LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. ©i^ap 0o{ti|nQ{;t 1^0. Shelf a^i' 1 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. -^0\A/'^^JtJcXe SEQUEL TO THE PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS GENEALOGY OF RELIGIONS NOE TENTH FROM ADAM, 3000 B. C. Brotherhood and covenant of safety HAM 22?6 B. C. Carries to Atrica the record of having come from the North SHEM PELEG Tlie earth divided 2256 B. C, when nine generations lived in peace in one house I ABRAHAM Brotherhood and Covenant of Promise JAPHETH 2256 B. C. Carries to China the counsel Yao gave to Shun CONFUCIUS and ancestral worship SARAH OF SHEM KETURA OF JAPHETH ISHMAEL ISAAC MOSES- ZOROASTER JESUS THE KING ■^4} Christianitv incorporates the mythology of all nations Protesting Christianity World's Parliament of Religions renews and acknowledges the bond of blood and brotherhood. I IN THE KINGDOM — BROTHERHOOD REALIZED SEQUEL TO THE ARLIAMENT OF T.LIGIONS BY EBEN MALCOLM SUTCLIFFE . WoX T/tAJb. "cJU^ Tu U)jdJUiA>iSo-^^^''^'iJ2^^ CHICAGO American Authors' Protective Publishing Company 1894 i'""MAV'2;5 1894' , Copyright, 1894 Eben Malcolm Sutcliffe All richts reserved CONTENTS Frontispiece .... Dedication . . . .11 Before ..... 13 Ad Interim , . . . .39 After ..... 43 Appendix . . . . .183 Dedication H, everlasting Truth! permit these pages in love and honor thy great cause to plead; KFor in thee dwells the sum of human need; %^|.^ And zealous seeking in the mists of ages, ^P Thine ancient landmarks, worthily engages The serious mind, which follows but thy lead. Desiring of the future true to read, And understand whate'er the time presages. The voice of prophets, in no tones uncertain, Says innocence shall triumph over ill; While every age still higher lifts the curtain, And light is dawning, as their words fulfill; The living fountain from Mount Zion flowing, On every nation its rich gifts bestowing. Before I'ER wild Atlantic's stormy ocean sped lA noble ship, which, as she plunged ahead, :Cast from her sides the snowy spray, and dashed 'iJlMl^ The mountain waves back to their source, abashed ■^^^ At their own vain presumption to defy The iron monster, right of way deny To proud leviathan with breath of smoke. With lungs of fire, whose great heart's mighty stroke. And thunder voice affright all Neptune's realm. But quick obedience yields the gentle helm. Epitome of a world, great ship, thou art; Alone and isolate, a thing apart, As\")lanet is from planet, star from star, Unknowable, yet wondering, from afar. What others are; of what composed; perchance Inhabited. These mysteries but enhance 14 SEQUEL TO THE And solemnize the charm enshrouding each Far-distant orb, which scarcely thought can reach. Nor can reveal, nor bridge infinite space, Through which course worlds and suns, and comets race. Though world thou art within thyself alone, Both carrying joy, and echoing sorrow's moan. And life and treasure, yet thou bearest more Than grandest ship that sailed e'er carried o'er Wide ocean's breast; for, freighted thou with hope — Hope of a realm of thought, within whose scope Are racial questions, theories of life, Of destinies of men, of war and strife; The old world turning to the new for light, The elder questioning the younger's sight Into the regions dim where reason gropes. Where fancy dallies, first with fears, then hopes. The old unto the young come meek to learn. Leaving aside its own experience stern. And disappointments, weariness, and care. To seek if some new source of knowledge rare, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 15 Into existence sudden sprung, revealed To newer world, what, from the old concealed, Had left it far behind; as when before. Brave Ponce de Leon sought the new world's shore To search for youth's far-fabled fountain's stream. All ages' fond desire, and poet's dream. 16 SEQUEL TO THE N this proud ship's high deck there slowly paced A man, upon whose lineaments time had traced Full three-score years. On his low brow up- sprung Thick eyebrows gray, which shaded and o'er- hung Dark eyes, deep set, impressing with the thought That will, enthroned, here reigned supreme, and brought All else into subjection. His rich dress And wrappings, which of Orient birth confess. Whose silken sheen, and many colors mixed With golden threads, and jewels bright affixed Upon his turban, and around it wreathed, Add to that natural dignity which breathed From eveiy move and gesture as he walked, Tall and majestic, while he earnest talked PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 17 With one far different, though as gay arrayed, And Eastern also, as his garb betrayed: The first, Phalil Ristabetani named, The other, short of stature, rotund, famed In his own country for his insight clear Into the mysteries deep, and deemed austere, Though not by his appearance so approved. While his whole bearing not to reverence moved. His round