
-as may be seen from the collection of his
-writings which is now before us, to retain it
-until required for use. His charges, essays,
-and serious correspondence reveal his mastery
-of theological literature, both past and present;
-the charming <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite> give us very
-pleasant glimpses of the gentler side of his
-character. We find from them that he took
-a keen interest in the general literature of
-England and the Continent, whether in philosophy,
-science, history, biography, fiction, poetry;
-and, as he and his young correspondent exchanged
-their sentiments without restraint, we
-can enjoy to the full his criticisms, now serious,
-now playful, on authors and their productions,
-his generous appreciation of all that is noble in
-life or art. We must find room for one passage
-on George Eliot’s last story, written in 1872,
-when he was seventy-five years old.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I suppose you cannot have read <cite>Middlemarch</cite>, as you
-say nothing about it. It stands quite alone. As one only
-just moistens one’s lips with an exquisite liqueur to keep the
-taste as long as possible in one’s mouth, I never read more
-than a single chapter of <cite>Middlemarch</cite> in the evening, dreading
-to come to the last, when I must wait two months for a
-renewal of the pleasure. The depth of humour has certainly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>never been surpassed in English literature. If there is ever
-a shade too much learning that is Lewes’s fault<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c011'><sup>[64]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But there was another reason for his enjoyment
-of Abergwili. Student as he was, he
-delighted in the sights, the sounds, the air of
-the country. He never left it for his annual
-migration to London without regret, partly
-because it was so troublesome to move the
-mass of books without which he could not
-bear to leave home, but still more because
-the bustle and dust of London annoyed him;
-and in the midst of congenial society, and the
-enjoyment of music and pictures, his thoughts
-reverted with longing regret to his trees, his
-flowers, and his domestic pets. He had begun
-his social relations with dogs and cats in Yorkshire,
-and an amusing story is told of the way
-in which the preparations for his formal reception
-when he came home after accepting the
-bishopric of S. David’s, were completely disconcerted
-by the riotous welcome of his dogs,
-who jumped on his shoulders and excluded all
-human attentions<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c011'><sup>[65]</sup></a>. At Abergwili he extended
-his affections to birds, and kept peacocks, pheasants,
-canaries, swans, and tame geese, which
-he regularly fed every morning, no matter what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>the weather might be. They treated him with
-easy familiarity, for they used to seize his coattails
-with their beaks to show their welcome.
-His flowers had to yield to the tastes of his
-four-footed friends. One day his gardener
-complained, ‘What am I to do, my Lord?
-The hares have eaten your carnations.’ ‘Plant
-more carnations,’ was his only reply. Fine
-summer weather would draw him out of ‘Chaos’
-into the field or garden; and one of his letters
-gives a delicious picture of his enjoyment of a
-certain June, sitting on the grass while the
-haymakers were at work in the field beyond,
-reading <cite>The Earthly Paradise</cite>, and watching
-the movements of ‘a dear horse’ who paced up
-and down with a ‘system of hay rakes behind
-him to toss it about and accelerate its maturity<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c011'><sup>[66]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must not, however, be supposed that
-Bishop Thirlwall lived the life of an indolent
-man of letters. No bishop ever performed the
-duties of his position more thoroughly, or with
-greater sacrifice of personal ease and comfort.
-His first care was to learn Welsh, and in a
-little more than a year he could read prayers
-and preach in that language. In his large and
-little-known diocese locomotion was not easy, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>accommodation was often hard to obtain. Yet
-he visited every part of it, personally inspected
-the condition of the schools and churches
-(deplorable enough in 1840), and regularly
-performed the duties of confirmation, preaching,
-and visitation. In the charge of 1866 he
-reviewed the improvements which had been
-accomplished up to that time, and could mention
-183 churches to the restoration of which
-the Church Building Society had made grants,
-and more than thirty parishes in which either
-new or restored churches were in progress.
-Besides these, there were some which had
-been restored by private munificence; others,
-including the cathedral, by public subscription;
-many parsonages had been built, livings
-had been augmented, and education had been
-largely increased<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c011'><sup>[67]</sup></a>. To all these excellent objects
-he had himself been a munificent contributor,
-and we believe that between the beginning
-and the end of his episcopate he had spent nearly
-£40,000 in charities of various kinds<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c011'><sup>[68]</sup></a>. Yet
-with all these claims on the gratitude of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>clergy we are sorry to have to admit that he
-was not personally popular. It would have
-been more wonderful perhaps had he been so.
-The Welsh clergy forty years ago were a rough
-and uncultivated body of men, narrow-minded
-and prejudiced, and with habits hardly more
-civilized than those of the labourers around
-them. They were ill at ease with an English
-man of letters. He was to them an object of
-curiosity, possibly of dread. The new Bishop
-intimated his wish that the clergy should come
-to his house without restraint, and when there
-should be treated as gentlemen and equals.
-This was of itself an innovation. In his predecessor’s
-time when a clergyman called at
-Abergwili he entered by the back door, and
-if he stayed to dinner he took that meal in the
-housekeeper’s room with the upper servants.
-Thirlwall abolished these customs, and entertained
-the clergy at his own table. This was
-excellent in intention, but impossible in practice.
-The difference in tastes, feelings, manners,
-between the entertainer and the entertained
-made social intercourse equally disagreeable
-to both parties; and the Bishop felt obliged
-to substitute correspondence for visits, so far
-as he could, reserving personal intercourse for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>the archdeacons, or those clergymen whose
-education enabled them to appreciate his friendship<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c011'><sup>[69]</sup></a>.
-Again, the peculiar tone of his mind
-must be remembered. He was nothing if not
-critical; and, further, as one of his oldest friends
-once said in our hearing, ‘he was the most
-thoroughly veracious man I ever knew.’ He
-could not listen to a hasty, ill-considered, remark
-without taking it to pieces, and demonstrating,
-by successive questions, put in a slow, deliberate
-tone of voice, the fallacy of the separate parts
-of the proposition, and, by consequence, of the
-whole. Hence he was feared and respected
-rather than beloved; and those who ought to
-have been proud of having such a man among
-them wreaked their small spite against him by
-accusing him of being inhospitable, of walking
-out attended by a dog trained to know and
-bite a curate, and the like. These slanders, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>which we hope he was unconscious, he could
-not answer; those who attacked him in public
-he could and did crush with an accuracy of
-exposition, and a power of sarcasm, for which
-it would be hard to find a parallel. We need
-only refer to his answers to Sir Benjamin
-Hall, M.P. for Marylebone, on the general
-question of the condition of the churches in his
-diocese, appended to his charge for 1851, and
-on the special case of the Collegiate Church of
-Brecon, in two letters to the Archbishop of
-Canterbury; or to the <cite>Letter to the Rev.
-Rowland Williams</cite>, published in 1860. Mr
-Williams had published some sermons, entitled
-<cite>Rational Godliness</cite>, the supposed heterodoxy of
-which had alarmed the clergy of his diocese,
-seventy of whom had signed a memorial to the
-Bishop, praying him to take some notice of the
-book; in other words, to remove the author
-from the college at Lampeter, of which he was
-vice-principal. The Bishop had declined to
-interfere, and in his charge of 1857 had discussed
-the question at length, considering it, as
-was his manner, from all points of view, and,
-while he found much to blame, defending the
-author’s intentions, on the ground of the high
-opinion of his personal character which he himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>held. This, however, did not satisfy Mr
-Williams. We cannot help suspecting that he
-was longing for a martyr’s crown; and, indignant
-at not having obtained one, he addressed
-the Bishop at great length in what he called
-<cite>An Earnestly Respectful Letter on the Difficulty
-of bringing Theological Questions to an Issue</cite>.
-He described the charge as ‘a miracle of cleverness,’
-but deplored its indefiniteness; he drew
-a picture of ‘a preacher in our wild mountains’
-who came to seek counsel from his bishop and
-got only evasive answers—‘in all helps for our
-guidance Abergwili may equal Delphi in wisdom,
-but also in ambiguity<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c011'><sup>[70]</sup></a>’—and entreated
-the Bishop to declare plainly his own opinion
-on the questions raised. For once Bishop
-Thirlwall’s serenity was fairly ruffled. Stung
-by the ingratitude of a man whom he had
-steadily befriended, and whose aim was, as he
-thought, to draw him into admissions damaging
-to himself, he struck with all his might and
-main, and, as was said at the time, ‘you
-may hear every bone in his adversary’s body
-cracking.’ One specimen of the remarkable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>power of his reply must suffice. On the comparison
-of himself to the Delphic oracle he
-remarked:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Even if I had laid claim to oracular wisdom I should
-have thought this complaint rather unreasonable; for the
-oracle at Delphi, though it pretended to divine infallibility,
-was used to wait for a question before it gave a response.
-But I wish above all things to be sure as to the person with
-whom I have to do. I remember to have read of one who
-went to the oracle at Delphi, “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ex industriâ factus ad imitationem
-stultitiæ</span>”; and I cannot help suspecting that I have
-before me one who has put on a similar disguise. The
-voice does not sound to me like that of a “mountain clergyman”;
-while I look at the roll I seem to recognize a very
-different and well-known hand. The “difficulties” are very
-unlike the expression of an embarrassment which has been
-really felt, but might have been invented in the hope of
-creating one. They are quite worthy of the mastery which
-you have attained in the art of putting questions, so as most
-effectually to prevent the possibility of an answer<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c011'><sup>[71]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But if Thirlwall’s great merits were not
-fully appreciated in his own diocese, there was
-no lack of recognition of them in the Church
-at large. His seclusion at Abergwili largely
-increased his influence. It was known that he
-thought out questions for himself, without consulting
-his episcopal brethren or his friends,
-and without being influenced in any way, as
-even the most conscientious men must be, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>despite of themselves, by the opinions which
-they hear expressed in society. Hence his
-utterances came to be accepted as the decisions
-of a judge; of one who, standing on an eminence,
-could take ‘an oversight of the whole
-field of ecclesiastical events<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c011'><sup>[72]</sup></a>,’ and from that
-commanding position could distinguish what
-was of permanent importance from that which
-possessed a merely controversial interest as a
-vexed question of the day. We have spoken
-of the advantages which he derived from his
-secluded life; it must be admitted that it had
-also certain disadvantages. The freshness and
-originality of his opinions, the judicial tone of
-his independent decisions, gave them a permanent
-value; but his want of knowledge of
-the opinions of those from whom he could not
-wholly dissociate himself, and, we may add, his
-indifference to them, caused him to be not
-unfrequently misunderstood, and to be charged
-with holding views not far removed from heresy.
-‘I will not call him an unbeliever, but a misbeliever,’
-said a very orthodox bishop, whose
-love of epigram occasionally got the better of
-his charity. His brother bishops, like the
-Welsh clergy, feared him more than they loved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>him; they knew his value as an ally, but they
-knew also that he would never, under any circumstances,
-become a partisan, or adopt a view
-which he could not wholly approve, merely
-because it seemed good to his Order to exhibit
-unanimity. It was probably for this reason, as
-much as for his eloquence and power, that he
-had the ear of the House of Lords on the rare
-occasions when he addressed it. The Peers
-knew that they were listening to a man who
-had the fullest sense of the responsibilities of
-the episcopate, but who would neither defend
-nor oppose a measure because ‘the proprieties’
-indicated the side on which a bishop would be
-expected to vote. Two only of his speeches
-are republished in the collection before us—on
-the Civil Disabilities of the Jews (1848), and
-on the Disestablishment of the Irish Church
-(1869). We should like to have had added to
-these that on the grant to the Roman Catholic
-College of Maynooth (1845), which seems to
-us to be equally worth preserving. On these
-occasions Bishop Thirlwall took the unpopular
-side at periods of great excitement; his arguments
-were listened to with the utmost attention;
-and in the case of the Irish Church it has
-been stated that no speech had a greater effect
-in favour of the measure than his.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>In all Church matters he was a thorough
-Liberal. His view of the Church of England
-cannot be better stated than by quoting a
-passage from one of his <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>.
-He had been reading Mr Robertson’s sermons;
-and after saying that their author was specially
-recommended to him by the hostility of the
-<cite>Record</cite>, ‘which I consider as a proof of some
-excellence in every one who is its object,’ he
-thus proceeds:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘He was certainly not orthodox after the <cite>Record</cite> standard,
-but might very well be so after another. For our Church
-has the advantage—such I deem it—of more than one type
-of orthodoxy: that of the High Church, grounded on one
-aspect of its formularies; that of the Low Church, grounded
-on another aspect; and that of the Broad Church, striving
-to take in both, but in its own way. Each has a right to
-a standing-place, none to exclusive possession of the field.
-Of course this is very unsatisfactory to the bigots of each
-party—at the two extremes. Some would be glad to cast
-the others out; and some yearn after a Living Source of
-Orthodoxy, of course on the condition that it sanctions their
-own views. To have escaped that worst of evils ought, I
-think, to console every rational Churchman for whatever he
-finds amiss at home.’<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c011'><sup>[73]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Had the Bishop added that he wished each
-of these parties to have fair play, but that none
-should be exalted at the expense of the others,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>we should have had a summary of the principles
-which regulated his public life. Let it not,
-however, be supposed that he was an indifferent
-looker-on. He held that truth had many sides;
-that it might be viewed in different ways by
-persons standing in different positions; but
-still it was to him clear, and definite, and
-based upon a rock which no human assailant
-could shake. This, we think, is the keynote
-which is struck in every one of those eleven
-most remarkable Charges which are now for
-the first time collected together. We would
-earnestly commend them to the study of all
-who are interested in the history of the Church
-of England during the period which they cover.
-Every controversy which agitated her, every
-measure which affected her welfare, is discussed
-by a master; the real question at issue is carefully
-pointed out; the trivial is distinguished
-from the important; moderation and charity are
-insisted upon; angry passions are allayed; and,
-while the liberty of the individual is perpetually
-asserted, the duty of maintaining her doctrines
-is strenuously inculcated. As illustrations of
-some of these characteristics we would contrast
-his exhaustive analysis of the Tractarian movement
-or the Gorham controversy, with his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>conduct respecting <cite>Essays and Reviews</cite>. In
-the former cases he hesitated to condemn; he
-preferred to allay the terror with which his
-clergy were evidently inspired. In the latter,
-though always ‘decidedly opposed to any
-attempt to narrow the freedom which the
-law allows to every clergyman of the Church
-of England in the expression of his opinion
-on theological subjects,’ he joined his brother
-bishops in signing the famous ‘Encyclical,’
-which we now know was the composition of
-Bishop Wilberforce, because he thought that
-in this case the principles advocated led to a
-negation of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thirlwall’s position towards theological questions
-has been called ‘indefinable<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c011'><sup>[74]</sup></a>.’ In a certain
-sense this statement is no doubt true. It was
-quite impossible to label him as of this or that
-party or faction; or to predict with any approach
-to certainty what he would do or say on any
-particular occasion. He had no enthusiasm
-(in the ordinary sense of the word) and no
-sentiment, and therefore, when a question was
-submitted to him, he did not decide it in the
-light of previous prejudices, or welcome it as a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>point gained towards some cherished end. He
-considered it as if it were the only question in
-the world at that moment, and as if he had
-never heard of it, or anything like it, before; he
-looked all round it, and balanced the arguments
-for and against it with the accuracy of a man of
-science in a laboratory. As a result of this
-process he frequently came to no resolution
-at all, and frankly told his correspondent that
-he would leave the matter referred to him to
-the decision of others. But, if what he held to
-be truth was assailed, or the conduct of an
-individual unjustly called in question, Thirlwall’s
-hesitation vanished. We have already mentioned
-his conduct in the House of Lords; but
-it should never be forgotten that he was one
-of the four Bishops who dissented from the
-resolution to inhibit Bishop Colenso from
-preaching in the various dioceses of England;
-and that he stood alone in withholding his
-signature from the address requesting him to
-resign his see. Again, when Mr J. S. Mill
-was a candidate for Westminster in 1865, and
-his opponents circulated on a placard some lines
-from his <cite>Examination of Sir W. Hamilton’s
-Philosophy</cite> intended to shock the minds of the
-electors as irreverent if not blasphemous,—a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>proceeding which was eagerly followed up by
-the <cite>Record</cite> and the <cite>Morning Advertiser</cite> in
-leading articles—Thirlwall at once wrote to
-the <cite>Spectator</cite>, maintaining that this passage
-contained “the utterance of a conviction in
-harmony with ‘the purest spirit of Christian
-morality’; that nothing but ‘an intellectual
-and moral incapacity worthy of the ‘Record’
-and its satellite could have failed to recognise
-its truth’; and that it ‘thrilled’ him ‘with a
-sense of the ethical sublime’<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c011'><sup>[75]</sup></a>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were many other duties besides the
-care of the diocese of S. David’s to which the
-Bishop devoted himself, but these we must
-dismiss with a passing notice. We allude to his
-work as a member of the Ritual Commission,
-as chairman of the Old Testament Revision
-Company, and in Convocation. Gradually,
-however, as years advanced, his physical powers
-began to fail, and he resolved to resign his
-bishopric. This resolution was carried into
-effect in 1874. He retired to Bath, where
-he was still able to continue many of his old
-pursuits, and, by the help of his nephew and
-his family, notwithstanding blindness and deafness,
-to maintain his old interests. He died
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>rather suddenly, July 27, 1875, and was buried
-in Westminster Abbey, where, by a singularly
-felicitous arrangement, his remains were laid in
-the same grave as those of George Grote.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Regret has been often expressed that Bishop
-Thirlwall did not write more. We do not share
-this feeling. Had he written more he would
-have thought less, studied less, possessed in a
-less perfect degree that ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>cor sapiens et intelligens
-ad discernendum judicium</em></span><a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c011'><sup>[76]</sup></a>’ which was never
-weary of trying to impart to others a portion
-of its own serenity. At seventy-six years of
-age, just before his resignation, he could say, ‘I
-should hesitate to say that whatever is is best;
-but I have strong faith that it is <em>for</em> the best,
-and that the general stream of tendency is
-toward good’; and in the last sentence of
-his last charge he bade his clergy remark that
-even controversies were ‘a sign of the love of
-truth which, if often passionate and one-sided,
-is always infinitely preferable to the quiet of
-apathy and indifference.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, <br /> LORD HOUGHTON<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c011'><sup>[77]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>It is much to be regretted that Lord
-Houghton did not write his own biography.
-Those who know his delightful <cite>Monographs,
-Social and Personal</cite>, can form some idea of
-how he would have treated it. From his early
-years he lived in society—not merely the society
-to which his birth naturally opened the door,
-but a varied society of his own creating. He
-had an insatiable curiosity. It is hardly too
-much to say that in his long life he was present
-at every ceremony of importance, from
-the Eglinton Tournament to the Œcumenical
-Council; he knew everybody who was worth
-knowing, both at home and abroad—not merely
-as chance acquaintances, but as friends with
-whom he maintained a correspondence; he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>both a politician and a man of letters, a friend
-of the unwashed and the associate of princes.
-What a book might have been written by such
-a man on such a subject! But, alas! though
-he often spoke of writing his own life, he died
-before he had leisure even to begin it; and,
-instead, we have to content ourselves with
-the volumes before us. They are good—unquestionably
-good; they abound with amusing
-stories and brilliant witticisms; but we confess
-that we laid them down with a sense of disappointment
-which it is hard to define. Perhaps
-it was beyond the writer’s ability to draw so
-complex a character—a man of many moods,
-a creature of contradictions, a master of what
-<em>not</em> to do and <em>not</em> to say, as a lady of fashion
-told him to his face; perhaps he was overweighted
-by a wish to bring into prominence
-those solid qualities in his hero which society
-often failed to discover, while judging only ‘the
-man of fashion, whose unconventional originality
-had so far impressed itself upon the popular
-mind that there was hardly any eccentricity
-too audacious to be attributed to him by those
-who knew him only by repute<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c011'><sup>[78]</sup></a>.’ We are not
-so presumptuous as to suppose that we can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>paint a portrait of Lord Houghton that will
-satisfy those who were his intimate friends;
-but we hope to present to our readers at least
-a faithful sketch of one for whom we had a
-most sincere admiration and respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Richard Monckton Milnes was born in
-London, June 19, 1809. His father, Robert
-Pemberton Milnes, then a young man of twenty-five,
-and M.P. for the family borough of Pontefract,
-had just flashed into sudden celebrity in
-the House of Commons by a brilliant speech
-in favour of Mr Canning, which saved the
-Portland Administration, and would have made
-Mr Milnes’s political fortune, had he been so
-minded. But when Mr Perceval offered him
-a seat in the Cabinet, either as Chancellor of
-the Exchequer or as Secretary of War, he
-exclaimed, ‘Oh, no: I will not accept either;
-with my temperament, I should be dead in
-a year.’ That he had entered Parliament with
-high hopes, and confidence in his own powers
-to win distinction there, is plain from the well-known
-story (which his son evidently believed)
-that he laid a bet of 100<em>l.</em> that he would be
-Chancellor of the Exchequer in five years.
-But, when the time came, he declined to ‘take
-occasion by the hand,’ and sat down under the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>oaks of Fryston to spend the rest of his life,
-just half a century, in the placid uniformity of a
-country gentleman’s existence. His abandonment
-of public life, and his refusal to return to
-it in any form, even when, late in life, Lord
-Palmerston offered him a peerage, were unsolved
-riddles to his contemporaries. Those
-who read these volumes will have but little
-difficulty in finding the answer to it. He was
-endowed with a proud independence of judgment
-which could never bind itself to any
-political party, and a critical fastidiousness
-which made him hesitate over every question
-presented to him. These two qualities of mind
-were conspicuous in his son, and barred to
-some extent his advancement, as they had
-barred his father’s. It must not, however, be
-imagined that the elder Milnes was an indolent
-man. Far from it. He was a daring rider
-to hounds, a scientific agriculturist, an active
-magistrate, a stimulator of the waning Toryism
-of Yorkshire by speeches which showed what
-the House of Commons had lost when he left
-it, and ardently curious about men of note and
-events of interest—another characteristic which
-descended to his son. Occasionally, too, he
-yielded to a love of excitement which Yorkshire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>could not gratify, and revisited London,
-to tempt the fickle goddess who presides over
-high play—a taste which cost him dear, for
-it compelled him to pass several years of his
-life in comparative obscurity abroad, while the
-rents in his fortune, due to his own and his
-brother’s extravagance, were being slowly repaired.
-We have been told, by one who knew
-him late in life, that he was a singularly loveable
-person—the delight of children and young
-people—full of jokes, and fun, and <em>persiflage</em>.
-‘You could never be sure whether he spoke in
-jest or in earnest,’ said our informant. Here
-again one of the most obvious characteristics of
-his son makes its appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boyhood of Richard Milnes may be
-passed over in a sentence. A serious illness
-when he was ten years old put an end to his
-father’s intention of sending him to Harrow,
-and he was educated at home, or near it, till
-he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, in
-October 1827. He was entered as a fellow-commoner—a
-position well suited to the training
-he had received, for it gave him the society of
-men older than himself, while he was looking
-out for congenial friends among men of his
-own age. His college tutor was Mr Whewell,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>and it was doubtless at his suggestion that he
-went to read classics with Thirlwall, then one
-of the resident Fellows. On one of his later
-visits to Cambridge Lord Houghton told an
-interesting story of their relations as pupil and
-instructor. After a few days’ trial Thirlwall
-said to him: ‘You will never be a scholar. It
-is no use our reading classics together. Have
-you ever read the Bible?’ ‘Yes, I have read
-it, but not critically,’ was the reply. ‘Very
-well,’ said Thirlwall, ‘ then let us begin with
-Genesis.’ And so the rest of the term was
-spent in the study of the Old Testament. Mr
-Reid is, no doubt, right in saying that, for ‘the
-making of his mind,’ Milnes was more deeply
-indebted to Thirlwall than to any other man.
-But Thirlwall was not merely the Gamaliel at
-whose feet Milnes was willing to sit; he became
-the chosen friend of his heart. Lord Houghton
-was once asked to name the most remarkable
-man whom he had known in his long experience.
-Without a moment’s hesitation he
-replied ‘Thirlwall’; and the numerous letters
-which Mr Reid has printed show that the
-friendship was equally strong on both sides.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The most picturesque of Roman historians
-said of one of his heroes that he was <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>felix
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>opportunitate mortis</em></span>; it might be said of Milnes,
-with regard to Cambridge, that he was <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>felix
-opportunitate vitæ</em></span>. It would be difficult, if not
-impossible, to find a period in which so many
-men who afterwards made their mark in the
-world have been gathered together there; and,
-with a happy facility for discovering and attracting
-to himself whatever was eminent and worth
-knowing, it was not long before he became
-intimate with the best of them. Nearly forty
-years afterwards, in 1866, on the occasion of
-the opening of the new rooms of the Union
-Society, he commemorated these friends of his
-early years in a speech of singular beauty and
-sincerity:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘There was Tennyson, the Laureate, whose goodly bay-tree
-decorates our language and our land; Arthur, the
-younger Hallam, the subject of <cite>In Memoriam</cite>, the poet
-and his friend passing, linked hand in hand, together down
-the slopes of fame. There was Trench, the present Archbishop
-of Dublin, and Alford, Dean of Canterbury, both
-profound Scriptural philologists who have not disdained the
-secular muse. There was Spedding, who has, by a philosophical
-affinity, devoted the whole of his valuable life to
-the rehabilitation of the character of Lord Bacon; and there
-was Merivale, who—I hope by some attraction of repulsion—has
-devoted so much learning to the vindication of the
-Cæsars. There were Kemble and Kinglake, the historian
-of our earliest civilization and of our latest war—Kemble
-as interesting an individual as ever was portrayed by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>dramatic genius of his own race; Kinglake, as bold a man-at-arms
-in literature as ever confronted public opinion.
-There was Venables, whose admirable writings, unfortunately
-anonymous, we are reading every day, without knowing to
-whom to attribute them; and there was Blakesley, the
-“Hertfordshire Incumbent” of the <cite>Times</cite>. There were sons
-of families which seemed to have an hereditary right to, a
-sort of habit of, academic distinction, like the Heaths and
-the Lushingtons. But I must check this throng of advancing
-memories, and I will pass from this point with the
-mention of two names which you would not let me omit—one
-of them, that of your Professor of Greek, whom it is
-the honour of Her Majesty’s late Government to have
-made Master of Trinity; and the other, that of your latest
-Professor, Mr F. D. Maurice, in whom you will all soon
-recognize the true enthusiasm of humanity’ (vol. ii. p. 161).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Mr Reid tells us that Tennyson sought
-Milnes’s acquaintance because ‘he looks the
-best-tempered fellow I ever saw.’ Hallam
-proclaimed him to be ‘a kindhearted fellow,
-as well as a very clever one, but vain and
-paradoxical.’ Milnes himself put Hallam at
-the head of those whom he knew. ‘He is
-the only man of my standing,’ he wrote, ‘before
-whom I bow in conscious inferiority in everything.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was hardly to be expected that Milnes,
-with his taste for the general in literature rather
-than the particular, would achieve distinction in
-the Cambridge of 1830. We have seen how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Thirlwall disposed of his classical aspirations,
-and in mathematics he fared no better. He
-read hard, and hoped for distinction in the
-college examination. But he had overtaxed
-his energies; his health gave way, and he was
-forced to give up work altogether for some
-days. Happily, the benefit a man derives from
-his three years at a university need not be
-measured by his honours, and we may be sure
-that the experience of men and books that
-Milnes gained there was of greater service to
-him than a high place in any Tripos would
-have been. He roamed in all directions over
-the fields of knowledge; phrenology, anatomy,
-geology, political economy, metaphysics, by
-turns engaged his attention; he dabbled in
-periodical literature; he acted Beatrice in <cite>Much
-Ado about Nothing</cite>, and Mrs Malaprop in <cite>The
-Rivals</cite>; he made an excursion in a balloon with
-the celebrated aeronaut, Mr Green; he wrote
-two prize-poems, <cite>Timbuctoo</cite> and <cite>Byzantium</cite>,
-but only to be beaten by Tennyson and Kinglake;
-he obtained a second prize for an English
-declamation, and a first prize for an English
-essay, <cite>On the Homeric Poems</cite>; he became a
-member of the club known as ‘The Apostles,’
-in which he maintained a kindly interest to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>end of his life; and last, but by no means least,
-he was a constant speaker at the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is impossible, at a distance of just sixty
-years, to form an exact estimate of the success
-of Milnes in those debates. But that it was
-something more than ordinary, is, we think,
-certain; for otherwise he would not have ventured
-to present himself at the Oxford Union
-in December 1829, in the character of a self-selected
-missionary, who hoped to carry light
-and leading into the dark places of the sister
-University. As this expedition has been twice
-described by Milnes himself, first in a letter to
-his mother soon after his return to Cambridge,
-and secondly in a speech at the opening of the
-new building of the Cambridge Union Society
-in 1866; and also, more or less fully, by
-four of his contemporaries, Sir Francis Doyle,
-Mr Gladstone, Cardinal Manning, and Dean
-Blakesley, it is clear that it was regarded by
-himself and his friends, both at the time and
-afterwards, as something uncommon and remarkable,
-and we feel sure that we shall be
-excused if we try to give a connected narrative
-of what really took place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Doyle had ‘brought forward a motion at
-the Oxford Union that Shelley was a greater
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>poet than Byron<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c011'><sup>[79]</sup></a>.’ According to Blakesley,
-‘the respective moral tendency of the writings
-of Shelley and Byron<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c011'><sup>[80]</sup></a>’ was the subject under
-debate. Doyle states that he acted ‘under
-Cambridge influences’; and that his motion
-was ‘an echo of Cambridge thought and
-feeling,’ words which probably refer to the
-then recent reprint of Shelley’s <cite>Adonais</cite> at
-Cambridge. The debate, he proceeds, ‘was
-attended by three distinguished members of
-the Cambridge Union, Arthur Hallam, Richard
-Milnes, and Sunderland’; or, to use the words
-of what may be called his second account, taken
-from a lecture on Wordsworth delivered forty-three
-years afterwards, ‘friends of mine at
-Cambridge took the matter up and appeared
-suddenly on the scene of action.’ That this
-was the true state of the case, and that there
-was little or no premeditation about the excursion,
-is made still clearer by Milnes’ first
-account. After mentioning that he had been
-to Oxford, he proceeds:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I wanted much to see the place and the men, and had
-no objection to speak in their society; so, as they had a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>good subject for debate (the comparative merits of Shelley
-and Byron), and Sunderland and Hallam were both willing
-to go—and the Master, when he heard what was our purpose,
-very kindly gave us an <cite>Exeat</cite>—we drove manfully through
-the snow, arriving in time to speak that evening....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘Sunderland spoke first after Doyle, who opened, then
-Hallam, then some Oxonians, and I succeeded. The contrast
-from our long, noisy, shuffling, scraping, talking, vulgar,
-ridiculous-looking kind of assembly, to a neat little square
-room, with eighty or ninety young gentlemen, sprucely
-dressed, sitting on chairs or lounging about the fire-place,
-was enough to unnerve a more confident person than
-myself. Even the brazen Sunderland was somewhat awed,
-and became tautological, and spoke what we should call an
-inferior speech, but which dazzled his hearers. Hallam, as
-being among old friends, was bold, and spoke well. I was
-certainly nervous, but, I think, pleased my audience better
-than I pleased myself<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c011'><sup>[81]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In his second account, written thirty-six
-years afterwards, Milnes gives greater prominence
-to the Union Society than, we think,
-is consistent with the facts. It might easily
-be argued, after reading it, that the three
-Cambridge undergraduates had been selected
-by the Society to represent it. This exaggeration
-of the part played by the Union was
-perhaps only natural on an occasion when the
-speaker must have felt almost bound to magnify
-the influence of that Society on all departments
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>of Cambridge life. After mentioning Arthur
-Hallam and Sunderland, he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It was in company with Mr Sunderland and Arthur
-Hallam that I formed part of a deputation sent from the
-Union of Cambridge to the Union of Oxford; and what do
-you think we went about? Why, we went to assert the
-right of Mr Shelley to be considered a greater poet than
-Lord Byron. At that time we in Cambridge were all very
-full of Mr Shelley. We had printed the <cite>Adonais</cite> for the
-first time in England, and a friend of ours suggested that
-as Shelley had been expelled from Oxford, and greatly
-ill-treated, it would be a very grand thing for us to go to
-Oxford and raise a debate upon his character and powers.
-So, with full permission of the authorities<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c011'><sup>[82]</sup></a> we went....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>We had a very interesting debate ... but we were very
-much shocked, and our vanity was not a little wounded, to
-find that nobody at Oxford knew anything about Mr Shelley.
-In fact, a considerable number of our auditors believed that
-it was Shenstone, and said that they only knew one poem
-of his, beginning, “My banks are all furnished with bees.”
-We hoped, however, that our apostolate was of some
-good...<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c011'><sup>[83]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Sir Francis Doyle is provokingly brief in
-his account of the performances of his Cambridge
-allies. Sunderland, he tells us, ‘spoke
-with great effect, though scarcely, I believe,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>with the same fire that he often put forth
-on more congenial subjects. Then followed
-Hallam, with equal if not superior force.’ Of
-Milnes he says but little. After recounting
-the discomfiture of a speaker from Oriel, who
-while declaiming against Shelley suddenly
-caught sight of him, he adds: ‘Lord Houghton
-then stood up, and showed consummate skill
-as an advocate.... After him there was silence
-in the Union for several minutes, and then
-Mr Manning of Baliol rose.’ He was on the
-side of Byron; and when the votes were taken
-the members present agreed with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr Gladstone, in a conversation with the
-author of the life of Cardinal Manning, has
-given a rather different account of the matter:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘There was an invasion of barbarians among civilized
-men, or of civilized men among barbarians. Cambridge
-men used to look down upon us at Oxford as prim and
-behind the times. A deputation from the Society of the
-Apostles at Cambridge, consisting of Monckton Milnes
-and Henry [Arthur] Hallam, and Sunderland, came to set
-up among us the cult of Shelley; or at any rate, to introduce
-the School of Shelley as against the Byronic School
-at Oxford—Shelley that is, not in his negative, but in his
-spiritual side. I knew Hallam at Eton, and, I believe, was
-the intermediary in bringing about the discussion<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c011'><sup>[84]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>This view, that the commission of the three
-knights-errant emanated from the Apostles,
-and not from themselves, or from the Union
-Society, is borne out to some degree by
-Blakesley’s account. But for this we have
-no space. We will conclude with Manning’s
-admirable description of the scene. It occurs
-in a letter dated 3 November, 1866—just after
-Lord Houghton had made his speech at the
-Cambridge Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I do not believe that I was guilty of the rashness of
-throwing the javelin over the Cam. It was, I think, a
-passage of arms got up by the Eton men of the two Unions.
-My share, if any, was only as a member of the august
-committee of the green baize table. I can, however, remember
-the irruption of the three Cambridge orators. We
-Oxford men were precise, orderly, and morbidly afraid of
-excess in word or manner. The Cambridge oratory came
-in like a flood into a mill-pond. Both Monckton Milnes
-and Henry [Arthur] Hallam took us aback by the boldness
-and freedom of their manner. But I remember the effect
-of Sunderland’s declaration and action to this day. It had
-never been seen or heard before among us; we cowered like
-birds, and ran like sheep.... I acknowledge that we were
-utterly routed. Lord Houghton’s beautiful reviving of those
-old days has in it something fragrant and sweet, and brings
-back old faces and old friendships, very dear as life is
-drawing to its close.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Mr Milnes had always wished that his son
-should become distinguished in that House
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>of Commons where he had himself made so
-brilliant a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>début</em></span>. With this object in view, he
-had urged him to cultivate speaking in public,
-and probably the only part of his Cambridge
-career which he viewed with complete satisfaction
-was his interest in, and success at, the
-Union Debating Society. But even in this
-they did not quite agree. Mr Milnes urged
-his son to take a decided line, and to lead the
-Union. But the only answer he could get was,
-‘If there is one thing on which I have ever
-prided myself, it is on having no politics at
-all, and judging every measure by its individual
-merits. A leader there must be a violent
-politician and a party politician, or he must
-have a private party. I shall never be the
-one or have the other.’ Again, they were at
-variance on the burning question of the day,
-the Reform Bill. Mr Milnes, though a Conservative,
-was in favour of it; his son described
-it as ‘the curse and degradation of the nation.’
-Further, while exhorting his son to prepare
-himself for public life, with a singleness of
-purpose that, if adhered to, would have excluded
-other and more congenial pursuits, Mr
-Milnes warned him that his circumstances
-would not allow him to enter parliament. No
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>wonder, therefore, that the young man became
-perplexed and melancholy, and more than ever
-anxious to find a refuge for his aspirations in
-literature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While these questions were pending between
-father and son, the pecuniary embarrassments
-to which we have already alluded entered upon
-an acute stage, and in 1829 the whole family
-left England for five years. If Mr Milnes
-ever submitted his own actions to the test of
-rigorous examination, he must have concluded
-that he had himself brought about the very
-result which he was most anxious to prevent;
-for it was this enforced residence on the Continent
-which, more than any other influence,
-shaped the character of his son. Mr Milnes
-evidently wished him to become a country
-gentleman like himself, and, if he must write,
-to be ‘a pamphleteer on guano and on grain.’
-Instead of this, while he kept his loyalty
-to England with unbroken faith, he divested
-himself of English narrowness, and acquired
-that intimate knowledge of the other members
-of the European family, and, we may add,
-that catholicity of taste, for which he was so
-conspicuous. Probably no public man of the
-present century understood the Continent so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>well as Milnes. In many ways he was a
-typical Englishman; but he was also a citizen
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first resting-place of the family was
-Boulogne, and there Milnes made his first
-acquaintance with Frenchmen and their literature.
-The romantic school was beginning to
-engross public attention, and Victor Hugo—then,
-as afterwards, the ‘stormy voice of
-France’—became his favourite French poet.
-But, great as was the interest which Milnes
-felt in France, he was too eager for knowledge
-to be content with one language and one literature,
-and, rejecting his father’s suggestion
-that he should spend some time in Paris, he
-spent most of the summer and autumn of 1830
-at Bonn, in order to learn German. We suspect
-that he must have taken this step at the
-suggestion of Thirlwall, for it was he who
-introduced him to Professor Brandis, and probably
-also to the veteran Niebuhr. Thence,
-his family having migrated to Milan, he crossed
-the Alps, and made his first acquaintance with
-Italy, which became, we might almost say,
-the country of his adoption. He felt a deep
-sympathy for the Italian people in their aspirations
-for liberty, and though, as was natural at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>his age, he enjoyed the society of the Austrian
-vice-regal Court, he longed to see the foreigner
-expelled from Italy. Other Italian cities were
-visited in due course, and, lastly, Rome. Where-ever
-he went, he managed, with a skill that was
-peculiarly his own, to know the most interesting
-people, and to be welcomed with equal warmth
-by persons of the most opposite opinions. It
-was no small feat to have known both Italians
-and Austrians at Milan; but at Rome, besides
-his English acquaintances, he formed lasting
-friendships with the Chevalier Bunsen and
-his family, and with Dr Wiseman, M. Rio,
-M. Montalembert, and other catholics of distinction.
