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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ A Defence of Poetry and Other Essays, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
+ </title>
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Defence of Poetry and Other Essays, by
+Percy Bysshe Shelley
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Defence of Poetry and Other Essays
+
+Author: Percy Bysshe Shelley
+
+
+Release Date: April, 2004 [EBook #5428]
+This file was first posted on July 18, 2002
+Last Updated: June 16, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A DEFENCE OF POETRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Steve Harris, Charles Franks and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
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+HTML file produced by David Widger
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+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ A DEFENCE OF POETRY AND OTHER ESSAYS
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Percy Bysshe Shelley
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> ON LOVE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> ON A FUTURE STATE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> ON THE PUNISHMENT OF DEATH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> SPECULATIONS ON METAPHYSICS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> SPECULATIONS ON MORALS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. ON THE NATURE OF VIRTUE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> ESSAY ON THE LITERATURE, THE ARTS, AND THE
+ MANNERS OF THE ATHENIANS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> ON THE SYMPOSIUM, OR PREFACE TO THE BANQUET OF
+ PLATO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> A DEFENCE OF POETRY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ON LOVE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What is love? Ask him who lives, what is life? ask him who adores, what is
+ God?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know not the internal constitution of other men, nor even thine, whom I
+ now address. I see that in some external attributes they resemble me, but
+ when, misled by that appearance, I have thought to appeal to something in
+ common, and unburthen my inmost soul to them, I have found my language
+ misunderstood, like one in a distant and savage land. The more
+ opportunities they have afforded me for experience, the wider has appeared
+ the interval between us, and to a greater distance have the points of
+ sympathy been withdrawn. With a spirit ill fitted to sustain such proof,
+ trembling and feeble through its tenderness, I have everywhere sought
+ sympathy and have found only repulse and disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thou demandest what is love? It is that powerful attraction towards all
+ that we conceive, or fear, or hope beyond ourselves, when we find within
+ our own thoughts the chasm of an insufficient void, and seek to awaken in
+ all things that are, a community with what we experience within ourselves.
+ If we reason, we would be understood; if we imagine, we would that the
+ airy children of our brain were born anew within another's; if we feel, we
+ would that another's nerves should vibrate to our own, that the beams of
+ their eyes should kindle at once and mix and melt into our own, that lips
+ of motionless ice should not reply to lips quivering and burning with the
+ heart's best blood. This is Love. This is the bond and the sanction which
+ connects not only man with man, but with everything which exists. We are
+ born into the world, and there is something within us which, from the
+ instant that we live, more and more thirsts after its likeness. It is
+ probably in correspondence with this law that the infant drains milk from
+ the bosom of its mother; this propensity develops itself with the
+ development of our nature. We dimly see within our intellectual nature a
+ miniature as it were of our entire self, yet deprived of all that we
+ condemn or despise, the ideal prototype of everything excellent or lovely
+ that we are capable of conceiving as belonging to the nature of man. Not
+ only the portrait of our external being, but an assemblage of the minutest
+ particles of which our nature is composed;[Footnote: These words are
+ ineffectual and metaphorical. Most words are so&mdash;No help!] a mirror
+ whose surface reflects only the forms of purity and brightness; a soul
+ within our soul that describes a circle around its proper paradise, which
+ pain, and sorrow, and evil dare not overleap. To this we eagerly refer all
+ sensations, thirsting that they should resemble or correspond with it. The
+ discovery of its antitype; the meeting with an understanding capable of
+ clearly estimating our own; an imagination which should enter into and
+ seize upon the subtle and delicate peculiarities which we have delighted
+ to cherish and unfold in secret; with a frame whose nerves, like the
+ chords of two exquisite lyres, strung to the accompaniment of one
+ delightful voice, vibrate with the vibrations of our own; and of a
+ combination of all these in such proportion as the type within demands;
+ this is the invisible and unattainable point to which Love tends; and to
+ attain which, it urges forth the powers of man to arrest the faintest
+ shadow of that, without the possession of which there is no rest nor
+ respite to the heart over which it rules. Hence in solitude, or in that
+ deserted state when we are surrounded by human beings, and yet they
+ sympathize not with us, we love the flowers, the grass, and the waters,
+ and the sky. In the motion of the very leaves of spring, in the blue air,
+ there is then found a secret correspondence with our heart. There is
+ eloquence in the tongueless wind, and a melody in the flowing brooks and
+ the rustling of the reeds beside them, which by their inconceivable
+ relation to something within the soul, awaken the spirits to a dance of
+ breathless rapture, and bring tears of mysterious tenderness to the eyes,
+ like the enthusiasm of patriotic success, or the voice of one beloved
+ singing to you alone. Sterne says that, if he were in a desert, he would
+ love some cypress. So soon as this want or power is dead, man becomes the
+ living sepulchre of himself, and what yet survives is the mere husk of
+ what once he was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1815; publ. 1840]
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ON LIFE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Life and the world, or whatever we call that which we are and feel, is an
+ astonishing thing. The mist of familiarity obscures from us the wonder of
+ our being. We are struck with admiration at some of its transient
+ modifications, but it is itself the great miracle. What are changes of
+ empires, the wreck of dynasties, with the opinions which supported them;
+ what is the birth and the extinction of religious and of political systems
+ to life? What are the revolutions of the globe which we inhabit, and the
+ operations of the elements of which it is composed, compared with life?
+ What is the universe of stars, and suns, of which this inhabited earth is
+ one, and their motions, and their destiny, compared with life? Life, the
+ great miracle, we admire not, because it is so miraculous. It is well that
+ we are thus shielded by the familiarity of what is at once so certain and
+ so unfathomable, from an astonishment which would otherwise absorb and
+ overawe the functions of that which is its object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If any artist, I do not say had executed, but had merely conceived in his
+ mind the system of the sun, and the stars, and planets, they not existing,
+ and had painted to us in words, or upon canvas, the spectacle now afforded
+ by the nightly cope of heaven, and illustrated it by the wisdom of
+ astronomy, great would be our admiration. Or had he imagined the scenery
+ of this earth, the mountains, the seas, and the rivers; the grass, and the
+ flowers, and the variety of the forms and masses of the leaves of the
+ woods, and the colours which attend the setting and the rising sun, and
+ the hues of the atmosphere, turbid or serene, these things not before
+ existing, truly we should have been astonished, and it would not have been
+ a vain boast to have said of such a man, 'Non merita nome di creatore, se
+ non Iddio ed il Poeta.' But now these things are looked on with little
+ wonder, and to be conscious of them with intense delight is esteemed to be
+ the distinguishing mark of a refined and extraordinary person. The
+ multitude of men care not for them. It is thus with Life&mdash;that which
+ includes all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is life? Thoughts and feelings arise, with or without our will, and
+ we employ words to express them. We are born, and our birth is
+ unremembered, and our infancy remembered but in fragments; we live on, and
+ in living we lose the apprehension of life. How vain is it to think that
+ words can penetrate the mystery of our being! Rightly used they may make
+ evident our ignorance to ourselves, and this is much. For what are we?
+ Whence do we come? and whither do we go? Is birth the commencement, is
+ death the conclusion of our being? What is birth and death?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most refined abstractions of logic conduct to a view of life, which,
+ though startling to the apprehension, is, in fact, that which the habitual
+ sense of its repeated combinations has extinguished in us. It strips, as
+ it were, the painted curtain from this scene of things. I confess that I
+ am one of those who are unable to refuse my assent to the conclusions of
+ those philosophers who assert that nothing exists but as it is perceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a decision against which all our persuasions struggle, and we must
+ be long convicted before we can be convinced that the solid universe of
+ external things is 'such stuff as dreams are made of.' The shocking
+ absurdities of the popular philosophy of mind and matter, its fatal
+ consequences in morals, and their violent dogmatism concerning the source
+ of all things, had early conducted me to materialism. This materialism is
+ a seducing system to young and superficial minds. It allows its disciples
+ to talk, and dispenses them from thinking. But I was discontented with
+ such a view of things as it afforded; man is a being of high aspirations,
+ 'looking both before and after,' whose 'thoughts wander through eternity,'
+ disclaiming alliance with transience and decay; incapable of imagining to
+ himself annihilation; existing but in the future and the past; being, not
+ what he is, but what he has been and shall be. Whatever may be his true
+ and final destination, there is a spirit within him at enmity with
+ nothingness and dissolution. This is the character of all life and being.
+ Each is at once the centre and the circumference; the point to which all
+ things are referred, and the line in which all things are contained. Such
+ contemplations as these, materialism and the popular philosophy of mind
+ and matter alike forbid; they are only consistent with the intellectual
+ system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is absurd to enter into a long recapitulation of arguments sufficiently
+ familiar to those inquiring minds, whom alone a writer on abstruse
+ subjects can be conceived to address. Perhaps the most clear and vigorous
+ statement of the intellectual system is to be found in Sir William
+ Drummond's Academical Questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After such an exposition, it would be idle to translate into other words
+ what could only lose its energy and fitness by the change. Examined point
+ by point, and word by word, the most discriminating intellects have been
+ able to discern no train of thoughts in the process of reasoning, which
+ does not conduct inevitably to the conclusion which has been stated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What follows from the admission? It establishes no new truth, it gives us
+ no additional insight into our hidden nature, neither its action nor
+ itself. Philosophy, impatient as it may be to build, has much work yet
+ remaining, as pioneer for the overgrowth of ages. It makes one step
+ towards this object; it destroys error, and the roots of error. It leaves,
+ what it is too often the duty of the reformer in political and ethical
+ questions to leave, a vacancy. It reduces the mind to that freedom in
+ which it would have acted, but for the misuse of words and signs, the
+ instruments of its own creation. By signs, I would be understood in a wide
+ sense, including what is properly meant by that term, and what I
+ peculiarly mean. In this latter sense, almost all familiar objects are
+ signs, standing, not for themselves, but for others, in their capacity of
+ suggesting one thought which shall lead to a train of thoughts. Our whole
+ life is thus an education of error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us recollect our sensations as children. What a distinct and intense
+ apprehension had we of the world and of ourselves! Many of the
+ circumstances of social life were then important to us which are now no
+ longer so. But that is not the point of comparison on which I mean to
+ insist. We less habitually distinguished all that we saw and felt, from
+ ourselves. They seemed as it were to constitute one mass. There are some
+ persons who, in this respect, are always children. Those who are subject
+ to the state called reverie, feel as if their nature were dissolved into
+ the surrounding universe, or as if the surrounding universe were absorbed
+ into their being. They are conscious of no distinction. And these are
+ states which precede, or accompany, or follow an unusually intense and
+ vivid apprehension of life. As men grow up this power commonly decays, and
+ they become mechanical and habitual agents. Thus feelings and then
+ reasonings are the combined result of a multitude of entangled thoughts,
+ and of a series of what are called impressions, planted by reiteration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The view of life presented by the most refined deductions of the
+ intellectual philosophy, is that of unity. Nothing exists but as it is
+ perceived. The difference is merely nominal between those two classes of
+ thought, which are vulgarly distinguished by the names of ideas and of
+ external objects. Pursuing the same thread of reasoning, the existence of
+ distinct individual minds, similar to that which is employed in now
+ questioning its own nature, is likewise found to be a delusion. The words
+ <i>I</i>, YOU, THEY, are not signs of any actual difference subsisting
+ between the assemblage of thoughts thus indicated, but are merely marks
+ employed to denote the different modifications of the one mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let it not be supposed that this doctrine conducts to the monstrous
+ presumption that I, the person who now write and think, am that one mind.
+ I am but a portion of it. The words <i>I</i>, and YOU, and THEY, are
+ grammatical devices invented simply for arrangement, and totally devoid of
+ the intense and exclusive sense usually attached to them. It is difficult
+ to find terms adequate to express so subtle a conception as that to which
+ the Intellectual Philosophy has conducted us. We are on that verge where
+ words abandon us, and what wonder if we grow dizzy to look down the dark
+ abyss of how little we know. The relations of THINGS remain unchanged, by
+ whatever system. By the word THINGS is to be understood any object of
+ thought, that is any thought upon which any other thought is employed,
+ with an apprehension of distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The relations of these remain unchanged; and such is the material of our
+ knowledge. What is the cause of life? that is, how was it produced, or
+ what agencies distinct from life have acted or act upon life? All recorded
+ generations of mankind have weariedly busied themselves in inventing
+ answers to this question; and the result has been,&mdash;Religion. Yet,
+ that the basis of all things cannot be, as the popular philosophy alleges,
+ mind, is sufficiently evident. Mind, as far as we have any experience of
+ its properties, and beyond that experience how vain is argument! cannot
+ create, it can only perceive. It is said also to be the cause. But cause
+ is only a word expressing a certain state of the human mind with regard to
+ the manner in which two thoughts are apprehended to be related to each
+ other. If any one desires to know how unsatisfactorily the popular
+ philosophy employs itself upon this great question, they need only
+ impartially reflect upon the manner in which thoughts develop themselves
+ in their minds. It is infinitely improbable that the cause of mind, that
+ is, of existence, is similar to mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1815; publ. 1840]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ON A FUTURE STATE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It has been the persuasion of an immense majority of human beings in all
+ ages and nations that we continue to live after death,&mdash;that apparent
+ termination of all the functions of sensitive and intellectual existence.
+ Nor has mankind been contented with supposing that species of existence
+ which some philosophers have asserted; namely, the resolution of the
+ component parts of the mechanism of a living being into its elements, and
+ the impossibility of the minutest particle of these sustaining the
+ smallest diminution. They have clung to the idea that sensibility and
+ thought, which they have distinguished from the objects of it, under the
+ several names of spirit and matter, is, in its own nature, less
+ susceptible of division and decay, and that, when the body is resolved
+ into its elements, the principle which animated it will remain perpetual
+ and unchanged. Some philosophers-and those to whom we are indebted for the
+ most stupendous discoveries in physical science, suppose, on the other
+ hand, that intelligence is the mere result of certain combinations among
+ the particles of its objects; and those among them who believe that we
+ live after death, recur to the interposition of a supernatural power,
+ which shall overcome the tendency inherent in all material combinations,
+ to dissipate and be absorbed into other forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us trace the reasonings which in one and the other have conducted to
+ these two opinions, and endeavour to discover what we ought to think on a
+ question of such momentous interest. Let us analyse the ideas and feelings
+ which constitute the contending beliefs, and watchfully establish a
+ discrimination between words and thoughts. Let us bring the question to
+ the test of experience and fact; and ask ourselves, considering our nature
+ in its entire extent, what light we derive from a sustained and
+ comprehensive view of its component parts, which may enable, us to assert,
+ with certainty, that we do or do not live after death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The examination of this subject requires that it should be stript of all
+ those accessory topics which adhere to it in the common opinion of men.
+ The existence of a God, and a future state of rewards and punishments, are
+ totally foreign to the subject. If it be proved that the world is ruled by
+ a Divine Power, no inference necessarily can be drawn from that
+ circumstance in favour of a future state. It has been asserted, indeed,
+ that as goodness and justice are to be numbered among the attributes of
+ the Deity, He will undoubtedly compensate the virtuous who suffer during
+ life, and that He will make every sensitive being who does not deserve
+ punishment, happy for ever. But this view of the subject, which it would
+ be tedious as well as superfluous to develop and expose, satisfies no
+ person, and cuts the knot which we now seek to untie. Moreover, should it
+ be proved, on the other hand, that the mysterious principle which
+ regulates the proceedings of the universe, is neither intelligent nor
+ sensitive, yet it is not an inconsistency to suppose at the same time,
+ that the animating power survives the body which it has animated, by laws
+ as independent of any supernatural agent as those through which it first
+ became united with it. Nor, if a future state be clearly proved, does it
+ follow that it will be a state of punishment or reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the word death, we express that condition in which natures resembling
+ ourselves apparently cease to be that which they were. We no longer hear
+ them speak, nor see them move. If they have sensations and apprehensions,
+ we no longer participate in them. We know no more than that those external
+ organs, and all that fine texture of material frame, without which we have
+ no experience that life or thought can subsist, are dissolved and
+ scattered abroad. The body is placed under the earth, and after a certain
+ period there remains no vestige even of its form. This is that
+ contemplation of inexhaustible melancholy, whose shadow eclipses the
+ brightness of the world. The common observer is struck with dejection at
+ the spectacle. He contends in vain against the persuasion of the grave,
+ that the dead indeed cease to be. The corpse at his feet is prophetic of
+ his own destiny. Those who have preceded him, and whose voice was
+ delightful to his ear; whose touch met his like sweet and subtle fire;
+ whose aspect spread a visionary light upon his path&mdash;these he cannot
+ meet again. The organs of sense are destroyed, and the intellectual
+ operations dependent on them have perished with their sources. How can a
+ corpse see or feel? its eyes are eaten out, and its heart is black and
+ without motion. What intercourse can two heaps of putrid clay and
+ crumbling bones hold together? When you can discover where the fresh
+ colours of the faded flower abide, or the music of the broken lyre, seek
+ life among the dead. Such are the anxious and fearful contemplations of
+ the common observer, though the popular religion often prevents him from
+ confessing them even to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natural philosopher, in addition to the sensations common to all men
+ inspired by the event of death, believes that he sees with more certainty
+ that it is attended with the annihilation of sentiment and thought. He
+ observes the mental powers increase and fade with those of the body, and
+ even accommodate themselves to the most transitory changes of our physical
+ nature. Sleep suspends many of the faculties of the vital and intellectual
+ principle; drunkenness and disease will either temporarily or permanently
+ derange them. Madness or idiotcy may utterly extinguish the most excellent
+ and delicate of those powers. In old age the mind gradually withers; and
+ as it grew and was strengthened with the body, so does it together with
+ the body sink into decrepitude. Assuredly these are convincing evidences
+ that so soon as the organs of the body are subjected to the laws of
+ inanimate matter, sensation, and perception, and apprehension, are at an
+ end. It is probable that what we call thought is not an actual being, but
+ no more than the relation between certain parts of that infinitely varied
+ mass, of which the rest of the universe is composed, and which ceases to
+ exist so soon as those parts change their position with regard to each
+ other. Thus colour, and sound, and taste, and odour exist only relatively.