fat face, and almost hidden eyes, Somewhat obliquely placed, induced surprise. When hearing him in serious discourse. And noting with what earnestness and force He states his points, and holds his vantage ground With perspicuity, concise, profound. He, Tze Lu Yen Mugata, was, by right, A mandarin with two swords, who held him quite The equal, both in rank and mind, of any, And very far superior to the many. A common impulse each to other drew 18 SEQUEL TO THE At once; for, on the deck these only two Seemed lone in singularity; the rest Were ordinary travelers, plainly dressed. So they, in conversation grave immersed. Passed on absorbed, while each, in turn, rehearsed The reason of his journey. First upspoke Yen Mugata, who thus the silence broke: " I hold commission royal to attend A Congress of Religions, and I wend My way to far Chicago, vague to me. Though of it, and its exposition, we Have heard great things. My country, forced at last To recognize the outer world, has passed The barrier of conservatism reared Of old, and institutions long endeared Are trembling, to destruction doomed, though yet We love not domination, nor forget How, by their thunder, modern guns compelled And frighted to submission. We withheld PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 19 All intercourse, and guarded close our arts; But foreign powder so surpassed our darts And swords, that we, in self-defense, must turn, And from outsiders condescend to learn. "As for this Congress of Religions, I Perceive no need, nor can I e'en descry What end of aim it serves; for, in my land. Religion stands not high, nor can command Allegiance, save from those who lack in mind. And unto women only, is consigned. " By accident, discovered in a man. Him deem we as effeminate, and scan His conduct close, with those who cringe and cower, Cajole, and fear the dreaded evil power, But care not, nor revere the power of good, Which overcomes not evil, if it could. " But from this Congress 'tis our hope to wrest That secret energy by which the West Now inundates the East, like mighty flood; And, though our rivers all may run with blood, 20 SEQUEL TO THE We cannot stay its progress, nor withstand Its law of change, and innovation's hand. "This wonderful advance, o'erwhelming all Which stood for ages, but now hastes to fall, Attributed by them to some benign And efficacious influence, called divine, Which their religion gives, I come to know; For, if from it such might and progress flow, I shall report to China what I saw. And 'twill no doubt be introduced by law. "This is the reason why 1 thus engage To take this dangerous journey at my age." Phalil Ristabetani then replied: "I too, quite unaccustomed, brave the tide. The ocean's peril face for learning's sake. And to that Congress strange, myself betake. " Four hundred years agone (perhaps but one). Ere yet so low had sunk the prophet's sun. Such Congress had not been proposed to us. Or we have even deigned to listen thus. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 21 When infidels in consultation met Idolaters and atheists, nor let Such proposition speak, nor contemplate To answer, save with speaking sword elate, And ready to cast back into their teeth Their invitation, deemed so far beneath What we hold dignity. Time changes things. And men, and dynasties. Experience brings Less ardor to the blood, and softens hate; And, just as men can learn to tolerate in later years what to the youth appeared Impossible, so nations which upreared. When young and vigorous, around the state A wall which none should pass, learn but too late That no such bounds can stand, nor force sustain. Thought will be free to roam, nor will remain Chained to Procrustean rule. Mahomet's blade, While still it flashed and kept the world dismayed, Gained empire and conviction. Sheathed, it grew Less terrible, less potent. 22 SEQUEL TO THE "Riches, too, Were conquered; art and learning flourished, nursed. And tender reared. Prosperity, accursed, Brings ruin unto nations. Now, the pen Is mightier far than sword, and we, the men. Who made the earth to tremble for our creed, Come now to meet and parley, and, indeed, As they suppose, inquire what seemeth best. And what the world demands. "This is our quest. "As our fast-waning greatness has decreased. Our wild enthusiasm too has ceased; Else would we not be represented where Such Congress meets, unless 'twere to declare Our will with sword and tire. But now we seek These shores, this conclave, and with accents meek Discuss this burning question. Evidence PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 23 Of wavering faith, loss of self-confidence, Could not be clearer shown; and of what use, Feign to conceal that under flag of truce The weaker comes, and to the stronger proffers The emblem which complete surrender offers?" While thus they converse held, a stranger heard. In passing, what they said, and, at