-The Church of Rome must always
-have great attractions for a young man of deep
-feeling and with no settled principles of faith,
-and we gather that Milnes was at one time not
-indisposed to join it. His feelings in that time
-of unrest and perplexity are well indicated in
-the following lines, written at Rome in 1834:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘To search for lore in spacious libraries,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And find it hid in tongues to you unknown;</div>
- <div class='line'>To wait deaf-eared near swelling minstrelsies,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Watch every action, but not catch one tone;</div>
- <div class='line'>Amid a thousand breathless votaries,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To feel yourself dry-hearted as a stone—</div>
- <div class='line'>Are images of that which, hour by hour,</div>
- <div class='line'>Consumes my heart, the strife of Will and Power.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>‘The Beauty of the past before my eyes</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Stands ever in each fable-haunted place,</div>
- <div class='line'>I know her form in every dark disguise,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>But never look upon her open face;</div>
- <div class='line'>O’er every limb a veil thick-folded lies,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Showing poor outline of a perfect grace,</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet just enough to make the sickened mind</div>
- <div class='line'>Grieve doubly for the treasures hid behind.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O Thou! to whom the wearisome disease</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of Past and Present is an alien thing,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou pure Existence! whose severe decrees</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Forbid a living man his soul to bring</div>
- <div class='line'>Into a timeless Eden of sweet ease,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Clear-eyed, clear-hearted—lay thy loving wing</div>
- <div class='line'>In death upon me—if that way alone</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy great creation-thought thou wilt to me make known<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c011'><sup>[85]</sup></a>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>An interesting picture of Milnes at about this
-period has been drawn by Mr Aubrey de Vere,
-whom he visited in Ireland during one of his
-brief absences from Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘He remained with us a good many days, though when
-he left us they seemed too few. We showed him whatever
-of interest our neighbourhood boasts, and he more than
-repaid us by the charm of his conversation, his lively
-descriptions of foreign ways, his good-humour, his manifold
-accomplishments, and the extraordinary range of his information,
-both as regards books and men. He could hardly
-have then been more than two-and-twenty, and yet he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>already well acquainted with the languages and literatures
-of many different countries, and not a few of their most
-distinguished men, living or recently dead. I well remember
-the vivid picture which he drew of Niebuhr’s profound
-grief at the downfall of the restored monarchy in France, at
-the renewal of its Revolution in 1830. He was delivering
-a series of historical lectures at the time, and Milnes was
-one of the young men attending the course. One day
-they had long to wait for their Professor; at last the aged
-historian entered the lecture-hall, his form drooping, and
-his whole aspect grief-stricken. ‘Gentlemen,’ he said, ‘I
-have no apology for detaining you; a calamity has befallen
-Europe which must undo all the restorative work recently
-done, and throw back her social and political progress—perhaps
-for centuries. The Revolution has broken out
-again’ (vol. i. p. 115).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>One episode of these foreign experiences
-deserves a separate notice. In 1832 Milnes
-spent some months in Greece with his friend
-Mr Christopher Wordsworth, a scholar whose
-<cite>Athens and Attica</cite> has long been a classical
-text-book. But Milnes was more powerfully
-attracted by the sight of Grecian independence
-than by the relics of her ancient glory. The
-volume which he published on his return, called
-<cite>Memorials of a Tour in some parts of Greece,
-chiefly Poetical</cite> (his first independent literary
-venture, it may be remarked), contains but
-scanty references to antiquity. He was keenly
-interested in the efforts of Greece to obtain a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>settled government of her own, and through all
-the drawbacks and discomforts which, as a
-traveller, he had to endure from the Greeks, he
-firmly adhered to the cause of freedom. He
-even advocated the immediate restoration of
-the Elgin marbles to the Parthenon. But
-Milnes had a mind which was singularly free
-from prejudice, and even in those early days
-he had learnt to consider both sides of every
-question, and to keep his sympathies controlled
-by his judgment. He probably approached
-Greece with the enthusiasm for a liberated
-nation which had so deeply stirred even the
-most indifferent in England; but he left it
-‘with an affection for the Turkish character
-which he never entirely lost, and which enabled
-him in very different days, then far distant, to
-understand the political exigencies of the East
-better than many politicians of more pretentious
-character and fame.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have dwelt on Milnes’s early years at
-some length, because their history throws
-considerable light on his subsequent career,
-and accounts for most of the difficulties that
-he experienced when he made his first entrance
-into London society. ‘Conceive the man,’ said
-Carlyle: ‘a most bland-smiling, semi-quizzical,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>affectionate, high-bred, Italianised little man,
-who has long olive-blonde hair, a dimple, next
-to no chin, and flings his arm round your
-neck when he addresses you in public society!’
-If the rough Scotch moralist was not in an
-unusually bad humour when he wrote these
-words, it is not to be wondered at that Milnes
-was regarded for a time as a dangerous person,
-‘anxious to introduce foreign ways and fashions
-into the conservative fields of English life.’
-But this dislike of him was very transient, and
-in less than a year after his return to England
-he had ‘made a conquest of the social world.’
-That he was still looked upon as an oddity
-seems certain, and even his intimate friend
-Charles Buller could exclaim: ‘I often think
-how puzzled your Maker must be to account
-for your conduct;’ but people soon became
-willing to accept him on his own terms for
-the sake of his wit and brilliancy, and, we may
-add, of his kind heart. Some nicknames that
-survived long after their application had lost its
-point, are worth remembering as illustrations
-of what was once thought of him; perhaps still
-more for the sake of the letter which Sydney
-Smith wrote on being accused, quite groundlessly,
-of having invented them.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>‘<span class='sc'>Dear Milnes</span>,—Never lose your good temper, which
-is one of your best qualities, and which has carried you
-hitherto safely through your startling eccentricities. If you
-turn cross and touchy, you are a lost man. No man can
-combine the defects of opposite characters. The names of
-“Cool of the evening,” “London Assurance,” and “In-I-go
-Jones,” are, I give you my word, not mine. They are of no
-sort of importance; they are safety-valves, and if you could
-by paying sixpence get rid of them, you had better keep
-your money. You do me but justice in acknowledging that
-I have spoken much good of you. I have laughed at you
-for those follies which I have told you of to your face; but
-nobody has more readily and more earnestly asserted that
-you are a very agreeable, clever man, with a very good
-heart, unimpeachable in all the relations of life, and that
-you amply deserve to be retained in the place to which you
-had too hastily elevated yourself by manners unknown to
-our cold and phlegmatic people. I thank you for what you
-say of my good-humour. Lord Dudley, when I took leave
-of him, said to me: “You have been laughing at me for the
-last seven years, and you never said anything that I wished
-unsaid.” This pleased me.</p>
-
-<div class='c019'>‘Ever yours,</div>
-<p class='c020'>‘<span class='sc'>Sydney Smith</span><a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c011'><sup>[86]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When we read that Milnes ‘made a conquest
-of society,’ it must not be supposed that
-he was a mere pleasure-seeker. On the contrary,
-as Mr Reid says in another place, ‘he
-had too great a reverence for what was good
-and pure and true, too consuming a desire to
-hold his own with the best intellects of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>time, and, above all, too deep a sympathy with
-the suffering and the wronged to allow him to
-fall a victim to these temptations.’ From the
-first, then, he ‘sought to combine the world of
-pleasure and the world of intellect.’ A list of
-his friends would contain the names of the
-best-known men of the day, but, at the same
-time, men who had but little in common:
-Carlyle, Sterling, Maurice, Spedding, Thackeray,
-Tennyson, Landor, Hallam, Rogers,
-Macaulay, Sydney Smith. ‘He became an
-intimate member of circles differing so widely
-from each other as those of Lansdowne House,
-Holland House, Gore House, and the Sterling
-Club’; and as a host he was notorious for
-mingling together the most discordant social
-elements. Disraeli sketched him in <cite>Tancred</cite>
-under a disguise so thin that nobody could
-fail to penetrate it:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Mr Vavasour saw something good in everybody and
-everything, which is certainly amiable, and perhaps just, but
-disqualifies a man in some degree for the business of life,
-which requires for its conduct a certain degree of prejudice.
-Mr Vavasour’s breakfasts were renowned. Whatever your
-creed, class, or merit—one might almost add, your character—you
-were a welcome guest at his matutinal meal, provided
-you were celebrated. That qualification, however, was rigidly
-enforced. He prided himself on figuring as the social
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>medium by which rival reputations became acquainted, and
-paid each other in his presence the compliments which
-veiled their ineffable disgust’ (vol. i. p. 337).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When some one asked if a celebrated murderer
-had been hanged, the reply he got was: ‘I
-hope so, or Richard will have him at his
-breakfast-table next Thursday;’ and Thirlwall,
-when his friend was on the brink of marriage,
-thus alludes to past felicity:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It is very likely, nay certain, that you will still collect
-agreeable people about your wife’s breakfast-table; but can
-I ever sit down there without the certainty that I shall
-meet with none but respectable persons? It may be an
-odd thing for a Bishop to lament, but I cannot help it’
-(vol. i. p. 448).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After all it seems probable that Milnes
-himself, and not the lion of the hour, was the
-chief attraction at those parties. He delighted
-in the best sort of conversation—that which he
-called ‘the rapid counterplay and vivid exercise
-of combined intelligences,’ and he did his best
-to revive the practice of that almost forgotten
-art—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>l’art de causer</em></span>. As Mr Reid says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘How brilliant and amusing he was over the dinner-table
-or the breakfast-table was known to all his friends.
-Overflowing with information, his mind was lightened by
-a bright wit, whilst his immense stores of appropriate
-anecdotes enabled him to give point and colour to every
-topic which was brought under discussion’ (vol. i. p. 189).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>At the same time he did not fall into the
-fatal error of taking the talk into his own
-hands, and delivering a monologue, as too
-many social celebrities have done before and
-since. He had the happy art of making his
-guests talk, while he listened, and threw in a
-remark from time to time, to give new life
-when the conversation seemed to flag. Carlyle,
-in a letter written to his wife during his first
-visit to Fryston, gives us a lifelike portrait of
-Milnes when thus engaged:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Richard, I find, lays himself out while in this quarter
-to do hospitalities, and of course to collect notabilities
-about him, and play them off one against the other. I am
-his trump-card at present. The Sessions are at Pontefract
-even now, and many lawyers there. These last two nights
-he has brought a trio of barristers to dine, producing
-champagne, &amp;c.... Last night our three was admitted to
-be a kind of failure, three greater blockheads ye wadna find
-in Christendee. Richard had to exert himself; but he is
-really dexterous, the villain. He pricks you with questions,
-with remarks, with all kinds of fly-tackle to make you bite,
-does generally contrive to get you into some sort of speech.
-And then his good humour is extreme; you look in his face
-and forgive him all his tricks’ (vol. i. p. 256).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As a pendant to this we will quote Mr
-Forster’s description of Milnes and Carlyle
-together:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>‘Monckton Miles came yesterday and left this morning—a
-pleasant, companionable little man—delighting in paradoxes,
-but good-humoured ones; defending all manner of
-people and principles in order to provoke Carlyle to abuse
-them, in which laudable enterprise he must have succeeded
-to his heart’s content, and for a time we had a most
-amusing evening, reminding me of a naughty boy rubbing a
-fierce cat’s tail backwards, and getting in between furious
-growls and fiery sparks. He managed to avoid the threatened
-scratches’ (vol. i. p. 387).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Milnes entered Parliament in 1837 as Conservative
-member for Pontefract. His friends
-were rather surprised at his selection of a
-party, for even then his views on most subjects
-were decidedly Liberal. Thirlwall, for instance,
-wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I can hardly bring myself now to consider you a Tory,
-or indeed as belonging to a party at all; and although
-I am aware how difficult, and even dangerous, it is for a
-public man to keep aloof from all parties, still my first hope
-as well as expectation as to your political career is that it
-may be distinguished by some degree of originality’ (vol. i.
-p. 199).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>These hopes were realized to an extent
-that none of Milnes’s friends would have expected
-or perhaps desired. From the outset
-he maintained an independence of thought and
-action which did him the utmost credit as a
-man of honour, but which ruined his chances
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>of obtaining that success which is measured by
-the attainment of official dignity. And yet,
-as Mr Reid tells us, he was more ambitious
-of political than of literary distinction. But
-the fates were against him. In the first place,
-his oratorical style did not suit the House,
-though as an after-dinner speaker he was
-conspicuously successful. He ‘had modelled
-himself on the old style of political oratory,
-and gave his hearers an impression of affectation.’
-Then he would not vote straight with
-his party. He took a line of his own about
-Canada and the Ballot; he voted on the
-opposite side to Peel on the question of a
-large remission of capital punishments; and he
-wrote <cite>One Tract More</cite>, ‘an eloquent and earnest
-plea for toleration for the Anglo-Catholic enthusiasm,’
-which shocked the Protestants in
-general, and the electors of Pontefract in particular.
-Perhaps he was too much in earnest;
-perhaps he was not a sufficiently important
-person to be silenced by office; perhaps, as
-Mr Reid says, ‘public opinion in England
-always insists upon drawing a broad line of
-demarcation between the man of letters and
-the man of affairs;’ but, whatever might be
-the reason, Sir Robert Peel passed him over
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>when forming his Administration in 1841—nay,
-rather, appears never to have turned his
-thoughts in his direction. Milnes was grievously
-disappointed, but with characteristic
-lightheartedness set at once to work to make
-himself more thoroughly fit for the post he
-specially coveted, the Under-Secretaryship of
-Foreign Affairs. He went to Paris, got intimate
-with Guizot, De Tocqueville, Montalembert—‘that
-English aristocrat foisted into the middle
-of French democracy’—and other leading
-statesmen. Through them, and by help of
-his natural gift of knowing everybody he
-wished to know, he managed to include Louis
-Philippe among those by whom he was accepted
-as a sort of unaccredited English envoy.
-He kept Peel informed of the views of Guizot
-and the King, and Peel replied with a message
-to the former in a letter which shows that he
-was quite ready to make use of Milnes, though
-not to reward him. On his return he gave
-Peel a general support on the Corn Laws,
-while regretting that his ‘measures were not
-of a more liberal character;’ he interested
-himself in the passing of the Copyright Bill,
-a measure in respect of which he was accepted
-as the representative of men of letters; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>he travelled in the East, no doubt to study
-Oriental politics on the spot. A letter he
-wrote to Peel from Smyrna is full of shrewd
-observation and far-reaching insight into the
-Eastern Question; but, on his return, he
-published a volume of poems called <cite>Palm
-Leaves</cite>. Now Peel, like a certain Hanoverian
-monarch who hated ‘boetry and bainters,’
-hated literature; and, as Milnes’s father told
-him, ‘every book he wrote was a nail in his
-political coffin.’ Again, Milnes was in favour
-of the endowment of the Roman Catholic
-Church in Ireland, and had written a pamphlet
-called <cite>The Real Union of England and Ireland</cite>,
-on which, we may note, in passing, Mr Gladstone’s
-remark, that he had ‘some opinions on
-Irish matters that are not fit for practice.’
-With these views he supported Peel’s grant
-to Maynooth, a step which brought him into
-such disgrace at Pontefract that he thought
-seriously of giving up parliamentary life altogether.
-In fact he applied for a diplomatic
-post, but without success. Before long we find
-him again running counter to his chief’s policy,
-supporting Lord Ashley against the Government,
-and seconding a motion of Charles
-Buller’s against Lord Stanley. After this it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>cannot excite surprise that Peel passed him
-over when he rearranged his Administration
-in 1845. With his second disappointment
-Milnes’s career as a professional politician
-came to an end. Ten years later Palmerston
-offered him a lordship of the Treasury, but he
-declined it. As he said himself in a letter
-written shortly afterwards:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘<span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>Via media</em></span> never answers in politics, and somehow or
-other I never can get out of it. My Laodicean spirit is the
-ruin of me. From having lived with all sorts of people, and
-seen good in all, the broad black lines of judgment that
-people usually draw seem to me false and foolish, and I
-think my own finer ones just as distinct, though no one can
-see them but myself’ (vol. i. p. 360).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Before long Milnes found a more congenial
-position on the opposite side of the House.
-But it must not be supposed that he rushed
-into sudden and rancorous opposition to his
-old leader. So long as Peel remained in office,
-he allowed no personal considerations to interfere
-with his support of him; and he steadily
-refused to join those who rebelled when he
-announced his conversion to Free Trade.
-Meanwhile, his interest in the burning question
-of the day being little more than formal, he
-turned his attention to a social question in
-which he had long been interested, and introduced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>a Bill for the establishment of reformatories
-for juvenile offenders. Among the many
-combinations of opposite tastes and tendencies
-with which Milnes was fond of startling the
-world, could one more curious be imagined
-than this—the literary exquisite and the criminal
-unwashed? But in fact this is only a
-single instance out of many which could be
-produced to show that the cynical selfishness
-he affected was only a mask which hid his real
-nature; perhaps assumed for the sake of concealing
-from his left hand what his right hand
-was doing so well. The proposal, we are told,
-‘was scoffed at by many politicians of eminence
-when it was first put forward.’ But Milnes
-was not to be daunted by rebuffs, and ‘he
-persevered with his proposal, until he had the
-great happiness of seeing reformatories established
-under the sanction of the law, and of
-becoming himself the president of the first and
-greatest of these noble institutions, that at
-Redhill.’ His very genuine sympathy with
-the poor and the unfortunate, especially when
-young, is testified to by one of his intimate
-friends, Miss Nightingale:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘His brilliancy and talents in tongue or pen—whether
-political, social, or literary—were inspired chiefly by good-will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>towards man; but he had the same voice and manners
-for the dirty brat as he had for a duchess, the same desire
-to give pleasure and good. Once, at Redhill, where we
-were with a party, and the chiefs were explaining to us the
-system in the court-yard, a mean, stunted, villainous-looking
-little fellow crept across the yard (quite out of order, and
-by himself), and stole a dirty paw into Mr Milnes’s hand.
-Not a word passed; the boy stayed quite quiet and quite
-contented if he could but touch his benefactor who had
-placed him there. He was evidently not only his benefactor,
-but his friend’ (vol. ii. p. 7).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Milnes had been called a Liberal-Conservative
-during the first ten years of his parliamentary
-life. He now became a Conservative-Liberal;
-but the transposition of the adjective
-made little, if any, change in his political
-conduct. He was as insubordinate in the
-latter position as he had been in the former.
-He took Lord Palmerston as his leader and
-chosen friend; but he did not always side
-with him. In the debates on the Conspiracy
-Bill, after the attempt of Orsini to assassinate
-Napoleon III., Milnes spoke and voted against
-his chief; and on the measure for abolishing
-the East India Company he was equally indifferent
-to the claims of party. As time went
-on, he drifted out of party politics altogether;
-and both in the House of Commons and the
-House of Lords, which he entered in 1863,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>it was to measures of a private character, or to
-measures of social reform, that he gave his attention.
-He advocated help to Lady Franklin
-in her expedition to clear up the mystery of
-her husband’s fate; he was in favour of female
-suffrage; of the abolition of public executions;
-and he led the agitation for legalising
-marriage with a deceased wife’s sister. At the
-same time he cordially supported the Liberal
-party on all great occasions. Speaking of the
-abortive Reform Bill of 1866, Mr Reid remarks:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Houghton held strongly to the Liberal side throughout
-the movement, and again afforded proof of the fact that his
-elevation to the House of Lords had strengthened, rather
-than weakened, his faith in the people and in popular
-institutions. Early in April he presided at one of the
-great popular meetings in favour of Reform. The scene of
-the meeting was the Cloth Hall at Leeds—a spot famous
-in the political history of the West Riding—and Lord
-Houghton’s speech was as advanced in tone as the most
-thoroughgoing Reformer could have wished it to be. He
-was, indeed, one of the very few peers who took an open
-and pronounced part in the agitation of the year’ (vol. ii.
-p. 151).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This is only one instance, out of many that
-could be adduced. It would be interesting to
-know what he would have thought of some of
-the later developments of his party. It is
-almost needless to say that he never regarded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>Lord Beaconsfield as a serious politician. On
-the eve of his return from Berlin in 1878, he
-writes: ‘I hope to be in my place on Thursday,
-to see the reception of the Great Adventurer.
-Whether from knowing him so well, or from
-the sarcastic temperament of old age, the whole
-thing looks to me like a comedy, with as much
-relation to serious politics as Punch to real life.’
-At the same time he had not been a thoroughgoing
-supporter of Mr Gladstone’s agitation
-against the Turks, and he had warned that
-statesman so far back as 1871, that ‘a demon,
-not of demagoguism, but of demophilism, is
-tempting you sorely.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Advancing years and disappointed hopes
-caused no abatement in his interest in foreign
-affairs. The events of 1848 had been specially
-interesting to him; and at the close of that year
-he produced what Mr Reid well describes as
-‘a striking and instructive’ pamphlet, entitled
-<cite>A Letter to the Marquis of Lansdowne</cite>. The
-author reviews the events of the year, and
-supports the thesis that ‘the Liberals of the
-Continent had not proved themselves unworthy
-of the sympathy of England.’ We have no
-room for an analysis of this masterly work, but
-we cannot refrain from quoting one remarkable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>passage in which he foreshadows French intervention
-in Italy. After describing measures by
-which Austria intended to make the Lombardo-Venetian
-kingdom a second Poland, he proceeds:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘And France, whatever be her adventures in government,
-will not easily have so dulled her imagination or
-quelled her enthusiasm as to be unmoved by appeals to
-the deeds of Marengo and Lodi, and to suffer an expiring
-nation at her very door to cry in vain for help and protection,
-not against the restraints of an orderly authority, but
-against fierce invaders intent upon her absolute destruction’
-(vol. i. p. 413).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This pamphlet made a great sensation. In
-England it was received, for the most part,
-with dislike and apprehension. Carlyle was
-almost alone in praising it. ‘Tell him,’ he said,
-‘it is the greatest thing he has yet done;
-earnest and grave, written in a large, tolerant,
-kind-hearted spirit, and, as far as I can see,
-saying all that is to be said on <em>that</em> matter.’
-But the strongest proof of the power of the
-pamphlet is the fact that the Austrians stopped
-the writer on the Hungarian frontier when
-travelling with his wife in 1851, as a person
-who could not breathe that revolutionary atmosphere
-without danger to the empire. In his
-later years foreign travel became almost a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>necessity to Lord Houghton; and as he had
-then fewer ties to bind him to England, his
-absences were more frequent and more prolonged.
-He travelled in France, no longer
-as an envoy without credentials, but for his
-private information, or to be the guest of
-Guizot and De Tocqueville; he became the
-friend of the accomplished Queen of Holland;
-he represented the Geographical Society at the
-opening of the Suez Canal; he made a triumphal
-progress through the United States;
-and only three years before his death he went
-again to Egypt and Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Throughout his life Milnes approached public
-events with a singular sobriety of judgment.
-He was never led away by popular clamour,
-but formed his opinions, on principle, after
-mature deliberation. It is almost needless to
-add that he generally found himself on the
-unpopular side. When England went mad
-over the Crimean war, Milnes wrote calmly:
-‘For my own part I like neither of the combatants,
-though I prefer a feeble and superannuated
-despotism as less noxious to mankind
-than one young and vigorous, and assisted by
-the appliances of modern intelligence.’ During
-the American civil war, he ‘broke away from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>his own class, and ranged himself on the side
-of the friends of the North, with an earnestness
-not inferior to that of Mr Bright and Mr
-Forster.’ Mr Reid tell us that this conduct
-won for Milnes that popularity with the masses,
-especially in Yorkshire and Lancashire, which
-all his previous efforts had failed to obtain, and
-that he found himself, to his great surprise, one
-of the popular idols. In 1870, again, he was
-on the unpopular side: ‘I am Prussian to the
-backbone,’ he wrote, ‘which is a pure homage
-to principle, as they are the least agreeable
-people in the world.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have been at pains to set forth Milnes’s
-political acts and convictions in some detail,
-because he has been frequently represented
-as a gay <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>farceur</em></span>, who took up politics as a
-pastime. It is not, however, as a politician
-that he will be remembered, but as a man of
-letters. In his younger days he achieved distinction
-as a writer of verse, and Landor hailed
-him as ‘the greatest poet now living in England.’
-This judgment may nowadays provoke
-a smile; but, though it is not to be expected
-that his poems will recover their former popularity,
-they hardly deserve to have fallen into
-complete neglect. As Mr Reid says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>‘A great singer he may not have been; a sweet singer
-with a charm of his own he undoubtedly was; nor did his
-charm consist alone in the melody of which he was a master.
-In many of his poems real poetic thought is linked with
-musical words; whilst in everything that he wrote, whether
-in verse or in prose, one may discern the brightest characteristics
-of the man himself: the catholicity of his spirit; the
-tenderness of his sympathy with weakness, suffering, mortal
-frailty in all its forms; the ardour of his faith in something
-that should break down the artificial barriers by which
-classes are divided, and bring into the lives of all a measure
-of that light and happiness which he relished so highly for
-himself’ (vol. ii. p. 438).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For his prose works, or at least for some of
-them, we predict a very different fate. We do
-not like even to think of an age that will refuse
-to admire the charming style, the real dramatic
-power, the exquisite tact, and the fine taste
-which distinguish his <cite>Life of Keats</cite>, and his
-<cite>Monographs</cite>, to which we have already alluded.
-Other essays, probably of equal merit, lie scattered
-in Reviews and Magazines. We hope
-that before long we may see the best of these
-collected together. Such a series, which would
-cover a period of nearly sixty years, would
-form a most important chapter in the history
-of English literature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Besides his reputation as a writer, Milnes
-occupied an unique position towards the world
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>of letters, which it is not quite easy to define.
-It is not enough to say that he was a Mæcenas,
-though he knew and entertained the whole
-literary community both in London and at
-Fryston—a house which, as Thackeray said,
-‘combined all the graces of the château and
-the tavern’; or that he was always ready to
-lend a helping hand to those in distress,
-though he spent a fortune in generously and
-delicately assisting others. His peculiar characteristics
-were a rare gift in detecting merit, and
-an untiring energy in bringing it out, and setting
-it in a position where it could bloom and
-flourish and be recognized by other people.
-In effecting this he spared no pains, and shrank
-from no annoyance. Often, indeed, he must
-have risked his own popularity by his importunity
-for favours to be conferred on others.
-Mr Reid describes at length the amusing scene
-between him and Sir Robert Peel, when he
-solicited and obtained pensions for Tennyson
-and Sheridan Knowles, of neither of whom the
-Minister had ever heard; and to Milnes must
-also be allowed the credit of having been the
-first, or nearly the first, to bring into prominent
-recognition the merits of Mr John Forster.
-He possessed, too, in a very high degree, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>gift of sympathy, and, as a consequence, of
-influence. ‘Ever since I knew you,’ said his
-friend Macarthy, ‘you have been the chief
-person in my life; a friend and brother and
-confessor—the end and aim of all my actions
-and hopes’; and Robert Browning, in a long
-and most interesting letter, written to ask
-Milnes to use his interest to get him appointed
-secretary to the minister whom England, as he
-then believed, ‘must send before the year ends
-to this fine fellow, Pio Nono<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c011'><sup>[87]</sup></a>,’ admits that his
-own interest in Italy was due in the first
-instance to Milnes’s influence. ‘One gets excited,’
-he says, ‘at least here on the spot, by
-this tiptoe strained expectation of poor dear
-Italy, and yet, if I had not known you, I
-believe I should have looked on with other
-bystanders.’ We have said that he was charitable;
-but to say this is to give an imperfect
-idea of the efforts he would make for literary
-men in difficulties. When Hood was in distress
-he found that he ‘preferred to receive assistance
-in the shape of gratuitous literary work for his
-magazine rather than in money.’ Milnes not
-only contributed himself, but ‘canvassed right
-and left among his friends for contributions.’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>Nor was his help confined to the person whose
-work he valued. ‘The interest and friendship
-which the genius had aroused,’ says Mr Reid,
-‘was extended to his or her friends and connexions.
-Many a widow and many an orphan
-had occasion to be thankful that the husband
-or father had during his lifetime excited the
-admiration of Milnes. Years after the death
-of Charlotte Brontë we find him trying to
-smooth the path of her father, and to secure
-preferment in the Church for her husband.’
-This is only one instance out of many that
-might be adduced. Again, he seemed to
-regard his critical faculty as a trust for the
-benefit of others, and was never more congenially
-employed than in drawing attention to
-some young poet who had no influential friends.
-In proof of this we will only refer our readers
-to the touching story of poor David Gray,
-whom he nursed with almost feminine tenderness,
-and whose poem, <cite>The Luggie</cite>, he edited;
-and to his early recognition of the genius of
-Mr Swinburne, to whose merits he drew attention
-by an article in the <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite>.
-In close connexion with this kind help to men
-of whom he knew little or nothing may be
-mentioned his interest in the Newspaper Press
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>Fund. The formation of such a fund was
-strenuously resisted, we are told, by the most
-influential members of the Press; but Milnes,
-from the first, brought the whole weight of
-his social influence to its support, and contributed,
-more than any other man, to its
-permanent and successful establishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nor should his kindness to young men be
-forgotten. He may have sought their society
-in the first instance from the pleasure he took
-in all that was bright, and entertaining, and
-unaffected; but, as we have already tried to
-point out, his motives were commonly underlaid
-by some serious purpose which it was not
-always easy to discover. We do not maintain
-that he was specially successful in drawing
-young men out, for his own talk was often
-scrappy, anecdotical, and difficult to follow;
-still less do we mean that he tried to influence
-them in any particular direction by improving
-conversation, or the enunciation of any special
-opinions in politics or literature. But he certainly
-made his juniors feel sure of his sympathy
-and his good-will.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of Milnes’s religious opinions it is difficult
-to give any positive account. His family had
-been Unitarian; at college he became an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>Evangelical; soon afterwards he fell under the
-influence of Irving, whom he proclaimed to be
-‘the apostle of the age.’ Then, during his
-residence in Italy, as we have already mentioned,
-he chose Dr Wiseman for his intimate
-friend, and the higher Roman Catholic clergy
-had hopes of his conversion. ‘Mezzofanti,’
-wrote one of his friends in 1832, ‘is full of
-hopes that you will return to the bosom of her
-whom Carlyle calls “the slain mother”.’ But,
-during this same period, while passing through
-what he calls ‘the twilight of his mind,’ he
-was the friend of Sterling and Maurice and
-Thirlwall, under whose influence he was hardly
-likely to submit to an infallible Church. He
-himself said that he was prevented from joining
-the Church of Rome by the uprising of a
-Catholic school in the Church of England.
-To this movement, as we have seen, he was
-deeply attached, and both spoke and wrote in
-its defence. In one of his commonplace books
-he called himself a Puseyite sceptic; sometimes
-he said he was a crypto-Catholic, and to the
-last he never entirely shook off the impressions
-of his youth. But Mr Reid is probably right
-in describing him as ‘a tolerant, liberal-minded
-man, apt to look at religion from many different
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>points of view.’ We are not aware that he
-ever took part in any directly religious movement,
-or ever declared his allegiance to the
-Church of England except as a political organization.
-Partly from a love of paradox, partly
-from a habit of looking round a question rather
-than directly at it, he would have had something
-to say in defence of almost any system
-of religion, while his unfeigned charity would
-induce him to adopt that which recognized
-most fully the claims of suffering humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lord Houghton died at Vichy, August 11,
-1885. He had been in failing health for some
-time, but the end was sudden and unexpected.
-Only a few hours before it came he had been
-entertaining a mixed company at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>table
-d’hôte</em></span> by the brilliancy and variety of his
-conversation. It might almost be said that
-he died, as he had lived, in society.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have tried to eliminate what we believe
-to have been the real Milnes from a cloud of
-misrepresentations and erroneous judgments—for
-both of which, it must be remembered, he
-was himself directly responsible. We leave to
-our readers the task of passing sentence on a
-singularly amiable, if eccentric, personality.
-Some opinions expressed by those who understood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>him and valued him will appropriately
-close this article. When he was young his
-friends recognized in him what Dr Johnson
-would have called the potentiality of greatness,
-though they doubted whether he would have
-sufficient steadiness of purpose to achieve it.
-‘Your gay and airy mind,’ wrote Tennyson
-in 1833, ‘must have caught as many colours
-from the landscape you moved through as a
-flying soap-bubble—a comparison truly somewhat
-irreverent, yet I meant it not as such.’
-‘I think you are near something very glorious,’
-said Stafford O’Brien, ‘but you will never
-reach it.’ Mr Aubrey de Vere decided that
-‘he had not much solid ambition. The highlands
-of life were not what interested him
-much; its mountains cast their shadows too
-far and drew down too many clouds.’ But,
-if Milnes’s well-wishers were compelled to
-abandon their hopes of any great distinction
-for their friend, they recognized, with one
-accord, his charity and his sincerity. If they
-did not admire him, they loved him. ‘You
-are on the whole a good man,’ said Carlyle,
-‘though with terrible perversities.’ Forster
-declared that he himself had ‘many friends
-who would be kind to him in distress, but only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>one who would be equally kind to him in
-disgrace.’ A distinguished German said of
-him, ‘Is it possible that an Englishman can
-be so loveable?’ and Mr Sumner described
-him as ‘a member of Parliament, a poet and
-a man of fashion, a Tory who does not forget
-the people, and a man of fashion with sensibilities,
-love of virtue and merit among the
-simple, the poor, and the lowly.’ Lastly, let
-us cite his own whimsical character of himself,
-which, though expressed in the language of
-paradox, is probably, in the main, nearer to
-the truth than one drawn by any critic could
-be:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘He was a man of no common imaginative perceptions,
-who never gave his full conviction to anything but the
-closest reasoning; of acute sensibilities, who always distrusted
-the affections; of ideal aspirations and sensual
-habits; of the most cheerful manners and of the gloomiest
-philosophy. He hoped little and believed little, but he
-rarely despaired, and never valued unbelief, except as leading
-to some larger truth and purer conviction’ (vol. ii. p. 491).</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>EDWARD HENRY PALMER<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c011'><sup>[88]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c021'>A dramatist who undertakes to write a
-play which is to be almost devoid of incident,
-and to depend for interest on the development
-of an eccentric character, with only a single
-strong situation, even though that situation be
-one of surpassing power, is considered by those
-learned in such matters to be almost courting
-failure. Such a work is therefore rarely attempted,
-and is still more rarely successful.
-Yet this is what Mr Besant has had to do in
-writing the Life of Edward Henry Palmer;
-and we are glad to be able to say at once that
-he has discharged a delicate and difficult task
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>in a most admirable fashion. For in truth he
-had a very unpromising subject to deal with.
-It is always difficult to interest the general
-public in the sayings and doings of a man of
-letters, even when he has occupied a prominent
-position, and thrown himself with ardour into
-some burning question of the day, political or
-social. Palmer, however, was not such a man
-at all. He did ‘break his birth’s invidious
-bar,’ but alas! it was never given to him, until
-the end was close at hand, ‘to grasp the skirts
-of happy chance,’ or to rise into a position
-where he could be seen by the world. It is
-melancholy now to speculate on what might
-have been had he returned in safety from the
-perilous enterprise in which he met his death,
-for it is hardly likely that the Government
-would have failed to secure, by some permanent
-appointment, the services of a man who had
-proved, in so signal a manner, his capacity for
-dealing with Orientals. As it was, however,
-with the exception of the journeys to the
-Sinaitic Peninsula and the Holy Land, he
-lived a quiet student-life; not wholly retired,
-for he was no book-worm, and enjoyed, after
-a peculiar fashion of his own, the society of his
-fellow-men; but still a life which did not really
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>bring him beyond the narrow circle of the few
-intimate friends who knew him thoroughly,
-and were proportionately devoted to him. He
-took no part in any movement; he was not
-‘earnest’ or ‘intense.’ He did not read new
-books, or any of the ‘thoughtful’ magazines;
-nor had he any particular desire to alter the
-framework of society. The world was a good
-world so far as he was concerned; and men
-were strange and interesting creatures whom
-it was a pleasure to study, as a naturalist
-studies a new species; why alter it or them?
-The interest which attaches to such a life depends
-wholly on the way in which the central
-character is presented to the public. That
-Mr Besant should have succeeded where others
-would have failed need not surprise us. The
-qualities which have made him a delightful
-novelist are brought to bear upon this prose
-<cite>In Memoriam</cite>, with the additional incentives
-of warm friendship and passionate regret. It
-is clear that he realized all the difficulties of his
-task from the outset; and he has treated his
-materials accordingly, leading the reader forward
-with consummate art, chapter by chapter,
-to the final catastrophe, which is described
-with the picturesqueness of a romance, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>solemn earnestness of a tragedy. Such a book
-is almost above criticism. A mourner by an
-open grave, pronouncing the funeral oration of
-his murdered friend, has a prescriptive right to
-apportion praise and blame in what measure he
-thinks fit; and we should be the last to intrude
-upon his sacred sorrow with harsh and inconsiderate
-criticism. But we should be failing in
-our duty if we did not draw attention to one
-point. It has been Mr Besant’s object to show
-the difficulties of all kinds against which his
-hero had to contend—ill-health, heavy sorrows,
-debt—and how he came triumphant through
-them all, thanks to his indomitable pluck and
-energy; and further, as though no element of
-interest should be wanting, he has represented
-him as smarting under a sense of unmerited
-wrong done to him by his University, which
-‘went out of the way to insult and neglect’
-him. This is no mere fancy of Mr Besant’s;
-we know from other sources that Palmer
-himself thought he had not been treated at
-Cambridge as he ought to have been, and that
-he was glad to get away from it. We shall do
-our best to show that this was a misconception
-on his part, and we regret that his biographer
-should have given such prominence to it. But,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>though Mr Besant may have been zealous
-overmuch on this particular point, his book is
-none the less fascinating, and we venture to
-predict that it will live, as a permanent record
-of a very remarkable man. We are sensible
-that much of its charm will disappear in the
-short sketch which we are about to give, but
-if our remarks have the effect of sending our
-readers to the original, we shall not have
-written in vain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Edward Henry Palmer was born in Green
-Street, Cambridge, 7 August, 1840. His father
-died when he was an infant, and his mother
-did not long survive her husband. Her place
-was supplied to some extent by an aunt, then
-unmarried, who took the orphan child to her
-own home and educated him. She was evidently
-a person who combined great kindness
-with great good sense. Palmer, we read,
-‘owed everything to her,’ and ‘never spoke
-of her in after years without the greatest
-tenderness and emotion.’ Of his real mother
-we do not find any record; but the father,
-who kept a small private school, was ‘a man
-of considerable acquirements, with a strong
-taste for art.’ We do not know whether any
-of Palmer’s peculiar talents had ever been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>observed in the father, or whether he can be
-said to have inherited anything from his family
-except a tendency to asthma and bronchial
-disease. From this, of which the father died
-before he was thirty, the son suffered all his
-life. He grew out of it to a certain extent,
-but it was always there, a watchful enemy,
-ready to start forth and fasten upon its victim.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The beginning of Palmer’s education was
-of the most ordinary description, and little need
-be said about it. He was sent in the first
-instance to a private school, and afterwards to
-the Perse Grammar School. There he made
-rapid progress, arriving at the sixth form before
-he was fifteen; but all we hear about his
-studies is that he distinguished himself in
-Greek and Latin, and disliked mathematics.