+ But let thought be considered as some peculiar substance, which permeates,
+ and is the cause of, the animation of living beings. Why should that
+ substance be assumed to be something essentially distinct from all others,
+ and exempt from subjection to those laws from which no other substance is
+ exempt? It differs, indeed, from all other substances, as electricity, and
+ light, and magnetism, and the constituent parts of air and earth,
+ severally differ from all others. Each of these is subject to change and
+ to decay, and to conversion into other forms. Yet the difference between
+ light and earth is scarcely greater than that which exists between life,
+ or thought, and fire. The difference between the two former was never
+ alleged as an argument for the eternal permanence of either, in that form
+ under which they first might offer themselves to our notice. Why should
+ the difference between the two latter substances be an argument for the
+ prolongation of the existence of one and not the other, when the existence
+ of both has arrived at their apparent termination? To say that fire exists
+ without manifesting any of the properties of fire, such as light, heat,
+ etc., or that the principle of life exists without consciousness, or
+ memory, or desire, or motive, is to resign, by an awkward distortion of
+ language, the affirmative of the dispute. To say that the principle of
+ life MAY exist in distribution among various forms, is to assert what
+ cannot be proved to be either true or false, but which, were it true,
+ annihilates all hope of existence after death, in any sense in which that
+ event can belong to the hopes and fears of men. Suppose, however, that the
+ intellectual and vital principle differs in the most marked and essential
+ manner from all other known substances; that they have all some
+ resemblance between themselves which it in no degree participates. In what
+ manner can this concession be made an argument for its imperishability?
+ All that we see or know perishes and is changed. Life and thought differ
+ indeed from everything else. But that it survives that period, beyond
+ which we have no experience of its existence, such distinction and
+ dissimilarity affords no shadow of proof, and nothing but our own desires
+ could have led us to conjecture or imagine. Have we existed before birth?
+ It is difficult to conceive the possibility of this. There is, in the
+ generative principle of each animal and plant, a power which converts the
+ substances by which it is surrounded into a substance homogeneous with
+ itself. That is, the relations between certain elementary particles of
+ matter undergo a change, and submit to new combinations. For when we use
+ the words PRINCIPLE, POWER, CAUSE, we mean to express no real being, but
+ only to class under those terms a certain series of co-existing phenomena;
+ but let it be supposed that this principle is a certain substance which
+ escapes the observation of the chemist and anatomist. It certainly MAY BE;
+ though it is sufficiently unphilosophical to allege the possibility of an
+ opinion as a proof of its truth. Does it see, hear, feel, before its
+ combination with those organs on which sensation depends? Does it reason,
+ imagine, apprehend, without those ideas which sensation alone can
+ communicate? If we have not existed before birth; if, at the period when
+ the parts of our nature on which thought and life depend, seem to be woven
+ together; if there are no reasons to suppose that we have existed before
+ that period at which our existence apparently commences, then there are no
+ grounds for supposition that we shall continue to exist after our
+ existence has apparently ceased. So far as thought is concerned, the same
+ will take place with regard to use, individually considered, after death,
+ as had place before our birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that it, is possible that we should continue to exist in some
+ mode totally inconceivable to us at present. This is a most unreasonable
+ presumption. It casts on the adherents of annihilation the burthen of
+ proving the negative of a question, the affirmative of which is not
+ supported by a single argument, and which, by its very nature, lies beyond
+ the experience of the human understanding. It is sufficiently easy,
+ indeed, to form any proposition, concerning which we are ignorant, just
+ not so absurd as not to be contradictory in itself, and defy refutation.
+ The possibility of whatever enters into the wildest imagination to
+ conceive is thus triumphantly vindicated. But it is enough that such
+ assertions should be either contradictory to the known laws of nature, or
+ exceed the limits of our experience, that their fallacy or irrelevancy to
+ our consideration should be demonstrated. They persuade, indeed, only
+ those who desire to be persuaded. This desire to be for ever as we are;
+ the reluctance to a violent and unexperienced change, which is common to
+ all the animated and inanimate combinations of the universe, is, indeed,
+ the secret persuasion which has given birth to the opinions of a future
+ state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1815; publ. 1840]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ON THE PUNISHMENT OF DEATH
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A FRAGMENT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The first law which it becomes a Reformer to propose and support, at the
+ approach of a period of great political change, is the abolition of the
+ punishment of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is sufficiently clear that revenge, retaliation, atonement, expiation,
+ are rules and motives, so far from deserving a place in any enlightened
+ system of political life, that they are the chief sources of a prodigious
+ class of miseries in the domestic circles of society. It is clear that
+ however the spirit of legislation may appear to frame institutions upon
+ more philosophical maxims, it has hitherto, in those cases which are
+ termed criminal, done little more than palliate the spirit, by gratifying
+ a portion of it; and afforded a compromise between that which is bests&mdash;the
+ inflicting of no evil upon a sensitive being, without a decisively
+ beneficial result in which he should at least participates&mdash;and that
+ which is worst; that he should be put to torture for the amusement of
+ those whom he may have injured, or may seem to have injured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Omitting these remoter considerations, let us inquire what, DEATH is; that
+ punishment which is applied as a measure of transgressions of indefinite
+ shades of distinction, so soon as they shall have passed that degree and
+ colour of enormity, with which it is supposed no, inferior infliction is
+ commensurate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And first, whether death is good or evil, a punishment or a reward, or
+ whether it be wholly indifferent, no man can take upon himself to assert.
+ That that within us which thinks and feels, continues to think and feel
+ after the dissolution of the body, has been the almost universal opinion
+ of mankind, and the accurate philosophy of what I may be permitted to term
+ the modern Academy, by showing the prodigious depth and extent of our
+ ignorance respecting the causes and nature of sensation, renders probable
+ the affirmative of a proposition, the negative of which it is so difficult
+ to conceive, and the popular arguments against which, derived from what is
+ called the atomic system, are proved to be applicable only to the relation
+ which one object bears to another, as apprehended by the mind, and not to
+ existence itself, or the nature of that essence which is the medium and
+ receptacle of objects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The popular system of religion suggests the idea that the mind, after
+ death, will be painfully or pleasurably affected according to its
+ determinations during life. However ridiculous and pernicious we must
+ admit the vulgar accessories of this creed to be, there is a certain
+ analogy, not wholly absurd, between the consequences resulting to an
+ individual during life from the virtuous or vicious, prudent or imprudent,
+ conduct of his external actions, to those consequences which are
+ conjectured to ensue from the discipline and order of his internal
+ thoughts, as affecting his condition in a future state. They omit, indeed,
+ to calculate upon the accidents of disease, and temperament, and
+ organization, and circumstance, together with the multitude of independent
+ agencies which affect the opinions, the conduct, and the happiness of
+ individuals, and produce determinations of the will, and modify the
+ judgement, so as to produce effects the most opposite in natures
+ considerably similar. These are those operations in the order of the whole
+ of nature, tending, we are prone to believe, to some definite mighty end,
+ to which the agencies of our peculiar nature are subordinate; nor is there
+ any reason to suppose, that in a future state they should become suddenly
+ exempt from that subordination. The philosopher is unable to determine
+ whether our existence in a previous state has affected our present
+ condition, and abstains from deciding whether our present condition will
+ affect us in that which may be future. That, if we continue to exist, the
+ manner of our existence will be such as no inferences nor conjectures,
+ afforded by a consideration of our earthly experience, can elucidate, is
+ sufficiently obvious. The opinion that the vital principle within us, in
+ whatever mode it may continue to exist, must lose that consciousness of
+ definite and individual being which now characterizes it, and become a
+ unit in the vast sum of action and of thought which disposes and animates
+ the universe, and is called God, seems to belong to that class of opinion
+ which has been designated as indifferent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To compel a person to know all that can be known by the dead concerning
+ that which the living fear, hope, or forget; to plunge him into the
+ pleasure or pain which there awaits him; to punish or reward him in a
+ manner and in a degree incalculable and incomprehensible by us; to disrobe
+ him at once from all that intertexture of good and evil with which Nature
+ seems to have clothed every form of individual existence, is to inflict on
+ him the doom of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain degree of pain and terror usually accompany the infliction of
+ death. This degree is infinitely varied by the infinite variety in the
+ temperament and opinions of the sufferers. As a measure of punishment,
+ strictly so considered, and as an exhibition, which, by its known effects
+ on the sensibility of the sufferer, is intended to intimidate the
+ spectators from incurring a similar liability, it is singularly
+ inadequate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Firstly, Persons of energetic character, in whom, as in men who suffer for
+ political crimes, there is a large mixture of enterprise, and fortitude,
+ and disinterestedness, and the elements, though misguided and disarranged,
+ by which the strength and happiness of a nation might have been cemented,
+ die in such a manner, as to make death appear not evil, but good. The
+ death of what is called a traitor, that is, a person who, from whatever
+ motive, would abolish the government of the day, is as often a triumphant
+ exhibition of suffering virtue, as the warning of a culprit. The
+ multitude, instead of departing with a panic-stricken approbation of the
+ laws which exhibited such a spectacle, are inspired with pity, admiration
+ and sympathy; and the most generous among them feel an emulation to be the
+ authors of such flattering emotions, as they experience stirring in their
+ bosoms. Impressed by what they see and feel, they make no distinctive
+ between the motives which incited the criminals to the action for which
+ they suffer, or the heroic courage with which they turned into good that
+ which their judges awarded to them as evil or the purpose itself of those
+ actions, though that purpose may happen to be eminently pernicious. The
+ laws in this case lose their sympathy, which it ought to be their chief
+ object to secure, and in a participation of which consists their chief
+ strength in maintaining those sanctions by which the parts of the social
+ union are bound together, so as to produce, as nearly as possible, the
+ ends for which it is instituted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly,&mdash;Persons of energetic character, in communities not
+ modelled with philosophical skill to turn all the energies which they
+ contain to the purposes of common good, are prone also to fall into the
+ temptation of undertaking, and are peculiarly fitted for despising the
+ perils attendant upon consummating, the most enormous crimes. Murder,
+ rapes, extensive schemes of plunder are the actions of persons belonging
+ to this class; and death is the penalty of conviction. But the coarseness
+ of organization, peculiar to men capable of committing acts wholly
+ selfish, is usually found to be associated with a proportionate
+ insensibility to fear or pain. Their sufferings communicate to those of
+ the spectators, who may be liable to the commission of similar crimes a
+ sense of the lightness of that event, when closely examined which, at a
+ distance, as uneducated persons are accustomed to do, probably they
+ regarded with horror. But a great majority of the spectators are so bound
+ up in the interests and the habits of social union that no temptation
+ would be sufficiently strong to induce them to a commission of the
+ enormities to which this penalty is assigned. The more powerful, and the
+ richer among them,&mdash;and a numerous class of little tradesmen are
+ richer and more powerful than those who are employed by them, and the
+ employer, in general, bears this relation to the employed,&mdash;regard
+ their own wrongs as, in some degree, avenged, and their own rights secured
+ by this punishment, inflicted as the penalty of whatever crime. In cases
+ of murder or mutilation, this feeling is almost universal. In those,
+ therefore, whom this exhibition does not awaken to the sympathy which
+ extenuates crime and discredits the law which restrains it, it produces
+ feelings more directly at war with the genuine purposes of political
+ society. It excites those emotions which it is the chief object of
+ civilization to extinguish for ever, and in the extinction of which alone
+ there can be any hope of better institutions than those under which men
+ now misgovern one another. Men feel that their revenge is gratified, and
+ that their security is established by the extinction and the sufferings of
+ beings, in most respects resembling themselves; and their daily
+ occupations constraining them to a precise form in all their thoughts,
+ they come to connect inseparably the idea of their own advantage with that
+ of the death and torture of others. It is manifest that the object of sane
+ polity is directly the reverse; and that laws founded upon reason, should
+ accustom the gross vulgar to associate their ideas of security and of
+ interest with the reformation, and the strict restraint, for that purpose
+ alone, of those who might invade it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passion of revenge is originally nothing more than an habitual
+ perception of the ideas of the sufferings of the person who inflicts an
+ injury, as connected, as they are in a savage state, or in such portions
+ of society as are yet undisciplined to civilization, with security that
+ that injury will not be repeated in future. This feeling, engrafted upon
+ superstition and confirmed by habit, at last loses sight of the only
+ object for which it may be supposed to have been implanted, and becomes a
+ passion and a duty to be pursued and fulfilled, even to the destruction of
+ those ends to which it originally tended. The other passions, both good
+ and evil. Avarice, Remorse, Love, Patriotism, present a similar
+ appearance; and to this principle of the mind over-shooting the mark at
+ which it aims, we owe all that is eminently base or excellent in human
+ nature; in providing for the nutriment or the extinction of which,
+ consists the true art of the legislator. [Footnote: The savage and the
+ illiterate are but faintly aware of the distinction between the future and
+ the past; they make actions belonging to periods so distinct, the subjects
+ of similar feelings; they live only in the present, or in the past, as it
+ is present. It is in this that the philosopher excels one of the many; it
+ is this which distinguishes the doctrine of philosophic necessity from
+ fatalism; and that determination of the will, by which it is the active
+ source of future events, from that liberty or indifference, to which the
+ abstract liability of irremediable actions is attached, according to the
+ notions of the vulgar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the source of the erroneous excesses of Remorse and Revenge; the
+ one extending itself over the future, and the other over the past;
+ provinces in which their suggestions can only be the sources of evil. The
+ purpose of a resolution to act more wisely and virtuously in future, and
+ the sense of a necessity of caution in repressing an enemy, are the
+ sources from which the enormous superstitions implied in the words cited
+ have arisen.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more clear than that the infliction of punishment in general,
+ in a degree which the reformation and the restraint of those who
+ transgress the laws does not render indispensable, and none more than
+ death, confirms all the inhuman and unsocial impulses of men. It is almost
+ a proverbial remark, that those nations in which the penal code has been
+ particularly mild, have been distinguished from all others by the rarity
+ of crime. But the example is to be admitted to be equivocal. A more
+ decisive argument is afforded by a consideration of the universal
+ connexion of ferocity of manners, and a contempt of social ties, with the
+ contempt of human life. Governments which derive their institutions from
+ the existence of circumstances of barbarism and violence, with some rare
+ exceptions perhaps, are bloody in proportion as they are despotic, and
+ form the manners of their subjects to a sympathy with their own spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spectators who feel no abhorrence at a public execution, but rather a
+ self-applauding superiority, and a sense of gratified indignation, are
+ surely excited to the most inauspicious emotions. The first reflection of
+ such a one is the sense of his own internal and actual worth, as
+ preferable to that of the victim, whom circumstances have led to
+ destruction. The meanest wretch is impressed with a sense of his own
+ comparative merit. He is one of those on whom the tower of Siloam fell not&mdash;he
+ is such a one as Jesus Christ found not in all Samaria, who, in his own
+ soul, throws the first stone at the woman taken in adultery. The popular
+ religion of the country takes its designation from that illustrious person
+ whose beautiful sentiment I have quoted. Any one who has stript from the
+ doctrines of this person the veil of familiarity, will perceive how
+ adverse their spirit is to feelings of this nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SPECULATIONS ON METAPHYSICS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I&mdash;THE MIND
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is an axiom in mental philosophy, that we can think of nothing which we
+ have not perceived. When I say that we can think of nothing, I mean, we
+ can imagine nothing, we can reason of nothing, we can remember nothing, we
+ can foresee nothing. The most astonishing combinations of poetry, the
+ subtlest deductions of logic and mathematics, are no other than
+ combinations which the intellect makes of sensations according to its own
+ laws. A catalogue of all the thoughts of the mind, and of all their
+ possible modifications, is a cyclopedic history of the universe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, it will be objected, the inhabitants of the various planets of this
+ and other solar systems; and the existence of a Power bearing the same
+ relation to all that we perceive and are, as what we call a cause does to
+ what we call effect, were never subjects of sensation, and yet the laws of
+ mind almost universally suggest, according to the various disposition of
+ each, a conjecture, a persuasion, or a conviction of their existence. The
+ reply is simple; these thoughts are also to be included in the catalogue
+ of existence; they are modes in which thoughts are combined; the objection
+ only adds force to the conclusion, that beyond the limits of perception
+ and thought nothing can exist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thoughts, or ideas, or notions, call them what you will, differ from each
+ other, not in kind, but in force. It has commonly been supposed that those
+ distinct thoughts which affect a number of persons, at regular intervals,
+ during the passage of a multitude of other thoughts, which are called REAL
+ or EXTERNAL OBJECTS, are totally different in kind from those which affect
+ only a few persons, and which recur at irregular intervals, and are
+ usually more obscure and indistinct, such as hallucinations, dreams, and
+ the ideas of madness. No essential distinction between any one of these
+ ideas, or any class of them, is founded on a correct observation of the
+ nature of things, but merely on a consideration of what thoughts are most
+ invariably subservient to the security and happiness of life; and if
+ nothing more were expressed by the distinction, the philosopher might
+ safely accommodate his language to that of the vulgar. But they pretend to
+ assert an essential difference, which has no foundation in truth, and
+ which suggests a narrow and false conception of universal nature, the
+ parent of the most fatal errors in speculation. A specific difference
+ between every thought of the mind, is, indeed, a necessary consequence of
+ that law by which it perceives diversity and number; but a generic and
+ essential difference is wholly arbitrary. The principle of the agreement
+ and similarity of all thoughts, is, that they are all thoughts; the
+ principle of their disagreement consists in the variety and irregularity
+ of the occasions on which they arise in the mind. That in which they
+ agree, to that in which they differ, is as everything to nothing.