the word "Religious Congress," paused, and quick inquired if they too, with punctilious zeal inspired, To this world's Congress came to seek for truth; if, like himself, they sought to know, forsooth, What this world-power, so recent born, could give Of knowledge new, to teach how best to live. They said, "We do." The other, tall and spare. Crowned with a forehead high, and broad, and square. Above the eyes, which, deep and darkly bright, Gleamed kindly gentle, and, if read aright, . They but to intellect and reason's reign 24 SEQUEL TO THE Obedience yield. His dress was dark and plain, While to his form a stately turban lent More grandeur, and bespoke the Orient. Said he, in accent grave, serene, polite: "Arjuna Samadura I am hight, And with a mission to this Congress sent By Southern Buddhists, there to represent That ancient faith revered, which all concede 5. c. ^jc^ Pataliputra's Council wise decreed. When ruled the emperor, surnamed The Great, Asoka, far renowned, o'er that famed state By noble Ganges watered. Deem you strange That we, who claim our reason free can range Through time and space; that e'en eternity From mind and thought can guard no mysteiy; That good, which never overcomes nor ends; That evil, which with it for aye contends; That Path, which man through brute shall ever scale; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 25 That Way, in which, the end attained, all hail NiiA/ana! Land of Silence — Saddest Bliss — Which is our only hope on leaving this? "1 also, who, as in the Path, should feel Naught but self-abnegation, can conceal Not from myself, that in me stirs the pride Of ancestry, a thousand years beside Old Ganges dwelling honored. I may plead — What is so clear that he who runs may read — That in my country, where this faith has reigned Through twenty centuries and two, retained Unhindered empire, yet, by gentleness, Are men not in their nature changed, unless We base conclusions on the few who dare Attempt reform. The many have no care Beyond today. So, in this newer land, Where progress rushes, we may understand Some primal cause to us as yet refused By reason. But why nations quite unused 26 SEQUEL TO THE To reason's ways, by virtue of their youtli Should be first favored to discover truth, I know not. " This I cross the sea to solve, And law from this strange order to evolve." Yen Mugata then took the word, and said, As slow they walked with that uncertain tread Which landsmen use at sea: "I must allow. My country, too, accustomed long to bow Before Confucius' wisdom, has not gained In prestige 'mong the nations, nor maintained . What e'en was hers from days of old, although Her art ranks high, and wisely we bestow Care and discrimination to preserve it, and improve But 'twill no purpose seive, Nor worthy would I deem me, were 1 blind To reason; and, like you, I do not find That, since Confucius taught them, men hav changed; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 37 But also now, as in his day, are ranged Class against class; each shows a deep unrest. Our old content, though paltiy at its best, is quite departed, and our people roam As others, caring now no more for home " I recognize a power, subtle, deep, Disturbing, and aggressive, which shall sweep All opposition down." Upspake the Turk, Ristabetani, then: "Twas bloody work When we opposed, and will again be so; For out of Europe we will never go, Unless their flashing swords than ours are longer. Their guns tell better, and their ships are stronger. "Before no creed will we consent to quail. And only Allah will our voices hail." Tze Lu Yen Mugata, somewhat in ire, Met this outburst at once with equal fire: 28 SEQUEL TO THE "Think not that we, who claim Confucius wise For our great leader, will his fame despise And, coward-like, abandon to contempt. Nay! we'll defend, or die in the attempt! What! think you tiiat our naval armament Is for child's play, or to amuse us meant? "We have these Christian weapons learned but late, And yet, already can we almost mate Them gun for gun, and use them well, I trow, When we join battle, meeting prow with prow. " Confucius said, 'As bends 'fore wind the grass, So peoples bow to rulers who harass By government oppressive, fiercer far Than starving tiger;' but, when calls to war Sound loud, the mass their petty quarrels lay Aside, and rush like vultures to the prey. " By purifying law, Confucius deemed Good government would raise them, and this seemed Sole remedy to him: if pure the head. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 29 The body would be, likewise; Virtue wed To strength; while love and mercy federate, Give counsel unto judgment, and debate, Each with the other, which the first shall flee To rescue helpless, weak humanity." Phalil Ristabetani then spoke bold: "Though law and precept both be good, I hold Still better, force. The lion, not the lamb, Is king of beasts. So our faith of Islam Depends not upon them to proselyte; Our propaganda is the law of might; Our logic, that of power. Men will not choose The rugged path, and ever will abuse The right of freedom, — far more dangerous gift Than beauty to a woman, which can lift The favored one to grandeur. Thus 'tis writ 30 SEQUEL TO THE In our great Koran's pages, to permit No peace to unbelievers, not to slack The onslaught of our legions, but — 'Attack, prophet, the vile infidel with arms, And give him no release from war's alarms, Till he profess islam.' This policy Gave grand results; the nations readily Embraced the faith, and in it lived content. Till radiant victory in our firmament No longer blazed; our star of conquest set; Our glorious banner trailed in dust; and yet. The key of three great continents we hold; And will, until that fatal hour foretold By prophets, and foreseen by statesmen wise. Who see in Europe ominous signs arise, Presaging war, which, threatening, scarce re- strained, As single hair Damocles' sword sustained." And now Arjuna Samadura mild: "This, to my mind, cannot be reconciled PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS 31 With right and justice; what by force is gained, Must be by force continued and maintained. The history of your creed but proves it so: When power relaxed, the empire ceased to grow. "What good had been so forcefully begun, Was, lacking that, as suddenly undone. " Besides, if only outwardly conformed To some set rule, not inwardly reformed. No man is bettered; rather the reverse, For to his vices he but adds a worse, — That of hypocrisy. " I would so wield A gentle influence, that the mind would yield Itself quite willingly to meditation. And soon would fmd, by self-examination. That good is best, the only worthy aim For all who lay to reason any claim." Ristabetani then: "That may be true 32 SEQUEL TO THE Of thinking men, who number but the few. The multitude, who never think, are saved The need of thinking. A smootli way is paved In which they walk. The semblance, followed, will To them become reality, until The right grows habit. Better blindly led. And forced to good and righteousness, instead, By having freedom, to rush madly where Wild riot leads unto destruction's lair." Yen Mugata now took the word: "I side, Phalil, with you; for force alone can guide To peace and happiness the human mind: But 'tis by force within the law confined, And not by fire and sword, that best would bind Into one brotherhood all human kind.' Arjuna Samadura, animated. By eloquence sublime invigorated, Spake thus: PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 33 "A strange amazement through me thrilling, Almost too marvelous to utter, filling My heart with awe; a reverence o'er me stealing For what 1 see before, quite clear revealing That we, today, upon the threshold standing Of some new era, change complete demanding, In methods old, of thought; and this assembling. From eveiy clime, shows human creeds are trem- bling; A crisis shadows; governments are shaking; Events are hastening; histoiy is making. " And we, three great ideas represent. Their end the same, their means far different. "Each one in turn has wielded power vast; Has risen, prospered, waned, decayed, and passed. " You, Yen Mugata, are the human plane On which Confucius labored, and the reign Of law and order you would have embraced Alone, and for itself. This plan is based 34 SEQUEL TO THE Upon the theory of abstract good; That men will love it, just because they should. " I, Samadura, stand for the ideal. "We recognize alone, in the unreal, That good exists. All matter is at strife, And all material things at war with life. So, quite discarding interest in these, Abandoning the field to those who please, What we call 'spirit' seek we to attain, And scourge the flesh with all its fancies vain. "This gained, and self forgotten, we may wait, And tranquilly, almost, anticipate The painless joys, th' unchanging, nameless rest Of that Nirvana state that we call blest "This is the highest human reason can; When we consider what we are, and scan What may be, from what is, we can conclude. When our unsatisfied desires intrude. The only refuge from unending pain PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 35 Is in a realm where life nor death doth reign. '&' " So reason can but lead to Being's end, No other joy conceives, nor hope can lend. "Thus I; while you, Phalil, are like to both. And your religion seems from ours a growth; With something more, as for incentive given. By which you hope to gain some fabled heaven Where houris dance, and where perpetual joy Shall please the sense, nor evils shall annoy. " Like Mugata, you force'a government In justice robed. Another element From my faith yours has borrowed: You believe, Existence shall continue, and conceive It blissful; while to these, you join command From some high source, to go with sword in hand To