-By the time he was sixteen he had learnt all
-that he was likely to learn at school, and was
-sent to London to earn his living. He became
-a junior clerk in a house of business in East-cheap,
-where he remained for three years, and
-might have remained for the term of his natural
-life, had he not been obliged to resign his
-situation on account of ill-health. Symptoms
-of pulmonary disease manifested themselves,
-and he got worse so rapidly that he was told
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>that he had little hope of recovery. He returned
-to Cambridge, with the conviction that
-he had but a few weeks to live, and that he
-had better die comfortably among his relations,
-than miserably among strangers. But
-after a few weeks of severe illness he recovered,
-suddenly and strangely. Mr Besant
-tells a curious story, which Palmer is reported
-to have believed, that the cure had been
-effected by a dose of <em>lobelia</em>, administered by
-a herbalist. That Palmer swallowed the drug—of
-which, by the way, he nearly died—is
-certain, and that he recovered is equally certain;
-but that the dose and the recovery can
-be correlated as cause and effect is more than
-we are prepared to admit. We are rather
-disposed to accept a less sensational theory,
-expressed by a gentleman who at that period
-was one of his intimate friends:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Careful watchfulness on the part of his aunt, open air,
-exercise, and freedom from restraint, were the principal
-means of patching him up. He had frequent attacks of
-blood-spitting afterwards, and was altogether one of those
-wonderful creatures that defy doctors and quacks alike, and
-won’t die of the disease which is theirs by inheritance.
-How little any of us thought that he would die a hero!’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Palmer’s peculiar gift of acquiring languages
-had manifested itself even before he went to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>London. Throughout his whole career his
-strength as a linguist lay in his extraordinary
-aptitude for learning a spoken language. The
-literature came afterwards. We are not aware
-that he was ever what is called a good scholar
-in Latin or in Greek, simply for the reason,
-according to our view, that those languages
-are no longer spoken anywhere. He did not
-repudiate the literature of a language; far from
-it. Probably few Orientalists have known the
-literatures of Arabia and Persia better than
-he knew them; but he learnt to speak Arabic
-and Persian before he learnt to read them. In
-this he resembled Cardinal Mezzofanti, who
-had the same power of picking up a language
-for speaking purposes from a few conversations—learning
-some words, and constructing for
-himself first a vocabulary and then a grammar.
-When Palmer was still a boy at school he
-learnt Romany. He learnt it, says Mr Besant,
-‘by paying travelling tinkers sixpence for a
-lesson, by haunting the tents, talking to the
-men, and crossing the women’s palms with
-his pocket-money in exchange for a few more
-words to add to his vocabulary. In this way
-he gradually made for himself a Gipsy dictionary.’
-In time he became a proficient in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>Gipsy lore, and Mr Besant tells several curious
-stories about his adventures with that remarkable
-people. We will quote the narrative
-supplied to him by Mr Charles Leland—better
-known as Hans Breitmann—Palmer’s intimate
-friend and brother in Romany lore.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘In one respect Palmer was truly remarkable. He
-combined plain common sense, clear judgment, and great
-quickness of perception into all the relations of a question,
-with a keen love of fun and romance. I could fill a volume
-with the eccentric adventures which we had in common,
-particularly among the gipsies. To these good folk we
-were always a first-class mystery, but none the less popular
-on that account. What with our speaking Romany “down
-to the bottom crust,” and Palmer’s incredible proficiency at
-thimble-rig, “ringing the changes,” picking pockets, card-sharping,
-three-monté, and every kind of legerdemain, these
-honest people never could quite make up their minds
-whether we were a kind of Brahmins, to which they were as
-Sudras, or what. Woe to the gipsy sharp who tried the
-cards with the Professor! How often have we gone into a
-<em>tan</em> where we were all unknown, and regarded as a couple of
-green Gentiles! And with what a wonderful air of innocence
-would Palmer play the part of a lamb, and ask them
-to give him a specimen of their language; and when they
-refused, or professed themselves unable to do so, how
-amiably he would turn to me and remark in deep Romany
-that we were mistaken, and that the people of the tent were
-only miserable “mumpers” of mixed blood, who could not
-<em>rakker</em>! Once I remember he said this to a gipsy, who
-retaliated in a great rage, “How could I know that you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>were a gipsy, if you come here dressed up like a <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>gorgio</em></span> and
-looking like a gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘One day, with Palmer, in the fens near Cambridge, we
-came upon a picturesque sight. It was a large band of
-gipsies on a halt. As we subsequently learned, they had
-made the day before an immense raid in robbing hen-roosts
-and poaching, and were loaded with game, fowls, and eggs.
-None of them knew me, but several knew the Professor as
-a lawyer. One took him aside to confide as a client their
-late misdoings. “We have been,” said he——</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘“You have been stealing eggs,” replied Palmer.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘“How did you know that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘“By the yolk on your waistcoat,” answered the Professor
-in Romany. “The next time you had better hide
-the marks<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c011'><sup>[89]</sup></a>.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>These experiences among the gipsies took
-place in 1874 or 1875, when Palmer had perfected
-himself in their language, and we must
-go back for a moment to the period spent
-in London. There, in his leisure hours, he
-managed to learn Italian and French, by a
-process similar to that by which he had previously
-acquired the rudiments of Romany.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘The method he pursued is instructive. He found out
-where Italians might be expected to meet, and went every
-evening to sit among them and hear them talk. Thus,
-there was in those days a <em>café</em> in Titchborne Street frequented
-by Italian refugees, political exiles, and republicans.
-Here Palmer sat and listened and presently began to
-talk, and so became an ardent partisan of Italian unity.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>There was also at that time—I think many of them have
-now migrated to Hammersmith—a great colony of Italian
-organ-grinders and sellers of plaster-cast images in and about
-Saffron Hill. He went among these worthy people, sat
-with them in their restaurants, drank their sour wine, talked
-with them, and acquired their <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>patois</em></span>. He found out Italian
-waiters at restaurants and talked with them; at the docks
-he went on board Italian ships, and talked with the sailors;
-and in these ways learned the various dialects of Genoa,
-Naples, Nice, Livorno, Venice, and Messina. One of his
-friends at this time was a well-known Signor Buonocorre,
-the so-called “Fire King,” who used to astonish the multitude
-nightly at Cremorne Gardens and elsewhere by his
-feats. For Palmer was always attracted by people who run
-shows, “do” things, act, pretend, persuade, deceive, and in
-fact are interesting for any kind of cleverness. However,
-the first result of this perseverance was that he made himself
-a perfect master of Italian, that he knew the country speech
-as well as the Italian of the schools, and that he could
-converse with the Piedmontese, the Venetian, the Roman,
-the Sicilian, or the Calabrian, in their own dialects, as well
-as with the purest native of Florence.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘Also while he was in the City he acquired French by a
-similar process. I do not know whether he carried on his
-French studies at the same time with the Italian, but I
-believe not. It seems certainly more in accordance with
-the practice which he adopted in after life that he should
-attempt only one thing at a time. But as with Italian so
-with French; he joined to a knowledge of the pure language
-a curious acquaintance with <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>argot</em></span>; also—which points to
-acquaintance made in <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>cafés</em></span>—he acquired somehow in those
-early days a curious knowledge and admiration of the
-French police and detective system<a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' class='c011'><sup>[90]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>The illness which compelled Palmer to
-give up London had evidently been very
-serious, and his convalescence was tedious.
-Nor, when supposed to be well, did he feel
-any inclination to resume work as a clerk. So
-he stayed in Cambridge at his aunt’s house,
-with no definite aim in life, but taking up now
-one thing, now another, after the manner of
-clever boys when they are at home for the
-holidays. He did a little literature in the
-way of burlesques, one of which, <cite>Ye Hole in
-ye Walle</cite>, a legend told after the manner
-of Ingoldsby, was afterwards published by
-Messrs Macmillan; he wrote a farce, which
-was acted in that temple of Thespis, once dear
-to Cambridge undergraduates, the old Barnwell
-Theatre; he acted himself with considerable
-success, and for a week or so thought of
-adopting the stage as a profession; he tried
-conjuring, in which in after years he became
-an adept, and ventriloquism, where he failed;
-he took up various forms of art, as wood-engraving,
-modelling, drawing, painting, photography;
-in all of which, except the last, he
-arrived at creditable results. His aunt is reported
-to have borne her nephew’s changeable
-tastes with exemplary patience, until photography
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>came to the front; but ‘the waste of
-expensive materials, the damage to clothes,
-stair carpets—he could always be traced—his
-disreputable piebald appearance,’ and (last, but
-not least!) ‘the results on glass,’ were too much
-for even her good-nature. The camera was
-banished, and the artist was bidden to adopt
-some pursuit less annoying to his neighbours.
-The one really useful study of this period was
-shorthand-writing; and in after years, when he
-practised as a barrister, he found the usefulness
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Up to this time—the year 1860—he had
-never turned his attention to Oriental literature,
-and very likely had never seen an Oriental
-character. The friend whose reminiscences we
-have quoted more than once already says that
-he remembers ‘going one morning into his
-bedroom (he was a very late riser) and finding
-him looking at some Arabic characters. They
-interested him; he liked the look of them; it
-was an improvement on shorthand; he would
-find it all out; and so he did!’ He set to
-work without delay to find somebody he could
-talk to about his new fancy, and, as the supply
-of Oriental scholars is necessarily limited even
-at one of the Universities, he was led at once
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>to the only two persons competent to instruct
-him—the Rev. George Skinner, and a Mohammedan
-named Syed Abdullah. The former
-was a Master of Arts of the University, who
-had published a translation of the Psalms; the
-latter was a native of Oudh, who had resided
-in England since 1851, and who about this
-time came to Cambridge to prepare students
-for the Civil Service of India. Under the
-guidance of these gentlemen, Palmer plunged
-into Oriental languages with the same enthusiasm
-with which he had followed the various
-pursuits we have mentioned above. There
-was this difference, however, between the new
-love and the old; there was no turning back;
-the day of transient fancies was over; that
-of serious work had begun. His ardour now
-knew no abatement; he is said to have worked
-at this time eighteen hours a day. This may
-well be doubted; but without pressing such a
-statement too closely, we may admit that he
-gave himself up to his new studies with unwonted
-perseverance, and that his progress was
-rapid. Mr Skinner used to take him out for
-walks in the country, and discourse to him on
-Hebrew grammar. Hebrew, however, was a
-language which did not attract him greatly,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>and in after years he used to say that he did
-not know it. Syed Abdullah gave him more
-regular and systematic instruction in Urdú,
-Persian, and Arabic. Palmer was ‘constantly
-writing prose and verse exercises for him.’
-They became intimate friends; and it was probably
-through his representations that Palmer
-was allowed to give up all thoughts of resuming
-work as a clerk, and to take up Oriental languages
-and literature as a profession. Through
-him, too, he was introduced to the Nawab Ikbal
-ud Dawlah, son of the late Rajah of Oudh,
-who took a very warm interest in Palmer’s
-studies, allowed him to live in his house when
-he pleased, and gave him the assistance of two
-able native instructors. Next he struck up a
-friendship with a Bengalee gentleman named
-Bazlurrahim, with whom he spent some time,
-composing incessantly under his supervision in
-Persian and Urdú. Besides these he was on
-terms of intimacy with other Orientals resident
-at that time in England, and also with Professor
-Mir Aulad Ali, of Trinity College, Dublin, ‘who
-was constantly his adviser, critic, teacher, friend,
-and sympathizer.’ Hence, as Mr Besant points
-out, we may see that he had no lack of instructors;
-and may at once dismiss from our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>minds two common misconceptions about him—first
-that Oriental languages ‘came natural’
-to him; and, secondly, that he was a poor,
-friendless, solitary student, burning the midnight
-lamp in a garret, and learning Arabic
-all alone. On the contrary, he never felt any
-pressure of poverty, and was helped, sympathized
-with, encouraged, by all those with
-whom he came in contact. His progress was
-rapid, and in 1862 he was able to send a copy
-of original Arabic verses to the Lord Almoner’s
-Reader in that language, who described them
-as ‘elegant and idiomatic.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Up to this time Palmer does not appear
-to have known much of University men, or
-to have thought of becoming a member of the
-University himself. He would probably have
-never joined S. John’s College had he not
-been accidentally ‘discovered,’ as Mr Besant
-happily puts it, by two of the Fellows. The
-result of this discovery was that he was invited
-to become a candidate for a sizarship in October
-1863, and in the interval prepared himself for
-the examination by reviving his former studies
-in classics, and in working at mathematics.
-He was assisted in this preparation by one
-of the Fellows, who tells us that, though he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>declared that he knew no mathematics at all,
-he ‘always did what I set him, passed the
-examinations very easily, and presumably obtained
-his sizarship on it.’ His known proficiency
-in Oriental languages was evidently
-not taken into account at the outset of his
-University career, but some two years afterwards,
-in 1865 or 1866, a scholarship was
-given to him on that account only. He took
-his degree in 1867, and, as there was no
-Oriental Languages Tripos in those days, he
-presented himself for the Classical Tripos, in
-which he obtained only a third class. Such
-a place cannot, as a general rule, be considered
-brilliant; but in his case it should be regarded
-as a distinction rather than a failure, for it
-shows that he must have possessed a more
-than respectable knowledge of Latin and Greek,
-and, moreover, have been able to write composition
-in those languages. At the time of
-his matriculation (November 1863) he could
-have known but little of either; and during the
-succeeding three years he had been much occupied
-with vigorous prosecution of his Oriental
-studies, with taking pupils in Arabic, and with
-making catalogues of the Oriental manuscripts
-in the libraries of the University, of King’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>College, and of Trinity College. But he always
-had a surprising power of getting through an
-enormous quantity of work without ever seeming
-to be in a hurry. A friend tells us that
-Palmer</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Did not strike one as a man of method, as an economist
-of time, as moving about wrapped in thought. You
-met him apparently lounging along, ready for a talk, perhaps
-in company with a rather idle man; yet when you came to
-measure up his work you were puzzled to know how any
-one man could do it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Palmer’s proficiency in Oriental languages
-at this time, 1867—only seven years, it should
-be remembered, after he had begun to study
-them—is abundantly attested by a very remarkable
-body of testimonials<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' class='c011'><sup>[91]</sup></a> which he obtained
-when a candidate for the post of interpreter
-to the English embassy in Persia. His old
-friend the Nawab said:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Notwithstanding the fact that he has never visited any
-Eastern kingdom, or mixed with Oriental nations, he has
-yet, by his own perseverance, application, and study, acquired
-such great proficiency, fluency, and eloquence, in speaking
-and writing three Oriental tongues—to wit, Urdú (Hindoostani),
-Persian, and Arabic—that one would say he must
-have associated with Oriental nations, and studied for a
-lengthened period in the Universities of the East.’</p>
-<p class='c022'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>We have no room for quotations from the
-curious and flowery compositions in which
-numerous learned Orientals held up his excellencies
-of every sort to admiration; but we
-will cite a short passage from what was said
-by Mr Bradshaw, Librarian to the University
-of Cambridge, who had naturally seen a great
-deal of him while working at the manuscripts:</p>
-<p class='c013'>‘What was at once apparent was the radical difference
-of his knowledge of these languages [Arabic and Persian]
-from that of any other Orientalist I had met. It was the
-difference between native knowledge and dictionary knowledge;
-between one who uses a language as his own and
-one who is able to make out the meaning of what is before
-him with more or less accuracy by help of a dictionary.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the autumn of 1867, a fellowship at S.
-John’s College being vacant, the then Master,
-Dr Bateson, knowing Palmer’s reputation as
-an Orientalist, asked Professor Cowell, then
-recently made Professor of Sanskrit, to examine
-him. Professor Cowell writes:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I undertook to examine him in Persian and Hindustani,
-as I felt that my knowledge of Arabic was too slight to
-justify my venturing to examine him in that language. I
-well remember my delight and surprise in this examination.
-I had never had any intercourse with Palmer before, as I
-had been previously living in India; and I had no idea that
-he was such an Oriental scholar. I remember well that I
-set him for translation into Persian prose a florid description
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>from Gibbon’s chapter on Mohammed. Palmer translated
-it in a masterly way, in the true style of Persian rhetoric,
-every important substantive having its rhyming doublet, just
-as in the best models of Persian literature. In fact, his
-vocabulary seemed exhaustless. I also set him difficult
-pieces for translation from the Masnaví, Khondemir, and I
-think Saudá; but he could explain them all without hesitation.
-I sent a full report to the Master, and the college
-elected him at once to the vacant fellowship<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' class='c011'><sup>[92]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It has now become an understood thing
-at Cambridge that a man who is really distinguished
-in any branch of study has a good
-chance of a fellowship; but twenty years ago
-this was not the case, and we believe that
-Palmer was the first, at least in the present
-century, to obtain that blue ribbon of Cambridge
-life for proficiency in other languages
-than those of Greece and Rome. Such a
-distinction meant more to him than it would
-have meant to most men. No further anxieties
-on the score of money need trouble him for
-the future; he need no longer be dependent
-on the generosity of relations who were not
-themselves overburdened with the goods of
-this world. He might study Oriental languages
-to his heart’s content without let or hindrance
-from anybody; and it was more than probable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>that one piece of good fortune would be the
-parent of another—a distinction so signal would
-bring him into notice, and obtain for him the
-offer of something which would be worth accepting.
-He had not long to wait. In less
-than a year a post was offered to him which presented,
-in delightful combination, study, travel,
-some emolument, and a reasonable prospect
-of fame and fortune if he worked hard and
-was successful. At the suggestion of the Rev.
-George Williams, then a resident Fellow of
-King’s College, he was asked to take part in
-the exploration of the Holy Land, and to
-accompany an expedition then about to start
-for the survey of Sinai and the neighbourhood.
-He was to investigate the names and traditions
-of the country, and to copy and decipher the
-inscriptions with which the rocks in the so-called
-‘Written Valley’ and in other places are
-covered. He accepted without hesitation, and
-left England in November 1868.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The results of this expedition will be found
-in <cite>The Desert of the Exodus</cite><a id='r93' /><a href='#f93' class='c011'><sup>[93]</sup></a>, a delightful book,
-in which Palmer has narrated in a pleasing
-style the daily doings of the surveyors, and
-the conclusions at which they arrived. His
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>own proceedings are kept modestly in the background;
-but a careful reader will soon discover
-that, in addition to his appointed task as collector
-of folk-lore, he did his full share of
-topographical investigation, in which he evidently
-took a keen and growing interest, all the
-more remarkable as he could have had but little
-previous preparation for it. A detailed analysis
-of the results achieved would occupy far more
-space than we have at our disposal. We will
-only mention that the investigations of the
-expedition ‘materially confirmed and elucidated
-the history of the Exodus’; that objections
-founded on the supposed incapacity of the
-peninsula to accommodate so large a host as
-that of Israel were disposed of by pointing
-out abundant traces of ancient fertility; that
-the claims of Jebel Musa to be the true Sinai
-were vindicated by a comparison of its natural
-features with the Bible narrative, and by the
-collection of Arab and Mohammedan traditions;
-and, lastly, that the site of Kibroth Hattaavah
-was determined, partly on geographical grounds,
-partly on the traditions still current among the
-Towarah Bedouin, whose language Palmer
-mastered, and of whose manners and customs
-he has drawn up a very full and interesting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>account. The intimate acquaintance which he
-thus formed with one of these tribes stood him
-in good stead in the following year, when he
-took a far more responsible journey. The ease
-with which he spoke the Arab language was,
-however, one of the least of his many gifts:
-he thoroughly understood Arab character, and
-was generally successful, not merely in making
-the natives do what he wanted, but, what is far
-more wonderful, in making them speak the
-truth to him. He thus sums up his method
-of dealing with them:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘An Arab is a bad actor, and with but a very little
-practice you may infallibly detect him in a lie; when
-directly accused of it, he is astonished at your, to him,
-incomprehensible sagacity, and at once gives up the game.
-By keeping this fact constantly in view, and at the same
-time endeavouring to win their confidence and respect, I
-have every reason to believe that the Bedawín gave us
-throughout a correct account of their country and its nomenclature.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘When once an Arab has ceased to regard you with
-suspicion, you may surprise a piece of information out of
-him at any moment; and if you repeat it to him a short
-time afterwards, he forgets in nine cases out of ten that he
-has himself been your authority, and should the information
-be incorrect will flatly contradict you and set you right, while
-if it be authentic he is puzzled at your possessing a knowledge
-of the facts, and deems it useless to withhold from you
-anything further<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94' class='c011'><sup>[94]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>The survey of Sinai had been completed
-but a few months when Palmer left England
-again, for a second journey of exploration. It
-is evident that he must have taken a more
-prominent part in the management of the
-first expedition than the precise terms of his
-engagement with the explorers would have
-led us to expect, and that he had thoroughly
-satisfied those responsible for it, for this second
-expedition was practically entrusted to him to
-arrange as he pleased. He was instructed in
-general terms to clear up, first, certain disputed
-points in the topography of Sinai; next, to
-examine the country between the Sinaitic Peninsula
-and the Promised Land—the ‘Desert
-of the Wanderings’; and, lastly, to search for
-inscriptions in Moab. He determined to take
-with him a single companion only, Mr Charles
-Tyrwhitt-Drake, of Trinity College, Cambridge,
-who had had already some experience
-of the East, and who proved himself in every
-way to be the man of men for rough journeys
-in unknown lands; to travel on foot, without
-dragoman, servant, or escort; and to take no
-more baggage than four camels could carry.
-The two friends started from Suez on December
-16, 1869, and reached Jerusalem in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>excellent health and spirits on February 26,
-1870. They had performed a feat of which
-anybody might well be proud. They had
-traversed ‘the great and terrible desert,’ the
-Desert of El Tih, and the Negeb, or ‘south
-country’ of Palestine, exactly as they had
-proposed to do—on foot, with no attendants
-except the owners of the baggage-camels.
-They had walked nearly 600 miles; but this
-fact, though it says much for their endurance,
-gives but little idea of the real fatigues of such
-a journey. The mental strain must have been
-far more exhausting than the physical fatigue.
-They were not tourists, but explorers, whose
-duty it was to observe carefully, to record
-their observations on the spot, to make plans
-and sketches, and to collect such information
-as could be extracted from the inhabitants.
-These various pursuits—in addition to their
-domestic arrangements—had to be carried on
-in the midst of an Arab population always
-suspicious, and sometimes openly hostile, who
-worried them from daybreak until far into the
-night, and against whom their only weapons
-were incessant watchfulness, tact, and good
-humour. Readers of Palmer’s narrative will
-not be surprised to find him hinting, not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>obscurely, that the only way to solve the
-‘Bedouin question’ is to adopt what was called
-a few years afterwards, with reference to another
-not wholly dissimilar race, ‘the bag and
-baggage policy.’ This deliberate opinion, expressed
-by one who knew the Arabs well, and
-who had obtained singular influence over them,
-is worthy of careful attention, as, indeed, are all
-the chapters in the second part of <cite>The Desert
-of the Exodus</cite>, where this journey is fully
-described and illustrated. After reading that
-narrative no one can be surprised that the
-mission which ended so triumphantly and so
-fatally twelve years afterwards should have
-been entrusted to Palmer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After a brief repose in Jerusalem they
-started afresh, and, passing again through the
-South Country by a different route, travelled
-eastward of the Dead Sea through the unknown
-lands of Edom and Moab. They
-made numerous observations of great value to
-Biblical students; but they failed to find what
-they had come to seek—inscriptions—though
-they succeeded in inspecting every known
-‘written stone’ in the country; and the conclusion
-at last forced itself upon them, ‘that,
-<em>above ground</em> at least, there does not exist
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>another Moabite stone<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' class='c011'><sup>[95]</sup></a>.’ It will be remembered
-that the famous inscription of King
-Mesha was found built into a wall of late
-Roman work, the ancient Moabite city being
-buried some feet below the present surface
-of the ground. This fact induced Palmer to
-adopt the following opinion:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘If a few intelligent and competent men, such as those
-employed in the Jerusalem excavations, could be taken out
-to Moab, and certain of the ruins be excavated, further
-interesting discoveries might be made. Such researches
-might be made without difficulty if the Arabs were well
-managed and the expedition possessed large resources; but
-it must be remembered that the country is only nominally
-subject to the Turkish Government, and is filled with
-lawless tribes, jealous of each other and of the intrusion
-of strangers, and all greedily claiming a property in every
-stone, written or unwritten, which they think might interest
-a Frank.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘That many treasures do lie buried among the ruins of
-Moab there can be but little doubt; the Arabs, indeed,
-narrated to us several instances of gold coins and figures
-having been found by them while ploughing in the neighbourhood
-of the ancient cities, and sold to jewellers at
-Nablous, by whom they were probably melted up<a href='#f95' class='c011'><sup>[95]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But, though there was no inscription to
-bring home as visible evidence of what had
-been done, the expedition was not barren of
-results. In the first place, the possibility of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>exploring the little-known parts of Palestine at
-a comparatively trifling cost had been demonstrated;
-and, secondly, numerous sites had
-been discovered where further research would
-probably yield information of the greatest value.
-It is a misfortune that Palmer was not able in
-after years to give undivided attention to these
-interesting problems of Biblical topography.
-Unless we are much mistaken, he would have
-made a revolution in many of them, and
-notably in the architectural history of the city
-of Jerusalem, upon which he did throw new
-light from an unexpected quarter—the Arab
-historians. He would, in fact, have pursued
-for the Temple area at Jerusalem the method
-which Professor Willis pursued so successfully
-for some of our own cathedrals; he would have
-marshalled in chronological order the notices of
-the Arab works there; and then, by comparing
-the historical evidence with the existing structures,
-have assigned their respective dates with
-certainty to each of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Palmer returned to England in the autumn
-of 1870, and soon afterwards became a candidate
-for the Professorship of Arabic in the
-University of Cambridge. He was unsuccessful,
-and we should have contented ourselves with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>recording the fact without comment, had not
-Mr Besant stated the whole question in a way
-reflecting so unfavourably on the electors, and
-through them on the University, that we feel
-compelled to investigate the circumstances in
-detail. This is what he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘In the same year Palmer experienced what one is fully
-justified in calling the most cruel blow ever dealt to him,
-and one which he never forgot or forgave.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘The vacancy of the Professorship of Arabic in 1871
-seemed to give him at last the chance which he had been
-expecting.... He became a candidate for the vacant post;
-the place in fact <em>belonged to him</em>; it was his already by a
-right which it is truly wonderful could have been contested
-by any—the right of Conquest. The electors were the
-Heads of the colleges.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘Consider the position: Palmer by this time was a man
-known all over the world of Oriental scholarship; he was
-not a single untried student and man of books; he had
-proved his powers in the most practical of all ways, viz. by
-relying on his knowledge of the language for safety on a
-dangerous expedition; he had written, and written wonderfully
-well, a great quantity of things in Persian, Urdú, and
-Arabic; he was known to everybody who knew anything
-at all about the subject; he had been greatly talked about
-by those who did not; he was a graduate of the University
-and Fellow of S. John’s, an honour which, as was well
-known, he received solely for his attainments in Oriental
-languages; he had a great many friends who were ready to
-testify, and had already testified, in the strongest terms, to
-his extraordinary knowledge; he was, in fact, the only
-Cambridge man who could, with any show of fairness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>justice at all, be elected. He was also young, and full of
-strength and enthusiasm; if Persian and Arabic lectures
-and Oriental studies could be made useful or attractive at
-the University, he would make them so. What follows
-seems incredible.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘On the other hand, the electing body consisted, as
-stated above, of the Heads of colleges. It is in the nature
-of things that the Heads, who are mostly men advanced in
-years, who have spent all their lives at the University,
-should retain whatever old prejudices, traditions, and ancient
-manner of regarding things, may be still surviving. There
-were—it seems childish to advance this statement seriously,
-and yet I have no doubt it is true and correct—two prejudices
-against which Palmer had then to contend. The
-first was the more serious. It was at that time, even more
-than it is now, the custom at Cambridge to judge the
-abilities of every man entirely with regard to his place in
-one of the two old Triposes; and this without the least
-respect or consideration for any other attainments, or accomplishments,
-or learning. Darwin, for instance, whose name
-does not occur in the Honour list at all, never received from
-his college the slightest mark of respect until his death.
-Long after he had become the greatest scientific man in
-Europe the question would have been asked—I have no
-doubt it was often asked—what degree he took. Palmer’s
-name did occur in the Classical Tripos—but alas! in the
-third class. Was it possible, was it probable, that a third-class
-man could be a person worthy of consideration at
-all? Third-class men are good enough for assistant-masters
-in small schools, for curacies, or for any other branch of
-labour which can be performed without much intellect.
-But a third-class man must never, under any circumstances,
-consider that he has a right to learn anything or to claim
-distinction as a scholar. I put the case strongly; but there
-is no Cambridge man who will deny the fact that, in whatever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>branch of learning distinction be subsequently attained,
-the memory of a second or third class is always prejudicial.
-Palmer, therefore, went before the grave and reverend
-Heads with this undeniable third class against a whole sheaf
-of proofs, testimonials, letters, opinions, statements, and
-assertions of attainments extraordinary, and, in some respects,
-unrivalled. To be sure they were only letters from Orientals
-and Oriental scholars. What could they avail against the
-opinion of the Classical Examiners of 1867 that Palmer was
-only worth a third class?</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘As I said above, it seems childish. But it is true.
-And this was the first prejudice.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘The second prejudice was perhaps his youth. He was,
-it is true, past thirty, but he had only taken his degree
-three or four years, and therefore he only ought to have
-been five-and-twenty. He looked no more than five-and-twenty;
-he still possessed—he always possessed—the enthusiasm
-of youth; his manners, which could be, when he
-chose, full of dignity even among his intimates, were those
-of a man still in early manhood; he had been talked about
-in connection with his adventures in the East; and stories
-were told, some true and some false, which may have
-alarmed the gravity of the Heads. There must be no
-tincture of Bohemianism about a Professor of the University.
-Perhaps rumours may have been whispered about the gipsies
-and the tinkers, or the mesmerizing, or the conjuring; but
-I think the conjuring had hardly yet begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘In speaking of this election, I beg most emphatically to
-disclaim any comparison between the most eminent and
-illustrious scholar who was elected and the man who was
-rejected. I say that it is always the bounden duty of the
-University to give her prizes to her own children if they
-have proved themselves worthy of them. Not to do so is to
-discourage learning and to drive away students. Now, the
-Professorship of Arabic was vacant; the most brilliant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>Oriental scholar whom the University has produced in this
-century—perhaps in any century—became a candidate for
-it; he was the only Cambridge man who could possibly be
-a candidate; the Heads of Houses passed him by and
-elected a scholar of wide reputation indeed, but not a
-member of the University.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘There were other circumstances which made the election
-more disappointing. It was known, before the election, that
-Dr Wright had been spoken to on the subject; it was also
-known that he would not stand because the stipend of the
-post, only 300<em>l.</em> a year, was not sufficient to induce him to
-give up the British Museum. It seemed, therefore, that the
-result of Palmer’s candidature would be a walk over. But
-the day before the election the Master of Queens’—then
-Dr Phillips, who was himself a Syriac scholar—went round
-to all the electors, and informed them that Dr Wright would
-be put up on the following day. He was put up; he was
-elected; and very shortly afterwards was made a Fellow of
-Queens’ probably in consequence of an understanding with
-Dr Phillips that, in the event of his election to the Professorship,
-an election to a Queens’ Fellowship should follow.
-Of course, one has nothing to say against the Fellowship.
-Probably a Queens’ Fellowship was never more honourably
-and usefully bestowed; but yet the man who ought to have
-obtained the Professorship, the man to whom it belonged,
-was kept out of it. Palmer was the kindest-hearted and
-most forgiving of men, and the last to think or speak evil;
-but this was a deliberate and uncalled-for injustice, an insult
-to his reputation which could never be forgotten. It embittered
-the whole of his future connexion with the University:
-it never was forgotten or forgiven<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96' class='c011'><sup>[96]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>We notice two errors of fact in the above
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>narrative. The election did not take place in
-1871, but in 1870; and secondly, the Professorship
-was then worth only £70 a year. The
-stipend was not raised to £300 until the
-following November. The second of these
-errors is not of much importance; but the first
-is very material, as we shall show presently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We will next give an exact narrative of
-what actually took place. Professor Williams,
-who had held the Arabic chair since 1854,
-died in the Long Vacation of 1870, and on
-October 1 the Vice-Chancellor announced the
-vacancy, and fixed the day of election for
-Friday, October 21. The only candidates who
-presented themselves in the ordinary way were
-Palmer and the Rev. Stanley Leathes, M.A.,
-of Jesus College, a gentleman who had obtained
-the Tyrwhitt Hebrew Scholarship in
-1853. It was thought that his merits were little
-known, and that he would not prove a formidable
-opponent; and Palmer, as Mr Besant
-rightly states, looked upon the Professorship
-as as good as won. However, on the day
-before, or the day but one before, the election,
-the President of Queens’ College left a card on
-each of the electors, to say that Dr Wright
-would be voted for. One of these cards was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>given to Palmer, we do not know by whom.
-He showed it to a friend, who asked, ‘What
-does it mean?’ ‘It means that it is all up with
-me,’ was Palmer’s reply; and events proved
-that he was right in his forebodings. When
-the electors met, the Masters of Trinity Hall
-and Emmanuel were not present, and the
-Master of Gonville and Caius declined to vote.
-The remaining fourteen voted in the following
-way:—for Dr Wright, eight; for Mr Palmer,
-five; for Mr Leathes, one. Dr Wright, therefore,
-was declared to be elected.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It will be seen from what is here stated—and
-the accuracy of our facts is, we know,
-beyond question—that it was not the Heads
-of Houses in their collective capacity who
-rejected Palmer, but less than half of them.
-Again, we submit that there is no evidence
-that those who voted against him were actuated
-by either of the prejudices which Mr Besant
-imputes to them. A high place in a tripos is
-no longer regarded at Cambridge as indispensable,
-unless the candidate be trying for a
-post the duties of which are in direct relation
-to the tripos in which he has sought distinction.
-Four years afterwards, the resident members of
-the Senate chose as Woodwardian Professor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>of Geology a gentleman who had taken an
-ordinary degree, in opposition to one who had
-been placed thirteenth in the first class of the
-mathematical tripos, on the ground that they
-believed him to be a better geologist than his
-opponent. It will be said they were not the
-Heads of Colleges; but we would remark that,
-even in the election we are discussing, the case
-against them breaks down on this point; for the
-successful candidate was not even a member of
-the University, and surely an indifferent degree
-is better than no degree at all. As to the
-second prejudice against Palmer, we simply
-dismiss it with contempt. We never heard of
-a Cambridge elector who was influenced by
-hearsay evidence; and, as a matter of fact,
-Palmer was supported by the Master of his
-own College, who must have known more
-about his habits than all the other Heads put
-together. If we consider the result arrived at
-by the light of subsequent events, it is natural
-for those who, like his biographer and ourselves,
-are strongly prepossessed in Palmer’s favour,
-to regret that he was unsuccessful; and we are
-delighted to find Mr Besant asserting, as he
-does, that University distinctions ought to be
-given, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>ceteris paribus</em></span>, to University men. But
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>if we try to put ourselves in the position of the
-electors, and survey the two candidates as they
-surveyed them, there is, we feel bound to assert,
-ample justification for the selection they made,
-having regard to the particular post to be filled
-at that time. They had, in fact, to choose between
-a tried and an untried man. Dr Wright
-was known to have received a regular education
-in Oriental languages in Germany and in
-Holland, and to be thought highly of by the
-most competent judges in those countries. He
-had given proof of sound scholarship in various
-publications, and it was considered by several
-scholars in the University that the studies to
-which he had given special attention, viz.—Syriac,
-Samaritan, Ethiopic, and the Semitic
-group of languages generally—would be specially
-useful there. He had held a Professorship
-in Trinity College, Dublin, where he had been
-distinguished as a teacher; he was personally
-known in Cambridge, not merely to Dr Phillips,
-but to the University at large, at whose hands
-he had received the honorary degree of Doctor
-of Law in 1868. Moreover, he was already an
-honorary Fellow of Queens’ College, and therefore
-it was not strange that a Society which had
-already gone so far should signify to him their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>intention of proceeding a step further, in the
-event of his consenting to come and reside at
-Cambridge as a Professor. He was accordingly
-elected Fellow January 5, 1871<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' class='c011'><sup>[97]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Palmer, on the other hand, had submitted
-to the electors testimonials which testified to
-his wonderful knowledge of Hindustani, Persian,
-and Arabic as spoken languages; he was
-known to have given special attention to the
-languages of India; he had catalogued the
-Oriental MSS. in the Libraries of the University,
-of King’s College, and of Trinity
-College; he had translated Moore’s <cite>Paradise
-and the Peri</cite> into Arabic verse; and he had
-published a short treatise on the Sufistic and
-Unitarian Theosophy of the Persians. But
-here the direct evidence of his acquirements
-ceased; and it is at this point that the date
-of the election becomes material. None of
-his more important works had as yet appeared.
-The official Report of his journeys in the East
-was not published until January 1871; and
-the preface to his <cite>Desert of the Exodus</cite> is</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>dated June of the same year<a id='r98' /><a href='#f98' class='c011'><sup>[98]</sup></a>. The Heads,
-therefore, could not know that he ‘had relied
-on his knowledge of the language for safety
-in a dangerous expedition.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After a disappointment so severe as the
-loss of the much-coveted professorship, it might
-have been expected that Palmer’s connexion
-with Cambridge would soon have been severed;
-that he would have sought and obtained a
-lucrative appointment elsewhere. On the contrary,
-it was written in the book of fate, as one
-of his favourite Orientals would have said, that
-he should not only remain at Cambridge, but
-remain there in connexion with Oriental studies.
-Cambridge has two chairs of Arabic: a Professorship
-founded by Sir Thomas Adams in
-1632; and a Readership, founded by King
-George I. in 1724, at the instance of Lancelot
-Blackburn, Bishop of Exeter and Lord Almoner.