+ Important distinctions, of various degrees of force, indeed, are to be
+ established between them, if they were, as they may be, subjects of
+ ethical and economical discussion; but that is a question altogether
+ distinct. By considering all knowledge as bounded by perception, whose
+ operations may be indefinitely combined, we arrive at a conception of
+ Nature inexpressibly more magnificent, simple and true, than accords with
+ the ordinary systems of complicated and partial consideration. Nor does a
+ contemplation of the universe, in this comprehensive and synthetical view,
+ exclude the subtlest analysis of its modifications and parts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A scale might be formed, graduated according to the degrees of a combined
+ ratio of intensity, duration, connexion, periods of recurrence, and
+ utility, which would be the standard, according to which all ideas might
+ be measured, and an uninterrupted chain of nicely shadowed distinctions
+ would be observed, from the faintest impression on the senses, to the most
+ distinct combination of those impressions; from the simplest of those
+ combinations, to that mass of knowledge which, including our own nature,
+ constitutes what we call the universe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are intuitively conscious of our own existence, and of that connexion
+ in the train of our successive ideas, which we term our identity. We are
+ conscious also of the existence of other minds; but not intuitively. Our
+ evidence, with respect to the existence of other minds, is founded upon a
+ very complicated relation of ideas, which it is foreign to the purpose of
+ this treatise to anatomize. The basis of this relation is, undoubtedly, a
+ periodical recurrence of masses of ideas, which our voluntary
+ determinations have, in one peculiar direction, no power to circumscribe
+ or to arrest, and against the recurrence of which they can only
+ imperfectly provide. The irresistible laws of thought constrain us to
+ believe that the precise limits of our actual ideas are not the actual
+ limits of possible ideas; the law, according to which these deductions are
+ drawn, is called analogy; and this is the foundation of all our
+ inferences, from one idea to another, inasmuch as they resemble each
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see trees, houses, fields, living beings in our own shape, and in
+ shapes more or less analogous to our own. These are perpetually changing
+ the mode of their existence relatively to us. To express the varieties of
+ these modes, we say, WE MOVE, THEY MOVE; and as this motion is continual,
+ though not uniform, we express our conception of the diversities of its
+ course by&mdash;IT HAS BEEN, IT IS, IT SHALL BE. These diversities are
+ events or objects, and are essential, considered relatively to human
+ identity, for the existence of the human mind. For if the inequalities,
+ produced by what has been termed the operations of the external universe,
+ were levelled by the perception of our being, uniting and filling up their
+ interstices, motion and mensuration, and time, and space; the elements of
+ the human mind being thus abstracted, sensation and imagination cease.
+ Mind cannot be considered pure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II&mdash;WHAT METAPHYSICS ARE. ERRORS IN THE USUAL METHODS OF CONSIDERING
+ THEM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We do not attend sufficiently to what passes within ourselves. We combine
+ words, combined a thousand times before. In our minds we assume entire
+ opinions; and in the expression of those opinions, entire phrases, when we
+ would philosophize. Our whole style of expression and sentiment is
+ infected with the tritest plagiarisms. Our words are dead, our thoughts
+ are cold and borrowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us contemplate facts; let us, in the great study of ourselves,
+ resolutely compel the mind to a rigid consideration of itself. We are not
+ content with conjecture, and inductions, and syllogisms, in sciences
+ regarding external objects. As in these, let us also, in considering the
+ phenomena of mind, severely collect those facts which cannot be disputed.
+ Metaphysics will thus possess this conspicuous advantage over every other
+ science, that each student, by attentively referring to his own mind, may
+ ascertain the authorities upon which any assertions regarding it are
+ supported. There can thus be no deception, we ourselves being the
+ depositaries of the evidence of the subject which we consider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Metaphysics may be defined as an inquiry concerning those things belonging
+ to, or connected with, the internal nature of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that mind produces motion; and it might as well have been said,
+ that motion produces mind.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ III&mdash;DIFFICULTY OF ANALYSING THE HUMAN MIND
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ If it were possible that a person should give a faithful history of his
+ being, from the earliest epochs of his recollection, a picture would be
+ presented such as the world has never contemplated before. A mirror would
+ be held up to all men in which they might behold their own recollections,
+ and, in dim perspective, their shadowy hopes and fears,&mdash;all that
+ they dare not, or that, daring and desiring, they could not expose to the
+ open eyes of day. But thought can with difficulty visit the intricate and
+ winding chambers which it inhabits. It is like a river whose rapid and
+ perpetual stream flows outwards;&mdash;like one in dread who speeds
+ through the recesses of some haunted pile, and dares not look behind. The
+ caverns of the mind are obscure, and shadowy; or pervaded with a lustre,
+ beautifully bright indeed, but shining not beyond their portals. If it
+ were possible to be where we have been, vitally and indeed&mdash;if, at
+ the moment of our presence there, we could define the results of our
+ experience,&mdash;if the passage from sensation to reflection&mdash;from a
+ state of passive perception to voluntary contemplation, were not so
+ dizzying and so tumultuous, this attempt would be less difficult.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ IV&mdash;HOW THE ANALYSIS SHOULD BE CARRIED ON
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Most of the errors of philosophers have arisen from considering the human
+ being in a point of view too detailed and circumscribed He is not a moral,
+ and an intellectual,&mdash;but also, and pre-eminently, an imaginative
+ being. His own mind is his law; his own mind is all things to him. If we
+ would arrive at any knowledge which should be serviceable from the
+ practical conclusions to which it leads, we ought to consider the mind of
+ man and the universe as the great whole on which to exercise our
+ speculations. Here, above all, verbal disputes ought to be laid aside,
+ though this has long been their chosen field of battle. It imports little
+ to inquire whether thought be distinct from the objects of thought. The
+ use of the words EXTERNAL and INTERNAL, as applied to the establishment of
+ this distinction, has been the symbol and the source of much dispute. This
+ is merely an affair of words, and as the dispute deserves, to say, that
+ when speaking of the objects of thought, we indeed only describe one of
+ the forms of thought&mdash;or that, speaking of thought, we only apprehend
+ one of the operations of the universal system of beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V&mdash;CATALOGUE OF THE PHENOMENA OF DREAMS, AS CONNECTING SLEEPING AND
+ WAKING
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Let us reflect on our infancy, and give as faithfully as possible a
+ relation of the events of sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And first I am bound to present a faithful picture of my own peculiar
+ nature relatively to sleep. I do not doubt that were every individual to
+ imitate me, it would be found that among many circumstances peculiar to
+ their individual nature, a sufficiently general resemblance would be found
+ to prove the connexion existing between those peculiarities and the most
+ universal phenomena. I shall employ caution, indeed, as to the facts which
+ I state, that they contain nothing false or exaggerated. But they contain
+ no more than certain elucidations of my own nature; concerning the degree
+ in which it resembles, or differs from, that of others, I am by no means
+ accurately aware. It is sufficient, however, to caution the reader against
+ drawing general inferences from particular instances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I omit the general instances of delusion in fever or delirium, as well as
+ mere dreams considered in themselves. A delineation of this subject,
+ however inexhaustible and interesting, is to be passed over. What is the
+ connexion of sleeping and of waking?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. I distinctly remember dreaming three several times, between intervals
+ of two or more years, the same precise dream. It was not so much what is
+ ordinarily called a dream; the single image, unconnected with all other
+ images, of a youth who was educated at the same school with myself,
+ presented itself in sleep. Even now, after the lapse of many years, I can
+ never hear the name of this youth, without the three places where I
+ dreamed of him presenting themselves distinctly to my mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. In dreams, images acquire associations peculiar to dreaming; so that
+ the idea of a particular house, when it recurs a second time in dreams,
+ will have relation with the idea of the same house, in the first time, of
+ a nature entirely different from that which the house excites, when seen
+ or thought of in relation to waking ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. I have beheld scenes, with the intimate and unaccountable connexion of
+ which with the obscure parts of my own nature, I have been irresistibly
+ impressed. I have beheld a scene which has produced no unusual effect on
+ my thoughts. After the lapse of many years I have dreamed of this scene.
+ It has hung on my memory, it has haunted my thoughts, at intervals, with
+ the pertinacity of an object connected with human affections. I have
+ visited this scene again. Neither the dream could be dissociated from the
+ landscape, nor the landscape from the dream, nor feelings, such as neither
+ singly could have awakened, from both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most remarkable event of this nature, which ever occurred to me,
+ happened five years ago at Oxford. I was walking with a friend, in the
+ neighbourhood of that city, engaged in earnest and interesting
+ conversation. We suddenly turned the corner of a lane, and the view, which
+ its high banks and hedges had concealed, presented itself. The view
+ consisted of a wind-mill, standing in one among many plashy meadows,
+ inclosed with stone walls; the irregular and broken ground, between the
+ wall and the road on which we stood; a long low hill behind the windmill,
+ and a grey covering of uniform cloud spread over the evening sky. It was
+ that season when the last leaf had just fallen from the scant and stunted
+ ash. The scene surely was a common scene; the season and the hour little
+ calculated to kindle lawless thought; it was a tame uninteresting
+ assemblage of objects, such as would drive the imagination for refuge in
+ serious and sober talk, to the evening fireside, and the dessert of winter
+ fruits and wine. The effect which it produced on me was not such as could
+ have been expected. I suddenly remembered to have seen that exact scene in
+ some dream of long&mdash;. [Footnote: Here I was obliged to leave off,
+ overcome by thrilling horror.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1815; publ. 1840]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SPECULATIONS ON MORALS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I&mdash;PLAN OF A TREATISE ON MORALS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ That great science which regards nature and the operations of the human
+ mind, is popularly divided into Morals and Metaphysics. The latter relates
+ to a just classification, and the assignment of distinct names to its
+ ideas; the former regards simply the determination of that arrangement of
+ them which produces the greatest and most solid happiness. It is admitted
+ that a virtuous or moral action, is that action which, when considered in
+ all its accessories and consequences, is fitted to produce the highest
+ pleasure to the greatest number of sensitive beings. The laws according to
+ which all pleasure, since it cannot be equally felt by all sensitive
+ beings, ought to be distributed by a voluntary agent, are reserved for a
+ separate chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The design of this little treatise is restricted to the development of the
+ elementary principles of morals. As far as regards that purpose,
+ metaphysical science will be treated merely so far as a source of negative
+ truth; whilst morality will be considered as a science, respecting which
+ we can arrive at positive conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The misguided imaginations of men have rendered the ascertaining of what
+ IS NOT TRUE, the principal direct service which metaphysical science can
+ bestow upon moral science. Moral science itself is the doctrine of the
+ voluntary actions of man, as a sentient and social being. These actions
+ depend on the thoughts in his mind. But there is a mass of popular
+ opinion, from which the most enlightened persons are seldom wholly free,
+ into the truth or falsehood of which it is incumbent on us to inquire,
+ before we can arrive at any firm conclusions as to the conduct which we
+ ought to pursue in the regulation of our own minds, or towards our fellow
+ beings; or before we can ascertain the elementary laws, according to which
+ these thoughts, from which these actions flow, are originally combined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The object of the forms according to which human society is administered,
+ is the happiness of the individuals composing the communities which they
+ regard, and these forms are perfect or imperfect in proportion to the
+ degree in which they promote this end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This object is not merely the quantity of happiness enjoyed by individuals
+ as sensitive beings, but the mode in which it should be distributed among
+ them as social beings. It is not enough, if such a coincidence can be
+ conceived as possible, that one person or class of persons should enjoy
+ the highest happiness, whilst another is suffering a disproportionate
+ degree of misery. It is necessary that the happiness produced by the
+ common efforts, and preserved by the common care, should be distributed
+ according to the just claims of each individual; if not, although the
+ quantity produced should be the same, the end of society would remain
+ unfulfilled. The object is in a compound proportion to the quantity of
+ happiness produced, and the correspondence of the mode in which it is
+ distributed, to the elementary feelings of man as a social being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disposition in an individual to promote this object is called virtue;
+ and the two constituent parts of virtue, benevolence and justice, are
+ correlative with these two great portions of the only true object of all
+ voluntary actions of a human being. Benevolence is the desire to be the
+ author of good, and justice the apprehension of the manner in which good
+ ought to be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Justice and benevolence result from the elementary laws of the human mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I ON THE NATURE OF VIRTUE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SECT. 1. General View of the Nature and Objects of Virtue.&mdash;2. The
+ Origin and Basis of Virtue, as founded on the Elementary Principles of
+ Mind.&mdash;3. The Laws which flow from the nature of Mind regulating the
+ application of those principles to human actions;&mdash;4. Virtue, a
+ possible attribute of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We exist in the midst of a multitude of beings like ourselves, upon whose
+ happiness most of our actions exert some obvious and decisive influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regulation of this influence is the object of moral science. We know
+ that we are susceptible of receiving painful or pleasurable impressions of
+ greater or less intensity and duration. That is called good which produces
+ pleasure; that is called evil which produces pain. These are general
+ names, applicable to every class of causes, from which an overbalance of
+ pain or pleasure may result. But when a human being is the active
+ instrument of generating or diffusing happiness, the principle through
+ which it is most effectually instrumental to that purpose, is called
+ virtue. And benevolence, or the desire to be the author of good, united
+ with justice, or an apprehension of the manner in which that good is to be
+ done, constitutes virtue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But wherefore should a man be benevolent and just? The immediate emotions
+ of his nature, especially in its most inartificial state, prompt him to
+ inflict pain, and to arrogate dominion. He desires to heap superfluities
+ to his own store, although others perish with famine. He is propelled to
+ guard against the smallest invasion of his own liberty, though he reduces
+ others to a condition of the most pitiless servitude. He is revengeful,
+ proud and selfish. Wherefore should he curb these propensities?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is inquired, for what reason a human being should engage in procuring
+ the happiness, or refrain from producing the pain of another? When a
+ reason is required to prove the necessity of adopting any system of
+ conduct, what is it that the objector demands? He requires proof of that
+ system of conduct being such as will most effectually promote the
+ happiness of mankind. To demonstrate this, is to render a moral reason.
+ Such is the object of virtue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A common sophism, which, like many others, depends on the abuse of a
+ metaphorical expression to a literal purpose, has produced much of the
+ confusion which has involved the theory of morals. It is said that no
+ person is bound to be just or kind, if, on his neglect, he should fail to
+ incur some penalty. Duty is obligation. There can be no obligation without
+ an obliger. Virtue is a law, to which it is the will of the lawgiver that
+ we should conform; which will we should in no manner be bound to obey,
+ unless some dreadful punishment were attached to disobedience. This is the
+ philosophy of slavery and superstition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, no person can be BOUND or OBLIGED, without some power preceding
+ to bind and oblige. If I observe a man bound hand and foot, I know that
+ some one bound him. But if I observe him returning self-satisfied from the
+ performance of some action, by which he has been the willing author of
+ extensive benefit, I do not infer that the anticipation of hellish
+ agonies, or the hope of heavenly reward, has constrained him to such an
+ act.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ . . . . . . .
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It remains to be stated in what manner the sensations which constitute the
+ basis of virtue originate in the human mind; what are the laws which it
+ receives there; how far the principles of mind allow it to be an attribute
+ of a human being; and, lastly, what is the probability of persuading
+ mankind to adopt it as a universal and systematic motive of conduct.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ BENEVOLENCE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ There is a class of emotions which we instinctively avoid. A human being,
+ such as is man considered in his origin, a child a month old, has a very
+ imperfect consciousness of the existence of other natures resembling
+ itself. All the energies of its being are directed to the extinction of
+ the pains with which it is perpetually assailed. At length it discovers
+ that it is surrounded by natures susceptible of sensations similar to its
+ own. It is very late before children attain to this knowledge. If a child
+ observes, without emotion, its nurse or its mother suffering acute pain,
+ it is attributable rather to ignorance than insensibility. So soon as the
+ accents and gestures, significant of pain, are referred to the feelings
+ which they express, they awaken in the mind of the beholder a desire that
+ they should cease. Pain is thus apprehended to be evil for its own sake,
+ without any other necessary reference to the mind by which its existence
+ is perceived, than such as is indispensable to its perception. The
+ tendencies of our original sensations, indeed, all have for their object
+ the preservation of our individual being. But these are passive and
+ unconscious. In proportion as the mind acquires an active power, the
+ empire of these tendencies becomes limited. Thus an infant, a savage, and
+ a solitary beast, is selfish, because its mind is incapable of receiving
+ an accurate intimation of the nature of pain as existing in beings
+ resembling itself. The inhabitant of a highly civilized community will
+ more acutely sympathize with the sufferings and enjoyments of others, than
+ the inhabitant of a society of a less degree of civilization. He who shall
+ have cultivated his intellectual powers by familiarity with the highest
+ specimens of poetry and philosophy, will usually sympathize more than one
+ engaged in the less refined functions of manual labour. Every one has
+ experience of the fact, that to sympathize with the sufferings of another,
+ is to enjoy a transitory oblivion of his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mind thus acquires, by exercise, a habit, as it were, of perceiving
+ and abhorring evil, however remote from the immediate sphere of sensations
+ with which that individual mind is conversant. Imagination or mind
+ employed in prophetically imaging forth its objects, is that faculty of
+ human nature on which every gradation of its progress, nay, every, the
+ minutest, change, depends. Pain or pleasure, if subtly analysed, will be
+ found to consist entirely in prospect. The only distinction between the
+ selfish man and the virtuous man is, that the imagination of the former is
+ confined within a narrow limit, whilst that of the latter embraces a
+ comprehensive circumference. In this sense, wisdom and virtue may be said
+ to be inseparable, and criteria of each other. Selfishness is the
+ offspring of ignorance and mistake; it is the portion of unreflecting
+ infancy, and savage solitude, or of those whom toil or evil occupations
+ have blunted or rendered torpid; disinterested benevolence is the product
+ of a cultivated imagination, and has an intimate connexion with all the
+ arts which add ornament, or dignity, or power, or stability to the social
+ state of man. Virtue is thus entirely a refinement of civilized life; a
+ creation of the human mind; or, rather, a combination which it has made,
+ according to elementary rules contained within itself, of the feelings
+ suggested by the relations established between man and man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the theories which have refined and exalted humanity, or those which
+ have been devised as alleviations of its mistakes and evils, have been
+ based upon the elementary emotions of disinterestedness, which we feel to
+ constitute the majesty of our nature. Patriotism, as it existed in the
+ ancient republics, was never, as has been supposed, a calculation of
+ personal advantages. When Mutius Scaevola thrust his hand into the burning
+ coals, and Regulus returned to Carthage, and Epicharis sustained the rack
+ silently, in the torments of which she knew that she would speedily
+ perish, rather than betray the conspirators to the tyrant [Footnote:
+ Tacitus.]; these illustrious persons certainly made a small estimate of
+ their private interest. If it be said that they sought posthumous fame;
+ instances are not wanting in history which prove that men have even defied
+ infamy for the sake of good. But there is a great error in the world with
+ respect to the selfishness of fame. It is certainly possible that a person
+ should seek distinction as a medium of personal gratification. But the
+ love of fame is frequently no more than a desire that the feelings of
+ others should confirm, illustrate, and sympathize with, our own. In this
+ respect it is allied with all that draws us out of ourselves. It is the
+ 'last infirmity of noble minds'. Chivalry was likewise founded on the
+ theory of self-sacrifice. Love possesses so extraordinary a power over the
+ human heart, only because disinterestedness is united with the natural
+ propensities. These propensities themselves are comparatively impotent in
+ cases where the imagination of pleasure to be given, as well as to be
+ received, does not enter into the account. Let it not be objected that
+ patriotism, and chivalry, and sentimental love, have been the fountains of
+ enormous mischief. They are cited only to establish the proposition that,
+ according to the elementary principles of mind, man is capable of desiring
+ and pursuing good for its own sake.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ JUSTICE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The benevolent propensities are thus inherent in the human mind. We are
+ impelled to seek the happiness of others. We experience a satisfaction in
+ being the authors of that happiness. Everything that lives is open to
+ impressions or pleasure and pain. We are led by our benevolent
+ propensities to regard every human being indifferently with whom we come
+ in contact. They have preference only with respect to those who offer
+ themselves most obviously to our notice. Human beings are indiscriminating
+ and blind; they will avoid inflicting pain, though that pain should be
+ attended with eventual benefit; they will seek to confer pleasure without
+ calculating the mischief that may result. They benefit one at the expense
+ of many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a sentiment in the human mind that regulates benevolence in its
+ application as a principle of action. This is the sense of justice.
+ Justice, as well as benevolence, is an elementary law of human nature. It
+ is through this principle that men are impelled to distribute any means of
+ pleasure which benevolence may suggest the communication of to others, in
+ equal portions among an equal number of applicants. If ten men are
+ shipwrecked on a desert island, they distribute whatever subsistence may
+ remain to them, into equal portions among themselves. If six of them
+ conspire to deprive the remaining four of their share, their conduct is
+ termed unjust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The existence of pain has been shown to be a circumstance which the human
+ mind regards with dissatisfaction, and of which it desires the cessation.
+ It is equally according to its nature to desire that the advantages to be
+ enjoyed by a limited number of persons should be enjoyed equally by all.
+ This proposition is supported by the evidence of indisputable facts. Tell
+ some ungarbled tale of a number of persons being made the victims of the
+ enjoyments of one, and he who would appeal in favour of any system which
+ might produce such an evil to the primary emotions of our nature, would
+ have nothing to reply. Let two persons, equally strangers, make
+ application for some benefit in the possession of a third to bestow, and
+ to which he feels that they have an equal claim. They are both sensitive
+ beings; pleasure and pain affect them alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is foreign to the general scope of this little treatise to encumber a
+ simple argument by controverting any of the trite objections of habit or
+ fanaticism. But there are two; the first, the basis of all political
+ mistake, and the second, the prolific cause and effect of religious error,
+ which it seems useful to refute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First, it is inquired, 'Wherefore should a man be benevolent and just?'
+ The answer has been given in the preceding chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a man persists to inquire why he ought to promote the happiness of
+ mankind, he demands a mathematical or metaphysical reason for a moral
+ action. The absurdity of this scepticism is more apparent, but not less
+ real than the exacting a moral reason for a mathematical or metaphysical
+ fact. If any person should refuse to admit that all the radii of a circle
+ are of equal length, or that human actions are necessarily determined by
+ motives, until it could be proved that these radii and these actions
+ uniformly tended to the production of the greatest general good, who would
+ not wonder at the unreasonable and capricious association of his ideas?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writer of a philosophical treatise may, I imagine, at this advanced
+ era of human intellect, be held excused from entering into a controversy
+ with those reasoners, if such there are, who would claim an exemption from
+ its decrees in favour of any one among those diversified systems of
+ obscure opinion respecting morals, which, under the name of religions,
+ have in various ages and countries prevailed among mankind. Besides that
+ if, as these reasoners have pretended, eternal torture or happiness will
+ ensue as the consequence of certain actions, we should be no nearer the
+ possession of a standard to determine what actions were right and wrong,
+ even if this pretended revelation, which is by no means the case, had
+ furnished us with a complete catalogue of them. The character of actions
+ as virtuous or vicious would by no means be determined alone by the
+ personal advantage or disadvantage of each moral agent individually
+ considered. Indeed, an action is often virtuous in proportion to the
+ greatness of the personal calamity which the author willingly draws upon
+ himself by daring to perform it. It is because an action produces an
+ overbalance of pleasure or pain to the greatest number of sentient beings,
+ and not merely because its consequences are beneficial or injurious to the
+ author of that action, that it is good or evil. Nay, this latter
+ consideration has a tendency to pollute the purity of virtue, inasmuch as
+ it consists in the motive rather than in the consequences of an action. A
+ person who should labour for the happiness of mankind lest he should be
+ tormented eternally in Hell, would, with reference to that motive, possess
+ as little claim to the epithet of virtuous, as he who should torture,
+ imprison, and burn them alive, a more usual and natural consequence of
+ such principles, for the sake of the enjoyments of Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My neighbour, presuming on his strength, may direct me to perform or to
+ refrain from a particular action; indicating a certain arbitrary penalty
+ in the event of disobedience within power to inflict. My action, if
+ modified by his menaces, can no degree participate in virtue. He has
+ afforded me no criterion as to what is right or wrong. A king, or an
+ assembly of men, may publish a proclamation affixing any penalty to any
+ particular action, but that is not immoral because such penalty is
+ affixed. Nothing is more evident than that the epithet of virtue is
+ inapplicable to the refraining from that action on account of the evil
+ arbitrarily attached to it. If the action is in itself beneficial, virtue
+ would rather consist in not refraining from it, but in firmly defying the
+ personal consequences attached to its performance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some usurper of supernatural energy might subdue the whole globe to his
+ power; he might possess new and unheard-of resources for enduing his
+ punishments with the most terrible attributes or pain. The torments of his
+ victims might be intense in their degree, and protracted to an infinite
+ duration. Still the 'will of the lawgiver' would afford no surer criterion
+ as to what actions were right or wrong. It would only increase the
+ possible virtue of those who refuse to become the instruments of his
+ tyranny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II&mdash;MORAL SCIENCE CONSISTS IN CONSIDERING THE DIFFERENCE, NOT THE
+ RESEMBLANCE, OF PERSONS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The internal influence, derived from the constitution of the mind from
+ which they flow, produces that peculiar modification of actions, which
+ makes them intrinsically good or evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To attain an apprehension of the importance of this distinction, let us
+ visit, in imagination, the proceedings of some metropolis. Consider the
+ multitude of human beings who inhabit it, and survey, in thought, the
+ actions of the several classes into which they are divided. Their obvious
+ actions are apparently uniform: the stability of human society seems to be
+ maintained sufficiently by the uniformity of the conduct of its members,
+ both with regard to themselves, and with regard to others. The labourer
+ arises at a certain hour, and applies himself to the task enjoined him.
+ The functionaries of government and law are regularly employed in their
+ offices and courts. The trader holds a train of conduct from which he
+ never deviates. The ministers of religion employ an accustomed language,
+ and maintain a decent and equable regard. The army is drawn forth, the
+ motions of every soldier are such as they were expected to be; the general
+ commands, and his words are echoed from troop to troop. The domestic
+ actions of men are, for the most part, undistinguishable one from the
+ other, at a superficial glance. The actions which are classed under the
+ general appellation of marriage, education, friendship, &amp;c., are
+ perpetually going on, and to a superficial glance, are similar one to the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, if we would see the truth of things, they must be stripped of this
+ fallacious appearance of uniformity. In truth, no one action has, when
+ considered in its whole extent, any essential resemblance with any other.
+ Each individual, who composes the vast multitude which we have been
+ contemplating, has a peculiar frame of mind, which, whilst the features of
+ the great mass of his actions remain uniform, impresses the minuter
+ lineaments with its peculiar hues. Thus, whilst his life, as a whole, is
+ like the lives of other men, in detail, it is most unlike; and the more
+ subdivided the actions become; that is, the more they enter into that
+ class which have a vital influence on the happiness of others and his own,
+ so much the more are they distinct from those of other men.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Those little, nameless, unremembered acts
+ Of kindness and of love,
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ as well as those deadly outrages which are inflicted by a look, a word&mdash;or
+ less&mdash;the very refraining from some faint and most evanescent
+ expression of countenance; these flow from a profounder source than the
+ series of our habitual conduct, which, it has been already said, derives
+ its origin from without. These are the actions, and such as these, which
+ make human life what it is, and are the fountains of all the good and evil
+ with which its entire surface is so widely and impartially overspread; and
+ though they are called minute, they are called so in compliance with the
+ blindness of those who cannot estimate their importance. It is in the due
+ appreciating the general effects of their peculiarities, and in
+ cultivating the habit of acquiring decisive knowledge respecting the
+ tendencies arising out of them in particular cases, that the most
+ important part of moral science consists. The deepest abyss of these vast
+ and multitudinous caverns, it is necessary that we should visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the difference between social and individual man. Not that this
+ distinction is to be considered definite, or characteristic of one human
+ being as compared with another; it denotes rather two classes of agency,
+ common in a degree to every human being. None is exempt, indeed, from that
+ species of influence which affects, as it were, the surface of his being,
+ and gives the specific outline to his conduct. Almost all that is
+ ostensible submits to that legislature created by the general
+ representation of the past feelings of mankind&mdash;imperfect as it is
+ from a variety of causes, as it exists in the government, the religion,
+ and domestic habits. Those who do not nominally, yet actually, submit to
+ the same power. The external features of their conduct, indeed, can no
+ more escape it, than the clouds can escape from the stream of the wind;
+ and his opinion, which he often hopes he has dispassionately secured from
+ all contagion of prejudice and vulgarity, would be found, on examination,
+ to be the inevitable excrescence of the very usages from which he
+ vehemently dissents. Internally all is conducted otherwise; the
+ efficiency, the essence, the vitality of actions, derives its colour from
+ what is no ways contributed to from any external source. Like the plant
+ which while it derives the accident of its size and shape from the soil in
+ which it springs, and is cankered, or distorted, or inflated, yet retains
+ those qualities which essentially divide it from all others; so that
+ hemlock continues to be poison, and the violet does not cease to emit its
+ odour in whatever soil it may grow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We consider our own nature too superficially. We look on all that in
+ ourselves with which we can discover a resemblance in others; and consider
+ those resemblances as the materials of moral knowledge. It is in the
+ differences that it actually consists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1815; publ. 1840]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ESSAY ON THE LITERATURE, THE ARTS, AND THE MANNERS OF THE ATHENIANS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A FRAGMENT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The period which intervened between the birth of Pericles and the death of
+ Aristotle, is undoubtedly, whether considered in itself, or with reference
+ to the effects which it has produced upon the subsequent destinies of
+ civilized man, the most memorable in the history of the world. What was
+ the combination of moral and political circumstances which produced so
+ unparalleled a progress during that period in literature and the arts;&mdash;why
+ that progress, so rapid and so sustained, so soon received a check, and
+ became retrograde,&mdash;are problems left to the wonder and conjecture of
+ posterity. The wrecks and fragments of those subtle and profound minds,
+ like the ruins of a fine statue, obscurely suggest to us the grandeur and
+ perfection of the whole. Their very language&mdash;a type of the
+ understandings of which it was the creation and the image&mdash;in
+ variety, in simplicity, in flexibility, and in copiousness, excels every
+ other language of the western world. Their sculptures are such as we, in
+ our presumption, assume to be the models of ideal truth and beauty, and to
+ which no artist of modern times can produce forms in any degree
+ comparable. Their paintings, according to Pliny and Pausanias, were full
+ of delicacy and harmony; and some even were powerfully pathetic, so as to
+ awaken, like tender music or tragic poetry, the most overwhelming
+ emotions. We are accustomed to conceive the painters of the sixteenth
+ century, as those who have brought their art to the highest perfection,
+ probably because none of the ancient paintings have been preserved. For
+ all the inventive arts maintain, as it were, a sympathetic connexion
+ between each other, being no more than various expressions of one internal
+ power, modified by different circumstances, either of an individual, or of
+ society; and the paintings of that period would probably bear the same
+ relation as is confessedly borne by the sculptures to all succeeding ones.
+ Of their music we know little; but the effects which it is said to have
+ produced, whether they be attributed to the skill of the composer, or the
+ sensibility of his audience, are far more powerful than any which we
+ experience from the music of our own times; and if, indeed, the melody of
+ their compositions were more tender and delicate, and inspiring, than the
+ melodies of some modern European nations, their superiority in this art
+ must have been something wonderful, and wholly beyond conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their poetry seems to maintain a very high, though not so disproportionate
+ a rank, in the comparison. Perhaps Shakespeare, from the variety and
+ comprehension of his genius, is to be considered, on the whole, as the
+ greatest individual mind, of which we have specimens remaining. Perhaps
+ Dante created imaginations of greater loveliness and energy than any that
+ are to be found in the ancient literature of Greece. Perhaps nothing has
+ been discovered in the fragments of the Greek lyric poets equivalent to
+ the sublime and chivalric sensibility of Petrarch.&mdash;But, as a poet.
+ Homer must be acknowledged to excel Shakespeare in the truth, the harmony,
+ the sustained grandeur, the satisfying completeness of his images, their
+ exact fitness to the illustration, and to that to which they belong. Nor
+ could Dante, deficient in conduct, plan, nature, variety, and temperance,
+ have been brought into comparison with these men, but for those fortunate
+ isles laden with golden fruit, which alone could tempt any one to embark
+ in the misty ocean of his dark and extravagant fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, omitting the comparison of individual minds, which can afford no
+ general inference, how superior was the spirit and system of their poetry
+ to that of any other period! So that had any other genius equal in other
+ respects to the greatest that ever enlightened the world, arisen in that
+ age, he would have been superior to all, from this circumstance alone&mdash;that
+ had conceptions would have assumed a more harmonious and perfect form. For
+ it is worthy of observation, that whatever the poet of that age produced
+ is as harmonious and perfect as possible. In a drama, for instance, were
+ the composition of a person of inferior talent, it was still homogeneous
+ and free from inequalities it was a whole, consistent with itself. The
+ compositions of great minds bore throughout the sustained stamp of their
+ greatness. In the poetry of succeeding ages the expectations are often
+ exalted on Icarian wings, and fall, too much disappointed to give a memory
+ and a name to the oblivious pool in which they fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In physical knowledge Aristotle and Theophrastus had already&mdash;no
+ doubt assisted by the labours of those of their predecessor whom they
+ criticize&mdash;made advances worthy of the maturity of science. The
+ astonishing invention of geometry, that series of discoveries which have
+ enabled man to command the element and foresee future events, before the
+ subjects of his ignorant wonder, and which have opened as it were the
+ doors of the mysteries of nature, had already been brought to great
+ perfection. Metaphysics, the science of man's intimate nature, and logic,
+ or the grammar and elementary principles of that science received from the
+ latter philosophers of the Periclean age a firm basis. All our more exact
+ philosophy is built upon the labours of these great men, and many of the
+ words which we employ in metaphysical distinctions were invented by them
+ to give accuracy and system to their reasonings. The science of morals, or
+ the voluntary conduct of men in relation to themselves or others, dates
+ from this epoch. How inexpressibly bolder and more pure were the doctrines
+ of those great men, in comparison with the timid maxims which prevail in
+ the writings of the most esteemed modern moralists! They were such as
+ Phocion, and Epaminondas, and Timoleon, who formed themselves on their
+ influence, were to the wretched heroes of our own age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their political and religious institutions are more difficult to bring
+ into comparison with those of other times. A summary idea may be formed of
+ the worth of any political and religious system, by observing the
+ comparative degree of happiness and of intellect produced under its
+ influence. And whilst many institution and opinions, which in ancient
+ Greece were obstacles to the improvement of the human race, have been
+ abolished among modern nations, how many pernicious superstitions and new
+ contrivances of misrule, and unheard-of complications of public mischief,
+ have not been invented among them by the ever-watchful spirit of avarice
+ and tyranny!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The modern nations of the civilized world owe the progress which they have
+ made&mdash;as well in those physical sciences in which they have already
+ excelled their masters, as in the moral and intellectual inquiries, in
+ which, with all the advantage of the experience of the latter, it can
+ scarcely be said that they have yet equalled them,&mdash;to what is called
+ the revival of learning; that is, the study of the writers of the age
+ which preceded and immediately followed the government of Pericles, or of
+ subsequent writers, who were, so to speak, the rivers flowing from those
+ immortal fountains. And though there seems to be a principle in the modern
+ world, which, should circumstances analogous to those which modelled the
+ intellectual resources of the age to which we refer, into so harmonious a
+ proportion, again arise, would arrest and perpetuate them, and consign
+ their results to a more equal, extensive, and lasting improvement of the
+ condition of man&mdash;though justice and the true meaning of human
+ society are, if not more accurately, more generally understood; though
+ perhaps men know more, and therefore are more, as a mass, yet this
+ principle has never been called into action, and requires indeed a
+ universal and an almost appalling change in the system of existing things.