conquer converts, force them to receive What shall be good when swallowed, and relieve Their every ill, as kind physicians give Unpleasant things, that he wiio dies may live. 36 SEQUEL TO THE "To this great Congress of Religions, we Come not as wise men, hut as pupils three, Desiring, yea! and hungry, but to learn; In seeking knowledge, tiying to discern What good, what evil is, and if together They shall forever struggle on; And whether Some truths may be achieved by consultation, Which could not be evolved by meditation." The three then stood quite silent for a season, Seeming impressed with the momentous reason For this assembling; when Phalil exclaiming. With his accustomed vehemence: "We're aiming For this great Parliament, though differing wide; Yet, still, each path to some extent must guide Us on our quest for truth. "Our journey ending. We soon will separate. The questions pending Between us may find adequate solution; But I propose to you a resolution: PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 37 " We three, in converse friendly, have related Our views of things, and so anticipated in small degree the object of this mission, For which we each bear authorized commission. "On this broad field, the gathered thought of nations Presents in all its varied acceptations. "We needs must reap superabundant harvest, Perhaps the most, from those who differ farthest; As I have heard, sometimes extremes, by meet- ing, But prove they have a circle been completing. "There may be much accomplished, or may not; But after-time, alone, can answer what. A plan 1 bring to you for contemplation, Which I desire may meet your approbation; Suggesting, when we leave the Worid's Fair city. That we convene as a select committee. " 1 should much like to hear our learned Confucian Give his opinion; while a contribution 38 SEQUEL TO THE From this profound Arjuna, beyond measure Would highest value add to learning's treasure. "Confessing 1 have yet much thought bestowed on But little else of lore beside the Koran, in this grand book of nations spread before us, The God of Nations surely watching o'er us, I must some living principles discern, And gladly will discuss on our return." They all agreed, and, their reunion dated. They bade farewell; and thus they separated. . Ad Interim H, magic city! witli Inaif centuiy's span Of wondrous growth, almost Utopian '- i^^ Pulsating center of a nation's heart, ^jM^j(^^ Whose tributary veins to thee impart mx The treasures bounteous earth around provides. Whose arteries give back enriching tides Of life and progress! For thy jubilee, All ages and all nations came to thee. That architecture which the Greeks but dreamed On high Parnassus realized, here seemed To reach its culmination. Crowned with this, Ambition surfeited appeared. Thy bliss Was not yet told. 40 SEQUEL TO THE The whole philosophy That thought from ages gleaned came willingly, Mayhap, at some new fount to slake the thirst, Grown fiercer, as through devious ways, which first Gave goodly promise, wandering, seeking ever. Advancing and retreating, gaining never The wished-for goal of perfect knowledge, given To none to reach, though all have vainly striven. Once unto Solomon, in days of old, All nations came, the wonders to behold. Which fame had blazoned with her trumpet voice. They came "to hear" the words of wisdom choice. Of his God-given knowledge. Once again. Near thirty centuries after, come the men Of Orient and Occident, inquiring The ways of truth, and earnestly desiring Of those custodians, the keepers still. Of Solomon's and their God's sovereign will, To gain some portion. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. +1 Solomon, inspired By love of God, and holy ardor fired. Gave freely all they asked, withholding naught; And each, rejoicing, gained the knowledge sought. East, from this center, rolled a tidal wave Of knowledge of the God whose power to save, And bless, and prosper, which the world had stirred When dimly shadowed, but now seen and heard By living witnesses, grew bright. Still on. But with diminished force, till Solomon Was quite forgot; yet on and on it swept, Till only law, as an abstract concept. Attained the Eastern sea. Of this the trace, Down through the ages, and by eveiy race Of Eastern countries treasured, lives today; Of moral law from Sinai some faint ray, Still unextinguished, gleams through error's night, And to its source serves to direct aright. This has survived, although corroding age 42 SEQUEL TO THE Has, touching, sullied. Evil, roused to wage, In Protean form, unceasing combat fierce With that God-given law whose light could pierce its inmost vileness, almost gained its end. In quenching that on which their hopes depend. Shall, then, these questioners, now termed be- nighted, — Yet whose whole path one beam of faith has lighted. Near thirty centuries cherished, loved, and guarded, — Again with truth as freely be rewarded. As when to Solomon they came of old? How, and by whom, shall now the truth be told.? After w GAIN o'er ocean's wave a good ship sails, And toward the rising sun, with favoring gales, ;^=s^4J Her course directs. Upon her deck, high set Above the flying spray, three men are met — Three striking figures, each of Eastern race. In converse deep engaged, with friendly grace. " I greet you well, my brothers," Said Phalil, The Turk, Ristabetani: "We but ill The opportunity have apprehended. If, in this Parliament so grandly ended. We have not something learned. As we agreed ' Before,' so, ' after,' we now meet to read Together what the Congress has evolved. 