-It is endowed with an income of £50
-a year, paid out of the Almonry bounty, but
-reduced by fees to £40. 10<em>s.</em> If, however,
-the income be small the duties are none—or,
-rather, none are attached to the office as such;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>and moreover the Reader is technically regarded
-as a Professor, and has a Professor’s
-privilege of retaining a College Fellowship for
-life as a married man. The previous holder
-of the office, the Rev. Theodore Preston,
-Fellow of Trinity College, had regarded it
-as a sinecure, and moreover had generally
-been non-resident. On his resignation in 1871,
-the Lord Almoner for the time being, the
-Hon. and Rev. Gerald Wellesley, Dean of
-Windsor, gave the office to Palmer. At last,
-therefore, he seemed to have obtained his
-reward—congenial occupation in a place which
-had been the first to find him out and help him,
-where he had many devoted friends, and where
-he was now enabled to establish himself as
-a married man; for on the very day after he
-received his appointment he married a lady to
-whom he had been engaged for some years.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Palmer took a very different view of his
-duties as Reader in Arabic from what his
-predecessor had done. He delivered his
-inaugural lecture on Monday, 4 March, 1872,
-choosing for his subject ‘The National Religion
-of Persia; an Outline Sketch of Comparative
-Theology<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' class='c011'><sup>[99]</sup></a>,’ and during the Easter and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>Michaelmas terms he lectured on six days in
-each week, devoting three days to Persian
-and three to Arabic. To these subjects there
-was subsequently added a course in Hindustani.
-In consequence of this large amount of voluntary
-work the Council of the Senate recommended
-(February 24, 1873)<a id='r100' /><a href='#f100' class='c011'><sup>[100]</sup></a> ‘that a sum of
-£250 per annum should be paid to the present
-Lord Almoner’s Reader out of the University
-Chest,’ and that he should be authorized to
-receive a fee of £2. 2<em>s.</em> in each term for each
-course of lectures from every student attending
-them, provided he declared in writing his readiness
-to acquiesce in certain regulations, of
-which the first was: ‘That it shall be his
-ordinary duty to reside within the precincts
-of the University for eighteen weeks during
-term time in every academical year, and to
-give three courses of lectures—viz. one course
-in Arabic, one in Persian, and one in Hindustani.’
-The Senate accepted this proposal
-March 6, 1873, and Palmer signed the new
-regulations five days afterwards. In recording
-this transaction Mr Besant remarks: ‘It must
-be acknowledged that the University got full
-value for their money.’ We reply to this sneer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>that the University asked no more from Palmer
-than it asked from every other professor whose
-salary was augmented. The clause imposing
-residence had been accepted in the same form
-by all the other professors; and one course of
-lectures in each term is surely the very least
-that a teaching body can require from one of
-its staff. It must also be remembered that
-the Lord Almoner’s Readership is an office to
-which the University does not appoint, which
-therefore it cannot control, and which, until
-Palmer held it, had been practically useless.
-He, however, being disposed to reside, and
-to discharge his self-imposed duties vigorously,
-the University came forward with an offer
-which was meant to be generous, in recognition
-of his personal merits; for the whole arrangement,
-it will be observed, had reference to the
-<em>present</em> Reader only—that is, to himself. The
-precise amount offered, £250, was evidently
-selected with the intention of placing the Lord
-Almoner’s Reader on the same footing as a
-professor, for the salaries of nearly all the
-professorial body had been already raised to
-£300; and, if a comparison between the
-Reader and the Professor of Arabic be inevitable,
-it may be remarked that while the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>University offered £250 to the former, they
-offered only £230 to the latter. The intention,
-we repeat, was generous, and we protest
-with some indignation against Palmer’s bitter
-words: ‘The very worst use a man can make
-of himself is to stay up at Cambridge and
-work for the University.’ The truth is that
-University life did not suit him, and though
-he tried hard for ten years to believe that
-it did, the attempt ended in failure, and
-it is much to be regretted that it was ever
-made.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We must pass rapidly over the next ten
-years. They were years of incessant labour,
-labour which must have been often most painful
-and irksome, for it had to be undertaken
-in the midst of heavy sorrow, ill-health, pecuniary
-difficulties—everything, in short, which
-damps a man’s energies and takes the heart
-out of his work. His married life began
-brightly enough: he had an assured income
-of nearly £600 a year, which he could increase
-at pleasure, and we know did increase, by
-literary work. In 1871 he entered at the
-Middle Temple, probably with the intention
-of practising at the Indian bar at some future
-time; but after he had given up all thoughts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>of India he joined the Eastern Circuit, and
-attended assizes and quarter sessions regularly.
-He had a fair amount of business, and is
-said to have made a good advocate, though
-he could have had little knowledge of law,
-and, in fact, regarded his legal work as a
-relaxation from severer studies. These he
-pursued without intermission. Besides his lectures,
-which he gave regularly, he produced
-work after work with amazing rapidity. In
-1871, in addition to the <cite>Desert of the Exodus</cite>,
-he published a <cite>History of Jerusalem</cite>, written
-in collaboration with his friend Mr Besant;
-in 1873 he undertook to write an Arabic
-Grammar, which appeared in the following
-year; in 1874 he wrote <cite>Outlines of Scripture
-Geography</cite>, and a <cite>History of the Jewish Nation</cite>,
-for the Christian Knowledge Society, and
-began a Persian Dictionary, of which the first
-part was published in 1876; in 1876—77 he
-edited the works of the Arabian poet Beda ed
-din Zoheir for the Syndics of the University
-Press, the text appearing in 1876 and the
-translation in 1877; and during the next few
-years he was at work upon a <cite>Life of Haroun
-Alraschid</cite>, a new translation of the Koran, and
-a revision of Henry Martyn’s translation of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>New Testament into Persian. Besides this
-vast amount of solid work it would be easy
-to show that he produced nearly as great a
-quantity of that other literature which, when
-we consider the labour which it entails upon
-him who writes it, it is surely a misnomer to
-call ‘light.’ Professor Nicholls, of Oxford,
-gives an account, in a most interesting appendix
-to Mr Besant’s book, of the quantity of Persian,
-Arabic, and Hindustani which Palmer was
-continually writing. In the last-mentioned language
-there were a poem on the marriage
-of the Duke of Edinburgh, and a wonderful
-account of the visit of the Shah to England,
-which occupied thirty-six columns of the <cite>Akhbar</cite>,
-a space equivalent to about twenty columns
-of the <cite>Times</cite>; and, although Palmer admitted
-that ‘the writing of such things is a laborious
-and artificial task to me, as I am not as familiar
-with the Urdú of everyday life as I am with
-the Persian,’ he still went on writing them.
-How familiar he was with Arabic and Persian
-is shown by the curious fact that whenever he
-was under strong emotion he would plunge
-abruptly into one or other language, sometimes
-writing a whole letter in it, sometimes only a
-sentence or two, or a few verses. Besides
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>these Oriental ‘trifles’ as he would probably
-have called them, we find continual contributions
-to English periodical literature, and three
-volumes of poetry: <cite>English Gipsy Songs in
-Romany</cite> (1875); the <cite>Song of the Reed, and
-other Pieces</cite> (1876); and <cite>Lyrical Songs</cite>, &amp;c.
-by John Ludwig Runeberg (1878). In the
-first of these he collaborated with Mr Leland,
-whom we mentioned before, and Miss Janet
-Tuckey; and in the last with Mr Magnusson;
-but the second is entirely his own. We regret
-that we cannot find room for a specimen of
-these graceful verses. Those who have leisure
-to look into the <cite>Song of the Reed</cite>, or the translation
-of Zoheir, will find themselves introduced
-to a new literature by one who, if not a poet,
-was unquestionably, as Mr Besant says, a
-versifier of a high order, and in the very front
-rank of translators.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have said that most of this work—were
-it grave or gay, it mattered not—had to
-be got through in the midst of serious anxieties.
-Mrs Palmer’s health began to fail before they
-had been married long, and it soon became
-evident that her lungs were affected. It was
-necessary that she should leave Cambridge.
-In the spring of 1876, Wales was tried, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>results which were so reassuring that it was
-decided to complete her cure (as it was then
-believed) by a winter in Paris. There, however,
-she got worse instead of better, and
-early in the following year her husband began
-to realize that she would die. In the autumn
-of 1877, they returned home to try Wales
-once more, and then, as a last resource, Bournemouth.
-There, in the summer of 1878, Mrs
-Palmer died. The expenses of so long an
-illness, added to journeyings to and fro, and
-the cost of keeping up two establishments (for
-he was obliged to continue his Cambridge
-lectures all the while), crippled his resources,
-and produced embarrassments from which he
-never became wholly free. His own health,
-too, never strong, gave way under his fatigues
-and worries, and he became only not quite
-so ill as his wife. Yet he never complained;
-never said a word about his troubles to any
-of his friends. Those who were most with
-him at this dreary time have recorded that
-he always met them with a smiling face, and
-went about his work as calmly as if he had
-been well and happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was fortunate for him that he had a
-singularly joyous nature, which could never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>be saddened for long together. He was always
-surrounded by a pleasant atmosphere of cheerfulness,
-which not only did good to those about
-him, but had a salutary effect upon himself,
-enabling him to maintain his elasticity and
-vigour, even in the face of sorrow and ill-health.
-Most things have their comic side, if only men
-are not blind to it; and he could see the
-humorous aspect of the most melancholy or
-the most perilous situation. To the last he
-was full of life and fun. Though he no longer,
-as of old, wrote burlesques, he could draw
-clever caricatures of his friends and acquaintances;
-tell stories which convulsed his hearers
-with laughter; and sing comic songs—especially
-a certain Arab ditty, in which he turned
-himself into an Arab minstrel with really
-wonderful power of impersonation. Again,
-whatever he came across—especially in great
-cities like London or Paris—was full of interest
-for him. Without being a philanthropist, or,
-indeed, having a spark of humanitarian sentiment
-in his nature, he took a pleasure in
-investigating his fellow-creatures, talking to
-men and finding out all about them. He was
-endowed in the highest degree with the gift
-of sympathy; and this, while it made him the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>most loveable of friends, made him also a
-singularly acute investigator, and gave him
-a power of influencing others which was truly
-wonderful. He possessed, too, great manual
-dexterity, and took a pleasure in finding out
-how all those things were done which depend
-for their success upon sleight of hand; and
-in all such he became a proficient himself. He
-was a first-rate conjuror, and besides doing
-the tricks, ordinary and extraordinary, of professed
-conjurors, he took much satisfaction in
-reproducing the most startling phenomena of
-spiritualism, which he regarded as a debased
-form of conjuring—‘a swindle of the most
-palpable and clumsy kind.’ It was in such
-pursuits that he found the recreation which
-other men find in hard exercise. Of this he
-took very little. Even in his younger days
-he did not care for games, and his one attempt
-at cricket was nearly fatal to the wicket-keeper,
-whom he managed to hit on the head with his
-bat; but he was an expert gymnast, and loved
-boating and fishing in the Fens, to which he
-used to retire from time to time with one of
-his friends. It may be doubted whether he
-cared about the sport and the fresh air so
-much as the absolute repose; the old-world
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>character of that curious corner of England;
-the total absence of convention. There he
-could dress as he pleased; and he took full
-advantage of his liberty. It is recorded that
-once, as he was coming home to College, he
-happened to meet the Master, Dr Bateson,
-who, casting his eye over the water-boots and
-flannels, stained with mud and weather, in
-which the learned Professor had encased himself,
-remarked, ‘This is Eastern costume,
-I suppose.’ ‘No, Master; Eastern Counties
-costume,’ was the reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is pleasant to be able to record that
-the happiness which had been so long delayed
-came at last. In about a year after his wife’s
-death he married again. His choice was fortunate,
-and for the last three years of his life
-he was able to enjoy that greatest of all
-luxuries—a thoroughly happy home. He stood
-sorely in need of such consolation, for in other
-directions he had plenty to distress and worry
-him. His pecuniary difficulties pressed upon
-him as hardly as ever, and his relations with
-the University began to be somewhat strained.
-He had had the mortification of seeing Professor
-Wright’s salary raised to £500 a year,
-with no hint of any corresponding proposition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>being made for him<a id='r101' /><a href='#f101' class='c011'><sup>[101]</sup></a>; and when the Commissioners
-promulgated their scheme his office
-was not included in it, a suggestion for raising
-his salary which had been made by the Board
-of Oriental Studies being wholly disregarded
-by them. Moreover, the undertaking to deliver
-three courses of lectures in each year turned
-out to be infinitely more laborious than he had
-expected. Candidates for the Indian Civil
-Service increased in number; and the pupils
-of any given term were pretty sure to want
-to go on with their work in the next, when
-he was teaching a different language, so that
-he was compelled in practice to give, not one,
-but two, or even three, courses in each term.
-Moreover, the elementary nature of much of
-this instruction—the ‘teaching boys the Persian
-alphabet,’ as he called it—became every year
-more and more irksome. We are not surprised
-that he got disgusted with the University;
-but at the same time we cannot agree with
-Mr Besant that the University was wholly
-to blame. They were in no wise responsible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>for the conduct of the Commissioners; in fact,
-all that could be done to make them take a
-different view was done. Had Palmer resided
-continuously in the University, and pressed
-his own claims, things might have been very
-different. But this he had been unable to do,
-for reasons which, as we have seen, were
-beyond his own control, and for which, therefore,
-he is not to be blamed; but the fact
-cannot be denied that for some years he had
-been practically non-resident. There was also
-another cause which has to be taken into
-consideration—his own disposition. The life
-of a University is a peculiar life, which does
-not suit everybody, and certainly did not suit
-him. He felt ‘cabined, cribbed, confined,’ in
-it; and he said afterwards that ‘he never
-really began to live till he was emancipated
-from academic trammels.’ Our wonder is, not
-that he left Cambridge when he did, but that
-he remained so long connected with it. The
-final break took place in 1881, when he voluntarily
-rescinded the engagement which he had
-made to lecture, and, retaining the Readership
-and the Fellowship at S. John’s College—neither
-of which he could afford to resign—took
-up his abode in London, where he obtained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>a place on the staff of the <cite>Standard</cite>
-newspaper. He readily adapted himself to
-this new life, and soon became a successful
-writer. One of the assistant-editors at that
-time, Mr Robert Wilson, has recorded that</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Palmer considered his career as a journalist in London,
-short as it was, one of the pleasantest episodes of his life.
-Those who were associated with him in that career professionally
-can say that they reckoned his companionship
-one of the brightest and happiest of their experiences. He
-was</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The dearest friend to me, the kindest man,</div>
- <div class='line'>The best-conditioned and unwearied spirit</div>
- <div class='line'>In doing courtesies;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>and what he was to me he was to all who worked with him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It will be well, before we relate the heroic
-achievement with which the career of our friend
-closed, to try to estimate his position as an
-Oriental scholar, for as such he will be remembered,
-especially in Cambridge. For this
-purpose Mr Besant has, most judiciously, supplied
-ample materials to those competent to
-use them, by printing an essay by Professor
-Nicholls, of Oxford, which we have already
-quoted, and a paper by Mr Stanley Lane
-Poole. The former points out Palmer’s extraordinary
-facility in the use of Persian and
-Arabic, and gives a minute, and in the main
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>highly laudatory, criticism of some of his performances,
-which ends with these words: ‘In
-him England loses her <em>greatest</em> Oriental linguist,
-and <em>readiest</em> Oriental scholar.’ From
-the latter we will quote a few sentences:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Palmer was a scholar of the kind that is born, not
-made. No amount of mere teaching could develop that
-wonderful instinct for language which he possessed. He
-stood in strongly-marked contrast to the other scholars of
-his time. Most of them were brought up on grammars
-and dictionaries; he learned Arabic by the ear and mouth.
-Others were careful about their conjugations and syntax;
-Palmer dashed to the root of all grammatical rules, and
-spoke or wrote so and so because it would not be spoken or
-written any other way. To him strange idioms that a book-student
-could not understand were perfectly clear; he had
-used them himself in the Desert again and again<a id='r102' /><a href='#f102' class='c011'><sup>[102]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He then proceeds to examine Palmer’s principal
-Arabic works, and decides that while the
-edition of Zoheir is the most finished of them,
-and the translation represents the original with
-remarkable skill, the version of the Koran ‘is
-a very striking performance.’</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It has the grave fault of immaturity; it was written, or
-rather dictated, at great speed, and is consequently defaced
-by some oversights which Palmer was incapable of committing
-if he had taken more time over the work. But, in
-spite of all the objections that may be urged against it, his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>translation has the true Desert ring in it; we may quarrel
-with certain renderings, puzzle over occasional obscurities,
-regret certain signs of haste or carelessness; but we shall be
-forced to admit that the translator has carried us among the
-Bedawí tents, and breathed into us the strong air of the
-Desert, till we fancy we can hear the rich voice of the Blessed
-Prophet himself as he spoke to the pilgrims on Akabah<a id='r103' /><a href='#f103' class='c011'><sup>[103]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lastly, Mr Poole points out the peculiar
-excellence of Palmer’s Arabic Grammar, which
-is arranged on the Arab system, in bold defiance
-of the usual custom of treating Arabic
-in the same way that one treats Latin. To
-these favourable criticisms of works beyond
-our powers of appreciation we should like to
-add a word of praise of our own for the historical
-introduction to the Koran, in which the
-career of Mahomet is sketched in a few bold,
-vigorous lines, and the scope and object of the
-work are analysed and explained. We regret
-that Palmer was not able to devote more time
-to history; the above <cite>Introduction</cite>, and the
-<cite>Life of Haroun Alraschid</cite>, seem to us to show
-that he would have excelled in that style of
-composition. He could read the native authorities
-with facility, and he knew how to put his
-materials to a good use. But alas! all these
-peaceful studies were to be closed for ever by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>an enterprise as masterly in its execution as it
-was terrible in its conclusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The suppression of Arabi’s revolt in Egypt
-created the greatest enthusiasm in this country.
-The British Public dearly loves a war, and
-every event in which our troops were concerned
-was eagerly read and proudly commented on
-by enthusiastic sympathizers. But there were
-probably not many who so much as read
-the scanty paragraphs which noted, first, the
-anxiety respecting the fate of some Englishmen
-who had gone into the Desert on a certain
-day in August 1882; and, subsequently, the
-certainty of their murder. Palmer’s wonderful
-achievement has been told for the first time
-by Mr Besant with a fulness of detail, a vividness
-of descriptive power, and, we may add,
-a bitterness of grief, that only those who read
-it carefully more than once can appreciate as
-such a piece of work deserves to be appreciated.
-We shall try to set before our readers the
-principal circumstances of those eventful days,
-treading in his steps, and often using his very
-words.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Early in the month of June 1882, when
-it became evident that the Egyptian revolt
-must be put down by force, two great causes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>of anxiety arose: (1) the safety of the Suez
-Canal; (2) the amount of support which Arabi
-was likely to receive, and the allies on whom
-he could depend. These two questions were of
-course closely connected with each other; and
-it is now known that as regards the second of
-them, Arabi hoped to obtain the support of the
-Arabs of the Desert on both sides of the Canal,
-and by their aid to seize, and, if possible, to
-destroy, the Canal itself. These Arabs, it is
-important to recollect, rise or remain quiet at
-the command of their sheikhs. The sheikhs,
-therefore, had to be won over. This he hoped
-to accomplish by the assistance of the governors
-of the frontier castles of El Arish on the
-Mediterranean, Kulat Nakhl, Suez, Akabah,
-and Tor on the west coast of the Sinaitic
-Peninsula, all of whom, at the beginning of
-the rebellion, were his frantic partisans. He
-had therefore an easy means of access to the
-Bedouin sheikhs. The number of men whom
-they could put into the field was estimated by
-Palmer himself at about 50,000; but this was
-not all. It was feared that if a single tribe
-joined Arabi, it would be followed by all the
-others, and that the Bedouin of the Syrian and
-Sinaitic deserts might presently be joined by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>their kinsfolk of Arabia and the Great Desert,
-a countless multitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was on the evening of Saturday, June 24,
-that Captain Gill, whose unhappy fate it was
-to perish with Palmer on the expedition which
-they planned together, was sent to him from
-the Admiralty, to ask him for information
-respecting ‘the character, the power, the possible
-movement, of the Sinai Arabs.’ The
-interview was short, but long enough for
-Palmer to sketch the position of affairs, and
-to convince Gill that a man whom the Government
-could thoroughly trust must be sent out
-to arrange matters personally with the sheikhs.
-When Gill had left, Palmer said to his wife,
-‘They must have a man to go to the Desert
-for them; and they will ask me, because there
-is nobody else who can go.’ On Monday
-Captain Gill came again, and the whole question
-was carefully talked over.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It was agreed that no time ought to be lost in detaching
-the tribes from Arabi, in preventing any injury to the Canal,
-and in quieting fanaticism, which might assume such proportions
-as to set the whole East aflame. It now became
-perfectly evident to Gill that Palmer was the only man
-who knew the sheikhs, and could be asked to go, and could
-do the work; it was also perfectly evident to Palmer that
-he would be urged to undertake this difficult and delicate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>mission; he had, in fact, already laid himself open by speaking
-of the ease with which these people may be managed by
-one who can talk with them. When Gill left him on that
-Monday morning he was already more than half-persuaded
-to accept the mission.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It is evident that after this interview Captain
-Gill returned to the Admiralty, and gave a
-glowing account to his superiors of the man
-whom he had discovered, and the information
-he had obtained; for in the course of the same
-afternoon Palmer received an invitation to
-breakfast with Lord Northbrook on the following
-morning, Tuesday, June 27, which he
-accepted. The interest which he had already
-excited is proved by the fact</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘that all the notes and reports which Gill had made during
-the interviews on the subject were already set up in type
-and laid on the table. The whole conversation at breakfast
-was concerning the tribes, and how they might be prevented
-from giving trouble. Palmer stated again his belief that the
-sheikhs might, if some one could be got to go, be persuaded
-to sit down and do nothing, if not to take an active part
-against the rebels.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At this point it is material to notice that
-the Government did not send for Palmer and
-ask him to undertake a certain mission to the
-East; neither did Palmer communicate with
-the Government and volunteer, in the ordinary
-sense of that word; but that in the course of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>three successive interviews it became evident
-to the Government that the mission must be
-undertaken by somebody; and to Palmer, that
-if he did not go himself the chance would be
-lost. No one equally fit for such a mission was
-available at that moment; no one knew the
-sheikhs personally as he did, and could travel
-among them as an old friend, for it must always
-be remembered that the country he was about
-to visit was the same which he had traversed
-with Drake in 1869-70. He did not exactly
-wish to go; he was too fondly devoted to
-his wife and children to find any pleasure in
-courting dangers of which he was fully sensible;
-but he seems to have felt that his duty to his
-country demanded the sacrifice; and perhaps
-the thought may have crossed his mind that,
-if he ran the risk and came out of it safe and
-successful, his fortune would be made; and
-therefore, when Lord Northbrook inquired,
-‘Do you know anyone who would go?’ he
-replied, ‘I will go myself.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This decision was not arrived at until
-Thursday, June 29. On the following evening
-he left London, and on Tuesday, July 4, he
-was on board the <cite>Tanjore</cite>, between Brindisi
-and Alexandria, writing to his wife:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>‘I am sure this trip will do me an immense deal of
-good, for I wanted a change of air and complete rest from
-writing, and now I have got both. Of course, the position
-is not without its anxieties, but I have no fear.... It is
-such a chance!’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Such a chance! It was worth while running
-the risk, for, though there was danger in it,
-there was fame and fortune beyond the danger:
-there would be no more debt and difficulty; no
-more days and nights of uncongenial toil. No
-wonder as he sat under the awning, ‘like a
-tent,’ as he said, and did nothing, that these
-thoughts came into his mind, and found their
-way on to his paper—it was a chance indeed!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It seems certain that the plan of the enterprise
-had been laid down before Palmer left
-London, though no formal instructions were
-given to him in writing. It was understood
-between him and the Government that he
-was to travel about in the Desert and Peninsula
-of Sinai, and ascertain the disposition of the
-tribes; secondly, that he was to attempt the
-detachment of the said tribes from the Egyptian
-cause, in order to effect which he was to make
-terms with the sheikhs; thirdly, that he was
-to take whatever steps he thought best for an
-effective guard of the banks of the Canal, and
-for the repair of the Canal, in case Arabi should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>attempt its destruction. Lastly, he was instructed,
-probably at Alexandria, to ascertain
-what number of camels could be purchased, and
-at what price.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Arrived at Alexandria, Palmer put himself
-under the orders of Admiral Lord Alcester,
-then Sir Beauchamp Seymour, who, after a few
-words of welcome and encouragement, ordered
-him to go at once to the Desert and begin
-work. It was decided that he should proceed
-by steamer to Jaffa, thence to Gaza, and across
-the Desert to Tor in the Sinaitic Peninsula,
-where he could be taken up and join the fleet
-at Suez. On the morning of July 9 he reached
-Jaffa, where he bought his camp-equipage and
-stores, hired a servant, and opened communications
-with certain Arabs of the Desert, whom
-he ordered to meet him at Gaza. We know
-the details of this time from a long letter which
-he wrote to his wife just before he left Jaffa.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It is bad enough here where I find plenty of people to
-talk to and be civil to me; but how will it be when I am
-in the Desert with no one but wild Arabs to talk to?
-Not that I am a bit afraid of them, for they were always
-good friends to me; but it will be lonely, and you may be
-sure that when I sit on my camel in the burning sun, or lie
-down in my little tent at night, my thoughts will always be
-with you and our dear happy home. I am quite sure of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>succeeding in my mission, and don’t feel anything to fear
-except the being away for a few months.... I feel very
-homesick, but quite confident.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He got to Gaza on July 13, and on July
-15 plunged into the Desert. Here Professor
-Palmer disappears, and we have instead a
-Syrian officer, dressed in Mohammedan costume,
-known as the Sheikh Abdullah, the
-name which had been given to him by the
-Arabs on his former journey. The expedition
-occupied just a fortnight, for Suez was reached
-on August 1. He was fortunately able to
-keep a brief journal, which he sent home by
-post from Suez. This invaluable document,
-with two or three letters written to friends,
-and a formal Report addressed from Suez to
-the Government, but not yet printed, enables
-us to ascertain what he did, and what sufferings
-and dangers he endured in the accomplishment
-of it. It was the middle of the summer,
-and apparently an unusually hot and stormy
-summer, for we read of even the natives being
-overcome by the heat, wind, and dust. His
-business admitted of no delay; whether well
-or ill, he must ride forward, in the full glare
-of the sun, with the thermometer ‘at 110 in
-the shade in the mountains, and in the plains
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>about twice that’; and yet never show, by
-the slightest hint, that he was either overcome
-by the physical exertion, or alarmed at the imminent
-peril which he ran at every moment.
-So well was the bodily frame sustained by the
-brave heart within, that he could write cheerfully,
-nay humorously, even before he had
-reached a place of safety. Here is an extract
-from one of his letters, dated ‘Magharah, in
-the Desert of the Tih, July 22’:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘This country is not exactly what you would call, in a
-truthful spirit, safe just now. I have had to dodge troops
-and Arabs, and Lord knows what, and am thankful and
-somewhat surprised at the possession of a whole skin....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘I wish to remark that about the fifth consecutive hour
-(noon) of the fifth consecutive day’s camel-ride, with a
-strong hot wind blowing the sand in your face, camel-riding
-loses, as an amusement, the freshness of one’s childhood’s
-experience at the Zoo....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘I am now two days from Suez, and before the third sun
-sets shall be either within reach of beer and baths, or be
-able to dispense altogether with those luxuries for the future.
-The very equally balanced probabilities lend a certain zest
-to the journey....</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘My man stole some melons from a patch near some
-water (if I may use the expression), and I feel better for the
-crime. Still I am dried up, and burnt, and thirsty, and
-bored.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Let us now extract from the Journal a few
-passages bearing directly on the main object of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>the journey. All of these, we ought to state
-are fully corroborated by the subsequently
-written Report, and by incidental allusions in
-the telegrams embodied in the Blue Book.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘<em>July 15.</em>—My sheikh has just come, and I have had
-a long and very satisfactory talk with him. I think the
-authorities will be very pleased with the report I shall have
-for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 16.</em>—I now know where to find and how to get at
-every sheikh in the Desert, and I have already got the
-Teyáhah, the most warlike and strongest of them all, ready
-to do anything for me. When I come back I shall be able
-to raise 40,000 men! It was very lucky that I knew such
-an influential tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 18.</em>—I have been quite well to-day, but as usual
-came in very fatigued. I had an exciting time, having met
-the great sheikh of the Arabs hereabouts<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104' class='c011'><sup>[104]</sup></a>. I, however,
-quite got him to accept my views.... It was really a most
-picturesque sight to see the sheikh ride into my camp at full
-gallop with a host of retainers, all riding splendid camels as
-hard as they could run; when they pulled up, all the camels
-dropped on their knees, and the men jumped off and came
-up to me. I had heard of their coming, so was prepared,
-and not at all startled, as they meant me to be. I merely
-rose quietly, and asked the sheikh into my tent.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 19.</em>—I have got hold of some of the very men
-whom Arabi Pasha has been trying to get over to his side,
-and when they are wanted I can have every Bedawin at my
-call from Suez to Gaza.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 20.</em>—The sheikh, who is the brother of Suleiman,
-is one who engages all the Arabs not to attack the caravan of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>pilgrims which goes to Mecca every year from Egypt, so
-that he is the <em>very man</em> I wanted. He has sworn by the
-most solemn Arab oath that, if I want him, he will guarantee
-the safety of the Canal even against Arabi Pasha.... In fact,
-I have already done the most difficult part of my task, and
-as soon as I get precise instructions the thing is done, and
-a thing which Arabi Pasha failed to do, and on which the
-safety of the road to India depends.... Was I not lucky
-just to get hold of the right people?... I have seen a great
-many other sheikhs, and I know that they will follow my
-man, Sheikh Muslih.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 21.</em>—I am anxious to get to Suez, because I have
-done all I wanted by way of preliminaries, and as soon as I
-get precise instructions, I can settle with the Arabs in a
-fortnight or three weeks, and get the whole thing over. As
-it is, the Bedouins keep quite quiet, and will not join Arabi,
-but will wait for me to give them the word what to do.
-They look upon Abdullah Effendi—that is what they call
-me—as a very grand personage indeed!</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 22.</em>—I have got the man who supplies the pilgrims
-with camels on my side too, and as I have promised my big
-Sheikh 500<em>l.</em> for himself, he will do anything for me.... It
-may seem a vain thing to say, but I did not know that I
-could be so cool and calm in the midst of danger as I am,
-and I must be strong, as I have endured <em>tremendous fatigue</em>,
-and am in first-rate health. I am very glad that the war
-has actually come to a crisis, because now I shall really
-have to do my big task, and <em>I am certain of success</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘<em>July 26.</em>—I have had a great ceremony to-day, eating
-bread and salt with the Sheikhs, in token of protecting each
-other to the death<a id='r105' /><a href='#f105' class='c011'><sup>[105]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This Journal, it will be remarked, speaks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>of the expedition as preliminary to something
-else. What this was is explained by the Report
-above alluded to, and by the telegrams which
-Sir William Hewett and Sir Beauchamp Seymour
-sent to the Admiralty after Palmer’s
-arrival at Suez. On August 4 Sir William
-Hewett telegraphs:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Professor Palmer confident that in four days he will
-have 500 camels, and within ten or fifteen days, 5,000 more.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘He waits return of messenger sent for 500, so he
-cannot start for Desert before Monday.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On August 6 Sir Beauchamp Seymour
-telegraphed to the Admiralty:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Palmer, in letter of August 1 at Suez, writes that, if
-precisely instructed as to services required of Bedouin, and
-furnished with funds, he believes he could buy the allegiance
-of 50,000 at a cost of from 20,000<em>l.</em> to 30,000<em>l.</em>’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the receipt of this telegram the Admiralty
-telegraphed to Sir William Hewett:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Instruct Palmer to keep Bedouins available for patrol
-or transport on Canal. A reasonable amount may be spent,
-but larger engagements are not to be entered into until
-General arrives and has been consulted.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The Admiralty must have been satisfied with
-what Palmer had accomplished in the Desert,
-or they would not have directed him to proceed
-with his ‘big task’; and it came out afterwards
-that in consequence of promises made to him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>one at least of the tribes refused to join Arabi.
-Meanwhile he was appointed Interpreter-in-Chief
-to her Majesty’s Forces in Egypt, and
-placed on the Admiral’s staff. It is important
-to note this, as it gave him the command of
-money, brought him into prominence, and
-paved the way for the disaster which was so
-soon to overtake him. Captain Gill joined him
-at Suez on the morning of the same day,
-August 6. He brought £20,000 with him,
-which he considered to be paid to Palmer, as
-appears from his Journal, and Palmer took the
-same view. Sir William Hewett, however,
-after the receipt of Lord Northbrook’s telegram,
-determined to limit the preliminary
-expenditure to £3,000, which was paid to
-Palmer on August 8. Soon after Gill’s arrival
-at Suez, he and Palmer had a long discussion,
-in which they agreed to combine their respective
-duties. Gill had been ordered to cut the
-telegraph wires from Kartarah to Constantinople,
-and so destroy Arabi’s communications
-with Turkey, and Palmer had made arrangements
-for a meeting of the sheikhs at Nakhl.
-We have seen that the Journal mentions presents
-to the sheikhs (as much as £500 had
-been promised to Misleh), and these would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>have to be conveyed to them before they
-were likely to arm their followers. The rest of
-the £20,000 was intended to be spent in
-fair payment for services rendered when the
-General should give the order to engage the
-Bedouin; and the word ‘buy,’ in Sir Beauchamp
-Seymour’s telegram of August 6, need not
-be interpreted to mean ‘bribe.’ The purchase
-of camels was another object which Palmer
-had before him in going to the Desert; but
-this, we take it, was quite subsidiary to the
-former, though perhaps, as a matter of policy,
-it was occasionally made prominent, in order
-to disarm suspicion. That much more important
-business than buying camels was intended
-is also proved by a letter from Palmer to
-Admiral Hewett, in which he said that ‘it would
-be most desirable that an officer of her Majesty’s
-Navy should accompany me on my journey to
-the Desert, as a guarantee that I am acting on
-the part of her Majesty’s Government<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' class='c011'><sup>[106]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must now be mentioned that on Palmer’s
-first journey, when staying in the camp of
-Sheikh Misleh, he had been introduced by him
-to a man of about seventy years of age, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>commanding stature, and haughty, peremptory
-manner, named Meter ibn Sofieh. This man
-Misleh had represented to be the Sheikh of the
-Lehewat tribe, occupying all the country east
-of Suez. This was not true. Meter was not
-a sheikh of the Lehewats, and the Lehewats
-as a tribe do not live east of Suez, but on
-the south border of Palestine. Meter was a
-Lehewat, but he was simply the head of a
-family who had left the tribe, and taken up
-their abode near Suez, where they had collected
-together two or three other families, who called
-themselves the Sofieh Tribe, but had no power
-or influence. Palmer, however, believed Meter’s
-story about himself, called him his friend, and
-trusted him implicitly. It was Meter whom
-he sent into Suez from Misleh’s camp to fetch
-his letters; Meter who conducted him thence
-to the place called ‘The Wells of Moses’
-between July 27 and July 31; Meter with
-whom he corresponded respecting his second
-journey; and there is little doubt that it was
-Meter who betrayed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Report which Palmer addressed to
-the Admiralty on August 1 he stated that when
-he started on his second journey a company of
-300 or 400 Bedouin should go with him, ‘for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>the sake of effect.’ Most unfortunately, this
-precaution was not taken. On August 7,
-Meter, accompanied by his nephew, Salameh
-ibn Ayed, came to Moses’ Wells, and asked
-Mr Zahr, one of the native Christians who
-reside there, to read a letter which he had
-received from Palmer. The letter, signed
-‘Abdullah,’ contained a request that Meter
-would bring down one hundred camels and
-twenty armed men. Meter then crossed over
-to Suez by water, Mr Zahr’s son going with
-him, saw Palmer, who did not, so far as we
-know, express surprise that he came without
-men or camels, and in the evening was presented
-to Consul West and Admiral Hewett,
-from whom he received a naval officer’s sword,
-as a mark of confidence and respect. This
-sword Meter subsequently gave secretly to
-Mr Zahr’s son to take care of for him, saying
-that he was going to the Desert with some
-English gentlemen, and was afraid that the
-Bedouin might kill him if they saw him with a
-sword, as they were not quiet at that time. After
-the murder, Mr Zahr’s son brought the sword
-to the English Consul, and told the above story.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following day was spent in making
-preparations for the journey. During the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>afternoon, Palmer received a package containing
-three bags, each containing £1,000
-in English sovereigns. These bags were taken
-intact into the Desert. The party, consisting
-of Professor Palmer, Captain Gill, Lieutenant
-Charrington, of the <cite>Euryalus</cite> (who had been
-selected by Palmer out of seven officers who
-volunteered to go with him), Gill’s dragoman,
-a native Christian, and the servant whom
-Palmer had engaged at Jaffa, a Jew, named
-Bokhor, crossed over to Moses’ Wells in a boat
-after sunset, and passed the night in a tent
-supplied by Mr Zahr. Next morning they
-started soon after sunrise, and, after the usual
-midday halt, pitched their camp for the night
-in Wady Kahalin, a shallow watercourse, about
-half-a-mile wide, and distant eighteen miles
-from Moses’ Wells. So far their proceedings
-can be followed with certainty; but after this
-it becomes a most difficult task to compose an
-exact narrative of what befell them. We have
-followed the account drawn up by Colonel
-Warren, through whose persevering energy
-some of the murderers were brought to justice,
-supplementing it, in a few places, by facts
-stated in the Blue Book, generally on the
-same authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>On Thursday, August 10, the travellers
-were unable to start at dawn as they had
-intended, because it was found that two of
-their camels had been stolen during the night,
-probably with the intention of delaying the
-start, and so giving time to warn the Bedouin
-appointed to waylay them. Several hours
-elapsed before the camels were found, and
-they were not able to start until 3 p.m. Meter
-is said to have suggested that the baggage
-should be left to follow slowly (both the stolen
-camels and those which had been sent out to
-bring them back being tired), and that the
-three Englishmen and the dragoman should
-ride forward with him, taking with them only
-their most valuable effects, among which was
-a black leather bag containing the £3,000, and
-Palmers despatch-box containing £235 more.
-At about 5 p.m. they reached the mouth of
-the Wady Sudr. This valley is described as
-a narrow mountain-gorge, bounded by precipices
-which, on the northern side, are from 1,200 to
-1,600 feet in height; on the southern side they
-are much lower, not exceeding 300 or 400 feet.