+ The study of modern history is the study of kings, financiers, statesmen,
+ and priests. The history of ancient Greece is the study of legislators,
+ philosophers, and poets; it is the history of men, compared with the
+ history of titles. What the Greeks were, was a reality, not a promise. And
+ what we are and hope to be, is derived, as it were, from the influence and
+ inspiration of these glorious generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever tends to afford a further illustration of the manners and
+ opinions of those to whom we owe so much, and who were perhaps, on the
+ whole, the most perfect specimens of humanity of whom we have authentic
+ record, were infinitely valuable. Let us see their errors, their
+ weaknesses, their daily actions, their familiar conversation, and catch
+ the tone of their society. When we discover how far the most admirable
+ community ever framed was removed from that perfection to which human
+ society is impelled by some active power within each bosom to aspire, how
+ great ought to be our hopes, how resolute our struggles! For the Greeks of
+ the Periclean age were widely different from us. It is to be lamented that
+ no modern writer has hitherto dared to show them precisely as they were.
+ Barthelemi cannot be denied the praise of industry and system; but he
+ never forgets that he is a Christian and a Frenchman. Wieland, in his
+ delightful novels, makes indeed a very tolerable Pagan, but cherishes too
+ many political prejudices, and refrains from diminishing the interest of
+ his romances by painting sentiments in which no European of modern times
+ can possibly sympathize. There is no book which shows the Greeks precisely
+ as they were; they seem all written for children with the caution that no
+ practice or sentiment, highly inconsistent with our present manners,
+ should be mentioned, lest those manners should receive outrage and
+ violation. But there are many to whom the Greek language is inaccessible,
+ who ought not to be excluded by this prudery from possessing an exact and
+ comprehensive conception of the history of man; for there is no knowledge
+ concerning what man has been and may be, from partaking of which a person
+ can depart, without becoming in some degree more philosophical, tolerant,
+ and just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the chief distinctions between the manners of ancient Greece and
+ modern Europe, consisted in the regulations and the sentiments respecting
+ sexual intercourse. Whether this difference arises from some imperfect
+ influence of the doctrines of Jesus, who alleges the absolute and
+ unconditional equality of all human beings, or from the institutions of
+ chivalry, or from a certain fundamental difference of physical nature
+ existing in the Celts, or from a combination of all or any of these causes
+ acting on each other, is a question worthy of voluminous investigation.
+ The fact is, that the modern Europeans have in this circumstance, and in
+ the abolition of slavery, made an improvement the most decisive in the
+ regulation of human society; and all the virtue and the wisdom of the
+ Periclean age arose under other institutions, in spite of the diminution
+ which personal slavery and the inferiority of women, recognized by law and
+ opinion, must have produced in the delicacy, the strength, the
+ comprehensiveness, and the accuracy of their conceptions, in moral,
+ political, and metaphysical science, and perhaps in every other art and
+ science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women, thus degraded, became such as it was expected they would
+ become. They possessed, except with extraordinary exceptions, the habits
+ and the qualities of slaves. They were probably not extremely beautiful;
+ at least there was no such disproportion in the attractions of the
+ external form between the female and male sex among the Greeks, as exists
+ among the modern Europeans. They were certainly devoid of that moral and
+ intellectual loveliness with which the acquisition of knowledge and the
+ cultivation of sentiment animates, as with another life of overpowering
+ grace, the lineaments and the gestures of every form which they inhabit.
+ Their eyes could not have been deep and intricate from the workings of the
+ mind, and could have entangled no heart in soul-enwoven labyrinths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let it not be imagined that because the Greeks were deprived of its
+ legitimate object, they were incapable of sentimental love; and that this
+ passion is the mere child of chivalry and the literature of modern times.
+ This object or its archetype for ever exists in the mind, which selects
+ among those who resemble it that which most resembles it; and
+ instinctively fills up the interstices of the imperfect image, in the same
+ manner as the imagination moulds and completes the shapes in clouds, or in
+ the fire, into the resemblances of whatever form, animal, building, &amp;c.,
+ happens to be present to it. Man is in his wildest state a social being: a
+ certain degree of civilization and refinement ever produces the want of
+ sympathies still more intimate and complete; and the gratification of the
+ senses is no longer all that is sought in sexual connexion. It soon
+ becomes a very small part of that profound and complicated sentiment,
+ which we call love, which is rather the universal thirst for a communion
+ not only of the senses, but of our whole nature, intellectual, imaginative
+ and sensitive, and which, when individualized, becomes an imperious
+ necessity, only to be satisfied by the complete or partial, actual or
+ supposed fulfilment of its claims. This want grows more powerful in
+ proportion to the development which our nature receives from civilization,
+ for man never ceases to be a social being. The sexual impulse, which is
+ only one, and often a small part of those claims, serves, from its obvious
+ and external nature, as a kind of type or expression of the rest, a common
+ basis, an acknowledged and visible link. Still it is a claim which even
+ derives a strength not its own from the accessory circumstances which
+ surround it, and one which our nature thirsts to satisfy. To estimate
+ this, observe the degree of intensity and durability of the love of the
+ male towards the female in animals and savages and acknowledge all the
+ duration and intensity observable in the love of civilized beings beyond
+ that of savages to be produced from other causes. In the susceptibility of
+ the external senses there is probably no important difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the ancient Greeks the male sex, one half of the human race,
+ received the highest cultivation and refinement: whilst the other, so far
+ as intellect is concerned, were educated as slaves and were raised but few
+ degrees in all that related to moral of intellectual excellence above the
+ condition of savages. The gradations in the society of man present us with
+ slow improvement in this respect. The Roman women held a higher
+ consideration in society, and were esteemed almost as the equal partners
+ with their husbands in the regulation of domestic economy and the
+ education of their children. The practices and customs of modern Europe
+ are essentially different from and incomparably less pernicious than
+ either, however remote from what an enlightened mind cannot fail to desire
+ as the future destiny of human beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1818; publ. 1840]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ON THE SYMPOSIUM, OR PREFACE TO THE BANQUET OF PLATO
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A FRAGMENT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The dialogue entitled The Banquet was selected by the translator as the
+ most beautiful and perfect among all the works of Plato. [Footnote: The
+ Republic, though replete with considerable errors of speculation, is,
+ indeed, the greatest repository of important truths of all the works of
+ Plato. This, perhaps, is because it is the longest. He first, and perhaps
+ last, maintained that a state ought to be governed, not by the wealthiest,
+ or the most ambitious, or the most cunning, but by the wisest; the method
+ of selecting such rulers, and the laws by which such a selection is made,
+ must correspond with and arise out of the moral freedom and refinement of
+ the people.] He despairs of having communicated to the English language
+ any portion of the surpassing graces of the composition, or having done
+ more than present an imperfect shadow of the language and the sentiment of
+ this astonishing production.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Plato is eminently the greatest among the Greek philosophers, and from,
+ or, rather, perhaps through him, his master Socrates, have proceeded those
+ emanations of moral and metaphysical knowledge, on which a long series and
+ an incalculable variety of popular superstitions have sheltered their
+ absurdities from the slow contempt of mankind. Plato exhibits the rare
+ union of close and subtle logic with the Pythian enthusiasm of poetry,
+ melted by the splendour and harmony of his periods into one irresistible
+ stream of musical impressions, which hurry the persuasions onward, as in a
+ breathless career. His language is that of an immortal spirit, rather than
+ a man. Lord Bacon is, perhaps, the only writer, who, in these particulars,
+ can be compared with him: his imitator, Cicero, sinks in the comparison
+ into an ape mocking the gestures of a man. His views into the nature of
+ mind and existence are often obscure, only because they are profound; and
+ though his theories respecting the government of the world, and the
+ elementary laws of moral action, are not always correct, yet there is
+ scarcely any of his treatises which do not, however stained by puerile
+ sophisms, contain the most remarkable intuitions into all that can be the
+ subject of the human mind. His excellence consists especially in
+ intuition, and it is this faculty which raises him far above Aristotle,
+ whose genius, though vivid and various, is obscure in comparison with that
+ of Plato.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dialogue entitled the Banquet, is called [word in Greek], or a
+ Discussion upon Love, and is supposed to have taken place at the house of
+ Agathon, at one of a series of festivals given by that poet, on the
+ occasion of his gaining the prize of tragedy at the Dionysiaca. The
+ account of the debate on this occasion is supposed to have been given by
+ Apollodorus, a pupil of Socrates, many years after it had taken place, to
+ a companion who was curious to hear it. This Apollodorus appears, both
+ from the style in which he is represented in this piece, as well as from a
+ passage in the Phaedon, to have been a person of an impassioned and
+ enthusiastic disposition; to borrow an image from the Italian painters, he
+ seems to have been the St. John of the Socratic group. The drama (for so
+ the lively distinction of character and the various and well-wrought
+ circumstances of the story almost entitle it to be called) begins by
+ Socrates persuading Aristodemus to sup at Agathon's, uninvited. The whole
+ of this introduction affords the most lively conception of refined
+ Athenian manners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1818; publ. 1840] [UNFINISHED]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A DEFENCE OF POETRY
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ I
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ According to one mode of regarding those two classes of mental action,
+ which are called reason and imagination, the former may be considered as
+ mind contemplating the relations borne by one thought to another, however
+ produced; and the latter, as mind acting upon those thoughts so as to
+ colour them with its own light, and composing from them, as from elements,
+ other thoughts, each containing within itself the principle of its own
+ integrity. The one is the [word in Greek], or the principle of synthesis,
+ and has for its objects those forms which are common to universal nature
+ and existence itself; the other is the [word in Greek], or principle of
+ analysis, and its action regards the relations of things, simply as
+ relations; considering thoughts, not in their integral unity, but as the
+ algebraical representations which conduct to certain general results.
+ Reason is the enumeration of quantities already known; imagination is the
+ perception of the value of those quantities, both separately and as a
+ whole. Reason respects the differences, and imagination the similitudes of
+ things. Reason is to the imagination as the instrument to the agent, as
+ the body to the spirit, as the shadow to the substance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poetry, in a general sense, may be defined to be 'the expression of the
+ imagination': and poetry is connate with the origin of man. Man is an
+ instrument over which a series of external and internal impressions are
+ driven, like the alternations of an ever-changing wind over an Aeolian
+ lyre, which move it by their motion to ever-changing melody. But there is
+ a principle within the human being, and perhaps within all sentient
+ beings, which acts otherwise than in the lyre, and produces not melody
+ alone, but harmony, by an internal adjustment of the sounds or motions
+ thus excited to the impressions which excite them. It is as if the lyre
+ could accommodate its chords to the motions of that which strikes them, in
+ a determined proportion of sound; even as the musician can accommodate his
+ voice to the sound of the lyre. A child at play by itself will express its
+ delight by its voice and motions; and every inflexion of tone and every
+ gesture will bear exact relation to a corresponding antitype in the
+ pleasurable impressions which awakened it; it will be the reflected image
+ of that impression; and as the lyre trembles and sounds after the wind has
+ died away, so the child seeks, by prolonging in its voice and motions the
+ duration of the effect, to prolong also a consciousness of the cause. In
+ relation to the objects which delight a child, these expressions are, what
+ poetry is to higher objects. The savage (for the savage is to ages what
+ the child is to years) expresses the emotions produced in him by
+ surrounding objects in a similar manner; and language and gesture,
+ together with plastic or pictorial imitation, become the image of the
+ combined effect of those objects, and of his apprehension of them. Man in
+ society, with all his passions and his pleasures, next becomes the object
+ of the passions and pleasures of man; an additional class of emotions
+ produces an augmented treasure of expressions; and language, gesture, and
+ the imitative arts, become at once the representation and the medium, the
+ pencil and the picture, the chisel and the statue, the chord and the
+ harmony. The social sympathies, or those laws from which, as from its
+ elements, society results, begin to develop themselves from the moment
+ that two human beings coexist; the future is contained within the present,
+ as the plant within the seed; and equality, diversity, unity, contrast,
+ mutual dependence, become the principles alone capable of affording the
+ motives according to which the will of a social being is determined to
+ action, inasmuch as he is social; and constitute pleasure in sensation,
+ virtue in sentiment, beauty in art, truth in reasoning, and love in the
+ intercourse of kind. Hence men, even in the infancy of society, observe a
+ certain order in their words and actions, distinct from that of the
+ objects and the impressions represented by them, all expression being
+ subject to the laws of that from which it proceeds. But let us dismiss
+ those more general considerations which might involve an inquiry into the
+ principles of society itself, and restrict our view to the manner in which
+ the imagination is expressed upon its forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the youth of the world, men dance and sing and imitate natural objects,
+ observing in these actions, as in all others, a certain rhythm or order.
+ And, although all men observe a similar, they observe not the same order,
+ in the motions of the dance, in the melody of the song, in the
+ combinations of language, in the series of their imitations of natural
+ objects. For there is a certain order or rhythm belonging to each of these
+ classes of mimetic representation, from which the hearer and the spectator
+ receive an intenser and purer pleasure than from any other: the sense of
+ an approximation to this order has been called taste by modern writers.
+ Every man in the infancy of art observes an order which approximates more
+ or less closely to that from which this highest delight results: but the
+ diversity is not sufficiently marked, as that its gradations should be
+ sensible, except in those instances where the predominance of this faculty
+ of approximation to the beautiful (for so we may be permitted to name the
+ relation between this highest pleasure and its cause) is very great. Those
+ in whom it exists in excess are poets, in the most universal sense of the
+ word; and the pleasure resulting from the manner in which they express the
+ influence of society or nature upon their own minds, communicates itself
+ to others, and gathers a sort or reduplication from that community. Their
+ language is vitally metaphorical; that is, it marks the before
+ unapprehended relations of things and perpetuates their apprehension,
+ until the words which represent them become, through time, signs for
+ portions or classes of thoughts instead of pictures of integral thoughts;
+ and then if no new poets should arise to create afresh the associations
+ which have been thus disorganized, language will be dead to all the nobler
+ purposes of human intercourse. These similitudes or relations are finely
+ said by Lord Bacon to be 'the same footsteps of nature impressed upon the
+ various subjects of the world'; [Footnote: De Augment. Scient., cap. i,
+ lib. iii.] and he considers the faculty which perceives them as the
+ storehouse of axioms common to all knowledge. In the infancy of society
+ every author is necessarily a poet, because language itself is poetry; and
+ to be a poet is to apprehend the true and the beautiful, in a word, the
+ good which exists in the relation, subsisting, first between existence and
+ perception, and secondly between perception and expression. Every original
+ language near to its source is in itself the chaos of a cyclic poem: the
+ copiousness of lexicography and the distinctions of grammar are the works
+ of a later age, and are merely the catalogue and the form of the creations
+ of poetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But poets, or those who imagine and express this indestructible order, are
+ not only the authors of language and of music, of the dance, and
+ architecture, and statuary, and painting; they are the institutors of
+ laws, and the founders of civil society, and the inventors of the arts of
+ life, and the teachers, who draw into a certain propinquity with the
+ beautiful and the true, that partial apprehension of the agencies of the
+ invisible world which is called religion. Hence all original religions are
+ allegorical, or susceptible of allegory, and, like Janus, have a double
+ face of false and true. Poets, according to the circumstances of the age
+ and nation in which they appeared, were called, in the earlier epochs of
+ the world, legislators, or prophets: a poet essentially comprises and
+ unites both these characters. For he not only beholds intensely the
+ present as it is, and discovers those laws according to which present
+ things ought to be ordered, but he beholds the future in the present, and
+ his thoughts are the germs of the flower and the fruit of latest time. Not
+ that I assert poets to be prophets in the gross sense of the word, or that
+ they can foretell the form as surely as they foreknow the spirit of
+ events: such is the pretence of superstition, which would make poetry an
+ attribute of prophecy, rather than prophecy an attribute of poetry. A poet
+ participates in the eternal, the infinite, and the one; as far as relates
+ to his conceptions, time and place and number are not. The grammatical
+ forms which express the moods of time, and the difference of persons, and
+ the distinction of place, are convertible with respect to the highest
+ poetry without injuring it as poetry; and the choruses of Aeschylus, and
+ the book of Job, and Dante's Paradise, would afford, more than any other
+ writings, examples of this fact, if the limits of this essay did not
+ forbid citation. The creations of sculpture, painting, and music, are
+ illustrations still more decisive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Language, colour, form, and religious and civil habits of action, are all
+ the instruments and materials of poetry; they may be called poetry by that
+ figure of speech which considers the effect as a synonym of the cause. But
+ poetry in a more restricted sense expresses those arrangements of
+ language, and especially metrical language, which are created by that
+ imperial faculty; whose throne is curtained within the invisible nature of
+ man. And this springs from the nature itself of language, which is a more
+ direct representation of the actions and passions of our internal being,
+ and is susceptible of more various and delicate combinations, than colour,
+ form, or motion, and is more plastic and obedient to the control of that
+ faculty of which it is the creation. For language is arbitrarily produced
+ by the imagination and has relation to thoughts alone; but all other
+ materials, instruments and conditions of art, have relations among each
+ other, which limit and interpose between conception and expression The
+ former is as a mirror which reflects, the latter as a cloud which
+ enfeebles, the light of which both are mediums of communication. Hence the
+ fame of sculptors, painters, and musicians, although the intrinsic powers
+ of the great masters of these arts may yield in no degree to that of those
+ who have employed language as the hieroglyphic of their thoughts, has
+ never equalled that of poets in the restricted sense of the term, as two
+ performers of equal skill will produce unequal effects from a guitar and a
+ harp. The fame of legislators and founders of religions, so long as their
+ institutions last, alone seems to exceed that of poets in the restricted
+ sense; but it can scarcely be a question, whether, if we deduct the
+ celebrity which their flattery of the gross opinions of the vulgar usually
+ conciliates, together with that which belonged to them in their higher
+ character of poets, any excess will remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have thus circumscribed the word poetry within the limits of that art
+ which is the most familiar and the most perfect expression of the faculty
+ itself. It is necessary, however, to make the circle still narrower, and
+ to determine the distinction between measured and unmeasured language; for
+ the popular division into prose and verse is inadmissible in accurate
+ philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sounds as well as thoughts have relation both between each other and
+ towards that which they represent, and a perception of the order of those
+ relations has always been found connected with a perception of the order
+ of the relations of thoughts. Hence the language of poets has ever
+ affected a certain uniform and harmonious recurrence of sound, without
+ which it were not poetry, and which is scarcely less indispensable to the
+ communication of its influence, than the words themselves, without
+ reference to that peculiar order. Hence the vanity of translation; it were
+ as wise to cast a violet into a crucible that you might discover the
+ formal principle of its colour and odour, as seek to transfuse from one
+ language into another the creations of a poet. The plant must spring again
+ from its seed, or it will bear no flower&mdash;and this is the burthen of
+ the curse of Babel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An observation of the regular mode of the recurrence of harmony in the
+ language of poetical minds, together with its relation to music, produced
+ metre, or a certain system of traditional forms of harmony and language.