44 SEQUEL TO THE And what grave questions its debates liave solved." Tze Lu Yen Mugata, tine learned Confucian, A man of changeless will and resolution, Then, smiling, spoke: "You, Phalil, have but voiced What also is my mind. 1 am rejoiced To be again with you, my friends and brothers. By covenant bound, though some, far more than others, 1 would prefer. " I am with wonder dazed At all the marvels 1 have heard and gazed Upon in this new world; and 1 am filled With words for utterance seeking, though un- skilled My tongue to equal my desire. My thought I gave to study of their law, and brought To understand; for peace on law depends, With harmonv. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 45 "When China comprehends And follows all Confucius' laws profound, Then order reigns supreme, and joys abound. " But 'tis not always thus; and I desired To prove if some great principle, required To give stability to law in force, By being absent weakened ours. "In course Of these investigations, followed long, I found their laws confusing, and not strong. "They are not one great nation with one head. But many principalities instead. With laws diverse and frequently conflicting. The course of justice often thus restricting. " I crossed the sea, with deep respect abounding For Christian powder and their guns, confounding To all our nation, when they forced submission At cannon's mouth. But now the dread admission From me is pressed: to fear, respect has changed. 46 SEQUEL TO THE And horror; for their little guns, deranged By spirits evil, shoot when they're not loaded. And every day are pointed and exploded, By hand of child, at parent innocent. Which could not be through power benetlcfnt. "No Moloch fierce, or Indian Juggernaut Has ruled more cruel, or more havoc wrought; For, if for ancestors and parents kind No reverence exists in childhood's mind. No government in recitude maintained Can be. 'Tis in Confucius' law contained In rules of conduct four, 'The son to serve The parents is required,' and not to swerve; For 'Filial duty, of humanity The true foundation is,' alone can be The source of all good government. He sought Solution for all problems deep, and taught, 'Humanity is characteristic true Of man,' and from relations social grew. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 47 The first of these, as king and subject mild; The next, the parent and obedient child. All others follow. "In this country strange. They have a custom which would disarrange All order in my land: "A man ambitious Of station, in a manner surreptitious Distributes cash by thousands; is elected A mandarin; but, speedily rejected, A mandarin no longer, like the rest, Bereft of power stands, and dispossessed Of honor's meed. " It is my apprehension, Confucius would have deemed this a subvention Of all true principles of government; For if, by right of merit, prominent Above their fellows some are formed to rise, Destined to lead, experience makes more wise, And still more fit that power to exercise, Which legislation could best utilize. 48 SEQUEL TO THE " I have a modern method learned, to gam Much power and influence, which men of brain Alone perform; for, but the truly great, Great works accomplish. "To appropriate A line of railroad for the public good, Is philanthropic and quite understood. "A railroad, built by little sums collected From numerous shareholders, is expected To act the part of any gay deceiver. And very soon fall heir to a receiver. "This favored one receives it all benignly, And its affairs are soon progressing finely. "Its troubles all are ended now forever, For no receiver e'er was known to sever The link which binds to duty's obligations, More dear than maid and lover's fond relations. " I shall proceed at once, on my returning. To introduce this feature new, concerning PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 49 The management of railroads, while I seal Myself receiver for the kingdom's weal. "There are, in that great country now behind me, Praiseworthy laws extant, and which remind me Of wise Confucius' teaching. "One exception Amazed me, and surprised beyond conception: " In China, we our authors magnify, And prize our books, and laud them to the sky With honors and emoluments, the tribute A grateful nation hastens to contribute, While through all time his name and work abide His own possession, and the people's pride. '"T is in America quite different: An author writes a book, and gives consent To have it published; and that moment ceases His right to it; but as the sale increases. His honors multiply in words and phrases. Though little else is given to him but praises. 