-They turned into the Wady, and rode up it,
-intending no doubt not to halt again until they
-reached Meter’s camp, at a place called Tusset
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>Sudr. Shortly before midnight they were
-suddenly attacked by a party of about twenty-five
-Bedouin, who fired upon them, disabled
-one of the camels, and took prisoners Palmer,
-Gill, Charrington, and the dragoman. The
-accounts of the attack are very conflicting, but
-it appears certain that Meter deserted his charge
-at once, and escaped up the Wady to his own
-camp, which he reached at sunrise; while his
-nephew, Salameh ibn Ayed, who had been
-riding with Palmer on one of his uncle’s camels,
-rode rapidly off in the opposite direction, down
-the Wady, taking with him the bag containing
-the £3000, and the despatch-box. It has
-been affirmed that he struck Palmer off the
-camel; but, as it is stated in evidence that the
-attacked party knelt down behind their camels
-and fired at their assailants, the truth of this
-rumour may be doubted. It is certain, however,
-that had he not been at least a thief, if not a
-traitor, he would have warned the men in
-charge of the baggage of what had occurred,
-for it was proved afterwards, by the tracks of
-his camel, that he had passed within a few feet
-of them; or, if he really missed them in the
-dark, that he would have gone straight on to
-Moses’ Wells and given the alarm there, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>even to Suez, as it was deposed he was desired
-to do. As it was, he rode straight on to the
-mouth of the Wady, and thence by a circuitous
-route to Meter’s camp, having hid part of the
-money and the despatch-box in the Desert.
-What he did with the remainder will probably
-never be known.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Meanwhile the four prisoners were stripped
-of everything except their underclothing, which,
-being of European make, was useless to Arabs,
-and taken down to a hollow among the rocks
-about 200 yards from the place of attack.
-Here they were left in charge of two of the
-robbers. The rest, disappointed at finding no
-money, rode off, some to pursue Salameh, some
-to look for the baggage. They were presently
-followed by one of the two guards, so that for
-several hours the Englishmen were left with
-only one man to watch them. The drivers
-were just loading their camels for a start, when
-they were attacked, disarmed, and the baggage
-taken from them. Palmer’s servant was made
-prisoner, but the camel-drivers were not molested,
-and were even permitted to take their
-camels away with them. The robbers then
-retraced their steps, and rode up the valley for
-about three miles. There they halted, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>laid out the spoil, with the view of dividing it;
-but they could not agree, and finally each kept
-what he had taken. This matter settled, they
-mounted their camels again, and went to look
-after their prisoners, taking Palmer’s servant
-with them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We will now return to Meter ibn Sofieh.
-On arriving at his own camp he collected his
-four sons and several other Bedouin, and came
-down to the place of attack. This they were
-able to recognize by the dead or wounded
-camel, which had not then been removed.
-Finding nobody there, they shouted, and were
-answered by the prisoners in the hollow.
-Meter and another went down to them and
-found them unguarded, their guard having run
-away on the approach of strangers. Had
-Meter really come to save them—and it is
-difficult to explain his return from any other
-motive than that of a late repentance—there
-was not a moment to be lost. Much valuable
-time, however, was wasted in useless
-expressions of pity and exchange of Bedouin
-courtesies, and they had hardly reached Meter’s
-camels before the hostile party came in sight.
-It is reported that Meter’s men said, ‘Let
-us protect the Englishmen,’ and raised their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>guns; but that Meter answered, ‘No, we must
-negotiate the matter,’ and allowed his men to
-be surrounded by a superior force. What
-happened next will never be known with certainty.
-Meter himself swore that he offered
-£30 for each of the five; others, that he
-offered thirty camels for the party; while there
-is a general testimony that Palmer offered all
-they possessed if their lives could be spared,
-adding, ‘Meter has all the money.’ The debate
-did not last long, not more than half an
-hour, and then Meter retired, it being understood
-that the five<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107' class='c011'><sup>[107]</sup></a> prisoners were all to be put
-to death. The manner of the execution of this
-foul design had next to be determined, and
-it seems to have been regarded as a matter
-requiring much nicety of arrangement. The
-captors belonged to two tribes, the Debour and
-the Terebin, and it was finally arranged that
-two should be killed by the Debour, and three
-by the Terebin. The men who were to strike
-the blow were next selected, one for each
-victim; and when this had been done the
-prisoners were driven before their captors for
-upwards of a mile, over rough ground, to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>place of execution. It was now near the
-middle of the day, and the unfortunate men
-had no means of protecting their heads from
-the August sun. It is to be hoped, therefore,
-that they were nearly unconscious before the
-spot was reached. At that part of the Wady
-Sudr a ledge or plateau of rock, some twenty
-feet wide, runs for a considerable distance along
-the steep face of the cliffs; and below it the
-torrent cuts its way through a narrow channel,
-not more than eighteen feet wide, with precipitous
-sides, about fifty feet high. At the
-spot selected for the murder a mountain stream,
-descending from the heights above, works its
-way down the cliffs to the water below. The
-bed of this stream was then dry; but it would
-be a cataract in the rainy season, and might be
-trusted to obliterate all traces of the crime.
-The prisoners were forced down the mountain
-side until the plateau was reached, and then
-placed in a row facing the torrent, the selected
-murderer standing behind each victim. Some
-of the Bedouin swore that they were all shot
-at a given signal, and that their bodies fell
-over the cliff; others that Abdullah was shot
-first, and that the remaining four, seeing him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>fall, sprang forward, some down the cliff, some
-along the edge of the gully. Three were
-killed, so they said, before they reached the
-bottom; the fourth was despatched in the
-torrent-bed by an Arab who followed him
-down. There is, however, reason for believing
-that some at least were wounded or killed
-before they were thrown into the abyss; for
-the rocks above were deeply stained with blood.
-It may be that one or more of them had
-been wounded in the first encounter, or intentionally
-maimed by their captors; and this
-may explain what seems to us so strange,
-that they made no effort to escape during the
-long hours they were left unguarded. At the
-moment of death Palmer alone is said to have
-lifted up his voice, and to have uttered a
-solemn malediction on his murderers. He
-knew the Arab character well, and he may
-have thought that the last chance of escape
-was to terrify his captors by the thought of
-what would come to pass if murderous hands
-were laid upon him and his companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Justice was not slow to overtake the criminals.
-In less than two months Colonel Warren,
-to whom the direction of the search-expedition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>was entrusted<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108' class='c011'><sup>[108]</sup></a>, had discovered who they were,
-and had found some scattered remains of their
-unfortunate victims in the gulf which they
-hoped would conceal them for ever. In January
-1883 he read the solemn burial service of
-the Church at the spot in the presence of the
-brother and sister of Lieutenant Charrington;
-after which, according to military custom, the
-officers present fired three volleys across the
-torrent. On the hill above they raised a
-huge cairn, 17 feet in diameter, and 13 feet
-in height, surmounted by a cross, which the
-Bedouin were charged, at their peril, to preserve
-intact. Of the actual murderers three
-were executed, as also were two headmen for
-having incited them to the crime. Others
-were imprisoned for various terms of years,
-and the Governor of Nakhl, who was proved
-to have been privy to the murder, and near the
-place at the time, was imprisoned for a year
-and dismissed the service. The end of Meter
-ibn Sofieh was strangely retributive. He had
-led the party out of their way into an ambuscade<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' class='c011'><sup>[109]</sup></a>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>probably for the paltry gain of £3000,
-for we have seem that his nephew escaped with
-the gold, and £1000 was afterwards found in
-the place where he knew it was hid; he had
-betrayed the man with whom he had solemnly
-eaten bread and salt in Misleh’s camp only a
-month before; he hid himself in the Desert for
-awhile, then he gave himself up, and told as
-much of the story as he probably dared to tell;
-then he fell ill—his manner had been strange
-ever since the murder, it was said—he was
-taken to the hospital at Suez, and there he
-died. These, however, were only instruments
-in the hands of others. The influence which
-Sheikh Abdullah was exercising in the Desert
-was soon known at Cairo, and the Governor of
-El Arish was sent out to bring him in dead
-or alive; the Bedouin swore that Arabi had
-promised £20 for every Christian head; the
-murder itself was planned at Cairo, by men
-high in place, for Colonel Warren complains
-over and over again that the Shedides thwarted
-his proceedings, and let guilty men escape.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>And after the guilt of Egypt comes the guilt of
-Turkey: Hussein Effendi, a Turkish notable
-at Gaza—a man who might have been of the
-greatest service—was not allowed by the Porte
-to help in bringing the guilty to justice; and
-there were other indications that further inquiry
-was not desired. The murder in the
-Wady Sudr is one more count in the long
-indictment against the Turk which the Western
-Powers will one day be compelled to hear;
-and, after hearing, to pronounce sentence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The remains discovered by Colonel Warren
-were reverently gathered together and sent
-home to England, and in April, 1883, they
-were interred in the crypt of S. Paul’s Cathedral.
-A single tablet, placed near the grave,
-records the names of the three Englishmen
-and their faithful attendants who died for their
-country in the Wady Sudr, and now find a
-fitting resting-place among those whose deeds
-have won for them a world-wide reputation.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Not once or twice in our rough island-story</div>
- <div class='line'>The path of duty was the way to glory.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>FRANCIS MAITLAND BALFOUR.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>On Sunday evening last the news reached
-Cambridge that Professor Balfour had met with
-a fatal accident in the Alps near Courmayeur<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' class='c011'><sup>[110]</sup></a>.
-It was only in November of last year that we
-drew attention to the extraordinary merits of
-his <cite>Treatise on Comparative Embryology</cite>, then
-just completed<a id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c011'><sup>[111]</sup></a>. We felt that a ‘bright particular
-star’ had risen on the scientific horizon;
-and we expected, from what we knew of the
-great abilities and unremitting energy of the
-author, that year by year his reputation would
-be increased by fresh discoveries. But</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Cut is the branch that might have grown full straight,</div>
- <div class='line'>And burned is Apollo’s laurel bough;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>the pride which the University took in one of
-her most popular and distinguished members is
-changed to an outburst of passionate regret;
-and all that his friends can do is to attempt a
-brief record of a singularly brilliant career, a
-tribute of affection to be laid upon his grave.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr Balfour was a younger son of the late
-Mr J. M. Balfour of Whittinghame, near
-Prestonkirk, and of the late Lady Blanche
-Balfour, a sister of Lord Salisbury. He entered
-at Trinity College, Cambridge, from Harrow,
-in October 1870. He brought from school the
-reputation of being a clever boy, whom the
-masters liked and respected, but of not sufficient
-ability to distinguish himself remarkably at
-Cambridge. Those who expressed this opinion
-overlooked the fact that he had already evinced
-a decided bent for Natural Science, and had
-published a brief memoir on the geology of his
-native county, Haddingtonshire. In his very
-first term he was fortunately induced to attend
-the biological lectures of the Trinity Prælector
-in Physiology, Mr Michael Foster; he made
-rapid progress, and at Easter 1871 he obtained
-the Natural Science Scholarship at Trinity
-College. He at once commenced original
-research in the direction in which he was afterwards
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>to be so distinguished; and after two
-years’ work published a paper on <cite>The Development
-of the Chick</cite> in the <cite>Microscopical Journal</cite>
-for July, 1873. Indeed, we believe that the
-time spent on this and kindred investigations
-diminished somewhat the brilliancy of his degree,
-for he was placed second instead of first,
-as had been expected, in the Natural Sciences
-Tripos of 1873.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In November of that year he was nominated
-by the Board of Natural Science Studies to
-work at the Zoological Station at Naples, then
-lately established by Dr Anton Dohrn. His
-object in going there was to continue his
-investigations on Development, and before
-starting he had determined to study the
-Elasmobranch Fishes (Sharks and Rays), as
-it seemed likely, from their pristine characters,
-that their development would throw great light
-on the early history of vertebrate animals.
-The result showed how wisely he had made his
-selection. He made discoveries of the highest
-value in reference to the development of certain
-organs, and the origin of the nerves from the
-spinal cord—points which had baffled the
-most acute previous observers. These were
-not merely valuable for the history of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>special group from which they were derived,
-but threw a flood of light upon the connexion
-between vertebrates and invertebrates, and
-their derivation from a common ancestry;
-views which he expanded afterwards in his
-work on Embryology. The results of his
-Neapolitan researches were embodied in the
-dissertation upon which he rested his candidature
-for a Fellowship at Trinity College;
-and were afterwards printed in the <cite>Philosophical
-Transactions</cite> for 1875. Fortunately for him, a
-Natural Science Fellowship was vacant in 1874,
-to which he was elected, in consequence of the
-value of this dissertation. It is what is called
-an open secret that its great merits were at
-once recognized by Professor Huxley, to whom
-it had been referred.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From that time forward Balfour devoted
-himself unremittingly to continuous research in
-preparation for his systematic treatise on Embryology,
-the plan of which he had already
-sketched out, and which was finally completed
-and published in 1881. Before this appeared,
-however, he had published numerous papers of
-great value, covering nearly the whole range of
-his subject. Many of these will be found in
-the <cite>Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science</cite>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>of which he was one of the editors. As an
-original investigator he had no equal. He
-was skilful in manipulation, and observed
-rapidly and exactly, so that no point escaped
-his notice. His mind was calm and wholly
-free from prejudice, with a singularly broad
-and original grasp, which enabled him to seize,
-with readiness and sureness, the principle
-which lay under a number of apparently discordant
-facts. At the same time, like every
-true genius, he was singularly modest and
-retiring, always ready to depreciate the value
-of his own work, and to put forward that of
-others, especially of men younger than himself.
-We know of many students, now rising to
-distinction, who owe their first success to his
-generous encouragement, and, we may add, in
-some cases to his bountiful assistance, given
-with a delicacy which doubled the value of the
-gift. It was this strong desire to encourage
-others to work at Natural Science that induced
-him, in 1875, to undertake a class in Animal
-Morphology, or, as it used to be called, Comparative
-Anatomy. At first only a few students
-presented themselves, and one small room at
-the New Museums was sufficient for their
-accommodation. The class, however, grew
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>with surprising rapidity; and, after Mr Balfour’s
-appointment as Natural Science Lecturer to
-Trinity College, it became necessary to build
-new rooms for his use. During the year 1881
-the numbers had reached an average of nearly
-sixty in each term; and just before he left
-England for the excursion which has ended so
-fatally he had superintended the plans for a yet
-further extension of the Museum Buildings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His reputation as a successful teacher soon
-became known far and wide; students came
-from a distance to work under his direction;
-and he received tempting offers to go elsewhere.
-It need no longer be a secret that,
-after the death of Professor Wyville Thompson,
-the Chair of Natural History at Edinburgh was
-offered to him; or that, after the death of Professor
-Rolleston, he was strongly urged by the
-leading men in Natural Science at Oxford to
-accept the Linacre Professorship of Anatomy
-and Physiology. But he was devoted to Cambridge,
-and nothing would induce him to leave
-it. His refusal of posts so honourable induced
-the University, somewhat tardily perhaps, to
-recognize his merits, and a new Professorship
-was established in the course of last term for
-that especial purpose. We extract a few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>sentences from the Report in which the
-Council of the Senate recommended this step<a id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c011'><sup>[112]</sup></a>:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>The successful and rapid development of biological
-teaching in Cambridge, so honourable to the reputation
-of the University, has been formally brought to the notice
-of the Council. It appears that the classes are now so large
-that the accommodation provided but a few years ago has
-already become insufficient, and that plans for extending it
-are now occupying the attention of the Museums and
-Lecture-Rooms Syndicate.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>It is well known that one branch of this teaching, viz.
-that of Animal Morphology, has been created in Cambridge
-by the efforts of Mr F. M. Balfour, and that it has grown to
-its present importance through his ability as a teacher and
-his scientific reputation.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>The service to the interests of Natural Science thus
-rendered by Mr Balfour having been so far generously
-given without any adequate Academical recognition, the
-benefit of its continuance is at present entirely unsecured
-to the University, and the progress of the department under
-his direction remains liable to sudden check.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>It has been urgently represented to the Council that the
-welfare of biological studies at Cambridge demands that
-Mr Balfour’s department should be placed on a recognized
-and less precarious footing, and in this view the Council
-concur. They are of opinion that all the requirements of
-the case will be best met by the immediate establishment of
-a ‘Professorship of Animal Morphology’ terminable with
-the tenure of the first Professor.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It is a melancholy satisfaction, when we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>think how short his life was—for he would not
-have been thirty-one years of age until November
-next—that so many honours had been
-showered upon him. He became a Fellow of
-the Royal Society in 1878; in the autumn of
-1881 he received the Royal Medal; and in
-1882 he was elected a member of the Council.
-He was President of the Cambridge Philosophical
-Society, and became General Secretary
-of the British Association at the York Meeting
-in August 1881.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it is not merely as a man of science
-that Mr Balfour will be remembered. He was
-not one of those enthusiasts who can see nothing
-beyond the limits of their own particular
-studies. He was a man of wide sympathies
-and interests. He devoted much time and
-attention to College and University affairs;
-and was an active member of numerous Syndicates,
-to whose special business he applied
-himself with infinite energy. He was also a
-keen politician on the Liberal side, and an
-ardent University reformer. His complete
-mastery of facts, his retentive memory, and his
-admirable powers of reasoning, made him a
-formidable antagonist in argument; but, though
-he rarely let an opportunity for vindicating his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>own opinions go by without taking full advantage
-of it, we never heard that he either
-lost a friend or made an enemy. He was so
-thoroughly a man “who bore without abuse
-the grand old name of gentleman,” that he
-could never be a mere disputant. He approached
-every subject with the earnestness of
-sincere conviction, and he invariably gave his
-opponents credit for a sincerity equal to his
-own. It was only when he found himself
-opposed to presumption, shallowness, or ignorance,
-that the natural playfulness of his
-manner ceased, his mild and delicate features
-darkened to an unwonted sternness, and his
-habitually gentle voice grew cold and severe.
-We have heard it said that he was too uniformly
-earnest, that he took life too seriously, and that
-he lacked the saving grace of humour. But
-his earnestness was perfectly genuine, and he
-would have joined hands with the Philistines in
-scorning the follies of the “intense.” With
-the undergraduates he was immensely popular.
-Besides his great success as a teacher, he had
-the inestimable gift of sympathy; they felt that
-they had in him a friend who thoroughly understood
-them, and they trusted him implicitly;
-while the members of his own special class
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>regarded him with a veneration which it has
-been the lot of few teachers to inspire. Nor
-was his influence upon men older than himself
-less remarkable. They were fascinated by his
-exquisite courtesy; his quiet, high-bred dignity;
-his respect for the opinions and feelings of
-others. No one of late years has exerted so
-strong a personal influence in the University.
-It was the vigour of this personality which
-enabled Natural Science to take the place it
-now occupies in Cambridge life. He began to
-teach at a time when the rising popularity of
-science was regarded with dislike and suspicion
-by not a few persons. He left it accepted as
-one of the studies of the place. What will
-happen now that he has been taken away it is
-hard to foresee. We hope and believe that
-Natural Science is too deeply rooted at Cambridge
-to be permanently affected by even his
-loss. We trust that the strong efforts which
-will be made to keep together the school which
-he had created may be successful; but we fear
-that it will soon be evident that the members
-of the University have lost not merely a very
-dear friend, but also a master.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='small'><em>29 July, 1882.</em></span></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>HENRY BRADSHAW.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The past twelve months have been singularly
-fatal to Cambridge; but no loss has
-caused grief so widespread and so sincere as
-that of the distinguished scholar and man of
-letters who passed quietly away while sitting
-at his library-table on the night of last Wednesday
-week<a id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c011'><sup>[113]</sup></a>. If proof were needed of the
-respect in which he was held, we have only
-to point to the vast assemblage of past and
-present members of the University which filled
-the chapel of King’s College on Monday last
-to do honour to his funeral. Nor will the
-grief be confined to Cambridge. Though Mr
-Bradshaw rarely quitted his own University,
-and took no trouble to bring himself into notice,
-few men were more highly appreciated, both at
-home and abroad. It is hardly necessary to
-observe that this recognition of his merits was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>of no sudden growth. We can recall the time
-when he was working silently and unknown,
-and when even a small circle of devoted friends
-had not realised the extent and thoroughness
-of those studies which he carefully kept in the
-background. But gradually the world of letters
-became aware that there were many points in
-bibliography and kindred subjects which could
-not be set on a right footing unless the inquirer
-were willing to pay a visit to him. No one
-who did so had any cause to regret his journey.
-He was certain to be received with a courtesy
-which, we regret to say, is nowadays commonly
-called old-fashioned, and to find himself before
-he left far richer than when he came. Mr Bradshaw
-was the most unselfish of men; and the
-stores of his knowledge were invariably laid
-open, freely and ungrudgingly, to every inquirer,
-provided he was satisfied that the work proposed
-would be thoroughly well done. He
-was modest to a fault; and we believe that
-he really preferred to remain in the background,
-while others, at his suggestion and with his
-help, worked out the subjects in which he took
-special interest. It was no fault of theirs if
-his share in their work remained a secret.
-His generous wish to help others forward made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>him refuse more than once, as we well know,
-to allow his name to appear in connexion with
-work that he had really done; and posterity
-will have to tax its ingenuity to discover, from
-a few words in a preface or a line in a note,
-how much belongs of right to him. Nor was
-it only in subjects with which he was specially
-familiar that his help was valuable. He seemed
-equally at home in all branches of knowledge.
-He knew so thoroughly how materials should
-be used, and in what form the results would
-be best presented, that, whether the subject
-were art, or archeology, or history, or bibliography,
-or early English texts, his clear and
-accurate judgment went straight to the point,
-and reduced the most tangled facts to order.
-But, devoted student as he was, he was no
-bookworm. He took the liveliest interest in
-all that was going on around him. His strong
-common sense, his kind, charitable nature, and
-his habit of going to the bottom of every
-question presented to him, enabled him to
-sympathize with those who had arrived at
-conclusions widely different from his own. As
-a younger man he was too reserved, too
-diffident of himself, to feel at ease in the
-society of men of his own standing. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>thought they disliked him, and this idea increased
-his natural sensitiveness and his love
-of retirement. The truth was that he was too
-honest to be popular. Like Alceste in <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Le
-Misanthrope</cite></span>, he would rebuke insincerity and
-pretentiousness with a few blunt stern words
-that made the offender tremble; and, if he
-disliked anybody, as happened sometimes, he
-took no pains to conceal it. Hence he was
-respected, but he was not liked. By slow
-degrees, however, the natural geniality of his
-disposition gained the upper hand, and the
-warm heart which beat under that calm exterior
-was allowed to assert itself. The old severity
-of denunciation, instead of being exercised on
-individuals, was reserved for slovenly work,
-unjust criticism, or unfair treatment. He began
-to go more into society, in which he took a
-keen pleasure, though he would rarely allow
-himself to spend what he called an idle evening.
-At all times he had sought the company
-of young people. At a period when undergraduates
-hardly ventured to speak to men
-older than themselves, his quiet kindness
-attracted them to him, and obtained their
-confidence. In him they were certain of a
-friend whose sympathy never failed them, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>from whom, no matter what trouble or difficulty
-had befallen them, they were sure of advice
-and help. Many a man now successful in life
-may thank him for the influence which, exercised
-at a critical time, determines a career for
-good; and not a few have been enabled by
-his generosity to begin the studies in which
-they are now distinguished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The events of such a life are not numerous.
-Mr Bradshaw was born 2 February, 1831.
-He was educated at Eton College, on the
-foundation, and came up to King’s College,
-Cambridge, in February, 1850. He proceeded
-to the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1854.
-At that time members of King’s College were
-not obliged to submit themselves to University
-examinations, but he and some others availed
-themselves of the permission then accorded to
-them to do so, and he was placed tenth in
-the second class of the Classical Tripos. Soon
-afterwards he accepted a mastership at S.
-Columba’s College, near Dublin, then under
-the direction of his old friend, the late Mr
-George Williams; but finding tuition, after a
-few months’ trial, uncongenial to his tastes,
-he returned to Cambridge, and to those studies
-which ended only with his life. His connexion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>with the University Library began two years
-afterwards. In 1856 he was appointed principal
-assistant, a post which he resigned in
-1858. In 1859 he returned to the Library as
-Keeper of the Manuscripts, an office specially
-created for the purpose of retaining his services,
-the value of which had even then been discovered.
-This office he held until 1867, when,
-on the resignation of Mr J. E. B. Mayor,
-he was elected librarian. From a boy he had
-been distinguished for a love of books; but
-it was not until his return to Cambridge from
-Ireland that he was able to devote himself
-seriously and systematically to the study of
-bibliography in its widest sense, with all that
-is subsidiary to it. Most of us know what a
-dreary subject bibliography is when treated
-from the ordinary point of view. In his hands,
-however, it acquired a human interest. He
-studied specimens of early printing, not for
-themselves, but for the sake of the men who
-produced them. In following out this system
-he went far more thoroughly than an ordinary
-bibliographer cares to do into every particular
-of the book before him. Paper, type, signature,
-tailpiece, were all taken into account, so as to
-settle not only who printed the volume, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>in what relation he stood to his predecessors
-and successors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bradshaw had an unerring eye for detecting
-small differences in style, a memory which
-never failed him, and an instinct of discovery
-little short of marvellous. Again and again
-in well-known libraries, both in England and
-on the Continent, he has been able, after a
-brief examination, to point out important facts
-which scholars who had worked there for the
-best part of their lives had failed to notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the same spirit of discovery he applied
-himself to the study of Chaucer. Silently and
-secretly, as was his wont, he examined all the
-manuscripts within his reach, and then set to
-work to determine (1) what was Chaucer’s
-own work; (2) what is the real order of the
-<cite>Canterbury Tales</cite>. In the course of his researches
-it occurred to him that the rhymes
-used would prove a test of what was Chaucer’s
-and what was not. Without assistance from
-any one he wrote out a complete rhyme-list—an
-astonishing labour for an individual, when
-it is remembered that the <cite>Tales</cite> contain some
-eight thousand lines, every one of which must
-have been registered twice, and many three or
-four times. The labour, however, was not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>thrown away. The rhymes employed turned
-out to be a true test, and Mr Bradshaw was
-enabled to publish in 1867 ‘The Skeleton of
-Chaucer’s <cite>Canterbury Tales</cite>: an attempt to
-distinguish the several Fragments of the Work
-as left by the Author.’ We regret to say that
-this pamphlet of fifty-four octavo pages is all
-that the world is ever likely to see of this
-splendid piece of work. With characteristic
-self-depreciation he says, in a note appended
-in 1871, ‘Mr Furnivall’s labours have put far
-out of date any work that I have ever done
-upon this subject’; but it is gratifying to turn
-to Mr Furnivall, and read, ‘There is only one
-man in the world, I believe, who thoroughly
-understands this subject, Mr Henry Bradshaw.’
-He welcomed Mr Furnivall with habitual
-generosity, and placed in his hands, without
-reserve, all that he had got ready for the edition
-of Chaucer which he at one time intended to
-publish himself. Publication, however, was
-what he could rarely be persuaded to attempt.
-It was not criticism that he feared; but he had
-set up in his own mind such a lofty standard of
-excellence that he could not bear to abandon
-a piece of work while it was yet possible to
-add some trifling detail, or to correct some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>imperfection which his own fastidious taste
-would alone have been able to detect. It is
-sad to think how much has perished with him.
-His excellent memory enabled him to dispense
-with notes to a far greater extent than most
-persons, and those which he did put down were
-written on a system to which we fear it will be
-impossible now to find the key. What he
-actually published amounts to very little.
-When we have mentioned eight short octavo
-pamphlets, which he called ‘Memoranda’; a
-few papers printed by the Cambridge Antiquarian
-Society; some communications to <cite>Notes
-and Queries</cite> and other periodicals; and an
-admirable edition of the new <cite>Statutes for the
-University of Cambridge, and for the Colleges
-within it</cite>, we fear that the list is complete.
-He had made important discoveries respecting
-the old Breton language in connexion with the
-early collection of canons known as the <cite>Hibernensis</cite>,
-and had collected materials for a Breton
-glossary which would have placed him in the
-first rank of philologers; he had worked at
-Irish literature with the special object of elucidating
-the history of early Irish printing; in
-knowledge of ancient service-books he was
-probably second to none, and at the time of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>his death he was writing a preface to the new
-edition of the Sarum Breviary; and, lastly, he
-had made considerable progress towards a
-catalogue of the fifteenth-century books in the
-University Library. On all these subjects
-considerable materials exist; but who is fit
-to take his place and make use of them?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='small'><em>20 February, 1886.</em></span></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>WILLIAM HEPWORTH THOMPSON.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The death of the Master of Trinity College
-has severed almost the last of the links which
-connect the present life of Cambridge with the
-past. From 1828 until his death<a id='r114' /><a href='#f114' class='c011'><sup>[114]</sup></a> in 1886 his
-connexion with his college was unbroken; for
-a brief absence soon after his election to a
-Fellowship, and the periods of canonical residence
-at Ely need hardly be taken into account.
-He was, therefore, up to a certain point, a
-typical Trinity man of the older school; a firm
-believer in the greatness of his college, and in
-the obligation laid upon him personally to increase
-that greatness by every means in his
-power. But he did not admire blindly. He
-could recognize, if he did not welcome, the
-necessity for changes in the old order from
-time to time; and he was known throughout
-the best period of his intellectual life as a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>Liberal and a reformer. He was a rare combination
-of a student without pedantry, and a
-man of the world without foppishness, or want
-of principle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As an undergraduate he was fortunate in
-obtaining the friendship of men who afterwards
-became celebrated in the world of letters, most
-of them members of that famous coterie of
-which Tennyson and Hallam were the most
-notable figures. Indeed it is not impossible
-that the poet may have intended to include
-Thompson himself among those who</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'>“held debate, a band</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Of youthful friends, on mind and art</div>
- <div class='line in4'>And labour, and the changing mart,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the framework of the land.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>In their society he laid the foundation of that
-wide knowledge of literature, that keen interest
-in whatever was going forward, that habit of
-weighing all things in the nicely-adjusted
-balance of thoughtful criticism, which made
-what he wrote so valuable, and what he said
-so delightful. Nor, after he had obtained his
-Fellowship, and was free to do as he liked, was
-he content to become a student and nothing
-more. He was careful to add a knowledge of
-men and manners to what he was learning from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>books. He travelled abroad, and acquired a
-competent knowledge of more than one modern
-language; he was fond of art, and a good judge
-of pictures and sculpture. Nor did he forget
-the friends of his undergraduate days. He
-was a welcome, and we believe a frequent,
-guest at their houses both in town and country,
-where his fine presence, his courteous bearing,
-and his quiet, epigrammatic conversation were
-keenly appreciated. To the influence of these
-social surroundings he owed that absence of
-narrowness which is inseparable from a University
-career, if it be not tempered by influences
-from the outside.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Academic lives usually contain few details
-to arrest the biographer, and his was no exception
-to the rule. His father was a solicitor
-at York, and he was born in that city 27 March,
-1810. He was educated at a private school,
-which he left when thirteen years old, and was
-then placed under the care of a tutor, with whom
-he remained until he came up to Trinity in the
-Michaelmas Term, 1828, as one of the pupils of
-Mr Peacock, afterwards Dean of Ely. To his
-watchful care and sound advice Thomson felt
-himself under deep obligation, and in after-life he
-used to describe him as “the best and wisest of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>tutors.” It had been at first intended that he
-should enter as a sizar; but this decision was
-reversed at the last moment, and he matriculated
-as a pensioner. He obtained a scholarship in
-1830, and one of the Members’ prizes for
-a Latin Essay in 1831. At that time candidates
-for Classical Honours could not present
-themselves for the Classical Tripos until they
-had satisfied the examiners for the Mathematical.
-Thompson must have devoted a considerable
-portion of his time to that subject, for he
-appears in the Tripos of 1832 as tenth Senior
-Optime. In the Classical Tripos of the same
-year he obtained the fourth place, being beaten
-by Lushington, Shilleto, and Dobson, the first
-of whom beat him again in the examination for
-the Chancellor’s medals, of which he won only
-the second. He was elected Fellow of his
-College in 1834. His reputation as a scholar
-marked him out for immediate employment as
-one of the assistant-tutors; but for a time either
-no vacancy presented itself, or men senior
-to himself were appointed. Meanwhile he
-accepted a mastership in a school at Leicester,
-work which, we believe, he did not find congenial.
-In October 1837 he was recalled to
-Cambridge by the offer of an assistant-tutorship.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>In 1844, on the retirement of Mr Heath, he
-became tutor, an office which he held until he
-obtained the Regius Professorship of Greek in
-1853. The other candidates on that occasion
-were Shilleto and Philip Freeman, but the
-electors were all but unanimous in their choice
-of Thompson. In the spring of 1866, on the
-death of Dr Whewell, he was appointed to the
-Mastership of Trinity College.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In attempting to estimate the value of his
-work as a classical teacher, it must be remembered
-that he was the direct heir of the system
-introduced into Trinity College by Hare and
-Thirlwall. We are not aware that he attended
-the lectures of the former, though he may well
-have done so, but we have heard from his own
-lips that he derived great benefit from those
-of the latter, which were as systematic as
-Hare’s had been desultory. Those distinguished
-scholars, while not neglecting an author’s language,
-were careful to direct the attention of
-their pupils to his matter. They did not waste
-time unduly on the theories of this or that
-commentator, though they had carefully digested
-them, but they showed how their author might
-be made to explain himself. In fine, the discovery
-of his thoughts, not the dry elucidation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>of his words, was the object of their teaching.
-Translation, again, received from them a larger
-share of attention than it had done from their
-predecessors. In this particular Thompson
-attained an unrivalled excellence. His translations
-never smelt of the lamp, though it may
-be easily imagined that this perfection had not
-been arrived at without much preliminary study.
-But, when presented to the class, toil was carefully
-kept out of sight. The lecturer stood at
-his desk and read his author into English, with
-neither manuscript nor even notes before him,
-as though the translation was wholly unpremeditated,
-in a style which reflected the original
-with exact fidelity, whatever the subject selected
-might be. He seemed equally at home in a
-dialogue of Plato, a tragedy of Euripides in
-which, like the <cite>Bacchae</cite>, the lyric element predominates,
-or a comedy of Aristophanes. He
-did not labour in vain. The lecture-room was
-crowded with eager listeners; and the happiest
-renderings were passed from mouth to mouth,
-and so made the round of the University. But
-we are glad to think that his fame as a scholar
-rests on a firmer foundation than traditions of
-the lecture-room, however brilliant. The author
-of his choice was Plato, and though ill-health
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>and a too fastidious criticism of his own powers,
-which made him unwilling to let a piece of work
-go out of his hands so long as there was any
-chance of making it better, stood in the way of
-the complete edition, or, at any rate, translation,
-of the author, which he once meditated, yet he
-has left enough good work behind him to command
-the gratitude of future scholars. To this
-study he was doubtless directed, in the first
-instance, by natural predilection; but, if we
-mistake not, he was confirmed in it by the
-scholars above-mentioned, either directly or by
-their suggesting to him the study of Schleiermacher,
-whose writings were first introduced to
-English readers by their influence. That critic’s
-theory—that Plato had a comprehensive and
-precise doctrine to teach, which he deliberately
-concealed under the complicated machinery of
-a series of dialogues, leaving his readers to
-combine and interpret for themselves the dark
-hints and suggestions afforded to them—was
-followed by Thompson with great learning,
-unerring tact, and firm grasp. His editions of
-the <cite>Phaedrus</cite> (1868) and the <cite>Gorgias</cite> (1871)
-are models of what an edition, based on these
-principles, ought to be; and the paper on the
-<cite>Sophistes</cite>, long lost sight of in the <cite>Transactions</cite>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, but
-republished in the <cite>Journal of Philology</cite> (1879),
-is a masterpiece. Nor must we omit an introductory
-lecture on the <cite>Philebus</cite>, written in 1855,
-and published in the same journal (1882), which
-is a piece of literature as well as a piece of
-criticism; or the learned and instructive notes
-to Archer Butler’s <cite>Lectures on the History of
-Ancient Philosophy</cite>, the first edition of which
-appeared in 1855.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thompson discharged the difficult duties of
-a college tutor with admirable patience and
-discretion. Those who knew him imperfectly
-called him cold, hard, and sarcastic; and his
-bearing towards his brother Fellows gave occasionally,
-we must admit, some colour to the
-accusation. But in reality he was an exceedingly
-modest man, diffident of himself, reserved,
-and at first somewhat shy in the society of
-those whom he did not know well. Again,
-it must be recollected that nature had dealt
-out to him a measure of ‘irony, that master-spell,’
-of a quality that a Talleyrand might
-have envied. Hence, especially when slightly
-nervous, he got into a habit of letting his words
-fall into well-turned sarcastic sentences almost
-unconsciously. The most ordinary remark, when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>uttered by him, became an epigram. We maintain,
-however, that he never said an unkind
-word intentionally, or crushed anybody who
-did not richly deserve it. For the noisy advocate
-of crude opinions, or the pretender to
-knowledge which he did not possess, were
-reserved those withering sentences which froze
-the victim into silence, and, being carefully
-treasured up by his friends, and repeated at
-intervals, clung to him like a brand. To his
-own pupils Thompson’s demeanour was the
-reverse of this. At a time when the older
-men of the University—with the exception,
-perhaps, of Professor Sedgwick—were not in
-sympathy with the rising generation, he made
-them feel that they had in him a friend who
-would really stand <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in loco parentis</em></span> to them.
-Somewhat indolent by nature, on their behalf
-he would spare no trouble; but, on the other
-hand, he would allow of no interference. ‘He
-is a pupil of mine, you had better leave him
-to me,’ he would say to the Seniors, when
-an undergraduate on his ‘side’ got into trouble;
-but it may be questioned whether many a
-delinquent would not have preferred public
-exposure to the awful half-hour in his tutor’s
-study by which his rescue was succeeded. Nor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>did his interest in his pupils cease when they
-left college. He was always glad to see them
-or to write to them, and few, we imagine, took
-any important step in life without consulting
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Thompson became Greek Professor,
-a canonry at Ely was still united to the office—an
-expedient for augmenting the salary which,
-we are glad to say, will not trouble future
-Professors. To most men, trained as he had
-been, the new duties thus imposed upon him
-would have been thoroughly distasteful; and
-we are not sure that he ever took a real
-pleasure in his residences at Ely. In fact,
-more than one bitter remark might be quoted
-to prove that he did not. Notwithstanding,
-he made himself extremely popular there, both
-with the Chapter and the citizens, and he soon
-became a good preacher. It is to be regretted
-that only one of his sermons—that on the death
-of Dean Peacock—has been printed; that one
-is in its way a masterpiece.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He became Master rather late in life, when
-the habits of a bachelor student had grown
-upon him; and he lacked the superabundant
-energy of his great predecessor. But notwithstanding,
-the twenty years of his Mastership
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>were years of activity and progress; and he
-took his due share of University and College
-business. He was alive to the necessity for
-reform, and the statutes framed in 1872, as
-well as those which received the royal assent
-in 1882, owed much to his criticism and support.