+ Yet it is by no means essential that a poet should accommodate his
+ language to this traditional form, so that the harmony, which is its
+ spirit, be observed. The practice is indeed convenient and popular, and to
+ be preferred, especially in such composition as includes much action: but
+ every great poet must inevitably innovate upon the example of his
+ predecessors in the exact structure of his peculiar versification. The
+ distinction between poets and prose writers is a vulgar error. The
+ distinction between philosophers and poets has been anticipated. Plato was
+ essentially a poet&mdash;the truth and splendour of his imagery, and the
+ melody of his language, are the most intense that it is possible to
+ conceive. He rejected the measure of the epic, dramatic, and lyrical
+ forms, because he sought to kindle a harmony in thoughts divested of shape
+ and action, and he forbore to invent any regular plan of rhythm which
+ would include, under determinate forms, the varied pauses of his style.
+ Cicero sought to imitate the cadence of his periods, but with little
+ success. Lord Bacon was a poet. [Footnote: See the Filum Labyrinthi, and
+ the Essay on Death particularly]. His language has a sweet and majestic
+ rhythm, which satisfies the sense, no less than the almost superhuman
+ wisdom of his philosophy satisfies the intellect; it is a strain which
+ distends, and then bursts the circumference of the reader's mind, and
+ pours itself forth together with it into the universal element with which
+ it has perpetual sympathy. All the authors of revolutions in opinion are
+ not only necessarily poets as they are inventors, nor even as their words
+ unveil the permanent analogy of things by images which participate in the
+ life of truth; but as their periods are harmonious and rhythmical, and
+ contain in themselves the elements of verse; being the echo of the eternal
+ music. Nor are those supreme poets, who have employed traditional forms of
+ rhythm on account of the form and action of their subjects, less capable
+ of perceiving and teaching the truth of things, than those who have
+ omitted that form. Shakespeare, Dante, and Milton (to confine ourselves to
+ modern writers) are philosophers of the very loftiest power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A poem is the very image of life expressed in its eternal truth. There is
+ this difference between a story and a poem, that a story is a catalogue of
+ detached facts, which have no other connexion than time, place,
+ circumstance, cause and effect; the other is the creation of actions
+ according to the unchangeable forms of human nature, as existing in the
+ mind of the Creator, which is itself the image of all other minds. The one
+ is partial, and applies only to a definite period of time, and a certain
+ combination of events which can never again recur; the other is universal,
+ and contains within itself the germ of a relation to whatever motives or
+ actions have place in the possible varieties of human nature. Time, which
+ destroys the beauty and the use of the story of particular facts, stripped
+ of the poetry which should invest them, augments that of poetry, and for
+ ever develops new and wonderful applications of the eternal truth which it
+ contains. Hence epitomes have been called the moths of just history; they
+ eat out the poetry of it. A story of particular facts is as a mirror which
+ obscures and distorts that which should be beautiful: poetry is a mirror
+ which makes beautiful that which is distorted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parts of a composition may be poetical, without the composition as a
+ whole being a poem. A single sentence may be a considered as a whole,
+ though it may be found in the midst of a series of unassimilated portions:
+ a single word even may be a spark of inextinguishable thought. And thus
+ all the great historians, Herodotus, Plutarch, Livy, were poets; and
+ although, the plan of these writers, especially that of Livy, restrained
+ them; from developing this faculty in its highest degree, they made
+ copious and ample amends for their subjection, by filling all the
+ interstices of their subjects with living images.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having determined what is poetry, and who are poets, let us proceed to
+ estimate its effects upon society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poetry is ever accompanied with pleasure: all spirits on which it falls
+ open themselves to receive the wisdom which is mingled with its delight.
+ In the infancy of the world, neither poets themselves nor their auditors
+ are fully aware of the excellence of poetry: for it acts in a divine and
+ unapprehended manner, beyond and above consciousness; and it is reserved
+ for future generations to contemplate and measure the mighty cause and
+ effect in all the strength and splendour of their union. Even in modern
+ times, no living poet ever arrived at the fullness of his fame; the jury
+ which sits in judgement upon a poet, belonging as he does to all time,
+ must be composed of his peers: it must be impanelled by Time from the
+ selectest of the wise of many generations. A poet is a nightingale, who
+ sits in darkness and sings to cheer its own solitude with sweet sounds;
+ his auditors are as men entranced by the melody of an unseen musician, who
+ feel that they are moved and softened, yet know not whence or why. The
+ poems of Homer and his contemporaries were the delight of infant Greece;
+ they were the elements of that social system which is the column upon
+ which all succeeding civilization has reposed. Homer embodied the ideal
+ perfection of his age in human character; nor can we doubt that those who
+ read his verses were awakened to an ambition of becoming like to Achilles,
+ Hector, and Ulysses the truth and beauty of friendship, patriotism, and
+ persevering devotion to an object, were unveiled to the depths in these
+ immortal creations: the sentiments of the auditors must have been refined
+ and enlarged by a sympathy with such great and lovely impersonations,
+ until from admiring they imitated, and from imitation they identified
+ themselves with the objects of their admiration. Nor let it be objected,
+ that these characters are remote from moral perfection, and that they can
+ by no means be considered as edifying patterns for general imitation.
+ Every epoch, under names more or less specious, has deified its peculiar
+ errors; Revenge is the naked idol of the worship of a semi-barbarous age;
+ and Self-deceit is the veiled image of unknown evil, before which luxury
+ and satiety lie prostrate. But a poet considers the vices of his
+ contemporaries as a temporary dress in which his creations must be
+ arrayed, and which cover without concealing the eternal proportions of
+ their beauty. An epic or dramatic personage is understood to wear them
+ around his soul, as he may the ancient armour or the modern uniform around
+ his body; whilst it is easy to conceive a dress more graceful than either.
+ The beauty of the internal nature cannot be so far concealed by its
+ accidental vesture, but that the spirit of its form shall communicate
+ itself to the very disguise, and indicate the shape it hides from the
+ manner in which it is worn. A majestic form and graceful motions will
+ express themselves through the most barbarous and tasteless costume. Few
+ poets of the highest class have chosen to exhibit the beauty of their
+ conceptions in its naked truth and splendour; and it is doubtful whether
+ the alloy of costume, habit, &amp;c., be not necessary to temper this
+ planetary music for mortal ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole objection, however, of the immorality of poetry rests upon a
+ misconception of the manner in which poetry acts to produce the moral
+ improvement of man. Ethical science arranges the elements which poetry has
+ created, and propounds schemes and proposes examples of civil and domestic
+ life: nor is it for want of admirable doctrines that men hate, and
+ despise, and censure, and deceive, and subjugate one another. But poetry
+ acts in another and diviner manner. It awakens and enlarges the mind
+ itself by rendering it the receptacle of a thousand unapprehended
+ combinations of thought. Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of
+ the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar; it
+ reproduces all that it represents, and the impersonations clothed in its
+ Elysian light stand thenceforward in the minds of those who have once
+ contemplated them as memorials of that gentle and exalted content which
+ extends itself over all thoughts and actions with which it coexists. The
+ great secret of morals is love; or a going out of our own nature, and an
+ identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in thought,
+ action, or person, not our own. A man, to be greatly good, must imagine
+ intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another
+ and of many others; the pains and pleasures of his species must become his
+ own. The great instrument of moral good is the imagination; and poetry
+ administers to the effect by acting upon the cause. Poetry enlarges the
+ circumference of the imagination by replenishing it with thought of ever
+ new delight, which have the power of attracting and assimilating to their
+ own nature all other thoughts, and which form new intervals and
+ interstices whose void for ever craves fresh food. Poetry strengthens the
+ faculty which is the organ of the moral nature of man, in the same manner
+ as exercise strengthens a limb. A poet therefore would do ill to embody
+ his own conceptions of right and wrong, which are usually those of his
+ place and time, in his poetical creations, which participate in neither By
+ this assumption of the inferior office of interpreting the effect in which
+ perhaps after all he might acquit himself but imperfectly, he would resign
+ a glory in a participation in the cause. There was little danger that
+ Homer, or any of the eternal poets should have so far misunderstood
+ themselves as to have abdicated this throne of their widest dominion.
+ Those in whom the poetical faculty, though great, is less intense, as
+ Euripides, Lucan, Tasso, Spenser, have frequently affected a moral aim,
+ and the effect of their poetry is diminished in exact proportion to the
+ degree in which they compel us to advert to this purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Homer and the cyclic poets were followed at a certain interval by the
+ dramatic and lyrical poets of Athens, who flourished contemporaneously
+ with all that is most perfect in the kindred expressions of the poetical
+ faculty; architecture, painting, music the dance, sculpture, philosophy,
+ and, we may add, the forms of civil life. For although the scheme of
+ Athenian society was deformed by many imperfections which the poetry
+ existing in chivalry and Christianity has erased from the habits and
+ institutions of modern Europe; yet never at any other period has so much
+ energy, beauty, and virtue, been developed; never was blind strength and
+ stubborn form so disciplined and rendered subject to the will of man, or
+ that will less repugnant to the dictates of the beautiful and the true, as
+ during the century which preceded the death of Socrates. Of no other epoch
+ in the history of our species have we records and fragments stamped so
+ visibly with the image of the divinity in man. But it is poetry alone, in
+ form, in action, or in language, which has rendered this epoch memorable
+ above all others, and the storehouse of examples to everlasting time. For
+ written poetry existed at that epoch simultaneously with the other arts,
+ and it is an idle inquiry to demand which gave and which received the
+ light, which all, as from a common focus, have scattered over the darkest
+ periods of succeeding time. We know no more of cause and effect than a
+ constant conjunction of events: poetry is ever found to coexist with
+ whatever other arts contribute to the happiness and perfection of man. I
+ appeal to what has already been established to distinguish between the
+ cause and the effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at the period here adverted to, that the drama had its birth; and
+ however a succeeding writer may have equalled or surpassed those few great
+ specimens of the Athenian drama which have been preserved to us, it is
+ indisputable that the art itself never was understood or practised
+ according to the true philosophy of it, as at Athens. For the Athenians
+ employed language, action, music, painting, the dance, and religious
+ institutions, to produce a common effect in the representation of the
+ highest idealisms of passion and of power; each division in the art was
+ made perfect in its kind by artists of the most consummate skill, and was
+ disciplined into a beautiful proportion and unity one towards the other.
+ On the modern stage a few only of the elements capable of expressing the
+ image of the poet's conception are employed at once. We have tragedy
+ without music and dancing; and music and dancing without the highest
+ impersonations of which they are the fit accompaniment, and both without
+ religion and solemnity. Religious institution has indeed been usually
+ banished from the stage. Our system of divesting the actor's face of a
+ mask, on which the many expressions appropriated to his dramatic character
+ might be moulded into one permanent and unchanging expression, is
+ favourable only to a partial and inharmonious effect; it is fit for
+ nothing but a monologue, where all the attention may be directed to some
+ great master of ideal mimicry. The modern practice of blending comedy with
+ tragedy, though liable to great abuse in point of practice, is undoubtedly
+ an extension of the dramatic circle; but the comedy should be as in KING
+ LEAR, universal, ideal, and sublime. It is perhaps the intervention of
+ this principle which determines the balance in favour of KING LEAR against
+ the OEDIPUS TYRANNUS or the AGAMEMNON, or, if you will, the trilogies with
+ which they are connected; unless the intense power of the choral poetry,
+ especially that of the latter, should be considered as restoring the
+ equilibrium. KING LEAR, if it can sustain this comparison, may be judged
+ to be the most perfect specimen of the dramatic art existing in the world;
+ in spite of the narrow conditions to which the poet was subjected by the
+ ignorance of the philosophy of the drama which has prevailed in modern
+ Europe. Calderon, in his religious AUTOS, has attempted to fulfil some of
+ the high conditions of dramatic representation neglected by Shakespeare;
+ such as the establishing a relation between the drama and religion and the
+ accommodating them to music and dancing; but he omits the observation of
+ conditions still more important, and more is lost than gained by the
+ substitution of the rigidly-defined and ever-repeated idealisms of a
+ distorted superstition for the living impersonations of the truth of human
+ passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I digress.&mdash;The connexion of scenic exhibitions with the
+ improvement or corruption of the manners of men, has been universally
+ recognized: in other words, the presence or absence of poetry in its most
+ perfect and universal form, has been found to be connected with good and
+ evil in conduct or habit. The corruption which has been imputed to the
+ drama as an effect, begins when the poetry employed in its constitution
+ ends: I appeal to the history of manners whether the periods of the growth
+ of the one and the decline of the other have not corresponded with an
+ exactness equal to any example of moral cause and effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drama at Athens, or wheresoever else it may have approached to its
+ perfection, ever co-existed with the moral and intellectual greatness of
+ the age. The tragedies of the Athenian poets are as mirrors in which the
+ spectator beholds himself, under a thin disguise of circumstance, stript
+ of all but that ideal perfection and energy which every one feels to be
+ the internal type of all that he loves, admires, and would become. The
+ imagination is enlarged by a sympathy with pains and passions so mighty,
+ that they distend in their conception the capacity of that by which they
+ are conceived; the good affections are strengthened by pity, indignation,
+ terror, and sorrow; and an exalted calm is prolonged from the satiety of
+ this high exercise of them into the tumult of familiar life: even crime is
+ disarmed of half its horror and all its contagion by being represented as
+ the fatal consequence of the unfathomable agencies of nature; error is
+ thus divested of its wilfulness; men can no longer cherish it as the
+ creation of their choice. In a drama of the highest order there is little
+ food for censure or hatred; it teaches rather self-knowledge and
+ self-respect. Neither the eye nor the mind can see itself, unless
+ reflected upon that which it resembles. The drama, so long as it continues
+ to express poetry, is as a prismatic and many-sided mirror, which collects
+ the brightest rays of human nature and divides and reproduces them from
+ the simplicity of these elementary forms, and touches them with majesty
+ and beauty, and multiplies all that it reflects, and endows it with the
+ power of propagating its like wherever it may fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in periods of the decay of social life, the drama sympathizes with
+ that decay. Tragedy becomes a cold imitation of the form of the great
+ masterpieces of antiquity, divested of all harmonious accompaniment of the
+ kindred arts; and often the very form misunderstood, or a weak attempt to
+ teach certain doctrines, which the writer considers as moral truths; and
+ which are usually no more than specious flatteries of some gross vice or
+ weakness, with which the author, in common with his auditors, are
+ infected. Hence what has been called the classical and domestic drama.
+ Addison's CATO is a specimen of the one; and would it were not superfluous
+ to cite examples of the other! To such purposes poetry cannot be made
+ subservient. Poetry is a sword of lightning, ever unsheathed, which
+ consumes the scabbard that would contain it. And thus we observe that all
+ dramatic writings of this nature are unimaginative in a singular degree;
+ they affect sentiment and passion, which, divested of imagination, are
+ other names for caprice and appetite. The period in our own history of the
+ grossest degradation of the drama is the reign of Charles II, when all
+ forms in which poetry had been accustomed to be expressed became hymns to
+ the triumph of kingly power over liberty and virtue. Milton stood alone
+ illuminating an age unworthy of him. At such periods the calculating
+ principle pervades all the forms of dramatic exhibition, and poetry ceases
+ to be expressed upon them. Comedy loses its ideal universality: wit
+ succeeds to humour; we laugh from self-complacency and triumph, instead of
+ pleasure; malignity, sarcasm, and contempt, succeed to sympathetic
+ merriment; we hardly laugh, but we Obscenity, which is ever blasphemy
+ against the divine beauty in life, becomes, from the very veil which it
+ assumes, more active if less disgusting: it is a monster for which the
+ corruption of society for ever brings forth new food, which it devours in
+ secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drama being that form under which a greater number of modes of
+ expression of poetry are susceptible of being combined than any other, the
+ connexion of poetry and social good is more observable in the drama than
+ in whatever other form. And it is indisputable that the highest perfection
+ of human society has ever corresponded with the highest dramatic
+ excellence; and that the corruption or the extinction of the drama in a
+ nation where it has once flourished, is a mark of a corruption of manners
+ and an extinction of the energies which sustain the soul of social life.