50 SEQUEL TO THE " He merely writes the book; and this involving Long years, mayhap, of study given to solving Some deep, important question quite abstruse, Condemning to the life of a recluse. "Tis written, and the publisher then takes it; Henceforth 't is his, for he's the man that ma/ccs it." Just here, Phalil, who could contain no longer. And tired with indignation rather stronger Than usual, with a gesture which alarms His friends a moment, as he threw his arms High o'er his head, exclaiming, while he waved Them wild, as if in justice' cause he braved Whole legions of oppressors — "This could never Be practiced in my land! In jail forever We lodge a man who robs of all his gains The one who gives the service of his brains To do his country honor! is less right PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 51 Inherent in a work which gives delight To generations, than in that which feeds And ministers to merely creature needs? " is, then, a horse protected by the laws As property, while brain work has no cause Which can be heard — no champion to speak In trumpet tones? and are the authors weak And nerveless, or is fame to them so dear, That they refuse reward? or do they fear, Or are they proud, or all too rich to plead For right and truth 'gainst avaricious greed? "A firman of the Sultan gives possession, And authors ever guards against aggression. "Through generations it affords protection Where'er his rule extends, without defection." Then Yen Mugata: "These claim with precision. Their method has effected a division Of labor and reward; renown and pleasure Belong to one; the other takes the treasure. 52 SEQUEL TO THE The author to the work but gives his leisure; The mals ^j_^^ Yang and Yin, two principles, produces. And, causing their uniting, thus induces The useful elements origination; So tire and water owe their generation, And earth and metal, wood and man befell; Mans Who is the heart of heaven and earth, as well As most intelligent; the rest consist Of refuse products; and 'mong men subsist The worthies, choice above the choice, and sages; The foolish form the refuse of the ages. "He who would know to combat evil's hand. Must by this way man's nature understand. "Of certain substances he is composed. And nature, howsoever kind disposed. Can only act on matter as contained In individual creatures. "This explained In reference to animals, narrates — 78 SEQUEL TO THE A?ii- Which their imperfect power substantiates — ma/s' imper- Their substance is more earthy, gross, defective, fictions And elementaiy; while man, reflective, is called, the nucleus of the elements. The sacred tire, ethereal, intense. Above all creatures raised in dignity; Yet only intellectuality Can his essential imperfections drive Into subjection. "Then will \-irtue thrive. Subdued be anger, appetite restrained. Integrity and purity maintained. " Some look for evil's sudden overthrowing, To panacea universal owing; But nature secret works, and slow unfolds. Abilities innate she gently molds. And can do nothing more. 'es " if man, debased, Faiiand Hls dignity has lost, his rank defaced, restora- tion of kwd^, lower than an animal, reduced What, shared with them, of appetite induced PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 79 By weak indulgence, he is not a man; But if, witli fear and trembling, nature's ban Is once again removed by true repentance, 'Tis merely justice to reverse his sentence. " So all Confucianists indoctrinate, And thus their novices initiate. " But when in every man an evil heart Rules rampant, then no power can impart Good government. What equal misery Can be conceived? Reformers piously So seek to mete impartial justice free, That evil spirits, which maliciously Pervade the times, are exorcised, and dwell Not near solemnities, and music's spell. "And such improvement renders vain the use Of sword and punishment, save when abuse Of privilege extreme, and last resort Compels, lest spirits evil shall distort The age. "Confucius' aim was to restore 80 SEQUEL TO THE inno- pnmeval innocence, extant before cence the former With man; establisliing a standard liigh state ofman Of goodncss and salvation, and defy Tlie evil powers. "Right principles of force Are only understood by strict recourse To waxing and then waning elements Of active and alternate passive sense Of nature, in the 'Bool< of Changes' writ. To which all essence must at last submit. Matis "Thus meek Kong-fu-tze teaches, since we fail duties to in duty unto men, shall