-It should also be recorded that he was an
-excellent examiner, appreciating good work of
-very different sorts. Gradually, however, as
-his health grew worse, he was compelled to
-give up much that he had been able to do
-when first elected, and to withdraw from society
-almost entirely. Yet he did not become a
-mere lay figure. Even strangers who caught
-a glimpse in chapel of that commanding presence,
-the dignity of which was enhanced by
-singularly handsome features, and silvery hair<a id='r115' /><a href='#f115' class='c011'><sup>[115]</sup></a>,
-were compelled to recognize his power. There
-was an innate royalty in his nature which made
-his Mastership at all times a reality, and he
-contrived, from the seclusion of his study, to
-exert a stronger influence and to maintain a
-truer sympathy with the Society than Whewell,
-with all his activity, had ever succeeded in</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>establishing. His very isolation from the worry
-and bustle of the world gave authority to his
-advice; those who came to seek it felt, as they
-sat by his armchair, that they were listening to
-one who was not influenced by considerations
-of the moment, but who was giving them some
-of the garnered treasures of mature experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='small'><em>9 October, 1886.</em></span></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>COUTTS TROTTER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The Society of Trinity College had long
-been aware of the critical condition of their
-Vice-Master’s health, and his numerous friends
-in the wider circle of the University had shared
-their alarm. And yet, though everybody had
-been expecting the worst for several weeks, the
-news that the end had really come<a id='r116' /><a href='#f116' class='c011'><sup>[116]</sup></a> fell upon
-the University with the stunning force of a
-wholly unexpected event. The full extent of
-the loss can only be measured by time; for the
-moment we can but feel that the University of
-Cambridge misses an influence which pervaded
-and animated every department of her affairs.
-For the last fifteen years no one has been so
-completely identified with what may be termed
-modern Cambridge; no one has been admitted to
-so large a share in her councils, or has devoted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>himself with such unremitting diligence to the
-administration of her complex organization.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr Trotter proceeded to his degree in 1859.
-He was thirty-seventh wrangler, and third in
-the second class of the Classical Tripos. It is
-evident, however, that his acquirements must
-not be measured by his place in these two
-Triposes, for he was soon after elected to a
-Fellowship in his college, where, as is well
-known, the proficiency of candidates is tested
-by a fresh examination. After his election he
-took Holy Orders, and devoted himself for a
-time to active clerical work. For this, however,
-after a fair trial, he found himself unsuited, and,
-resigning his curacy, he returned to college.
-Between the years 1865 and 1869 he spent a
-considerable portion of his time in German
-universities. In 1869 he became Lecturer in
-Natural Science in Trinity College, and in due
-course succeeded to the Tutorship. In 1874
-he was elected a member of the Council of the
-Senate—a position which he occupied, without
-interruption, until his death. In early life he
-had been a staunch Conservative; but, as time
-went on, his views changed, and he became
-not only a Liberal in politics, but an ardent
-University reformer. In the latter capacity he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>threw himself energetically into the movement
-for reform which led to the present University
-and College statutes—to which, in their actual
-shape, he largely contributed. We have said
-that he was a Liberal and a reformer. This
-position placed him, it is almost needless to
-remark, in direct antagonism to many of those
-with whom he was called upon to act; but his
-conciliatory manners, his excellent temper, and
-his perfect straightforwardness, not only disarmed
-opposition, but enabled him to make
-friends even among those who differed from
-him most widely. In fact, what was sometimes
-called in jest ‘the Trotterization of the University’
-was so complete that he had come to
-be regarded as indispensable; and his name
-will be found at one time or another on all the
-more important Boards and Syndicates. But
-it was not merely his knowledge of University
-business and detail that placed him there. He
-was gifted with an intelligence of extraordinary
-quickness. He could grasp the bearings of a
-complicated question swiftly and readily—disentangle
-it, so to speak, from all that was not
-strictly essential to it—and while others were
-still talking about it, doubtful how to act, he
-would commit to paper a draft of a report
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>which was commonly accepted by those present
-as exactly resuming the general sense of the
-meeting. He was in favour of a wide enlargement
-of University studies, especially in the
-scientific direction—a course which was impossible
-without funds; but at the same time no
-man ever loved his college more dearly than he
-did—no man held more closely to the old idea
-of duty to the college as a corporation; and it
-may be added that no Vice-Master ever dispensed
-the hospitality incidental to the office
-with greater geniality.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have dwelt on Mr Trotter’s University
-career at some length; but let it not be supposed
-that he was immersed in the details of University
-business to the exclusion of other subjects.
-Though modest and retiring almost to a fault,
-his interests were wide, and his knowledge
-extensive and accurate. He had no mean
-acquaintance with physical science, on which he
-gave collegiate lectures; he spoke and read
-several modern languages, and was familiar
-with their literature; he took great interest in
-music; he travelled extensively, and had a
-singularly minute knowledge of out-of-the-way
-parts of the Alps, and of the little visited
-country towns of Italy, to which he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>attracted partly by their history, partly by their
-art-treasures. He wrote easily and clearly,
-though he never cared to cultivate a particularly
-elegant style; and as a speaker he was always
-forcible, and sometimes exceedingly happy in
-the utterance of tersely-worded, epigrammatic
-sentences, which resumed much thought in few
-words.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have dwelt of necessity in these brief
-remarks almost exclusively on Mr Trotter’s
-public career. But there was another side to
-his character. He was a generous and warm-hearted
-friend, whose friendship was all the
-more sincere because it was so quiet and
-undemonstrative. Few had the rare privilege
-of his intimacy; but those few will never forget
-that kindly face, that bright smile of welcome,
-that charity which found excuses for everybody—that
-liberality which, while it eschewed
-publicity, was always ready to help the deserving,
-whether it was a cause or an individual.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='small'><em>10 December, 1887.</em></span></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>RICHARD OKES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>The death of Dr Okes, though he had
-reached the mature age of ninety-one, has
-taken the University by surprise<a id='r117' /><a href='#f117' class='c011'><sup>[117]</sup></a>. He had
-become an institution of the place. While
-everything around him changed, and old things
-became new, his venerable figure remained unaltered,
-like a monument of an older faith
-which has survived the attacks of successive
-iconoclasts, to tell the younger generation what
-manner of men the Dons of the past had been.
-He was fond of saying that the first public
-event he could distinctly remember was the
-battle of Trafalgar. He had been a Master at
-Eton when Goodall was Provost and Keate
-Head-master, and he had begun to rule over
-King’s College when the University of Cambridge
-differed as widely from what it is now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>as the Europe of Napoleon from its present
-condition. Still, his load of years sat so lightly
-upon him, his interest in what was going forward
-was still so keen, that there seemed to
-be no reason why he should not complete his
-century of life. The slight infirmities from
-which he suffered did not prevent him, until
-quite lately, from attending service in chapel,
-at least on Sundays; his hearing was but little
-affected; his sight was good; and he could still
-enjoy the society of his friends. Only a few
-days before his death he was reading Miss
-Burney’s <cite>Evelina</cite> to his daughters. When it
-became known on Sunday last that he had
-really passed away, it was hard to believe that
-the sad news could possibly be true.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Richard Okes was born in Cambridge,
-15 December, 1797. His father, Thomas
-Verney Okes, was a surgeon in extensive
-practice. Tradition is silent respecting the
-future Provost’s childhood and early education;
-but, as in those days boys began their
-lives at Eton at a very early age, it is probable
-that when he was little older than a child he
-was sent to fight his battles among the collegers,
-in what even devoted Etonians have
-called ‘a proverb and a reproach’—Long
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>Chamber. In 1816, when he was rather more
-than eighteen, he obtained a scholarship at
-King’s College; but it appears from the
-University records that he did not formally
-matriculate until November in the following
-year. In those days, be it remembered, King’s
-College was a very different place from what
-it is now, both structurally and educationally.
-The magnificent site, on which Henry VI. intended
-to place an equally magnificent college,
-was occupied by no structures of importance
-except the Chapel, and the Fellows’ Building,
-part of a second grand design which, like the
-first, was never completed. The scholars, or
-at all events the greater part of them, were
-packed into Old Court—the small, irregular
-quadrangle west of the University Library, to
-which the founder intended originally to limit
-his college. It must have been a curious
-structure—picturesque and interesting from an
-archeological point of view, but unwholesome
-and uncomfortable as a place of residence.
-The very nicknames given to some of the
-chambers—“the Tolbooth,” “the Block-house,”
-and the like—are a sufficient proof of their
-discomfort. In one of these, on the ground
-floor, facing Clare Hall, young Okes resided;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>and until a few months ago, when the last
-remnant of this part of the old college was absorbed
-by the University Library, the present
-generation could form a fairly correct idea of
-the gloom and damp that their ancestors were
-obliged to put up with. But members of
-Kings College had to endure something far
-worse than physical discomfort. It had been
-the object of their founder to make his college
-independent of the University, and, as a consequence
-of these well-intentioned provisions,
-scholars of King’s were not allowed to compete
-for University honours, but obtained their degrees
-as a matter of course. The result is not
-difficult to conceive. In every society there
-will be some whose love of letters, or whose
-ardour for distinction, is so strong that nothing
-can check it; but, as a rule, the young Etonians
-who were obliged to spend three years in
-Cambridge threw learning to the winds, and
-enjoyed to their hearts’ content the liberty, not
-to say license, of their new surroundings. It
-was a bad state of things; and that Okes felt
-it to be so is proved by the eagerness with
-which he, a strong Conservative, set himself
-to get it abolished as soon as he had the
-power to do so. We do not claim for the late
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>Provost any specially studious habits as a
-young man; he was too genial and too fond
-of society to have ever been a very hard
-reader; but his scholarship in after years
-would not have been as accurate as it certainly
-was had he wasted his time at Cambridge;
-and, as a proof that he aimed at
-distinction, it should be mentioned that he
-obtained Sir William Browne’s prize for Greek
-and Latin Epigrams in 1819 and 1820. To
-the very end of his life he was fond of writing
-Latin verse; and when the Fellows of his
-college congratulated him on his ninetieth
-birthday in Latin and English poems, he replied
-in half-a-dozen Latin lines which many
-a younger scholar could not have turned so
-neatly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He proceeded to his degree in 1821, and
-was in due course elected Fellow of his college.
-Soon afterwards he returned to Eton as an
-Assistant-Master. Mr Gladstone was one of
-the first set of boys who, in Eton phrase, were
-‘up to him’ in school. He filled his difficult
-position with a judicious blending of severity
-and kindliness that made him thoroughly respected
-by everybody, and at the same time
-beloved by those boys who saw enough of him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>to discover that his dignified and slightly
-pompous demeanour concealed a singularly
-warm and sympathetic heart. His house was
-well-conducted and deservedly popular; and
-though in those days masters did not see much
-of their pupils in private, he contrived to turn
-several of his boys into life-long friends. In
-1838 he became Lower Master—an office which
-he held until he returned to Cambridge in 1850.
-While in that influential position he introduced
-at least one reform into the school; he got
-what was called ‘an intermediate examination’
-established, by which the collegers were enabled
-to test their capacities before submitting to the
-final examination which was to determine their
-chances of obtaining a scholarship at King’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In November 1850, the Provostship of
-King’s College having been vacated by the
-death of the Rev. George Thackeray, Dr Okes
-was elected his successor. So anxious was he
-to abolish the anomalous position of King’s-men
-with regard to University degrees that, on his
-way from Eton to Cambridge to be inducted
-into his new dignity, he stayed a few hours in
-London to take counsel with the Bishop of
-Lincoln, as Visitor of the college, on the best
-way of effecting an alteration. The needful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>negotiations were pressed forward without loss
-of time, and on the 1st May, 1851, the college
-informed the University of their willingness to
-abolish the existing state of things. The
-University, as might have been expected, took
-time to consider the matter; and it was not
-until February 18, 1852, that the Senate
-accepted the proposed reform. Meanwhile
-Dr Okes had been elected Vice-Chancellor,
-and, in virtue of that office, had the pleasure
-of signing the report which concluded the
-negotiations. His year of office as Vice-Chancellor
-ended, he took but little part in University
-business. He served on the Council of the
-Senate from 1864 to 1868, and he was occasionally
-a member of Syndicates; but, with these
-exceptions, he devoted himself to the affairs of
-his college.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he returned to the University the
-ancient constitution still subsisted, and it may
-be doubted whether he could ever have brought
-himself into cordial sympathy with the changes
-inaugurated by the statutes which came into
-operation in 1858. The abolition of the old
-<cite>Caput</cite>, and the virtual dethronement of the
-Heads of Colleges, must have seemed to him
-to be changes which savoured of sacrilege.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>Still, when a reform had been once carried
-he accepted it loyally, and never tried by
-underhand devices to thwart its provisions, or
-to diminish its force. He was too straight-forward
-to pretend that he liked change, but he
-was too honest to take away with one hand the
-assent that he gave with the other. In regard
-to his own college he was before all things
-an Etonian, and he clung to the ancient system
-by which King’s was recruited exclusively from
-Eton. But, when it was decided, in 1864,
-to throw the college open, under certain restrictions,
-to all comers, he offered no violent
-resistance to the scheme, though he did not
-like it; and it may be doubted whether he
-ever felt that the newcomers were really King’s-men.
-His sense of duty, as well as his natural
-kindliness, compelled him to accept them; but
-he looked upon them as aliens. This strong
-conservative bias, opposed to the liberal instincts
-of a society which his own reform had
-created, sometimes brought him into collision
-with his Fellows; but such differences were
-not of long duration. He was never morose.
-He never bore a grudge against any one. His
-sense of humour, and his natural gaiety of
-spirits, carried him through difficulties which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>his habitual tone of mind would hardly have
-enabled him to surmount. When his portrait
-was painted by Herkomer, the artist showed
-him as he lived, with a smile on his kind face.
-It was objected that so jocose a countenance
-was at variance with the dignity of his position.
-‘What would the Provost of King’s be without
-his jokes?’ was the reply of a sarcastic contemporary.
-The remark had a deeper meaning
-than its author either imagined or intended.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='small'><em>1 December, 1888.</em></span></p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>HENRY RICHARDS LUARD<a id='r118' /><a href='#f118' class='c011'><sup>[118]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Nearly half a century has elapsed since
-Dr Luard became a member of Trinity College.
-When he came up, the University was a very
-different place from what it is now; the Statutes
-of Elizabeth were still in force; and the only
-study which obtained official recognition was
-that of mathematics. It is true that a Classical
-Tripos existed, but anybody who wished to be
-examined in it was obliged to obtain an honour
-in Mathematics first. The first Commission
-was not appointed until 1850, the year in which
-he proceeded to the degree of Master of Arts.
-Nor were the changes that resulted from their
-labours so sweeping as to alter, to any overt
-and material extent, the character of the University.
-The University of our own time, due
-to more recent legislation, did not come into
-being until he had reached middle life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>These prefatory sentences are necessary to
-explain his character, which has often been
-misunderstood. He passed his youth and many
-years of his manhood in the old University,
-and though he was compelled, intellectually, to
-admit the advantage of many of the changes
-which have taken place in recent years, I doubt
-if he ever cordially accepted them. He was a
-man of the older generation, who had lived
-down into the present, and though he made
-friends in it, and derived many substantial advantages
-from it, he was always casting lingering
-looks behind, and sighing for a past which he
-could not recall. He remembered the time
-when the resident Fellows of his college were
-few in number, when they all lived in college
-rooms, and met every day at the service in
-Chapel or the dinner in Hall, and commonly
-took their daily exercise, a walk or a ride, in
-each other’s company. As his older friends
-passed away, he found a difficulty in making
-new ones; he felt out of his element; he was
-distracted by the multiplicity of tastes and
-studies; and vehemently disapproved of the
-modifications in the collegiate life which the
-new statutes have brought about. Though he
-himself, by a strange irony of fate, was the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>Fellow to take advantage of the power of
-marrying and still retaining the Fellowship,
-he bitterly regretted that such a clause had
-ever become law; and it is hardly too much to
-say that he predicted the ruin of the college
-from such an innovation. And yet he was
-by no means an unreasoning or unreasonable
-Conservative. In many matters he was a
-Reformer; I have even heard him called a
-Radical; but, when his beloved college was
-concerned, the force of early association was
-too strong, and he regarded fundamental change
-as sacrilege.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Luard was fourteenth wrangler in 1847,
-a place much lower than he had been led to
-expect. The cause of his failure is said to
-have been ill-health. His disappointment, however,
-was speedily consoled by a Fellowship,
-a distinction to which he is said to have aspired
-from his earliest years. A friend who sat next
-him when he was a student at King’s College,
-London, remembers his writing down, “Henry
-Richards Luard, Fellow of Trinity College,
-Cambridge,” and asking, “How do you think
-that looks?” But, though he was really a
-first-rate mathematician, his heart was elsewhere.
-He delighted in classical studies, especially
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>Greek, and to the end of his life continued to
-collect early editions, and more, to read Greek
-authors. Not long ago, in the interval between
-two pieces of hard work, I think between
-two volumes of his edition of Matthew Paris,
-I found him reading the <cite>Supplices</cite> of Euripides.
-He complained that it was dull, but he went
-through with it. His acquaintance with Greek
-scholarship was very accurate and remarkable.
-He knew all about the emendations in which
-the scholars of the last century displayed
-their ingenuity; he spoke of Bentley, Porson,
-Gaisford, Elmsley, and the rest, as though they
-had been his personal friends, and he could
-quote from memory, even to the last, many of
-their most brilliant achievements. For Porson
-he had a special cult, and the Life of him
-which he contributed to the <cite>Cambridge Essays</cite>
-(1857) is a model of what such a composition
-should be, as remarkable for good taste and
-temperate criticism, as for erudition. He resented
-any slights on Porson as almost a
-personal affront; and spoke with unmeasured
-denunciation of any edition of a Greek Play,
-or other classical work, in which Porson did
-not seem to be fully appreciated. He had a
-priceless collection of <cite>Porsoniana</cite>, books which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>had belonged to Porson, and had been annotated
-by him, with notices of his life and
-labours, all of which he bequeathed to the
-Library of Trinity College; and he edited
-Porson’s <cite>Correspondence</cite>, and the <cite>Diary of
-Edward Rud</cite>, which throws so much light on
-the history of the college during the stormy
-reign of Dr Bentley. It must be confessed
-that Luard’s affection for these giants of classical
-criticism rather blinded him to the merits
-of their successors in our own time. He had
-a particular dislike for English notes; and I
-had rather not try to remember what I have
-heard him say about English translations
-printed side by side with the original text.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Let it not be supposed, however, that
-Luard confined his attention in literature to
-the classics. He was an insatiable reader of
-books on all subjects, and if the book was a
-new one he was particular that his copy should
-be uncut. He liked to read sitting in his armchair,
-and to cut the leaves as he went along.
-What he began, he considered it a point of
-honour to finish. It was a joke against him
-that he had read every word of <cite>The Cornhill
-Magazine</cite>, which he had taken in from the
-beginning; and I have heard him admit, more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>than once, that this was really the case. I
-think it quite likely that he had submitted the
-volumes published under the authority of the
-Master of the Rolls, to the same searching
-investigation; for he could give a curiously
-minute account of the merits and demerits of
-each work, supported, as usual with him, by
-numerous quotations, cited with much volubility
-of utterance, and, it may be added, with unerring
-accuracy. The pace at which he got through
-a ponderous volume—without skipping, be it
-remarked—was really astonishing, and when
-he had come to the end he could not only give
-a clear and connected account of what he had
-read, but it became part of himself, and he
-could quote long afterwards any passage that
-had specially struck him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The variety of Luard’s interests at all
-periods of his life, was remarkable, especially
-when it is remembered that he was a genuine
-student, with a horror of superficiality, and a
-conscientious determination to do whatever he
-took in hand as well as it could be done. But
-he was no Dry-as-dust. He was keenly alive
-to all that was passing in the world, and unlike
-a contemporary Cambridge antiquary who was
-once heard to ask, “Is the <cite>Times</cite> still published?”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>he not only read the paper through
-every day, but had his own very definite
-opinions on men and measures. There was
-nothing narrow about him; he was a patriotic
-Englishman, but he did not ignore the existence
-of the Continent, and his favourite
-relaxation was foreign travel. As a young
-man he had travelled extensively, not only in
-Europe, but in Egypt, where he had ascended
-the Nile as far as the second cataract: and, as
-he grew older, he still sought refreshment in
-going over parts of his old tours, especially in
-those by-ways of Central Italy which lie within
-the limits of what he affectionately called “dear
-old Umbria.” He spoke more than one foreign
-language fluently; and, being entirely destitute
-of British angularity, and British prejudices in
-politics and religion, he always got on exceedingly
-well with foreigners, especially with
-foreign ecclesiastics. I feel that I am saying
-only what is literally true when I affirm that
-few Englishmen have understood the creed
-and the practice of the Roman clergy in Italy
-so thoroughly as he did. In illustration of this
-view I would refer my readers to an article
-called <cite>Preaching and other matters in Rome
-in 1879</cite> which he contributed to the <cite>Church
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>Quarterly Review</cite><a id='r119' /><a href='#f119' class='c011'><sup>[119]</sup></a>. Further, he took an intelligent
-interest in antiquities of all sorts,
-and had an acquaintance with art that was
-something more than respectable. Here his
-excellent memory stood him in good stead, for
-he never forgot either a picture which he had
-once seen, or the place in which he had seen it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In politics he called himself a Tory, and
-he certainly did vote on that side; but he was
-in no sense of the word a party-man. For
-instance, when his friend Mr George Denman
-came forward as a Liberal candidate for the
-representation of the University in 1855, Luard
-was an active member of his committee. His
-knowledge of Italy made him watch the course
-of events there in 1859 with an enthusiastic
-sympathy, which was divided almost equally
-between the Italians and their French allies.
-With a curious perversity, which was not uncommon
-in his appreciation of men and his
-judgment of events, he hated Garibaldi as
-much as he admired Victor Emmanuel and
-Cavour. But from the first he never doubted
-of the cause of freedom, and astonished his
-Conservative friends by offering a wager across
-the high table at Trinity as to the time it would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>take the combined French and Italian forces to
-occupy Milan. So far as I can remember, he
-was right almost to the very day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From his boyhood Luard had been an
-ardent collector of books, and it was probably
-this taste that induced him to take a further
-excursion into the past, and begin the study of
-manuscripts. Professor Mayor tells me that
-the influence and example of Dr S. R. Maitland
-turned his attention to the Middle Ages in the
-widest sense—their history, their literature, and
-their life. This may well have been the case,
-for I know, from many conversations, that he
-had the profoundest respect and admiration for
-Dr Maitland’s character, and for the thoroughness
-of his studies and criticisms. I do not
-know how Luard acquired his very accurate
-knowledge of medieval handwriting; but I
-remember that in 1855 or 1856 he gave me
-some lessons of the greatest value. In the
-second of these years the first volume of the
-Catalogue of Manuscripts in the University
-Library was published, into the preparation of
-which he had thrown himself with characteristic
-enthusiasm. As time went on, the direction of
-the work was left more and more to him; he
-became the editor, and to him the excellent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>index, published in 1867, is mainly, if not
-entirely, due.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the study of manuscripts to their
-transcription and publication the transition is
-easy, and we need therefore find no difficulty
-in accounting for his employment by the Master
-of the Rolls. He began his work on that
-series in 1858 by editing certain <cite>Lives of
-Edward the Confessor</cite>, written in old French.
-This work, on which he had bestowed infinite
-pains, was not free from errors. The study of
-the language in which it is written was not
-understood at that time as it is now, and it is
-no discredit to Luard’s memory to admit that
-he was not fully prepared for the task. But
-such mistakes as he made are no justification
-for the savage and personal attack to which he
-was subjected, eleven years afterwards, by a
-critic who ought to have known better. I do
-not feel that this is the place to criticise, or
-even to mention, the long list of historical works
-that Luard subsequently edited, the last of which
-appeared not long before his death. His labours
-in this field of research have been better appreciated
-in Germany than in England, but even
-here scholars like Bishop Stubbs and Professor
-Freeman have spoken with cordial appreciation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>of the value of his work. It is worth noting
-too that here his passion for old methods of
-editing deserted him; nothing can be more
-thoroughly modern than his treatment of these
-ancient records. Nor can I leave this part of
-my subject without noticing his indexes. He
-was the very prince of index-makers; every
-sheet, before it was finally passed for press,
-was fully indexed, with the result that not only
-were mistakes recognised and corrected, but
-the index itself, worked out on a definite
-system conceived from the beginning, was
-carried through to a satisfactory conclusion
-without haste or weariness, and became a real
-catalogue of the subjects referred to in the
-work itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Luard was Registrary of the University
-from 1862 to his death in 1891. To this work
-he brought the same painstaking accuracy, and
-the same unselfish readiness to endure hard
-work, that distinguished his other labours.
-The ordinary duties of his office were discharged
-with marvellous rapidity, and almost
-painful attention to detail; and the records
-were admirably re-arranged. Mr Romilly, his
-predecessor, had brought order out of confusion,
-and prepared an excellent catalogue on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>modern lines; but Luard went a step farther.
-He bound the contents of Mr Romilly’s bundles
-in a series of volumes, each of which he indexed
-with his own hand. These separate indexes
-were then transcribed, and finally bound
-together so as to form a complete catalogue of
-the contents of the Registry. Every paper can
-now be found with the least possible loss of
-time, while each bound volume contains a
-complete history of the subject to which it
-relates, so far as it can be illustrated by documents
-in the Registry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Luard’s duties as Registrary, added to the
-continuous strain of his historical work, would
-have been enough for most people; but he
-never forgot that he was a clergyman, as well
-as a man of letters, and he took care always
-to have some active clerical work to do. He
-was an eloquent preacher, and his sermons in
-the College Chapel used to be listened to with
-an interest that we did not always feel in what
-was said to us from that pulpit. They were
-plain, practical, persuasive; the compositions of
-one who was not above his congregation; who
-had nothing donnish about him, but who spoke
-to the undergraduates as one who had passed
-through the same temptations as themselves,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>and who was, therefore, in a position to show
-them the right road. On the same principles,
-for the twenty-seven years during which he
-was Vicar of Great S. Mary’s, he laboured in
-the parish in a spirit of true sympathy. There
-was no fussiness about him; he did not take
-part in movements; he did not ‘work’ a parish
-as a modern clergyman does, on the principle
-of perpetual worry, leaving neither man, nor
-woman, nor child at peace for a moment; he
-led his people to better things by gentle measures;
-he sympathized with their troubles; he
-relieved their necessities; in a word, he exercised
-an unbounded influence over them, while
-refraining from interference in matters of moral
-indifference. His memory will long be venerated
-there for active benevolence, and punctual
-discharge of all that it became him to do. I
-have heard that the full extent of his charities
-will never be known. He hated display, and
-avoided reference to what he was about unless
-it was necessary to stimulate others by mentioning
-it; but those who know best tell me
-that his labours among the poor were unremitting,
-and that his generosity knew no limits.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nor should it be forgotten, in even the most
-summary record of Luard’s life at Cambridge,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>that it was he who got Great S. Mary’s restored
-in the true sense of the word, by
-removing the excrescences which the taste,
-or, rather, want of taste, of the last century
-had piled up in it. He pulled down the carved
-work thereof—the hideous ‘Golgotha’—with
-axes and hammers, and exhibited to an astonished
-and by no means complacent University
-the noble church in the unadorned simplicity
-of its architecture. The restoration of the
-University Church to something like its ancient
-arrangement will be an enduring monument
-of his parochial life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was a High Churchman, but a High
-Churchman with a difference. He belonged
-to the school of Pusey and Liddon rather
-than to that of the modern Ritualist, whose
-doings were as alien to his convictions and
-feelings as those of the party whom he scornfully
-styled ‘those Protestants.’ I have heard
-him called narrow and intolerant. I beg leave
-to refer such detractors to the sermon preached
-by him on the Sunday after the death of
-Frederick Denison Maurice. And this brings
-me to what was, perhaps, the leading principle
-of his whole life—his absolute honesty and
-fearlessness. He held certain beliefs and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>certain opinions himself, which he cherished,
-and which were of vital importance to himself;
-but he did not shut his eyes to the possibility
-that others who held diametrically opposite
-views might be in the right also. And if he
-found a man sincere, no considerations of party,
-of respectability, of imaginary dangers concealed
-behind opinions held to be heretical,
-would prevent him from speaking out and
-proclaiming his admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In manners Luard had much of the stately
-courtesy which we commonly ascribe to the
-last century, joined to a vivacious impulsiveness
-due, no doubt, to his French extraction.
-This impulsiveness led him into a rapidity of
-thought and utterance which often caused him
-to be misunderstood. He said what came first
-into his thoughts, and corrected it afterwards;
-but, unfortunately for him, people remembered
-the first words used, and forgot the explanation.
-Hence he was often misunderstood, and credited
-with opinions he did not really hold. He delighted
-in society, and few men knew better
-how to deal with it, or how to make his house
-an agreeable centre of Cambridge life. In this
-he was ably seconded by his admirable wife,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>qui savait tenir un salon</em></span>, as the French say,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>more successfully than is usual in this country.
-Without her help he would hardly have been
-able to find the time required for his continual
-hospitalities. The house was different from
-any other house that I have ever known, and
-reflected, more directly, the peculiar gifts and
-tastes of its owner. The pictures, the china,
-the books that lined the walls, bespoke the
-cultivated scholar; but the modern volumes
-that lay on the tables showed that he was no
-dry archaeologist, but full of enthusiasm for all
-that was best in modern literature. He had
-a keen sense of humour, and an admirable
-memory; and when the conversation turned
-that way, would tell endless stories of Cambridge
-life, or repeat page after page of his favourite
-Thackeray. At the same time he did not
-engross the conversation, but drew his guests
-out, and led each insensibly to what was interesting
-to him or to her. It is sad to think
-that all this has passed away; that exactly one
-month after Luard’s death his friends stood
-again beside his grave to see his only child
-laid in it; that his house will pass into alien
-hands; and that his library will share the fate
-of similar collections. ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Eheu! quanto minus
-est cum aliis versari quam tui meminisse.</em></span>’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>RICHARD OWEN<a id='r120' /><a href='#f120' class='c011'><sup>[120]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>A scientific naturalist who lived in England
-in the second quarter of this present century
-may be accounted a fortunate man. On the
-one hand was the vast field of the universe,
-undivided, unallotted; on the other, a public
-eager for instruction. At the present day,
-when men go to and fro, and knowledge is
-increased, we find it hard to realize the isolation
-of England until after the close of the great
-war, or the fear of invasion that absorbed
-men’s thoughts until after Trafalgar. That
-fear removed, the modern development of the
-nation began. The number of those who resorted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>to the Universities increased by leaps and
-bounds. Public school life, as we understand
-it, was developed. As a natural consequence,
-the flower of the English youth were no longer
-content with the knowledge that had satisfied
-their fathers and grandfathers. The old paths
-were too narrow for them. The convulsions
-which had shaken the continent had not been
-without their effect even here; and when
-Europe was again open, account had to be
-taken of the work of continental thinkers.
-Their achievements must be mastered, continued,
-developed. It was allowed on all
-hands, except by that small class who can
-neither learn nor forget, that the time for a new
-departure in scientific education had arrived.
-It was the good fortune of Richard Owen to
-be ready just when he was wanted, to take
-occasion by the hand, and to become the leader
-in biological research.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How did he effect this? How did a young
-man, launched on the great world of London
-with no powerful connexions,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Break his birth’s invidious bar,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And grasp the skirts of happy chance,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And breast the blows of circumstance</div>
- <div class='line'>And grapple with his evil star?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>To take a metaphor from our representative
-system, Owen was the member for biological
-science in the parliament of letters for nearly
-half a century. And yet he was not a great
-thinker; his name is not associated with any
-far-reaching generalization, or any theory fruitful
-of wide results. As a comparative anatomist,
-and as a paleontologist, he did plenty of good
-and solid work. But these pursuits are most
-commonly those of a recluse. The man who
-engages in them must be content, as a general
-rule, with the four walls of his laboratory, and
-the applause of a small circle of experts. Not
-so Professor Owen, as he was most commonly
-designated, even after he had received knighthood.
-He contrived to lead an essentially
-public life; to be seen everywhere; to have
-his last paper talked about in fashionable
-drawing-rooms quite as much as in learned
-societies. How did he effect this? We think
-that the answer to our question is to be found—first,
-in the general eagerness for scientific
-instruction which was one of the characteristics
-of the age in which he lived; and, secondly, in
-his own many-sidedness. He was by no means
-one of those authors ‘who are all author,’
-against whom Byron launched some of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>most brilliant sarcasms. He was a man of
-science; but he was also a polished gentleman
-of varied accomplishments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is to be regretted that such a man has
-not found a biographer more competent than
-his grandson and namesake; but the reader
-who reaches the end of the second volume will
-be rewarded by a masterly essay by Mr Huxley
-on Owen’s place in science. This is a remarkable
-composition; not merely for what it says,
-but for what it does not say; and we recommend
-those who would understand it thoroughly,
-not merely to read it more than once, but to
-cultivate the useful art of reading between the
-lines. Of a very different nature to <cite>The Life
-of Owen</cite> is the article which Sir W. H. Flower
-has contributed to the <cite>Dictionary of National
-Biography</cite>. It is of necessity much compressed,
-but it contains all that is really essential for
-the proper comprehension of Owen’s scientific
-career, and praise and blame are meted out
-with calm impartiality. For ourselves, we
-have a sincere admiration for Owen, but an
-admiration which does not exclude a readiness
-to admit that he had defects. In what we
-are about to say we do not propose to draw
-a fancy portrait. If we nothing extenuate, we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>shall set down naught in malice. In a word,
-we shall try to present him as he was, not as
-he might have been.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Richard Owen was born at Lancaster,
-20 July, 1804. His father was a West India
-merchant; his mother, Catherine Parrin, was
-descended from a French Huguenot family.
-She is said to have been a woman of refinement
-and intelligence, with great skill in music,
-a talent which she transmitted to her son. In
-appearance she was handsome and Spanish-looking,
-with dark eyes and hair. Owen
-delighted to dwell on his mother’s charm of
-manner, and all that he owed to her early
-training and example. We can well believe
-this, and the Life is full of touching references
-to her solicitude for her darling son. The
-interest she felt in all that he did even led her
-to read through his scientific papers and his
-catalogue of the Hunterian collection, with
-what profit to herself we are not informed.
-Her husband died in 1809; but the family
-seem to have been left in fairly affluent circumstances,
-and continued to live, as before,
-at Lancaster. Owen’s education began at the
-grammar-school there in 1810, when he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>six years old, and ended in 1820, when he was
-apprenticed to a local surgeon. Of his schooldays
-but little record has been preserved. One
-of the masters described him as lazy and impudent;
-he is said to have had no fondness for
-study of any kind except heraldry; and his
-sister used to relate that as a boy he was ‘very
-small and slight, and exceedingly mischievous.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who value the records of boyhood
-for the sake of traces of the tastes which made
-the man celebrated, will be rewarded by the
-perusal of the pages which record Owen’s four
-years as a surgeon’s apprentice at Lancaster.
-Not only will they find that he worked diligently
-at the curative side of his profession, but that,
-his master being surgeon to the gaol, he had
-the opportunity of attending post-mortem examinations,
-and so laid the foundation of his knowledge
-of the structure of the human frame.
-Here too we catch a glimpse of the future
-comparative anatomist; but the story of ‘The
-Negro’s Head,’ here given in the words used
-by Owen when he told it himself, is unfortunately
-too long for quotation, and is certainly
-far too good to be spoilt by abbreviation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In October 1824 Owen matriculated at the
-University of Edinburgh. There, in addition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>to the courses that were obligatory, he attended
-the ‘outside’ lectures in comparative anatomy
-delivered by Dr John Barclay. From these he
-derived the greatest benefit, and used in after-years
-to speak of Barclay with affectionate
-regard, as ‘my revered preceptor.’ It is noteworthy
-that, while at Edinburgh, Owen and one
-of his friends founded a students’ society, which
-at his suggestion was called, by a sort of prophetic
-instinct, the Hunterian Society. Barclay
-must have decided very quickly that he had to
-do with no common pupil, for at the end of
-April 1825, when Owen had been barely six
-months in Edinburgh, he advised him to move
-to St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, and
-study under Dr. Abernethy, then near the close
-of his brilliant but eccentric career. Armed
-with a letter of introduction from Barclay,
-Owen set out for London, where he had ‘literally
-not one single friend.’ No wonder that he felt
-‘an indescribable sense of desolation’ as he
-walked up Holborn, and that ‘the number of
-strange faces that kept passing by increased
-that feeling.’ What happened next is very
-characteristic of the strange mixture of roughness
-and kindness which was natural to his new
-patron.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>‘Abernethy had just finished lecturing, and was evidently
-in anything but the best of tempers, being surrounded by a
-small crowd of students waiting about to ask him questions.
-Owen was just screwing up his courage to attack this formidable
-personage and state his business, when Abernethy
-suddenly turned upon him and said: “And what do you
-want?” After presenting the letter Abernethy glanced at it
-for a moment, stuffed it into his pocket, and vouchsafed the
-gracious reply of “Oh!” As this did not seem to point to
-anything very definite, Owen was turning to go, when
-Abernethy called after him: “Here; come to breakfast
-to-morrow morning at eight,” and presenting him with his
-card, added, “That’s my address.” What were the terms in
-which Dr Barclay had spoken of him Owen never knew, but
-he thought they must have been favourable, for when he
-presented himself next morning at Abernethy’s residence,
-and was anticipating anything but an agreeable <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tête-à-tête</em></span>
-with the great doctor, he found him, to his surprise, considerably
-smoothed down and quite pleasant in his manner.
-The result of the meeting was that Abernethy offered him
-the post of prosector for his lectures’ (i. 30).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A year later (August 18, 1826) Owen
-obtained the membership of the College of
-Surgeons, and set up as a medical practitioner
-in Carey Street, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, where
-he gradually obtained a small practice among
-lawyers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have no wish to underrate Owen’s
-brilliant talents, or his perseverance, or his
-power of sustained work with a definite end in
-view; but at the same time it would be absurd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>to deny that he had good-fortune to thank for a
-large part of his first successes. What else
-made Abernethy, at their first interview, give
-him just the appointment best calculated to
-bring his peculiar gifts into the light of day?
-What else made the same patron procure his
-appointment, two years later, as assistant-conservator
-of the Hunterian collections, out of
-which all his future celebrity was developed?