+ But, as Machiavelli says of political institutions, that life may be
+ preserved and renewed, if men should arise capable of bringing back the
+ drama to its principles. And this is true with respect to poetry in its
+ most extended sense: all language, institution and form, require not only
+ to be produced but to be sustained: the office and character of a poet
+ participates in the divine nature as regards providence, no less than as
+ regards creation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Civil war, the spoils of Asia, and the fatal predominance first of the
+ Macedonian, and then of the Roman arms, were so many symbols of the
+ extinction or suspension of the creative faculty in Greece. The bucolic
+ writers, who found patronage under the lettered tyrants of Sicily and
+ Egypt, were the latest representatives of its most glorious reign. Their
+ poetry is intensely melodious, like the odour of the tuberose, it
+ overcomes and sickens the spirit with excess of sweetness; whilst the
+ poetry of the preceding age was as a meadow-gale of June, which mingles
+ the fragrance all the flowers of the field, and adds a quickening and
+ harmonizing spirit of its own, which endows the sense with a power of
+ sustaining its extreme delight. The bucolic and erotic delicacy in written
+ poetry is correlative with that softness in statuary, music and the
+ kindred arts, and even in manners and institutions, which distinguished
+ the epoch to which I now refer. Nor is it the poetical faculty itself, or
+ any misapplication of it, to which this want of harmony is to be imputed.
+ An equal sensibility to the influence of the senses and the affections is
+ to be found in the writings of Homer and Sophocles: the former,
+ especially, has clothed sensual and pathetic images with irresistible
+ attractions. Their superiority over these succeeding writers consists in
+ the presence of those thoughts which belong to the inner faculties of our
+ nature, not in the absence of those which are connected with the external:
+ their incomparable perfection consists in a harmony of the union of all.
+ It is not what the erotic poets have, but what they have not, in which
+ their imperfection consists. It is not inasmuch as they were poets, but
+ inasmuch as they were not poets, that they can be considered with any
+ plausibility as connected with the corruption of their age. Had that
+ corruption availed so as to extinguish in them the sensibility to
+ pleasure, passion, and natural scenery, which is imputed to them as an
+ imperfection, the last triumph of evil would have been achieved. For the
+ end of social corruption is to destroy all sensibility to pleasure; and,
+ therefore, it is corruption. It begins at the imagination and the
+ intellect as at the core, and distributes itself thence as a paralysing
+ venom, through the affections into the very appetites, until all become a
+ torpid mass in which hardly sense survives. At the approach of such a
+ period, poetry ever addresses itself to those faculties which are the last
+ to be destroyed, and its voice is heard, like the footsteps of Astraea,
+ departing from the world. Poetry ever communicates all the pleasure which
+ men are capable of receiving: it is ever still the light of life; the
+ source of whatever of beautiful or generous or true can have place in an
+ evil time. It will readily be confessed that those among the luxurious
+ citizens of Syracuse and Alexandria, who were delighted with the poems of
+ Theocritus, were less cold, cruel, and sensual than the remnant of their
+ tribe. But corruption must utterly have destroyed the fabric of human
+ society before poetry can ever cease. The sacred links of that chain have
+ never been entirely disjoined, which descending through the minds of many
+ men is attached to those great minds, whence as from a magnet the
+ invisible effluence is sent forth, which at once connects, animates, and
+ sustains the life of all. It is the faculty which contains within itself
+ the seeds at once of its own and of social renovation. And let us not
+ circumscribe the effects of the bucolic and erotic poetry within the
+ limits of the sensibility of those to whom it was addressed. They may have
+ perceived the beauty of those immortal compositions, simply as fragments
+ and isolated portions: those who are more finely organized, or born in a
+ happier age, may recognize them as episodes to that great poem, which all
+ poets, like the cooperating thoughts of one great mind, have built up
+ since the beginning of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same revolutions within a narrower sphere had place in ancient Rome;
+ but the actions and forms of its social life never seem to have been
+ perfectly saturated with the poetical element. The Romans appear to have
+ considered the Greeks as the selectest treasuries of the selectest forms
+ of manners and of nature, and to have abstained from creating in measured
+ language, sculpture, music, or architecture, anything which might bear a
+ particular relation to their own condition, whilst it should bear a
+ general one to the universal constitution of the world. But we judge from
+ partial evidence, and we judge perhaps partially Ennius, Varro, Pacuvius,
+ and Accius, all great poets, have been lost. Lucretius is in the highest,
+ and Virgil in a very high sense, a creator. The chosen delicacy of
+ expressions of the latter, are as a mist of light which conceal from us
+ the intense and exceeding truth of his conceptions of nature. Livy is
+ instinct with poetry. Yet Horace, Catullus, Ovid, and generally the other
+ great writers of the Virgilian age, saw man and nature in the mirror of
+ Greece. The institutions also, and the religion of Rome were less poetical
+ than those of Greece, as the shadow is less vivid than the substance.
+ Hence poetry in Rome, seemed to follow, rather than accompany, the
+ perfection of political and domestic society. The true poetry of Rome
+ lived in its institutions; for whatever of beautiful, true, and majestic,
+ they contained, could have sprung only from the faculty which creates the
+ order in which they consist. The life of Camillus, the death of Regulus;
+ the expectation of the senators, in their godlike state, of the victorious
+ Gauls: the refusal of the republic to make peace with Hannibal, after the
+ battle of Cannae, were not the consequences of a refined calculation of
+ the probable personal advantage to result from such a rhythm and order in
+ the shows of life, to those who were at once the poets and the actors of
+ these immortal dramas. The imagination beholding the beauty of this order,
+ created it out of itself according to its own idea; the consequence was
+ empire, and the reward everliving fame. These things are not the less
+ poetry quid carent vate sacro. They are the episodes of that cyclic poem
+ written by Time upon the memories of men. The Past, like an inspired
+ rhapsodist, fills the theatre of everlasting generations with their
+ harmony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the ancient system of religion and manners had fulfilled the
+ circle of its revolutions. And the world would have fallen into utter
+ anarchy and darkness, but that there were found poets among the authors of
+ the Christian and chivalric systems of manners and religion, who created
+ forms of opinion and action never before conceived; which, copied into the
+ imaginations of men, become as generals to the bewildered armies of their
+ thoughts. It is foreign to the present purpose to touch upon the evil
+ produced by these systems: except that we protest, on the ground of the
+ principles already established, that no portion of it can be attributed to
+ the poetry they contain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that the poetry of Moses, Job, David, Solomon, and Isaiah,
+ had produced a great effect upon the mind of Jesus and his disciples. The
+ scattered fragments preserved to us by the biographers of this
+ extraordinary person, are all instinct with the most vivid poetry. But his
+ doctrines seem to have been quickly distorted. At a certain period after
+ the prevalence of a system of opinions founded upon those promulgated by
+ him, the three forms into which Plato had distributed the faculties of
+ mind underwent a sort of apotheosis, and became the object of the worship
+ of the civilized world. Here it is to be confessed that 'Light seems to
+ thicken,' and
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The crow makes wing to the rooky wood,
+ Good things of day begin to droop and drowse,
+ And night's black agents to their preys do rouze.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But mark how beautiful an order has sprung from the dust and blood of this
+ fierce chaos! how the world, as from a resurrection, balancing itself on
+ the golden wings of knowledge and of hope, has reassumed its yet unwearied
+ flight into the heaven of time. Listen to the music, unheard by outward
+ ears, which is as a ceaseless and invisible wind, nourishing its
+ everlasting course with strength and swiftness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poetry in the doctrines of Jesus Christ, and the mythology and
+ institutions of the Celtic conquerors of the Roman empire, outlived the
+ darkness and the convulsions connected with their growth and victory, and
+ blended themselves in a new fabric of manners and opinion. It is an error
+ to impute the ignorance of the dark ages to the Christian doctrines or the
+ predominance of the Celtic nations. Whatever of evil their agencies may
+ have contained sprang from the extinction of the poetical principle,
+ connected with the progress of despotism and superstition. Men, from
+ causes too intricate to be here discussed, had become insensible and
+ selfish: their own will had become feeble, and yet they were its slaves,
+ and thence the slaves of the will of others: lust, fear, avarice, cruelty,
+ and fraud, characterized a race amongst whom no one was to be found
+ capable of CREATING in form, language, or institution. The moral anomalies
+ of such a state of society are not justly to be charged upon any class of
+ events immediately connected with them, and those events are most entitled
+ to our approbation which could dissolve it most expeditiously. It is
+ unfortunate for those who cannot distinguish words from thoughts, that
+ many of these anomalies have been incorporated into our popular religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until the eleventh century that the effects of the poetry of
+ the Christian and chivalric systems began to manifest themselves. The
+ principle of equality had been discovered and applied by Plato in his
+ Republic, as the theoretical rule of the mode in which the materials of
+ pleasure and of power, produced by the common skill and labour of human
+ beings, ought to be distributed among them. The limitations of this rule
+ were asserted by him to be determined only by the sensibility of each, or
+ the utility to result to all. Plato, following the doctrines of Timaeus
+ and Pythagoras, taught also a moral and intellectual system of doctrine,
+ comprehending at once the past, the present, and the future condition of
+ man. Jesus Christ divulged the sacred and eternal truths contained in
+ these views to mankind, and Christianity, in its abstract purity, became
+ the exoteric expression of the esoteric doctrines of the poetry and wisdom
+ of antiquity. The incorporation of the Celtic nations with the exhausted
+ population of the south, impressed upon it the figure of the poetry
+ existing in their mythology and institutions. The result was a sum of the
+ action and reaction of all the causes included in it; for it may be
+ assumed as a maxim that no nation or religion can supersede any other
+ without incorporating into itself a portion of that which it supersedes.
+ The abolition of personal and domestic slavery, and the emancipation of
+ women from a great part of the degrading restraints of antiquity, were
+ among the consequences of these events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abolition of personal slavery is the basis of the highest political
+ hope that it can enter into the mind of man to conceive. The freedom of
+ women produced the poetry of sexual love. Love became a religion, the
+ idols of whose worship were ever present. It was as if the statues of
+ Apollo and the Muses had been endowed with life and motion, and had walked
+ forth among their worshippers; so that earth became peopled by the
+ inhabitants of a diviner world. The familiar appearance and proceedings of
+ life became wonderful and heavenly, and a paradise was created as out of
+ the wrecks of Eden. And as this creation itself is poetry, so its creators
+ were poets; and language was the instrument of their art: 'Galeotto fu il
+ libro, e chi lo scrisse.' The Provencal Trouveurs, or inventors, preceded
+ Petrarch, whose verses are as spells, which unseal the inmost enchanted
+ fountains of the delight which is in the grief of love. It is impossible
+ to feel them without becoming a portion of that beauty which we
+ contemplate: it were superfluous to explain how the gentleness and the
+ elevation of mind connected with these sacred emotions can render men more
+ amiable, more generous and wise, and lift them out of the dull vapours of
+ the little world of self. Dante understood the secret things of love even
+ more than Petrarch. His Vita Nuova is an inexhaustible fountain of purity
+ of sentiment and language: it is the idealized history of that period, and
+ those intervals of his life which were dedicated to love. His apotheosis
+ of Beatrice in Paradise, and the gradations of his own love and her
+ loveliness, by which as by steps he feigns himself to have ascended to the
+ throne of the Supreme Cause, is the most glorious imagination of modern
+ poetry. The acutest critics have justly reversed the judgement of the
+ vulgar, and the order of the great acts of the 'Divine Drama', in the
+ measure of the admiration which they accord to the Hell, Purgatory, and
+ Paradise. The latter is a perpetual hymn of everlasting love. Love, which
+ found a worthy poet in Plato alone of all the ancients, has been
+ celebrated by a chorus of the greatest writers of the renovated world; and
+ the music has penetrated the caverns of society, and its echoes still
+ drown the dissonance of arms and superstition. At successive intervals,
+ Ariosto, Tasso, Shakespeare, Spenser, Calderon, Rousseau, and the great
+ writers of our own age, have celebrated the dominion of love, planting as
+ it were trophies in the human mind of that sublimest victory over
+ sensuality and force. The true relation borne to each other by the sexes
+ into which human kind is distributed, has become less misunderstood; and
+ if the error which confounded diversity with inequality of the powers of
+ the two sexes has been partially recognized in the opinions and
+ institutions of modern Europe, we owe this great benefit to the worship of
+ which chivalry was the law, and poets the prophets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poetry of Dante may be considered as the bridge thrown over the stream
+ of time, which unites the modern and ancient world. The distorted notions
+ of invisible things which Dante and his rival Milton have idealized, are
+ merely the mask and the mantle in which these great poets walk through
+ eternity enveloped and disguised. It is a difficult question to determine
+ how far they were conscious of the distinction which must have subsisted
+ in their minds between their own creeds and that of the people. Dante at
+ least appears to wish to mark the full extent of it by placing Riphaeus,
+ whom Virgil calls justissimns unus, in Paradise, and observing a most
+ heretical caprice in his distribution of rewards and punishments. And
+ Milton's poem contains within itself a philosophical refutation of that
+ system, of which by a strange and natural antithesis, it has been a chief
+ popular support. Nothing can exceed the energy and magnificence of the
+ character of Satan as expressed in Paradise Lost. It is a mistake to
+ suppose that he could ever have been intended for the popular
+ personification of evil. Implacable hate, patient cunning, and a sleepless
+ refinement of device to inflict the extremest anguish on an enemy, these
+ things are evil; and, although venial in a slave are not to be forgiven in
+ a tyrant; although redeemed by much that ennobles his defeat in one
+ subdued, are marked by all that dishonours his conquest in the victor.
+ Milton's Devil as a moral being is as far superior to his God, as one who
+ perseveres in some purpose which he has conceived to be excellent in spite
+ of adversity and torture, is to one who in the cold security of undoubted
+ triumph inflicts the most horrible revenge upon his enemy, not from any
+ mistaken notion of inducing him to repent of a perseverance in enmity, but
+ with the alleged design of exasperating him to deserve new torments.
+ Milton has so far violated the popular creed (if this shall be judged to
+ be a violation) as to have alleged no superiority of moral virtue to his
+ God over his Devil. And this bold neglect of a direct moral purpose is the
+ most decisive proof of the supremacy of Milton's genius. He mingled as it
+ were the elements of human nature as colours upon a single pallet, and
+ arranged them in the composition of his great picture according to the
+ laws of epic truth; that is, according to the laws of that principle by
+ which a series of actions of the external universe and of intelligent and
+ ethical beings is calculated to excite the sympathy of succeeding
+ generations of mankind. The Divina Commedia and Paradise Lost have
+ conferred upon modern mythology a systematic form; and when change and
+ time shall have added one more superstition to the mass of those which
+ have arisen and decayed upon the earth, commentators will be learnedly
+ employed in elucidating the religion of ancestral Europe, only not utterly
+ forgotten because it will have been stamped with the eternity of genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Homer was the first and Dante the second epic poet: that is, the second
+ poet, the series of whose creations bore a defined and intelligible
+ relation to the knowledge and sentiment and religion of the age in which
+ he lived, and of the ages which followed it: developing itself in
+ correspondence with their development. For Lucretius had limed the wings
+ of his swift spirit in the dregs of the sensible world; and Virgil, with a
+ modesty that ill became his genius, had affected the fame of an imitator,
+ even whilst he created anew all that he copied; and none among the flock
+ of mock-birds, though their notes were sweet, Apollonius Rhodius, Quintus
+ Calaber, Nonnus, Lucan, Statius, or Claudian, have sought even to fulfil a
+ single condition of epic truth. Milton was the third epic poet. For if the
+ title of epic in its highest sense be refused to the Aeneid, still less
+ can it be conceded to the Orlando Furioso, the Gerusalemme Liberata, the
+ Lusiad, or the Fairy Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dante and Milton were both deeply penetrated with the ancient religion of
+ the civilized world; and its spirit exists in their poetry probably in the
+ same proportion as its forms survived in the unreformed worship of modern
+ Europe. The one preceded and the other followed the Reformation at almost
+ equal intervals. Dante was the first religious reformer, and Luther
+ surpassed him rather in the rudeness and acrimony, than in the boldness of
+ his censures of papal usurpation. Dante was the first awakener of
+ entranced Europe; he created a language, in itself music and persuasion,
+ out of a chaos of inharmonious barbarisms. He was the congregator of those
+ great spirits who presided over the resurrection of learning; the Lucifer
+ of that starry flock which in the thirteenth century shone forth from
+ republican Italy, as from a heaven, into the darkness of the benighted
+ world. His very words are instinct with spirit; each is as a spark, a
+ burning atom of inextinguishable thought; and many yet lie covered in the
+ ashes of their birth, and pregnant with a lightning which has yet found no
+ conductor. All high poetry is infinite; it is as the first acorn, which
+ contained all oaks potentially. Veil after veil may be undrawn, and the
+ inmost naked beauty of the meaning never exposed. A great poem is a
+ fountain for ever overflowing with the waters of wisdom and delight; and
+ after one person and one age has exhausted all its divine effluence which
+ their peculiar relations enable them to share, another and yet another
+ succeeds, and new relations are ever developed, the source of an
+ unforeseen and an unconceived delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The age immediately succeeding to that of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio,
+ was characterized by a revival of painting, sculpture, and architecture.
+ Chaucer caught the sacred inspiration, and the superstructure of English
+ literature is based upon the materials of Italian invention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us not be betrayed from a defence into a critical history of
+ poetry and its influence on society. Be it enough to have pointed out the
+ effects of poets, in the large and true sense of the word, upon their own
+ and all succeeding times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But poets have been challenged to resign the civic crown to reasoners and
+ mechanists, on another plea. It is admitted that the exercise of the
+ imagination is most delightful, but it is alleged that that of reason is
+ more useful. Let us examine as the grounds of this distinction, what is
+ here meant by utility. Pleasure or good, in a general sense, is that which
+ the consciousness of a sensitive and intelligent being seeks, and in
+ which, when found, it acquiesces. There are two kinds of pleasure, one
+ durable, universal and permanent; the other transitory and particular.
+ Utility may either express the means of producing the former or the
+ latter. In the former sense, whatever strengthens and purifies the
+ affections, enlarges the imagination, and adds spirit to sense, is useful.
+ But a narrower meaning may be assigned to the word utility, confining it
+ to express that which banishes the importunity of the wants of our animal
+ nature, the surrounding men with security of life, the dispersing the
+ grosser delusions of superstition, and the conciliating such a degree of
+ mutual forbearance among men as may consist with the motives of personal
+ advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Undoubtedly the promoters of utility, in this limited sense, have their
+ appointed office in society. They follow the footsteps of poets, and copy
+ the sketches of their creations into the book of common life. They make
+ space, and give time. Their exertions are of the highest value, so long as
+ they confine their administration of the concerns of the inferior powers
+ of our nature within the limits due to the superior ones. But whilst the
+ sceptic destroys gross superstitions, let him spare to deface, as some of
+ the French writers have defaced, the eternal truths charactered upon the
+ imaginations of men. Whilst the mechanist abridges, and the political
+ economist combines labour, let them beware that their speculations, for
+ want of correspondence with those first principles which belong to the
+ imagination, do not tend, as they have in modern England, to exasperate at
+ once the extremes of luxury and want. They have exemplified the saying,
+ 'To him that hath, more shall be given; and from him that hath not, the
+ little that he hath shall be taken away.' The rich have become richer, and
+ the poor have become poorer; and the vessel of the state is driven between
+ the Scylla and Charybdis of anarchy and despotism. Such are the effects
+ which must ever flow from an unmitigated exercise of the calculating
+ faculty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to define pleasure in its highest sense; the definition
+ involving a number of apparent paradoxes. For, from an inexplicable defect
+ of harmony in the constitution of human nature, the pain of the inferior
+ is frequently connected with the pleasures of the superior portions of our
+ being. Sorrow, terror, anguish, despair itself, are often the chosen
+ expressions of an approximation to the highest good. Our sympathy in
+ tragic fiction depends on this principle; tragedy delights by affording a
+ shadow of the pleasure which exists in pain. This is the source also of
+ the melancholy which is inseparable from the sweetest melody. The pleasure
+ that is in sorrow is sweeter than the pleasure of pleasure itself. And
+ hence the saying, 'It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to
+ the house of mirth.' Not that this highest species of pleasure is
+ necessarily linked with pain. The delight of love and friendship, the
+ ecstasy of the admiration of nature, the joy of the perception and still
+ more of the creation of poetry, is often wholly unalloyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The production and assurance of pleasure in this highest sense is true
+ utility. Those who produce and preserve this pleasure are poets or
+ poetical philosophers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exertions of Locke, Hume, Gibbon, Voltaire, Rousseau, [Footnote:
+ Although Rousseau has been thus classed, he was essentially a poet. The
+ others, even Voltaire, were mere reasoners.] and their disciples, in
+ favour of oppressed and deluded humanity, are entitled to the gratitude of
+ mankind. Yet it is easy to calculate the degree of moral and intellectual
+ improvement which the world would have exhibited, had they never lived. A
+ little more nonsense would have been talked for a century or two; and
+ perhaps a few more men, women, and children, burnt as heretics. We might
+ not at this moment have been congratulating each other on the abolition of
+ the Inquisition in Spain. But it exceeds all imagination to conceive what
+ would have been the moral condition of the world if neither Dante,
+ Petrarch, Boccaccio, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Calderon, Lord Bacon, nor
+ Milton, had ever existed; if Raphael and Michael Angelo had never been
+ born; if the Hebrew poetry had never been translated; if a revival of the
+ study of Greek literature had never taken place; if no monuments of
+ ancient sculpture had been handed down to us; and if the poetry of the
+ religion of the ancient world had been extinguished together with its
+ belief. The human mind could never, except by the intervention of these
+ excitements, have been awakened to the invention of the grosser sciences,
+ and that application of analytical reasoning to the aberrations of
+ society, which it is now attempted to exalt over the direct expression of
+ the inventive and creative faculty itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have more moral, political and historical wisdom, than we know how to
+ reduce into practice; we have more scientific and economical knowledge
+ than can be accommodated to the just distribution of the produce which it
+ multiplies. The poetry in these systems of thought, is concealed by the
+ accumulation of facts and calculating processes. There is no want of
+ knowledge respecting what is wisest and best in morals, government, and
+ political economy, or at least, what is wiser and better than what men now
+ practise and endure. But we let '<i>I</i> DARE NOT wait upon I WOULD, like
+ the poor cat in the adage.' We want the creative faculty to imagine that
+ which we know; we want the generous impulse to act that which we imagine;
+ we want the poetry of life: our calculations have outrun conception; we
+ have eaten more than we can digest. The cultivation of those sciences
+ which have enlarged the limits of the empire of man over the external
+ world, has, for want of the poetical faculty, proportionally circumscribed
+ those of the internal world; and man, having enslaved the elements,
+ remains himself a slave. To what but a cultivation of the mechanical arts
+ in a degree disproportioned to the presence of the creative faculty, which
+ is the basis of all knowledge, is to be attributed the abuse of all
+ invention for abridging and combining labour, to the exasperation of the
+ inequality of mankind? From what other cause has it arisen that the
+ discoveries which should have lightened, have added a weight to the curse
+ imposed on Adam? Poetry, and the principle of Self, of which money is the
+ visible, incarnation, are the God and Mammon of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The functions of the poetical faculty are two-fold; by one it creates new
+ materials of knowledge and power and pleasure; by the other it engenders
+ in the mind a desire to reproduce and arrange them according to a certain
+ rhythm and order which may be called the beautiful and the good. The
+ cultivation of poetry is never more to be desired than at periods when,
+ from an excess of the selfish and calculating principle, the accumulation
+ of the materials of external life exceed the quantity of the power of
+ assimilating them to the internal laws of human nature. The body has then
+ become too unwieldy for that which animates it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poetry is indeed something divine. It is at once the centre and
+ circumference of knowledge; it is that which comprehends all science, and
+ that to which all science must be referred. It is at the same time the
+ root and blossom of all other systems of thought; it is that from which
+ all spring, and that which adorns all; and that which, if blighted, denies
+ the fruit and the seed, and withholds from the barren world the
+ nourishment and the succession of the scions of the tree of life. It is
+ the perfect and consummate surface and bloom of all things; it is as the
+ odour and the colour of the rose to the texture of the elements which
+ compose it, as the form and splendour of unfaded beauty to the secrets of
+ anatomy and corruption. What were virtue, love, patriotism, friendship&mdash;what
+ were the scenery of this beautiful universe which we inhabit; what were
+ our consolations on this side of the grave&mdash;and what were our
+ aspirations beyond it, if poetry did not ascend to bring light and fire
+ from those eternal regions where the owl-winged faculty of calculation
+ dare not ever soar? Poetry is not like reasoning, a power to be exerted
+ according to the determination of the will. A man cannot say, 'I will
+ compose poetry.' The greatest poet even cannot say it; for the mind in
+ creation is as a fading coal, which some invisible influence, like an
+ inconstant wind, awakens to transitory brightness; this power arises from
+ within, like the colour of a flower which fades and changes as it is
+ developed, and the conscious portions of our natures are unprophetic
+ either of its approach or its departure. Could this influence be durable
+ in its original purity and force, it is impossible to predict the
+ greatness of the results; but when composition begins, inspiration is
+ already on the decline, and the most glorious poetry that has ever been
+ communicated to the world is probably a feeble shadow of the original
+ conceptions of the poet. I appeal to the greatest poets of the present
+ day, whether it is not an error to assert that the finest passages of
+ poetry are produced by labour and study. The toil and the delay
+ recommended by critics, can be justly interpreted to mean no more than a
+ careful observation of the inspired moments, and an artificial connexion
+ of the spaces between their suggestions by the intertexture of
+ conventional expressions; a necessity only imposed by the limitedness of
+ the poetical faculty itself; for Milton conceived the Paradise Lost as a
+ whole before he executed it in portions; We have his own authority also
+ for the muse having 'dictated' to him the 'unpremeditated song'. And let
+ this be an answer to those who would allege the fifty-six various readings
+ of the first line of the Orlando Furioso. Compositions so produced are to
+ poetry what mosaic is to painting. This instinct and intuition of the
+ poetical faculty, is still more observable in the plastic and pictorial
+ arts; a great statue or picture grows under the power of the artist as a
+ child in the mother's womb; and the very mind which directs the hands in
+ formation is incapable of accounting to itself for the origin, the
+ gradations, or the media of the process.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poetry is the record of the best and happiest moments of the happiest and
+ best minds. We are aware of evanescent visitations of thought and feeling
+ sometimes associated with place or person, sometimes regarding our own
+ mind alone, and always arising unforeseen and departing unbidden, but
+ elevating and delightful beyond all expression; so that even in the desire
+ and regret they leave, there cannot but be pleasure, participating as it
+ does in the nature of its object. It is as it were the interpenetration of
+ a diviner nature through our own; but its footsteps are like those of a
+ wind over the sea, which the coming calm erases, and whose traces remain
+ only, as on the wrinkled sand which paves it. These and corresponding
+ conditions of being are experienced principally by those of the most
+ delicate sensibility and the most enlarged imagination; and the state of
+ mind produced by them is at war with every base desire. The enthusiasm of
+ virtue, love, patriotism, and friendship, is essentially linked with such
+ emotions; and whilst they last, self appears as what it is, an atom to a
+ universe. Poets are not only subject to these experiences as spirits of
+ the most refined organization, but they can colour all that they combine
+ with the evanescent hues of this ethereal world; a word, a trait in the
+ representation of a scene or a passion, will touch the enchanted chord,
+ and reanimate, in those who have ever experienced these emotions, the
+ sleeping, the cold, the buried image of the past. Poetry thus makes
+ immortal all that is best and most beautiful in the world; it arrests the
+ vanishing apparitions which haunt the interlunations of life, and veiling
+ them, or in language or in form, sends them forth among mankind, bearing
+ sweet news of kindred joy to those with whom their sisters abide&mdash;abide,
+ because there is no portal of expression from the caverns of the spirit
+ which they inhabit into the universe of things. Poetry redeems from decay
+ the visitations of the divinity in man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poetry turns all things to loveliness; it exalts the beauty of that which
+ is most beautiful, and it adds beauty to that which is most deformed; it
+ marries exultation and horror, grief and pleasure, eternity and change; it
+ subdues to union under its light yoke, all irreconcilable things. It
+ transmutes all that it touches, and every form moving within the radiance
+ of its presence is changed by wondrous sympathy to an incarnation of the
+ spirit which it breathes: its secret alchemy turns to potable gold the
+ poisonous waters which flow from death through life; it strips the veil of
+ familiarity from the world, and lays bare the naked and sleeping beauty,
+ which is the spirit of its forms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All things exist as they are perceived; at least in relation to the
+ percipient. 'The mind is its own place, and of itself can make a heaven of
+ hell, a hell of heaven.' But poetry defeats the curse which binds us to be
+ subjected to the accident of surrounding impressions. And whether it
+ spreads its own figured curtain, or withdraws life's dark veil from before
+ the scene of things, it equally creates for us a being within our being.
+ It makes us the inhabitants of a world to which the familiar world is a
+ chaos. It reproduces the common universe of which we are portions and
+ percipients, and it purges from our inward sight the film of familiarity
+ which obscures from us the wonder of our being. It compels us to feel that
+ which we perceive, and to imagine that which we know. It creates anew the
+ universe, after it has been annihilated in our minds by the recurrence of
+ impressions blunted by reiteration. It justifies the bold and true words
+ of Tasso: Non merita nome di creatore, se non Iddio ed il Poeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A poet, as he is the author to others of the highest wisdom, pleasure,
+ virtue and glory, so he ought personally to be the happiest, the best, the
+ wisest, and the most illustrious of men. As to his glory, let time be
+ challenged to declare whether the fame of any other institutor of human
+ life be comparable to that of a poet. That he is the wisest, the happiest,
+ and the best, inasmuch as he is a poet, is equally incontrovertible: the
+ greatest poets have been men of the most spotless virtue, of the most
+ consummate prudence, and, if we would look into the interior of their
+ lives, the most fortunate of men: and the exceptions, as they regard those
+ who possessed the poetic faculty in a high yet inferior degree, will be
+ found on consideration to confine rather than destroy the rule. Let us for
+ a moment stoop to the arbitration of popular breath, and usurping and
+ uniting in our own persons the incompatible characters of accuser,
+ witness, judge, and executioner, let us decide without trial, testimony,
+ or form, that certain motives of those who are 'there sitting where we
+ dare not soar', are reprehensible. Let us assume that Homer was a
+ drunkard, that Virgil was a flatterer, that Horace was a coward, that
+ Tasso a madman, that Lord Bacon was a peculator, that Raphael was a
+ libertine, that Spenser was a poet laureate. It is inconsistent with this
+ division of our subject to cite living poets, but posterity has done ample
+ justice to the great names now referred to. Their errors have been weighed
+ and found to have been dust in the balance; if their sins 'were as
+ scarlet, they are now white as snow'; they have been washed in the blood
+ of the mediator and redeemer, Time. Observe in what a ludicrous chaos the
+ imputation of real or fictitious crime have been confused in the
+ contemporary calumnies against poetry and poets; consider how little is,
+ as it appears&mdash;or appears, as it is; look to your own motives, and
+ judge not, lest ye be judged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poetry, as has been said, differs in this respect from logic, that it is
+ not subject to the control of the active powers of the mind, and that its
+ birth and recurrence have no necessary connexion with the consciousness or
+ will. It is presumptuous to determine that these are the necessary
+ conditions of all mental causation, when mental effects are experienced
+ unsusceptible of being referred to them. The frequent recurrence of the
+ poetical power, it is obvious to suppose, may produce in the mind a habit
+ of order and harmony correlative with its own nature and its effects upon
+ other minds. But in the intervals of inspiration, and they may be frequent
+ without being durable, a poet becomes a man, and is abandoned to the
+ sudden reflux of the influences under which others habitually live. But as
+ he is more delicately organized than other men, and sensible to pain and
+ pleasure, both his own and that of others, in a degree unknown to them, he
+ will avoid the one and pursue the other with an ardour proportioned to
+ this difference. And he renders himself obnoxious to calumny, when he
+ neglects to observe the circumstances under which these objects of
+ universal pursuit and flight have disguised themselves in one another's
+ garments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is nothing necessarily evil in this error, and thus cruelty,
+ envy, revenge, avarice, and the passions purely evil, have never formed
+ any portion of the popular imputations on the lives of poets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have thought it most favourable to the cause of truth to set down these
+ remarks according to the order in which they were suggested to my mind, by
+ a consideration of the subject itself, instead of observing the formality
+ of a polemical reply; but if the view which they contain be just, they
+ will be found to involve a refutation of the arguers against poetry, so
+ far at least as regards the first division of the subject. I can readily
+ conjecture what should have moved the gall of some learned and intelligent
+ writers who quarrel with certain versifiers; I confess myself, like them,
+ unwilling to be stunned, by the Theseids of the hoarse Codri of the day.
+ Bavius and Maevius undoubtedly are, as they ever were, insufferable
+ persons. But it belongs to a philosophical critic to distinguish rather
+ than confound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first part of these remarks has related to poetry in its elements and
+ principles; and it has been shown, as well as the narrow limits assigned
+ them would permit, that what is called poetry, in a restricted sense, has
+ a common source with all other forms of order and of beauty, according to
+ which the materials of human life are susceptible of being arranged, and
+ which is poetry in a universal sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second part will have for its object an application of these
+ principles to the present state of the cultivation of poetry, and a
+ defence of the attempt to idealize the modern forms of manners and
+ opinions, and compel them into a subordination to the imaginative and
+ creative faculty. For the literature of England, an energetic development
+ of which has ever preceded or accompanied a great and free development of
+ the national will, has arisen as it were from a new birth. In spite of the
+ low-thoughted envy which would undervalue contemporary merit, our own will
+ be a memorable age in intellectual achievements, and we live among such
+ philosophers and poets as surpass beyond comparison any who have appeared
+ since the last national struggle for civil and religious liberty. The most
+ unfailing herald, companion, and follower of the awakening of a great
+ people to work a beneficial change in opinion or institution, is poetry.
+ At such periods there is an accumulation of the power of communicating and
+ receiving intense and impassioned conceptions respecting man and nature.
+ The persons in whom this power resides may often, as far as regards many
+ portions of their nature, have little apparent correspondence with that
+ spirit of good of which they are the ministers. But even whilst they deny
+ and abjure, they are yet compelled to serve, the power which is seated on
+ the throne of their own soul. It is impossible to read the compositions of
+ the most celebrated writers of the present day without being startled with
+ the electric life which burns within their words. They measure the
+ circumference and sound the depths of human nature with a comprehensive
+ and all-penetrating spirit, and they are themselves perhaps the most
+ sincerely astonished at its manifestations; for it is less their spirit
+ than the spirit of the age. Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended
+ inspiration; the mirrors of the gigantic shadows which futurity casts upon
+ the present; the words which express what they understand not; the
+ trumpets which sing to battle, and feel not what they inspire; the
+ influence which is moved not, but moves. Poets are the unacknowledged
+ legislators of the world.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE END
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Defence of Poetry and Other Essays, by
+Percy Bysshe Shelley
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+</pre>
+
+ </body>
+</html>