-He might have been ‘exceedingly well informed
-in all that relates to his profession, an excellent
-anatomist, and sober and sedate very far beyond
-any young man I ever knew,’ as one who was
-in a position to know said of him in 1830, and
-yet have ‘bloomed unseen,’ an obscure practitioner
-in ‘the dusky purlieus of the law,’ had
-not the fickle goddess selected him as the
-special recipient of her favours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Owen’s active life in London divides itself
-naturally into two periods, each containing nearly
-thirty years. The first, during which he was
-connected with the Royal College of Surgeons,
-extended from 1827 to 1856; the second,
-during which he was nominally superintendent
-of the biological side of the British Museum,
-from 1856 to 1883.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Those who would rightly understand his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>work during the former period must of necessity
-take into account the history and extent of the
-vast collection which he was expected to catalogue
-and to develop, for it dominated and
-directed all his studies. It was formed by the
-celebrated surgeon, John Hunter, between 1763
-and 1793, in which year he died. In studying
-it, one is at a loss what to admire most—the
-beauty of the specimens themselves, and the
-admirable clearness with which those preserved
-in spirit have been dissected and mounted; or
-the labour and self-denial which brought them
-together in the midst of the incessant occupations
-of a large practice; or the almost
-prophetic instinct which divined what posterity
-would require in the way of such aids to study.
-It was Hunter’s object to illustrate the phenomena
-of life in all organisms, whether in health
-or in disease. For this purpose he collected as
-widely as he could. There is an osteological
-series, and a physiological series (in spirit),
-which exhibits the different organs, digestive,
-circulatory, and the like, in order, and traces
-their development from the simplest to the
-most complicated form. To the Invertebrata
-he had devoted special attention. He had
-secured, through his friend Sir Joseph Banks,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>many of the treasures collected during Cook’s
-voyages; and he had purchased rarities as
-occasion offered. Of insects he had a large
-collection. Nor were his observations limited
-to the animal kingdom. Whenever any physiological
-process could be illustrated by vegetable
-life, vegetables were pressed into the service.
-Nor did he fail to recognize the truth—which
-some persons still refuse to accept—that the
-remains of extinct animals are only in their
-proper place when side by side with those still
-living on the earth. ‘His collection of fossils,’
-says Owen in one of his prefaces, ‘was the
-largest and most select of any in this country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To contain this collection Hunter had built
-a special museum in Castle Street, Leicester
-Square, which was open to public inspection
-on certain days. After his death his executors,
-in accordance with his will, offered the collection
-to the Government. ‘Buy preparations?’ exclaimed
-Mr Pitt; ‘why, I have not money
-enough for gunpowder!’ Ultimately, however,
-the House of Commons agreed to give £15,000
-for it, just one-fifth of the sum that Hunter
-is said to have spent upon it. Next arose
-the further question, who should take care of
-it. The Royal Society, it is said, did not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>consider it ‘an object of importance to the
-general study of natural history’; the British
-Museum was literary, not scientific; and finally,
-in 1799, the Corporation of Surgeons, as it
-was then called, accepted it, under the condition
-that a proper catalogue should be made, a
-conservator appointed, and twenty-four lectures
-in explanation of it delivered annually in the
-college. Soon afterwards the Corporation of
-Surgeons became the Royal College of Surgeons,
-and a building, to which Parliament
-contributed £27,500, was built for its reception.
-This was opened in 1813.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Owen was appointed assistant-conservator
-of these collections thirty-four years
-had elapsed since Hunter’s death. During that
-time they had been preserved from damage
-by the devoted care of Mr William Clift, who,
-after being Hunter’s assistant for a short time,
-had been appointed conservator, first by the
-executors, and subsequently by the college.
-The general arrangement had been prescribed
-by Hunter, but no descriptive catalogue existed,
-as it had been, unfortunately, Hunter’s habit
-to trust to his memory for the history of his
-specimens. Further, though lists, more or less
-imperfect, drawn up either by Hunter himself or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>under his direction, had been preserved, the bulk
-of his papers had been destroyed by Sir Everard
-Home, his brother-in-law and executor. ‘There
-is but one thing more to be done—to destroy
-the collection,’ was Clift’s remark when he
-heard of this act of cynical wickedness. In
-the scarcity, therefore, of documentary evidence,
-other expedients had to be resorted to for the
-identification of the specimens which Hunter
-had dissected, or had preserved entire in spirit.
-As Owen remarks in the preface to the first
-volume of his descriptive catalogue (published
-in 1833), ‘It was necessary to consult the book
-of Nature.’ At first it was no easy matter to
-procure the animals required; but after the
-establishment of the Zoological Society this
-difficulty was in a great measure removed,
-and more than two hundred dissections were
-made by Owen in the course of the work
-incident to the preparation of the first volume
-of the catalogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This sketch of the Hunterian collections,
-which we would gladly have worked out in
-greater detail had our space allowed us to do
-so, will perhaps be sufficient to indicate to our
-readers the nature of the field of research on
-which Owen was about to enter. It was, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>fact, an undiscovered country, of which he was
-to be the pioneer. One would like to know
-whether he had any idea of what the work he
-was about to undertake implied; and whether
-he had any misgivings as to his own fitness
-for it. He was only twenty-three years old, so
-perhaps, as youth is sanguine, he entered upon
-it with a light heart, thinking—if he paused to
-think—that he had strength of will sufficient to
-compensate for defect of years and knowledge.
-‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">On vieillit vite sur les champs de bataille.</span>’
-His previous training must have been in the
-main professional; he could have gained at
-most only a glimpse of comparative anatomy
-at the feet of Dr Barclay; the great writers
-on the subject, Buffon, Daubenton, Cuvier, and
-the rest, must have been mere names to him.
-Moreover, he was obliged, for lucre’s sake, to
-continue the profession of a surgeon, and,
-though he gradually dropped it, he must, for
-some time at least, have spent a good deal of
-time over it. Besides this, he probably assisted
-Clift in the brief catalogue of the Hunterian
-collections that appeared between 1833 and
-1840. But, while thus engaged, he found time
-for study. For three years he attempted no
-original work; and when he did begin to write
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>(his first paper is dated 9 November, 1830),
-it is evident that the previous years had been
-spent in wise preparation. There is no trace
-of the novice in the papers that followed each
-other in quick succession; they evince a complete
-mastery of the subject from the historical,
-as well as from the anatomical, side. The
-mere number of these communications, addressed
-principally to the Zoological Society,
-is almost past belief. Before the end of 1855
-more than 250 had appeared, many of which
-were of considerable length, and enriched with
-elaborate drawings made by himself. But
-what is more surprising still is the versatility
-displayed in their composition. Nowadays a
-biologist is compelled to specialize. By ‘the
-custom of the country,’ to borrow a legal phrase,
-he selects his own subject, and is expected not
-to poach on that of his neighbours. But when
-Owen began to work, these laws existed not,
-or at any rate not for him. The very nature
-of his work obliged him to study in quick
-succession the most diverse structures; and,
-as death does not accommodate itself to human
-convenience, he could not tell from day to day
-what animals would be sent from the Zoological
-Gardens to his dissecting-room. An excellent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>bibliography of his works at the end of the
-second volume of the <cite>Life</cite> enables us to trace
-his studies in detail. For our present purpose
-we will only point out that between 1831 and
-1835 he had written papers (among many
-others) on the orang-outang, beaver, Thibet
-bear, gannet, armadillo, seal, kangaroo, tapir,
-cercopithecus, crocodile, toucan, hornbill, pelican,
-flamingo, besides various Invertebrates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While Owen was preparing himself for
-his serious attack on the catalogue an event
-occurred which had an important influence
-on his scientific development. Cuvier came
-to England to collect materials for his work
-on fishes, and naturally visited the Hunterian
-collection. Owen has preserved a singularly
-modest account of his introduction to the
-great French naturalist:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘In the year 1830 I made Cuvier’s personal acquaintance
-at the Museum of the College of Surgeons, and was specially
-deputed to show and explain to him such specimens as
-he wished to examine. There was no special merit in my
-being thus deputed, the fact being that I was the only
-person available who could speak French, and who had at
-the same time some knowledge of the specimens. Cuvier
-kindly invited me to visit the Jardin des Plantes in the
-following year’ (i. 49).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Accordingly, Owen spent the month of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>August 1831 in Paris. It has been frequently
-stated, says his biographer, that Cuvier and his
-collection ‘made a great impression on Owen,
-and gave a direction to his after-studies of fossil
-remains,’ a position which he contests on the
-ground that neither Owen’s diary nor his letters
-describing the visit warrant such a conclusion.
-We do not attach much importance to this
-argument, but we feel certain that the Museum
-of the Jardin des Plantes, from its unfortunate
-subdivision into departments widely separated
-structurally from each other, could not have
-stimulated anybody in that particular direction.
-That Cuvier was, to a very large extent,
-Owen’s master in comparative anatomy is
-undeniable; he quotes him with respect, not
-to say with reverence, in almost every page of
-his writings, and the ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Prix Cuvier</span>’ adjudged to
-him in 1857 probably gave him more pleasure
-than all his other distinctions. Cuvier’s method,
-as set forth in <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Les Ossemens Fossiles</cite></span>, of illustrating
-and explaining extinct animals by
-comparison with recent was closely followed
-by his illustrious disciple. But this principle
-might easily have been learnt—and in our
-judgment was learnt—by a study of his works
-at home. On the other hand, Owen has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>stated, in unequivocal terms, the direction in
-which Cuvier did exert a special influence upon
-him. In his <cite>Anatomy of Vertebrates</cite> (iii. 786),
-published in 1868, he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘At the close of my studies at the Jardin des Plantes,
-Paris, in 1831, I returned strongly moved to lines of research
-bearing upon the then prevailing phases of thought
-on some general biological questions.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘The great Master in whose dissecting-rooms, as well as
-in the public galleries of comparative anatomy, I was privileged
-to work, held that “species were not permanent”;
-and taught this great and fruitful truth, not doubtfully or
-hypothetically, but as a fact established inductively on a
-wide and well-laid basis of observation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Further, Owen had the opportunity of
-listening to some of the debates between
-Cuvier and Geoffrey Saint-Hilaire on the
-question of how new species may originate;
-and ‘on returning home,’ he adds, ‘I was
-guided in all my work with the hope or
-endeavour to gain inductive ground for conclusions
-on these great questions.’ Here, then,
-was the definite educational result which Owen
-gained from his visit. It had, moreover,
-another consequence. It made him known to
-the French naturalists, then in the front rank of
-science. His scientific acquirements, coupled
-with his agreeable manners and facility in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>speaking and writing French, made him a
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>persona grata</em></span> in Paris. In 1839 he was elected
-a corresponding member of the Institute, and
-read more than one paper there in French.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We have already mentioned the long line
-of scientific papers which, from 1830 onwards,
-were the result of Owen’s indomitable energy.
-This series was now to be interrupted for a
-moment by the famous <cite>Memoir on the Pearly
-Nautilus</cite>, a quarto volume of sixty-eight pages,
-illustrated by eight plates, drawn by himself.
-The shell of the nautilus, as most persons
-know, has always been fairly common; but the
-animal which was given to the Museum of the
-College of Surgeons in 1831 was, we believe,
-the first, or nearly the first, which had ever
-reached this country, and Owen was most
-fortunate in having the chance of describing
-such a rarity. His essay, elaborate and exhaustive
-as it is, was dashed off in less than
-a year. It was received with a general chorus
-of praise. Dr Buckland spoke of it as ‘Mr
-Owen’s admirable work,’ and they were soon
-in correspondence on the way in which the
-nautilus sinks and rises in the water. Milne
-Edwards translated it into French, and Oken
-into German. Nor has the contemporary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>verdict been reversed by that of posterity.
-Mr Huxley says of the <cite>Memoir</cite> that it</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘placed its author, at a bound, in the first rank of monographers.
-There is nothing better in the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Mémoires sur les
-Mollusques</cite></span>, I would even venture to say nothing so good,
-were it not that Owen had Cuvier’s great work for a model;
-certainly, in the sixty years that have elapsed since the
-publication of this remarkable monograph it has not been
-excelled’ (ii. 306).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This essay seems to have given Owen a
-taste for the group to which the nautilus
-belongs. At the conclusion of the <cite>Memoir</cite>
-he proposed a new arrangement of it, now
-generally accepted, which includes the fossil
-as well as the recent forms; and, as occasion
-presented itself, he described other species and
-genera. The merit of a memoir on the fossil
-group called ‘belemnites,’ from the Oxford
-Clay, was the cause assigned for the award
-to him of the gold medal of the Royal Society
-in 1846.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Between 1833 and 1840 the long-desired
-catalogue, in five quarto volumes, made its
-appearance. Sir William Flower calls it
-‘monumental’; a singularly happy epithet,
-for it commemorates, as a monument should
-do, alike the founder of the Museum and the
-industrious anatomist who had minutely described
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>the four thousand specimens of which
-the ‘physiological series’—or, as we should
-now say, the series of organs—then consisted.
-Nor, though the arrangement is obsolete, can
-the work itself be regarded as without value,
-even at the present time. It has already
-served as a model for the catalogues of many
-other museums, and has taken its place in the
-literature of the subject. It is, in fact, an
-elaborate treatise on comparative anatomy
-from the point of view of the modifications
-of special organs. The thirteen years spent
-over it can hardly appear an excessively long
-time when we remember the work involved,
-and also the fact that the college had from the
-first recognized the duty of filling up gaps in
-the collection as occasion offered. Many of
-the specimens recorded in this catalogue had
-been prepared by Owen himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the years that Owen spent upon
-the catalogue his position at the College of
-Surgeons was gradually becoming assured.
-He had begun as assistant-curator at £120 a
-year, but with no prospects, as the place of
-curator was expected to be given to Mr Clift’s
-son on his father’s retirement. But in 1832
-the younger Clift died suddenly from the effects
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>of an accident, and Owen remained as sole
-assistant at £200. In July 1833 his salary
-was raised to £300, and in 1835 he was
-enabled to marry Caroline Clift, Mr Clift’s
-only daughter. From this time until 1852,
-when the Queen gave him the delightful
-cottage at Sheen which he lived in till his
-death, he had apartments within the building
-of the College of Surgeons. They were small,
-and inconvenient in many ways. Owen was
-in the habit of turning his study into a dissecting-room,
-and his wife’s diary contains
-many amusing references to the pervading
-odours caused by the examination of a rhinoceros
-or an elephant, or to such disturbances
-as the following: ‘Great trampling and rushing
-upstairs past our bedroom door. Asked
-Richard if the men were dancing the polka
-on the stairs. He said, “No; what you hear
-is the body being carried upstairs. They are
-dissecting for fellowship to-day!”’ But, on
-the other hand, the proximity to the library
-and the museum, which he could enter at any
-hour of the night or day, must have greatly
-helped one who worked so incessantly. Ultimately,
-in 1842, Owen became sole curator,
-with Mr Quekett as his assistant. This was,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>no doubt, a dignified position, but it had its
-drawbacks. Owen’s golden time at the college
-was the period between 1827 and 1842, when
-the business details were taken off his hands
-by the painstaking and methodical Clift. After
-1842 he was held responsible, as curators
-usually are, for much that he regarded as
-irksome routine. This he performed in a
-perfunctory fashion that did not please the
-Council, and difficulties arose between that
-body and their distinguished servant which
-time only rendered more acute. It may be
-that the Council were not sufficiently sensible
-of the honour reflected upon the college by
-possessing ‘the first anatomist of the age’;
-and Owen, on his side, may have been too
-fond of doing work which brought ‘grist to
-the mill,’ and applause, and troops of friends,
-without being directly connected with the
-college. However this may have been, it is
-beyond dispute that Owen’s removal, in 1856,
-to the British Museum, was a fortunate solution
-of a difficulty which otherwise would probably
-have ended in an explosion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It has been already mentioned that when
-the Hunterian Museum was entrusted to the
-care of the College of Surgeons it had been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>stipulated that its contents should be illustrated
-by an annual course of twenty-four lectures.
-Up to 1836 this course had been divided between
-the professors of anatomy and surgery;
-but in that year Owen was appointed first
-Hunterian Professor of Comparative Anatomy
-and Physiology. To the last days of his life
-he constantly referred to the pleasure which
-this appointment gave him when first conferred
-upon him; nor did this feeling wear off as
-time went on. He gave his lectures regularly,
-with the same keen interest and thoroughness
-of preparation, down to 1855. At first he
-confined himself strictly to his prescribed subject;
-but gradually he widened his field, and
-introduced whatever views or subjects happened
-to be interesting him. Most of the lectures
-were worked up into books afterwards. He
-was an admirable lecturer—in fact, he was
-better as a lecturer than as a writer; for it
-must be confessed that his scientific style is
-often pedantic and cramped, and he seems to
-use words rather for the sake of concealing his
-thoughts than of imparting them. It is interesting
-to learn what pains he took with his
-early lectures—how he rehearsed them to his
-wife, or to a friend, till he got used to the work,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>and could estimate exactly how much would
-fill the allotted hour. We cannot refrain from
-quoting Mrs Owen’s account of the first
-lecture:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘So busy all the morning; had hardly time to be
-nervous, luckily for me. R. robed in the drawing-room,
-and took some egg and wine before going into the theatre.
-He then went in and left me. At five o’clock a great noise
-of clapping made me jump, for I timed the lecture to last a
-quarter of an hour longer; but R., it seems, cut it short
-rather than tire Sir Astley Cooper too much. All went off
-as well as even I could wish. The theatre crammed, and
-there were many who could not get places. R. was more
-collected than he or I ever supposed, and gave this awful
-first lecture almost to his own satisfaction! We sat down a
-large party to dinner. Mr Langshaw and R. afterwards
-played two of Corelli’s sonatas’ (i. 109).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>These lectures, more than anything that he
-wrote, made Owen famous, and procured for
-him a passport into society. To understand
-this, which appears almost a phenomenon at
-the present day, it must be remembered that
-the lecture-mania had not become one of the
-common diseases of humanity in 1836, and
-that it was still considered proper for great
-people to play the part of Mecenas to those
-who were distinguished in science or in letters.
-Hence, when the news spread abroad that a
-young and hitherto unknown lecturer was discoursing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>eloquently on a new subject in a
-building which few had heard of and none had
-seen, curiosity carried fashion into Lincoln’s
-Inn Fields, and certain dukes and earls, who
-cultivated a taste for natural history <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>dans leur
-moments perdus</em></span>, set the example of sitting at
-the feet of the new Gamaliel; more serious
-persons followed, and by-and-by a Hallam,
-a Carlyle, and a Wilberforce might be seen
-there side by side with the lights of medicine
-and surgery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To most men the work which these lectures,
-together with the catalogue, entailed, would
-have been sufficient. But Owen loved diversity
-of occupations; and one of his fortunate accidents
-presently threw an attractive paleontological
-subject in his way. It happened in
-this wise. Readers of the <cite>Life of Charles
-Darwin</cite> will remember his disappointment, on
-his return home from the now classic voyage
-of the <cite>Beagle</cite>, to find that zoologists cared
-but little for his collections; that, in fact, Lyell
-and Owen were the only two who wished to
-possess any of his specimens. The latter, who
-had been introduced to him by the former,
-was not slow to grasp the scientific value of
-the extinct animals whose bones Darwin had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>dug with his own hands out of the fluviatile
-deposits of South America. He began with
-a huge skull—‘the head of an animal equalling
-in size the hippopotamus’—and described it
-before the Geological Society, in 1837, under
-the name of <em>Toxodon platensis</em>. Further, as
-Mr Huxley points out:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It is worthy of notice, that in the title of this memoir
-there follow, after the name of the species, the words “referable
-by its dentition to the Rodentia, but with affinities to
-the Pachydermata and the herbivorous Cetacea,” indicating
-the importance in the mind of the writer of the fact that,
-like Cuvier’s <cite>Anoplotherium</cite> and <cite>Paleotherium</cite>, <cite>Toxodon</cite>
-occupied a position between groups which, in existing
-Nature, are now widely separated’ (ii. 308).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The same writer bids us remark that this
-‘maiden essay in paleontology possesses great
-interest’ from another point of view, for ‘it
-is with reference to Owen’s report on <cite>Toxodon</cite>
-that Darwin remarks in his <cite>Journal</cite>: “How
-wonderfully are the different orders, at the
-present time so well separated, blended together
-in different points in the structure of <cite>Toxodon</cite>.”’
-Soon afterwards Owen described the rest of
-Darwin’s fossil specimens in the geological part
-of <i>The Zoology of the ‘Beagle’ Voyage</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Two years later, in 1839, a second and
-still more sensational <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>trouvaille</em></span> came into his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>hands. A fragment of bone was offered for
-sale to the College of Surgeons, with the statement
-that it had been obtained in New Zealand
-from a native, who said that it was the bone
-of a great extinct eagle. Out of this fragment
-there ultimately grew that phalanx of huge
-extinct birds to which Owen gave the name
-of <em>Dinornis</em> (bird of wonder), on which he
-occupied himself till his death. His recognition
-of the true origin of this fragment was, no
-doubt, a wonderful instance of his osteological
-sagacity; but it is a misrepresentation of fact
-to say that he evolved the whole of an extinct
-bird out of a fragment of bone six inches long.
-What he did do, and how he did it, shall be
-told in his own words:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘As soon as I was at leisure I took the bone to the
-skeleton of the ox, expecting to verify my first surmise [that
-it was a marrow-bone, like those brought to table wrapped in
-a napkin]; but, with some resemblance to the shaft of the
-thigh-bone, there were precluding differences. From the
-ox’s humerus, which also affords the tavern delicacy, the
-discrepancy of shape was more marked. Still, led by the
-thickness of the wall of the marrow-cavity, I proceeded to
-compare the bone with similar-sized portions of the skeletons
-of the various quadrupeds which might have been introduced
-and have left their remains in New Zealand; but it
-was clearly unconformable with any such portions.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘In the course of these comparisons I noted certain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>obscure superficial markings on the bone, which recalled to
-mind similar ones which I had observed on the surface
-of the long bones in some large birds. Thereupon I
-proceeded with it to the skeleton of the ostrich. The bone
-tallied in point of size with the shaft of the thigh-bone in
-that bird, but was markedly different in shape. There were,
-however, the same superficial reticulate impressions on the
-ostrich’s femur which had caught my attention in the exhaustive
-comparison previously made with the mammalian
-bones.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'>‘In short, stimulated to more minute and extended
-examinations, I arrived at the conviction that the specimen
-had come from a bird, that it was the shaft of a thigh-bone,
-and that it must have formed part of the skeleton of a bird
-as large as, if not larger than, the full-sized male ostrich,
-with this more striking difference, that whereas the femur of
-the ostrich, like that of the rhea and eagle, is pneumatic,
-or contains air, the present huge bird’s bone had been filled
-with marrow, like that of a beast<a id='r121' /><a href='#f121' class='c011'><sup>[121]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The suggestion was received with sceptical
-astonishment, and the paper in which Owen
-announced it to the Zoological Society (November
-12, 1839) narrowly escaped exclusion
-from the <cite>Transactions</cite> of that body on the
-ground of its improbability. But confirmation
-was not slow to arrive, though in a direction
-that was not then expected. The bone was
-not fossilized; it was therefore naturally concluded
-that there existed somewhere in New
-Zealand—then but partially explored—a race
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>of birds of gigantic stature and struthious
-affinities. We have no space to tell the story
-of the extinction of the moa, as the natives
-call it—surely the most weird and curious of
-all ‘the fairy-tales of science’; but to Owen
-certainly belongs the credit of having been the
-first to point the way to the great discovery.
-No work of his created so much excitement.
-Society, headed by Prince Albert, hurried to
-inspect the huge remains, of which a large
-series soon reached this country, and to be
-introduced to the fortunate necromancer, at
-whose bidding a phantom procession of strange
-creatures had suddenly stepped out of the past
-into the present.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From this time forward Owen continued to
-pay as much attention to extinct as to recent
-animals, as his numerous publications testify.
-The work fascinated and excited him.</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘There was no hunt,’ he declared, ‘so exciting, so full of
-interest, and so satisfactory when events prove one to have
-been on the right scent, as that of a huge beast which
-no eye will ever see alive, and which, perhaps, no mortal
-eye ever did behold. Such a chase is not ended in a day,
-in a week, nor in a season. One’s interest is revived and
-roused year by year as bit by bit of the petrified portions of
-the skeleton comes to hand. Thirty such years elapsed
-before I was able to outline a restoration of <em>Diprotodon
-australis</em>’ [the gigantic extinct kangaroo].</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>In 1841 appeared his ‘<cite>Description of the
-Skeleton of an Extinct Gigantic Sloth (Mylodon
-robustus)</cite>, with observations on the osteology,
-natural affinities, and probable habits of the
-megatheroid quadrupeds in general’—‘a masterpiece
-both of anatomical description and of
-reasoning and inference,’ as Sir W. Flower
-calls it. He demonstrated its affinities with
-the sloths on osteological and dental grounds,
-and then reasoned out its habits from its configuration;
-showing that a creature so vast
-could not have ascended trees, but must have
-pulled them down to browse on them at its
-leisure. Then came the work on British Fossil
-Mammals and Birds, with a long series of
-memoirs, growing in importance as evidences
-of new forms, discovered in all parts of the
-world, came pouring in, as though his own
-reputation had attracted them; on the Triassic
-Labyrinthodonts of Central England; on the
-extinct fauna of South Africa and Australia; on
-the Reptiles of the Wealden and other formations
-in England, published by the Paleontographical
-Society, of which he was one of
-the first and most ardent supporters; on the
-<cite>Archæopteryx</cite> from Solenhofen; on the Great
-Auk; and on the Dodo, one of the representations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>of which, in an old Dutch picture,
-he had the good fortune to discover. It is,
-indeed, as Mr Huxley remarks, ‘a splendid
-record: enough, and more than enough, to
-justify the high place in the scientific world
-which Owen so long occupied.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These researches did not pass unrewarded.
-In 1838 the Geological Society gave to Owen
-the Wollaston Gold Medal for his work on
-Darwin’s collections, and it happened, by a
-fortunate coincidence, that Whewell, his fellow-townsman
-and school-fellow, occupied the chair
-on the occasion. In subsequent years he was
-twice invited to be president of that society;
-but on both occasions he was compelled to decline.
-Next, in 1841, Sir Robert Peel offered
-him a pension of £200 from the Civil List,
-protesting in a very gracious letter that he
-knew nothing about his political opinions, but
-merely wished ‘to encourage that devotion to
-science for which you are so eminently distinguished.’
-This offer, which was gratefully
-accepted, laid the foundation of an intercourse
-between Owen and Sir Robert which
-ripened by-and-by into something like friendship.
-Dinners in London were succeeded by
-visits to Drayton, at one of which Owen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>amused the company with a microscope which
-he had brought with him (of course quite
-accidentally); and, finally, his portrait was
-painted for the gallery there, as a pendant
-to that of Cuvier. In 1845 Owen refused
-knighthood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At this point in Owen’s career it will be
-convenient to pause for a moment and describe
-very briefly what manner of man it was
-that was rapidly becoming a leading figure in
-London society. We remember him from an
-earlier date than we care to mention, but, as
-we have no turn for portrait-painting, we gladly
-accept Sir W. Flower’s lifelike sketch:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Owen was tall and ungainly in figure, with massive
-head, lofty forehead, curiously round, prominent, and expressive
-eyes, high cheek-bones, large mouth, and projecting
-chin, long, lank, dark hair, and, during the greater part of
-his life, smooth-shaven face and very florid complexion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>His manners were distinguished for ceremonious
-courtesy, coupled with the formal exactness
-of a punctilious Frenchman. His bows
-were not easily forgotten. His enemies said,
-and his friends could not deny, that they varied
-with the rank of the person to whom he was
-presented. In fact Owen might have said,
-with Sir Pertinax Macsycophant, ‘I naver in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>my life could stond straight i’ th’ presence of a
-great mon; but awways boowed, and boowed,
-and boowed, as it were by instinct.’</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Next to what he called ‘my dear comparative
-anatomy,’ Owen loved music, and was
-at one time no mean performer, both vocally
-and instrumentally. Music was his constant
-recreation in an evening, and he has even been
-known to take his violoncello out with him to
-parties. He was a frequent attendant at
-concerts and operas, and when Weber’s <cite>Oberon</cite>
-was first performed in London he went to hear
-it thirty nights in succession. The stage also
-had attractions for him, and he and his wife
-had many friends in the dramatic profession.
-Macready in <cite>Henry the Fifth</cite>, Charles Kean
-in <cite>Louis XI.</cite> and <cite>Richard III.</cite>, and many
-minor stars, gave him great pleasure; and it
-was on the stage of Drury Lane Theatre, while
-joining the actors in singing the National
-Anthem on the occasion of the Queen’s first
-state visit, that he met Charles Dickens, who
-afterwards became his intimate friend. ‘London,’
-he once said, ‘is the place for interchange of
-thought’; and it was a relief to him to lay his
-habitual pursuits aside for a few hours, and
-exchange ideas with men whose lives lay
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>in lines wholly different from his own. He
-found dining-out a relaxation—the hours were
-earlier in those days—and gradually, as his
-social gifts were discovered, he was much in
-request. No man could tell a story better, and
-his general conversation was brilliant and
-original. He had the happy art of dilating
-on his own pursuits without being either a
-pedant or a bore. Consequently he was a
-member of many societies who, ‘greatly daring,
-dined,’ as, for instance, the Abernethy Club,
-the Literary Society, and The Club, founded
-by Dr Johnson, an exclusive society limited
-to forty members, in which he occupied the
-place once filled by Oliver Goldsmith. He
-also promoted the Royal Literary Fund and
-the Actors Benevolent Fund—where his after-dinner
-eloquence was much appreciated. He
-was a good chess-player, and was often
-matched, successfully, with some of the first
-players of the day, as Landseer, Staunton,
-and the Duke of Brunswick. His acquaintance
-with literature was wider than might
-have been expected from his absorbing occupations
-in other directions, and his retentive
-memory enabled him to quote pages of Milton,
-Shakespeare, and other standard writers. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>was also an ardent novel-reader. Mrs Owen
-kept him well supplied with the novels of the
-day; and he sat up half the night over <cite>Eugene
-Aram</cite>, the serial stories of Dickens, <cite>Vanity
-Fair</cite>, <cite>Shirley</cite>, and <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite>, which
-we are glad to find he preferred to all the rest
-of George Eliot’s stories. Apart from his
-social proclivities, he managed to get acquainted
-with most of the celebrated people of the day.
-They either came to see him and the museum
-he directed, or they asked him to call on them.
-Among those whom he met in this way we
-may mention Mrs Fry, Miss Edgeworth,
-Turner, Samuel Warren, Emerson, Guizot,
-the younger Dumas, Fanny Kemble, Tennyson,
-Macaulay, and Carlyle, who described him as
-‘the man with the glittering eyes,’ and decided
-that he was ‘neither a fool nor a humbug.’ In
-his own especial line of science he was intimate
-with Lord Enniskillen, Sir Philip Egerton,
-Prince Lucien Bonaparte, Sedgwick, Murchison,
-Lyell; and subsequently took a keen interest
-in the researches of Livingstone, whom he
-helped with the first record of his African
-work. ‘Poor Livingstone!’ he says; ‘he does
-not know what it is to write a book.’ When
-Owen could find time for a holiday, which was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>but seldom, he enjoyed fishing and grouse-shooting;
-but his delight in Nature was so
-keen that probably sport was what he least
-valued in these excursions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was natural that, as Owen’s reputation
-grew, he should be involved in some of the
-schemes for improving the condition of the
-people which from time to time engaged the
-attention of Government. In 1843 he served
-on a commission of inquiry into the health
-of towns, and exercised himself over sewers,
-slaughter-houses, and such-like abominations.
-In 1846 he was on the Metropolitan Sewers
-Commission, which grew out of the former,
-and he did much good work in hunting up
-evidence about the spread of cholera and typhus
-from imperfect drainage. In the course of this
-he incurred considerable unpopularity, and was
-contemptuously nick-named ‘Jack of all Trades.’
-The work became so heavy and absorbing that
-he thought of resigning; but when Lord
-Morpeth urged him to remain, on the ground
-that they could ill spare his ‘enlightened philanthropy,’
-he not only withdrew his resignation,
-but consented to serve on a commission to
-consider the state of Smithfield Market and
-the meat supply of London (1849), a subject
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>on which he held very decided opinions. Probably
-his zoological qualifications, coupled with
-his knowledge of what had been effected on the
-Continent in the way of establishing extramural
-slaughter-houses, had much to do with
-abolishing the market. He was also on the
-Preliminary Committee of Organization for the
-Great Exhibition of 1851, and chairman of
-the jury on raw materials, alimentary substances,
-&amp;c. Similar services were performed by him
-for the exhibition held at Paris in 1855.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was also a mark for many of those
-questions, serious and absurd alike, which are
-presented for solution to men of science. A
-firm of undertakers asked him how much they
-ought to charge for embalming Mr Beckford;
-a grave Oriental from the Turkish Embassy
-submitted to his examination the bowl of a
-tobacco-pipe which he believed to have been
-made out of the beak of a Phœnix; his opinion
-was sought by the Home Office on the window-tax,
-and by Charles Dickens on the publicity of
-executions; his microscopical skill was brought
-to bear on the so-called contemporary annotations
-of Shakespeare; and he demolished one
-of the many sea-serpents in which a marvel-loving
-public from time to time believes. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>showed very conclusively that it was probably a
-large seal. His letter to the <cite>Times</cite> on the
-subject excited a good deal of attention, and
-Prince Albert dubbed him ‘the serpent-killer.’
-He was also to a certain extent responsible for
-the models of extinct animals in the gardens of
-the Crystal Palace at Sydenham, and was
-rewarded for his trouble by a dinner in the
-spacious carcase of the Iguanodon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In 1856—it is said, through the influence
-of Lord Macaulay—Owen was appointed Superintendent
-of the Department of Natural History
-at the British Museum, with a salary of £800
-a year. The new officer was to stand towards
-the collections of natural history in the same
-relation that the librarian did towards the
-books and antiquities, and to be directly responsible,
-as he was, to the trustees. Great
-advantages were expected to result from this
-new departure, and Owen was warmly congratulated.
-Professor Sedgwick wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I trust that your move to the British Museum is for
-your happiness. If God spare your health, it will be a
-grand move for the benefit of British science. An <em>Imperator</em>
-was sadly wanted in that vast establishment’ (ii. 19).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With Lord Macaulay, anxiety for Owen
-himself had been paramount:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>‘I am extremely desirous that something should be done
-for Owen. I hardly know him to speak to. His pursuits
-are not mine; but his fame is spread over Europe. He is
-an honour to our country, and it is painful to me to think
-that a man of his merit should be approaching old age
-amidst anxieties and distresses. He told me that eight
-hundred a year, without a house in the Museum, would be
-opulence to him’ (ii. 15).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A little foresight might have saved much disappointment.
-The subordinate officers, whom
-Owen was expected to influence, owed no
-allegiance to him, and resented his intrusion;
-they had long been practically independent
-within their own departments, and desired to
-remain so. Such a situation would have been
-difficult even for a born leader of men; but for
-Owen, whose gifts did not lie in that direction,
-it meant either resignation or acceptance of the
-inevitable. He chose the latter, and, dropping
-the sword of a despot, assumed the peaceful
-mantle of a constitutional sovereign. His
-reputation did good service to the collections
-in the way of attracting specimens of all kinds
-from all parts of the world; and he exerted
-himself with exemplary diligence to obtain
-special <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>desiderata</em></span>; but otherwise his duties
-as administrator soon became little more than
-nominal. There was, however, one subject
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>connected with the Museum which had long
-engaged his attention, and which he had the
-pleasure to see settled before he died, though
-not entirely on the lines he had at first laid
-down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It had been manifest for a considerable
-period that the British Museum was too small
-for the various collections, and two years before
-Owen’s arrival Dr Gray, keeper of zoology,
-had made a definite request for additional
-accommodation. The trustees, after much
-consideration, agreed to a small, but wholly
-inadequate, extension of one of the galleries.
-Owen did not act hastily, but, having thoroughly
-mastered the subject, addressed a report to the
-trustees in 1859, in which he showed that,
-having regard to the congestion of the existing
-galleries, the quantity of specimens stored out
-of sight, and the probable rate of increase, a
-space of ten acres ought to be acquired at once.
-This report was accompanied by a plan, drawn
-by himself, in which several special features
-may be noticed. A central hall was to contain
-an epitome of natural history—specimens
-selected to show the type-characters of the
-principal groups—called in subsequent editions
-of the plan the Index-Museum; adjoining this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>hall there was to be a lecture-theatre; zoology
-was to include physical ethnology, for which
-a gallery measuring 150 feet by 50 feet was
-to be provided; the Cetacea, stuffed specimens
-and skeletons, were to have a long gallery to
-themselves; and lastly, paleontology was no
-longer to be separated from zoology, but the
-gallery containing the one was to be readily
-entered from the gallery containing the other.
-A plan so novel, so enlightened, so truly
-imperial as this, was far too much in advance
-of the age to meet with anything except opposition
-and ridicule. When it was debated in
-the House of Commons, Mr Gregory, M.P.
-for Galway, got it referred to a Select Committee,
-regretting, in reference to its author,
-‘that a man whose name stood so high should
-connect himself with so foolish, crazy, and
-extravagant a scheme.’ Owen’s first idea had
-been to purchase the land required at Bloomsbury;
-but on this point he had no very decided
-personal opinion, and, yielding to that of the
-majority of men of science, he advocated by
-lecture, by conversation, and in print, the
-removal of the collections of natural history
-to a new and distant site. For this scheme
-he fortunately secured the powerful advocacy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>of Mr Gladstone, then Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-who moved (May 12, 1862) for leave
-to bring in a Bill to effect it. These excellent
-intentions were thwarted by Mr Disraeli, who,
-knowing no more about science than he did
-about primroses, saw only a chance of obstructing
-a political opponent; and once more
-the scheme was adjourned. The adjournment,
-however, was of short duration, for in 1863
-Parliament voted the purchase of five acres
-at South Kensington, which Owen presently
-persuaded the Government to increase to eight;
-but further delays, extending over nearly
-twenty years, ensued, and when Owen resigned
-in 1883 the collections were not yet completely
-arranged in their new home.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Museum as completed is widely different
-from that which Owen originally prescribed.
-The gallery of ethnology is gone;
-the Cetacea are relegated, as at Bloomsbury
-in former days, to a cellar; there is no lecture-theatre;
-and, in fact, the index-museum is
-almost the only special feature which has
-survived, but even this was not arranged by
-himself. On one vital question of arrangement,
-moreover, Owen allowed his own views to be
-overruled. So early as 1842 he had reported
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>to the Council of the College of Surgeons on
-the expediency of combining the fossil and
-recent osteological specimens, pointing out
-that</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘the peculiarities of the extinct mastodon, for example,
-cannot be understood without a comparison with the analogous
-parts of the elephant and tapir; nor those of the
-ichthyosaurus without reference to the skeletons of crocodiles
-and fishes. The proper position of such specimens in
-the Museum is, therefore, between those series of skeletons
-of which they present transitional or intermediate structures.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>An arrangement of the recent and fossil collections
-in accordance with these most reasonable
-and philosophical views appears in all the
-versions of the plan until the last; now it has
-entirely disappeared, and the two collections
-are disposed in opposite wings of the building
-widely severed from each other. Owen had no
-special turn for organization, and he was
-probably in a minority of one against his colleagues
-on this point. Besides this, his fighting
-days were over, and he preferred peace to an
-ideal arrangement of which his contemporaries
-could not see the advantages.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Owen turned his enforced leisure at the
-British Museum to good account, and proceeded,
-with renewed activity, to occupy himself
-in various directions. In 1857 he gave lectures
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>on paleontology at the Royal School of Mines,
-and his first course seems to have evoked the
-enthusiasm of his earlier days. Said Sir
-Roderick Murchison:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘I never heard so thoroughly eloquent a lecture as that
-of yesterday.... It is the first time I have had the pleasure of
-seeing our British Cuvier in his true place, and not the less
-delighted to listen to his fervid and convincing defence
-of the principle laid down by his great precursor. Everyone
-was charmed, and he will have done more (as I felt convinced)
-to render our institution favourably known than by
-any other possible method’ (ii. 61).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Soon afterwards he was appointed (1859-61)
-Fullerian Professor of Physiology at the Royal
-Institution. Here again he chose ‘Fossil
-Mammals’ as his subject. In later years he
-gave frequent lectures on this and kindred
-subjects in the larger provincial towns. Nor
-must we omit the lectures to the Royal children
-at Buckingham Palace, which he delivered at
-the request of Prince Albert in 1860. These
-lectures, which were much appreciated by those
-for whom they were intended, laid the foundations
-of a close friendship between Owen and
-the Royal Family.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must not, however, be supposed that
-these occupations diverted him from osteology.
-It was during this period that he wrote many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>of the paleontological memoirs to which we
-have already alluded. He continued to publish
-paper after paper on <em>Dinornis</em> as fresh
-material accumulated; and he composed, among
-others, his monograph on the Aye-Aye (1863),
-which perhaps excited as much attention as
-that on the Nautilus thirty years before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Between 1866 and 1868 he published his
-elaborate treatise <cite>On the Anatomy of Vertebrates</cite>,
-obviously intended to be the standard
-work on the subject for all time. But alas for
-the fallacies of hope! It is an immense store-house
-of information, founded in the main upon
-his own observations and dissections; and from
-no similar work will advanced students derive
-so much assistance. But, unfortunately, no
-revision of his own papers was attempted; the
-novel classification employed has never been
-accepted by any school of zoologists; and the
-only result of the proposed division of the
-Mammalia into four sub-classes, according to
-their cerebral characteristics, was a controversy
-from which Owen emerged with his reputation
-for scientific accuracy seriously impaired, if
-not irretrievably ruined. He had stated, not
-merely in the work of which we are speaking,
-but in others—as, for instance, in the Rede
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>Lecture delivered at Cambridge in 1859—that
-certain divisions of the human brain were
-absent in the apes. It was proved over and
-over again, in public and private, that this
-assertion was contrary to fact, and contrary to
-his own authorities; but he could never be
-persuaded to retract, or even to modify, his
-statements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the end of the third volume of the <cite>Anatomy</cite>
-are some ‘General Conclusions,’ which
-contain, so far as human intelligence can penetrate
-the meaning of Owen’s ‘dark speech,’ his
-final views on the origin of species. We have
-already shown that his mind was first turned
-to this momentous question during his visit to
-Paris in 1831, and that subsequently, during
-his work on the Physiological and Osteological
-Catalogues of the Museum of the College of
-Surgeons, it was continually in his thoughts.
-During this period he read, and was profoundly
-influenced by, Oken’s <span lang="de" xml:lang="de"><cite>Lehrbuch der Naturphilosophie</cite></span>,
-a translation of which was published
-by the Ray Society, in 1847, at his instance.
-In his <cite>Archetype and Homologies of the Vertebrate
-Skeleton</cite> (1848) he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘The subject of the following essay has occupied a
-portion of my attention from the period when, after having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>made a certain progress in comparative anatomy, the
-evidence of a greater conformity to type, especially in the
-bones of the head of the vertebrate animals, than the
-immortal Cuvier had been willing to admit, began to enforce
-a reconsideration of his conclusions, to which I had previously
-yielded implicit assent.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Out of the study here indicated there grew
-a revision of the vertebrate skeleton, in which
-the homologues (<em>i.e.</em> the same organs in different
-animals, under every variety of form and
-function) were recognized, and a new system
-of osteological nomenclature was proposed. In
-this Owen did excellent work, which has been
-generally accepted. But in his anxiety to
-recognize and account for ‘the one in the
-many,’ he adopted Oken’s idea of the skeleton
-being resolvable into a succession of vertebræ,
-and evolved the idea of an archetype. It is
-almost inconceivable that the clear-headed and
-sagacious interpreter, whose sober conclusions
-we have indicated through a long series of
-zoological and paleontological memoirs, should
-have ever adopted these transcendental speculations.
-But there was evidently a metaphysical
-side to his mind, and he took a keen, almost a
-puerile, delight in this child of his fancy. He
-even had a seal engraved with a symbolical
-representation of it. To show that we are not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>exaggerating we will quote his own account of
-his views when sending the seal to his sister:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘It represents the archetype, or primal pattern—what
-Plato would have called the “Divine Idea”—on which the
-osseous frame of all vertebrate animals has been constructed.
-The motto is “The One in the Manifold,”
-expressive of the unity of plan which may be traced through
-all the modifications of the pattern, by which it is adapted
-to the varied habits and modes of life of fishes, reptiles,
-birds, beasts, and human kind. Many have been the
-attempts to discover the vertebrate archetype, and it seems
-now generally felt that it has been found’ (i. 388).</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But, assuming Owen to have really discovered
-the one, he was as far off as ever from
-the origin of the many. And on this subject
-he never did reach any definite conclusion.
-He admits, it is true, a theory which sounds
-very like evolution:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘Thus, at the acquisition of facts adequate to test the
-moot question of links between past and present species, as
-at the close of that other series of researches proving the
-skeleton of all Vertebrates, and even of Man, to be the
-harmonized sum of a series of essentially similar segments, I
-have been led to recognize species as exemplifying the
-continuous operation of natural law, or secondary cause;
-and that, not only successively, but progressively; from the
-first embodiment of the Vertebrate idea under its old
-Ichthyic vestment until it became arrayed in the glorious
-garb of the human form<a id='r122' /><a href='#f122' class='c011'><sup>[122]</sup></a>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>In this quotation he is in the main stating
-the views he held in 1849, for the latter portion
-of it is from his essay <cite>On the Nature of Limbs</cite>,
-published in that year. But the nature of the
-secondary cause which produced species cannot
-be concluded from his works. He fiercely
-contested Darwin’s theory of natural selection,
-both in conversation and in periodicals. To
-the last he clung to a notion of a ‘vital property,’
-which is thus described in the <cite>Anatomy</cite>
-(iii. 807):</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>‘So, being unable to accept the volitional hypothesis, or
-that of impulse from within, or the selective force exerted
-by outward circumstances, I deem an innate tendency to
-deviate from parental type, operating through periods of
-adequate duration, to be the most probable nature, or way
-of operation, of the secondary law, whereby species have
-been derived one from the other.’</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In 1883 Owen resigned his office at the
-British Museum and retired into private life.
-His remaining years were passed at Sheen
-in a tranquil and apparently happy old age.
-In 1884 he was gazetted a K.C.B., and, on
-Mr Gladstone’s initiative, his pension was augmented
-by £100 a year. But, though it
-pleased him to be always pleading poverty, he
-was really a comparatively wealthy man, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>when he died left £30,000 behind him. His
-wife died in 1873, and his only son in 1886;
-but a solitude which might have been painful
-was enlivened by the presence of his son’s
-widow and her seven children. Owen delighted
-in the country. He had a genuine
-love for outdoor natural history, and ‘the sight
-of the deer and other animals in the park, the
-birds and insects in the garden, the trees,
-flowers, and varying aspects of the sky, filled
-him with enthusiastic admiration.’ He died,
-literally of old age, on Sunday, 18 January,
-1892.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is much to be regretted that one who
-worked at his own subjects with such untiring
-zeal should have left behind him almost nothing
-to perpetuate his name with the great mass of
-the people. Mr Huxley remarks that, ‘whether
-we consider the quantity or the quality of the
-work done, or the wide range of his labours,
-I doubt if, in the long annals of anatomy, more
-is to be placed to the credit of any single
-worker’ (ii. 306); but he presently adds this
-caution: ‘Obvious as are the merits of Owen’s
-anatomical work to every expert, it is necessary
-to be an expert to discern them’ (ii. 332). He
-gave popular lectures, but they were not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>printed<a id='r123' /><a href='#f123' class='c011'><sup>[123]</sup></a>; he wrote what he intended to be
-a work for all time, but it has faded out of
-recollection, and the whole theory of the archetype
-is now as dead as his own Dinornis.
-Nor was he at pains to surround himself with
-a circle of pupils who might have handed down
-the teaching of the Master to another generation,
-as Cuvier’s teaching was handed down by
-his pupils. It was one of Owen’s defects that
-he was repellent to younger men. In a word,
-he was secretive, impatient of interference, and
-preferred to be <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>aut Cæsar aut nullus</em></span>. Credit
-was to him worth nothing if it was to be divided.
-Again, brilliant as were his talents and assured
-as was his position, he could not recognize the
-truth that men may sometimes err, and that the
-greatest gain rather than lose by admitting it.
-During the whole of his long life we believe
-that he never owned to a mistake. Not only
-was what he said law, but what others ventured
-to say—especially if it ‘came between the wind
-and his nobility’—was to be brushed aside as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>of no moment. We believe that this feeling
-on his part explains his refusal to accept the
-Darwinian theory. As we have shown, he
-went half way with it, and then dropped it,
-because it had not been hammered on his own
-anvil. This unfortunate antagonism to other
-workers, coupled with his readiness to enter
-into controversy, and the acrimony and dexterity
-with which he handled his adversaries,
-naturally discouraged those who would otherwise
-have been only too happy to sit at the
-feet of the Nestor of English zoology; and
-during the last thirty years of his life he became
-gradually more and more isolated. Moreover,
-there was, or there was thought to be, a certain
-want of sincerity about him which no amount
-of external courtesy could wholly conceal. In
-a word, he was compact of strange contradictions.
-He had many noble qualities; and
-yet he could not truly be called great, for they
-were warped and overshadowed by many moral
-perversities. Had he lived in the previous
-century his portrait might have been sketched
-by Pope:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>‘But were there one whose fires</div>
- <div class='line'>True genius kindles and fair fame inspires;</div>
- <div class='line'>Blest with each talent and each art to please,</div>
- <div class='line'>And born to write, converse, and live with ease;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>Should such a man, too fond to rule alone,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bear, like the Turk, no brother near the throne,</div>
- <div class='line'>View him with scornful yet with jealous eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hate for arts that caused himself to rise;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Like <em>Cato</em>, give his little senate laws,</div>
- <div class='line'>And sit attentive to his own applause;</div>
- <div class='line'>While wits and templars every sentence raise,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wonder with a foolish face of praise—</div>
- <div class='line'>Who but must laugh, if such a man there be?</div>
- <div class='line'>Who would not weep, if <em>Atticus</em> were he!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c023' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY J. AND C. F. CLAY, AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<p class='c024'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>Cambridge Described &amp; Illustrated.</span></span>
-Being a Short History of the Town and University. By
-<span class='sc'>Thomas Dinham Atkinson</span>; with an Introduction by
-<span class='sc'>John Willis Clark</span>, M.A., F.S.A., Registrary of the
-University, late Fellow of Trinity College. With Twenty-Nine
-Steel Plates, numerous Illustrations and Maps. 8vo.
-21<em>s.</em> net.</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>DAILY CHRONICLE.</cite>—“He has conferred a favour upon all
-lovers of literature and its early seats by going at much length and with
-great care into the questions not only of municipality, but of the
-University and the colleges.... A good thing well done.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>DAILY NEWS.</cite>—“All Cambridge men will be interested in the
-many quaint and curious descriptions of mediæval manners and customs
-of the University Town which Mr. Atkinson has collected. To all
-with archæological interests we strongly recommend the volume.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“His book will be welcomed by all those who
-desire to get, in the compass of a single volume, a comprehensive view
-of both Town and University. The illustrations throughout the volume
-are well drawn and excellently reproduced.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>MORNING POST.</cite>—“A volume which is copiously illustrated by
-excellent plates, drawings, and maps, and to which an admirable general
-index lends an additional value.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“We hail this interesting volume, which attempts
-to do what has heretofore been neglected (save in Cooper’s monumental
-work),—viz. combine in one survey the general history and description
-of both the University and town of Cambridge.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>CAMBRIDGE REVIEW.</cite>—“This most interesting and beautiful
-book.... To most of us this compact volume will come not so much as a
-luxury, but as one of that class of commodities known to economists as
-being ‘conventionally necessary.’”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>LITERATURE.</cite>—“Throughout deserves the highest praise.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>London: Macmillan and Company, Limited.</div>
- <div class='c002'>Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<p class='c025'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>A Concise Guide to the Town and
-University of Cambridge</span></span> in Four Walks. By
-<span class='sc'>John Willis Clark</span>, M.A., F.S.A., Registrary of the
-University, formerly Fellow of Trinity College. With Map
-and 75 Illustrations. Price 1<em>s.</em> net, or in limp cloth cover
-with pocket and duplicate of the map, 2<em>s.</em> net.</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>TIMES.</cite>—“All intelligent visitors to Cambridge, however short
-their stay, will be grateful to Mr. J. W. Clark, the Registrary of the
-University, for his excellent <cite>Concise Guide to the Town and University
-of Cambridge in Four Walks</cite>. It is not often that the casual visitor
-to a place of great historical and architectural interest like Cambridge
-finds so competent a <em>cicerone</em> as Mr. Clark to tell him what he can see
-and what is best worth seeing in the time at his disposal.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“Mr. J. Willis Clark has written <cite>A Concise
-Guide to Cambridge</cite> of unusual excellence.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>DAILY CHRONICLE.</cite>—“An ideal guide-book by a former
-Fellow of Trinity.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.</cite>—“Mr. Clark’s varied accomplishments
-raise this little book quite out of the category of ordinary
-popular guide-books.”</p>
-<p class='c014'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“In a book of its size the information is, of course,
-much condensed, but so far as it goes it is excellent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>Libraries in the Medieval and Renaissance Periods.</span></span> The Rede Lecture, delivered
-June 13, 1894. By <span class='sc'>J. W. Clark</span>, M.A., F.S.A. Crown
-8vo. 2<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> net.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='footnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>Footnotes</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. 1. <cite>William Whewell, D.D., Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.
-An Account of his Writings, with Selections from his Literary
-and Scientific Correspondence.</cite> By <span class='sc'>I. Todhunter</span>, M.A., F.R.S.,
-Honorary Fellow of S. John’s College. 2 vols., 8vo. (London, 1876.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. <cite>The Life and Selections from the Correspondence of William
-Whewell, D.D., late Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.</cite> By Mrs
-<span class='sc'>Stair Douglas</span>. 8vo. (London, 1881.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. In the fifteen years from 1800-1814 inclusive the average was
-205; from 1815-1829 it was 402; and from 1830-1844 it was 433;
-from 1845-1859 it was 444; from 1859-1874 it was 545.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Todhunter’s <cite>Life</cite>, ii. 91.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. <cite>Life and Letters of Sir C. Lyell</cite>, ii. 38. In the same letter he
-expresses his astonishment at finding that Whewell, while writing one
-of his papers on the Tides, was passing through the press <em>four other
-works</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. The inscription runs: munificentia · fultus · Alex. J. B. Hope,
-generosi · hisce · ædibus · antiquam · speciem · restituit. W. Whewell.
-Mag. Collegii. A. D. MDCCCXLIII. Mr Hope gave £1000, and the
-Master himself £250; but the liberality of the College, which spent
-some £4000 before the work was finished, is unrecorded. It was on
-this occasion that somebody wrote a parody on <cite>The House that Jack
-Built</cite>, beginning:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>This is the House that Hope built.</div>
- <div class='line'>This is the Master, rude and rough,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who lives in the House that Hope built.</div>
- <div class='line'>These are the Seniors, greedy and gruff,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who toady the Master, rude and rough,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who lives in the House that Hope built.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. The <cite>Times</cite>, February 25 and 26, 1847. Mrs Stair Douglas,
-p. 285, prints a letter from Archdeacon Hare, who had been disturbed
-by reports of the Vice-Chancellor’s vehemence.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. The visit of Queen Victoria to the University in 1843.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. <cite>A Letter to the Rev. W. Whewell, B.D., Master of Trinity College,
-etc. By an Undergraduate.</cite> 8vo. London, 1843.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. <cite>The Victory of Faith, and other Sermons.</cite> By J. C. Hare, M. A.
-8vo. Cambridge, 1840, p. x.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 216.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Dr Lightfoot’s Sermon, preached in the College Chapel on
-Sunday, March 18, 1866.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. They appeared in <cite>Punch</cite> for March 17, 1866.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. The letter is dated 30 October, 1857.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 208.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. Memoir by Sir John Herschel, <cite>Proceedings of Royal Society</cite>, <span class='fss'>XVI.</span>,
-p. lvi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Bishop Goodwin’s article in <cite>Macmillan’s Magazine</cite> for December,
-1881, p. 140.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. We are not sure that he ever allowed the <cite>Origin of Species</cite> to be
-admitted into the College Library. It was certainly refused more than
-once, being probably dismissed with the expression which he was fond
-of using when, as Chairman of the Seniority, he read the list of books
-proposed—‘a worthless publication.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. 1. <cite>Remains, Literary and Theological, of Connop Thirlwall,
-late Lord Bishop of S. David’s.</cite> Edited by <span class='sc'>J. J. Stewart Perowne</span>,
-D.D. Vol. 1: Charges delivered between the years 1842 and 1860.
-Vol. 2: Charges delivered between the years 1863 and 1872. 8vo.
-(London, 1877.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. <cite>Essays, Speeches, and Sermons.</cite> By <span class='sc'>Connop Thirlwall</span>,
-D.D., late Lord Bishop of S. David’s. Edited by <span class='sc'>J. J. Stewart
-Perowne</span>, D.D. 8vo. (London, 1880.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. <cite>Letters to a Friend.</cite> By <span class='sc'>Connop Thirlwall</span>, late Lord
-Bishop of S. David’s. Edited by the Very Rev. <span class='sc'>Arthur Penrhyn
-Stanley</span>, D.D. 8vo. (London, 1881.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>4. <cite>Letters, Literary and Theological, of Connop Thirlwall, late
-Lord Bishop of S. David’s.</cite> Edited by the Very Rev. <span class='sc'>J. J. Stewart
-Perowne</span>, D.D., Dean of Peterborough, and the Rev. <span class='sc'>Louis Stokes</span>,
-B.A. Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. With Annotations and
-Preliminary Memoirs by the Rev. <span class='sc'>Louis Stokes</span>. 8vo. (London,
-1881.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>5. <cite>Letters to a Friend.</cite> New Edition. (London, 1882.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. Dr Perowne’s Preface to <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. vi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 177.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. <cite>Primitiæ</cite>, p. 52. The essay is endorsed: ‘Composed 1st January,
-1806. Eight years old.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. <cite>Primitiæ</cite>, p. 224. The piece is dated October 28, 1808.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>, p. 155. As a matter of fact the Bishop did
-buy and destroy all the copies that he could.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Dean Perowne mentions (Preface, p. viii.) that ‘at school he did
-not care to enter into the games and amusements of the other boys, but
-was to be seen at play-hour withdrawing himself into some corner with
-a pile of books under his arm.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. Candler was seven years older than Thirlwall. He was junior
-assistant in a draper’s shop at Ipswich, and afterwards set up in business
-on his own account at Chelmsford, where he became a leading member
-of the Society of Friends. He died, nearly eighty years of age, in 1872.
-We have not been able to ascertain how he became acquainted with
-Thirlwall.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. <cite>Ibid.</cite> p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>, p. 225.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 21. The letter is dated December, 1813, when
-the writer was sixteen years old.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Professor Monk, who had examined Thirlwall on one of these
-occasions, was so much struck with the vigour and accuracy of his
-translations that he remarked to a friend, who had also had experience
-of his worth as a scholar, ‘Had I been sitting in my library, with
-unlimited access to books, I could not have done better.’ ‘Nor so
-well,’ was the reply.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. Cooper’s <cite>Annals of the Town and University of Cambridge</cite>,
-iv. 516. The words between inverted commas in our text are from a
-pamphlet entitled ‘A Statement regarding the Union, an Academical
-Debating Society, which existed at Cambridge from February 13, 1815,
-to March 24, 1817, when it was <em>suppressed by the Vice-Chancellor</em>.’
-The ‘statement’ is evidently official, and is thoroughly business-like
-and temperate. The Vice-Chancellor was Dr Wood, Master of
-S. John’s College; the officers of the society were: Mr Whewell,
-<em>President</em>; Mr Thirlwall, <em>Secretary</em>; Mr H. J. Rose, <em>Treasurer</em>. The
-late Professor Selwyn, in a speech at the opening of the new Union
-building, October 30, 1866, stated that on the entrance of the proctors
-the President said, ‘Strangers will please to withdraw, and the House
-will take the message into consideration.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. <cite>Autobiography of John Stuart Mill</cite>, p. 125. Mill is describing a
-debate at ‘a society of Owenites called the Co-operation Society,’ in
-1825. ‘It was a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>lutte corps à corps</em></span> between Owenites and political
-economists, whom the Owenites regarded as their most inveterate
-opponents; but it was a perfectly friendly dispute.... The speaker
-with whom I was most struck, though I dissented from nearly every
-word he said, was Thirlwall, the historian, since Bishop of S. David’s,
-then a Chancery barrister, unknown except by a high reputation for
-eloquence acquired at the Cambridge Union before the era of Austin
-and Macaulay. His speech was in answer to one of mine. Before he
-had uttered ten sentences, I set him down as the best speaker I had
-ever heard, and I have never since heard anyone whom I placed above
-him.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. An old friend of Bishop Thirlwall informs us that he retained his
-preference for the ‘Paradiso’ in after years.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. <cite>Life and Letters of Frances Baroness Bunsen</cite>; by Augustus J. C.
-Hare. 8vo. Lond. 1882: i. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. Letter to Bunsen, November 21, 1831, <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. <cite>Memoirs of Baron Bunsen</cite>, i. 339.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. Marsh was professor from 1807 to 1839. The first volume of his
-translation of Michaelis had appeared in 1793.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c., p. 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite>, April, 1876, p. 291.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. <cite>A Critical Essay on the Gospel of S. Luke.</cite> By Dr Frederick
-Schleiermacher. With an introduction by the Translator, containing
-an account of the controversy respecting the origin of the first three
-Gospels since Bishop Marsh’s dissertation. 8vo. London: 1825.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. F. D. Maurice writes, 25 February, 1848: ‘The Bishop of
-S. David’s very injudiciously translated, about twenty years ago,
-Schleiermacher’s book on S. Luke—the one of all, perhaps, which he
-ever wrote the most likely to offend religious people in England, and
-so mislead them as to his real character and objects.’ <cite>Life of F. D.
-Maurice</cite>, i. 454.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. Between 1827 and 1832 he held the college offices of Junior
-Bursar, Junior Dean, and Head Lecturer. In 1828, 1829, 1832, and
-1834 he was one of the examiners for the Classical Tripos.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. See Dean Stanley’s Memoir of Archdeacon Hare, prefixed to the
-third edition of <cite>The Victory of Faith</cite>. 1874.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. <i>A Vindication of Niebuhr’s ‘History of Rome’ from the Charges of
-the ‘Quarterly Review.’</i> By Julius Charles Hare, M.A. Cambridge,
-1829. The passage commented on will be found in the <cite>Quarterly
-Review</cite> for January 1829 (vol. xxxix. p. 8). The first edition of
-Niebuhr’s own work had been highly praised in an article in the same
-<cite>Review</cite> for June 1825 (vol. xxxii. p. 67).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. On the Life of Dr Whewell, printed above. It was originally
-called ‘Half a Century of Cambridge Life,’ and appeared in the <cite>Church
-Quarterly Review</cite>, April 1882.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. The <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Caput Senatus</cite></span> consisted of five persons, viz. a Doctor of
-Divinity, a Doctor of Laws, a Doctor of Physic, a non-regent Master,
-and a regent Master. These persons held office for a year. They were
-elected by the votes of the Heads of Colleges, the Doctors in all
-faculties, and the Scrutators. Each member had the right to veto
-any proposal of which he disapproved. The <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><cite>Caput Senatus</cite></span> was
-established by the Statutes of Elizabeth, 1570, Cap. xli, and abolished
-by the University Act, 1856.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. The first petition was presented to the House of Lords on March
-21, 1834; the protest is dated April 3; and the counter-petition was
-presented on April 21 in the same year.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. <cite>A Letter</cite> etc., p. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. <cite>A Letter</cite> etc., pp. 21, 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. When the ‘Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Undergraduates’
-tabulated the weekly attendance of the Fellows at Chapel
-in the Lent Term of 1838, and finally published a list, like the class list
-at the end of an examination, Whewell was placed in the middle of the
-second class, having obtained only 34 marks. The Deans, being
-obliged, in virtue of their office, to attend twice daily, were disqualified
-from obtaining the prize—a Bible—which the Society gave to Mr Perry,
-afterwards Bishop of Melbourne, who had obtained 66 marks.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. It has been said that the Master was advised to take the course
-he did by Mr Hugh James Rose, who was in the University at the time,
-and on Whitsunday, May 18, had preached a sermon at Great S. Mary’s
-on the ‘Duty of Maintaining the Truth,’ from S. Matt. x. 27: ‘What ye
-hear in the ear, that preach ye upon the house-tops.’ Thirlwall’s letter,
-however, was not published before May 21, so that, unless the nature
-of it had been known beforehand, it is clear that anything which Mr
-Rose had said in his sermon could not have referred to it. That
-Thirlwall believed that there was some connexion between the sermon,
-or at any rate the preacher, and his dismissal, is evident from the fact
-that after showing the Master’s letter to one of the junior Fellows, who
-expressed indignant surprise that such a course could have been taken,
-he remarked: ‘Ah! let this be a warning to you to preach truth, if
-need be, upon the house-tops, but never under any circumstances to
-preach error.’ Thirlwall was a regular attendant at Great S. Mary’s,
-and no doubt heard the sermon in question.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. The letter, dated 27 May, 1834, is printed by Mrs Stair Douglas,
-<cite>Life of Dr Whewell</cite>, p. 163.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. The letter, dated 23 September 1834, is printed in <cite>Letters of
-Bishop Thirlwall</cite>, p. 124; and by Mrs Stair Douglas, <cite>Life of Dr
-Whewell</cite>, p. 168. Dr Wordsworth’s action was noticed with disapproval
-beyond the limits of Trinity College, for Professor Babington
-records in his Diary:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>Nov. 17 [1834]\.</i> Attended a meeting at Mr Bowstead’s rooms at
-Corpus, to vote an address to Mr Connop Thirlwall expressive of our
-sorrow at his being prevented from acting as tutor, and of our disapprobation
-of the discussion of things not forming part of the duties of
-tuition being made a cause for depriving a tutor of his office.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Nov. 29.</em> A meeting was called for 28th to take into consideration
-the address to Thirlwall. Laing, Henslow, and I supposed that it was
-this day, and went, and found that the meeting was over and the
-address, much to our sorrow burnt. (<cite>Memorials, etc. of Charles
-Cardale Babington</cite>, 8vo. Camb. 1897, p. 33). Professor Mayor (<cite>Ibid.</cite> 265)
-conjectures, with much probability, that the address was destroyed at
-Thirlwall’s own suggestion. It is curious that his friends should have
-deferred their action for so many months.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. <cite>Life of Dr Whewell</cite>, by Mrs Stair Douglas, p. 211.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>, p. 191.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. The preface to the first edition of vol. i. is dated ‘Trinity College,
-June 12, 1835.’ He was instituted to Kirby Underdale, 13 February,
-1835 (<cite>Letters</cite>, p. 136), but he did not take up his residence there till
-July following (<cite>Ibid.</cite> p. 137). The dates of the subsequent volumes are
-ii. iii., 1836; iv., 1837; v., 1838; vi., 1839; vii., 1840; viii., 1844.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c. p. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. Preface to the second edition, dated ‘London, May 1845.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c. p. 194. The letter is dated April 9, 1846.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. <cite>The Personal Life of George Grote.</cite> By Mrs Grote, p. 173.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. <cite>Memoirs of Viscount Melbourne.</cite> By W. M. Torrens, M.P. Vol.
-ii. p. 332. Lord Houghton in the <cite>Fortnightly Review</cite>, February 1878.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>, p. 278.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r65'>65</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c. p. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r66'>66</a>. <cite>Letters</cite>, &amp;c. p. 292.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r67'>67</a>. <cite>Charges</cite>, vol. ii. pp. 90-100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r68'>68</a>. In his charge for 1851 (<cite>Charges</cite>, vol. i. p. 150) he announced his
-intention to devote the surplus of his income to the augmentation of
-small livings, and in 1866 he pointed out that the fund had up to that
-time yielded £24,000 (<cite>Ibid.</cite> vol. ii. p. 98).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r69'>69</a>. He particularly disliked gossip. At Kirby Underdale the old
-sexton used to relate how Mr Thirlwall said, ‘I never ’ears no tales’;
-and the following story shows that he maintained the same wise
-discretion after he became a bishop. One of his archdeacons thought
-it right to tell him that a certain clergyman in the diocese, who was a
-clever mimic, was fond of entertaining his friends with imitations of the
-Bishop. Thirlwall listened, and then inquired, ‘Does he do me well?’
-‘I am sure I cannot say, my Lord,’ replied the informer; ‘I was never
-present myself at one of these disgraceful exhibitions.’ ‘Ah! I should
-like to know, because he does <em>you</em> admirably,’ replied the Bishop. It
-is needless to say that no more stories were carried to his ears.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r70'>70</a>. <cite>An Earnestly Respectful Letter</cite>, 8vo. 1860, pp. 20-23. See also
-<cite>The Life and Letters of Rowland Williams, D.D.</cite>, London, 1874, chap.
-xv., where his determination to make the Bishop declare himself, under
-the belief that he really agreed with him, is expressly stated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r71'>71</a>. <cite>A Letter to the Rev. Rowland Williams</cite>, 8vo. 1860, p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r72'>72</a>. Dean Stanley’s preface to the <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>, p. xi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r73'>73</a>. <cite>Letters to a Friend</cite>, p. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r74'>74</a>. Review of ‘The letters of Bishop Thirlwall,’ <cite>The Times</cite>, 23
-November, 1881.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r75'>75</a>. <cite>The Edinburgh Review</cite>, for April, 1876, p. 292.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r76'>76</a>. These words are inscribed upon Bishop Thirlwall’s grave.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r77'>77</a>. <cite>Life, Letters, and Friendships of Richard Monckton Milnes, first
-Lord Houghton.</cite> By <span class='sc'>T. Wemyss Reid</span>. Second Edition, 2 vols.
-London, 1890.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r78'>78</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, vol. i. p. xiii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote c027' id='f79'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r79'>79</a>. <cite>Reminiscences and Opinions of Sir F. H. Doyle</cite>, 8vo. Lond. 1886.
-p. 108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote c027' id='f80'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r80'>80</a>. <cite>Richard Chenevix Trench, Archbishop. Letters and Memorials.</cite>
-8vo. Lond. 1888. Vol. i. p. 50. Letter from J. W. Blakesley, 24 Jan, 1830.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r81'>81</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, vol. i. p. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r82'>82</a>. Lord Houghton has been heard to say, when describing his
-interview with Dr Wordsworth, then Master of Trinity College: ‘I
-have always had a dim suspicion, though probably I did not do so,
-that I substituted the name of Wordsworth for Shelley.’ <cite>Life</cite>, vol. i.
-p. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r83'>83</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, vol. ii. p. 162.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r84'>84</a>. <cite>Life of Cardinal Manning</cite>, by E. S. Purcell, 8vo. Lond. 1895, vol.
-i. p. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r85'>85</a>. <cite>The Poems of Richard Monckton Milnes</cite>, 2 vols. (London, 1838),
-vol. i. p. 93.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r86'>86</a>. Vol. i. p. 214.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r87'>87</a>. Vol. i. p. 384. The letter is dated 31 March, 1847.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r88'>88</a>. 1. <cite>The Life and Achievements of Edward Henry Palmer, late
-Lord Almoner’s Professor of Arabic in the University of Cambridge
-and Fellow of S. John’s College.</cite> By <span class='sc'>Walter Besant</span>, M.A. (London,
-1883.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. <cite>Correspondence respecting the Murder of Professor E. H.
-Palmer, Captain William Gill, R.E., and Lieutenant Harold Charrington,
-R.N.</cite> Presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command
-of <span class='sc'>Her Majesty</span>. (London, 1883.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r89'>89</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, p. 182.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r90'>90</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r91'>91</a>. <cite>Testimonials in favour of Edward Henry Palmer, B.A.</cite> 8vo.
-Hertford, 1867.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r92'>92</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, p. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r93'>93</a>. <cite>The Desert of the Exodus</cite>, 8vo. Cambridge, Deightons, 1871.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r94'>94</a>. <cite>Desert of the Exodus</cite>, p. 325.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r95'>95</a>. <cite>Desert of the Exodus</cite>, p. 503.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r96'>96</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, pp. 120-125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r97'>97</a>. It is stated in <cite>Nature</cite> for July 16, 1883, in an article by Prof. W.
-Robertson Smith, Palmer’s successor at Cambridge, that Dr Wright
-was elected Fellow ‘without his knowledge or consent.’ We are able
-to state, on the authority of Dr Phillips himself, that Dr Wright was
-perfectly aware of the honour about to be conferred upon him.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r98'>98</a>. The <cite>Catalogue of Arabic, Persian, and Turkish MSS. in Trin.
-Coll. Camb.</cite> was not published until 1871; but the fact that it had been
-made was of course well known.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r99'>99</a>. <cite>Cambridge University Reporter</cite>, 1872, p. 181.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r100'>100</a>. <cite>Cambridge University Reporter</cite>, 1873, p. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r101'>101</a>. Grace of the Senate, April 29, 1875, confirming a Report of the
-Council, dated March 15. We believe that it was thought desirable to
-make the salary of the Professor of Arabic equal to that of the
-Professor of Sanskrit, who from the creation of the Professorship in
-1867 received £500 a year out of the University Chest.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r102'>102</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, p. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r103'>103</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, p. 145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote c027' id='f104'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r104'>104</a>. This was Misleh, Sheikh of the Teyáhah Arabs.—Warren’s
-<cite>Narrative</cite>, p. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r105'>105</a>. <cite>Life</cite>, pp. 266-278.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r106'>106</a>. Letter to Admiral Sir William Hewett, dated Suez, August 8.
-<cite>Blue Book</cite>, p. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r107'>107</a>. These five were Professor Palmer, Captain Gill, Lieutenant
-Charrington, Khalil Atek the dragoman, and Bochor the cook.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r108'>108</a>. The whole story of his expedition has been admirably told by
-Captain Haynes, who accompanied Colonel Warren, in <cite>Man-hunting
-in the Desert</cite>. 8vo. London. 1894.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r109'>109</a>. The Wady Sudr is quite out of the direct route from Moses’ Wells to Nakhl, as Palmer of course knew. He must therefore have
-been induced to go that way by some earnest representation made to
-him by Meter.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r110'>110</a>. Balfour and his guide lost their lives in a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>couloir</em></span> at the foot of the
-Italian side of the Aiguille Blanche. They started from Courmayeur
-to attempt the ascent of the Aiguille on the afternoon of Tuesday,
-18 July, 1882, with the expectation of returning on Thursday. The
-accident is supposed to have taken place on Wednesday, the 19th.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r111'>111</a>. <cite>Saturday Review</cite>, November 12, 1881.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r112'>112</a>. This Report, dated 27 March, 1882, was confirmed by the Senate
-11 May; and the Professor was elected 31 May.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r113'>113</a>. Wednesday, 10 February, 1886.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f114'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r114'>114</a>. Dr Thompson died on Friday, 1 October, 1886.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f115'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r115'>115</a>. The portrait painted by Hubert Herkomer, R.A., in 1881, which
-hangs in the College Hall, gives a life-like idea of him at that time,
-though the deep lines on the face, and the sarcastic expression of the
-mouth, are slightly exaggerated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f116'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r116'>116</a>. Mr Trotter died on the morning of Sunday, 4 December, 1887.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f117'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r117'>117</a>. Dr Okes died on Sunday, 25 November, 1888.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f118'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r118'>118</a>. Dr Luard died on Friday, 1 May, 1891.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f119'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r119'>119</a>. <cite>Church Quarterly Review</cite>, Vol. <span class='fss'>IX.</span> pp. 1-39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f120'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r120'>120</a>. 1. <cite>The Life of Richard Owen.</cite> By his Grandson, the Rev.
-<span class='sc'>Richard Owen</span>, M.A., with the Scientific Portions revised by <span class='sc'>C.
-Davies Sherborn</span>, and an Essay on Owen’s Position in Anatomical
-Science by the Right Hon. <span class='sc'>T. H. Huxley</span>, F.R.S. Second edition,
-2 vols. (London, 1895.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2.: <cite>Richard Owen.</cite> (Article in the <cite>Dictionary of National
-Biography</cite>, vol. xlii.) By Sir <span class='sc'>W. H. Flower</span>, K.C.B. (London,
-1895.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f121'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r121'>121</a>. <cite>Extinct Wingless Birds of New Zealand</cite>, Preface, p. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f122'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r122'>122</a>. <cite>Anatomy</cite>, iii. 796.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f123'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r123'>123</a>. We must except one delivered to the Young Men’s Christian
-Association at Exeter Hall in the autumn of 1863. It is called: <cite>On
-some Instances of the Power of God as manifested in His Animal
-Creation</cite>; and was published in the series of Exeter Hall Lectures by
-Messrs Nisbet. It is as accurate as it is courageous, and both in
-conception and execution does Owen infinite credit.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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