we prevail spirit in obligation unto spirit rare? Shall we, who nothing know of life, declare The sum of death? "These reasons penetrating. The wisest men of China, in debating, Have warrant deemed sufficient to permit No suppositions, but entire omit All teaching touching spirit, and confine To duty unto man; nor undermine PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 81 The understanding by vain speculations On after-deatli conditions, and relations Of spirit unto matter; but inferring, From clauses in the 'Book of Change' occurring, We may conclude that, after leaving earth. They but resume that held before their birth. Con- " High heaven, or 'Ti,' so far above contains, fucian system of That ouly emperors to its domains 7oancIs- Can sacrifice present; while unto lands, '"''^ And agriculture, rivers, mountains, hands Of Governors of Provinces arrive; All lower officers, but unto five Preceding generations gifts may proffer; The people, to ancestors only offer. "But as religious ceremonial. These sacrifices have no weight at all. "The best among the people, congregated In colleges and schools, are educated, Where wisdom, virtue, and benevolence Are inculcated, with due reverence For government, which each may execute, 82 SEQUEL TO THE As ruled or ruler, as his rank may suit." Phalil, in wonder, quick exclaimed: held Hesuits All else as heathen, nor conceived there welled of prej- udice A rill of good in any creed but mine; But, I perceive, that truth will not consign To narrow bounds. "Your theoretical And noble methods educational. Give influence and power to the best And fittest of the people, and attest Their merit; but e.xperience denies Success in fact, and history applies The truest proof. "Responsibility Too crushing falls on mere humanity, While from without, assistance offers not, As in your system, God is quite forgot. " I marvel much, that human thought can rise PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 83 So high, that quite unaided it descries ( If it indeed be so ) a government On such a lofty plane. "The sentiment Islam- s Of Islam influences daily life ''^' w And education; but ambition's strife influence p^^j. pQ^^^g,- ^nj_^ statiou is uot Cultivated; 'Bove worldly praise the mind is elevated. " But in your creed, the strange association Of that ancestral worship, in relation To moral law developed, and perception Of rights of man in true and just conception, Amazement wakes. " Again, when spirits evil Evil The nation trouble with a wild upheaval, 'tlhe You know no remedy save music's charm '""''''^ And ceremonies, evil to disarm. '"Tis curious when reason forms alliance With superstitions crude. We bid defiance To powers of evil, by the power of prayer; 84 SEQUEL TO THE Five times each day, good Mussulmen prepare The heart by orisons. " This may appear A system slavish, arduous, severe. Through it, the weak in judgment are impelled In righteous ways. 'T is better be compelled To good; and that religion will prevail. That by this test can stand; and that will fail. Which, judged by human conduct, shows defect In influence. "Good Mussulmen expect That in this might, triumphantly uprising, Will Islam prosper, revolutionizing The world's religions. " God made and created All men; but Abraham predestinated, To keep the truth untarnished in the world; And when Mahomet's banner was unfurled, It was in protest raised, and indignation For Mecca's sacred temple's profanation. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 85 Worship 'Three hundred sixty idols vile polluted; of stars andidois While unto stars, divinity, imputed. Astrologers' unreal portents upheld, With paganism dominant, repelled His heart, which, turning unto Abraham, Restored the pure religion to Islam. "This faith, immovable as Ararat's Unchanging mountain, which, like God's fiats Immutable, endures without progressing. The sum of all, its followers confessing." Arjuna, then: in India, Phalil, Idols The idols are not worshiped, but fulfill in India, and their A pai't \x\ representing to the mind ineamn^j^^ great idea, which is but enshrined Within the heart, though dimly. He who bows in India to an idol, will arouse And tell you: "'Him the sun cannot repress, Nor moon, nor stars, nor lightning can express, 86 SEQUEL TO THE Nor fire explain; they through Him only shine, While all that live, exist through Him divine' — "Though undeveloped intellect may screen The far idea, by the image seen. " in this America my eyes have viewed Some acts which might be equally construed: "To bow before a picture, statue, saint. Excites in Christian churches no restraint. And I perceive no difference, unless in this: less beauty and less comeliness And less attractiveness, to chain the heart. Have India's idols, than their counterpart. Pica for " The very argument, as urged to me rLp7-escn- tation of In free America, is India's plea. ideas by images "The Buddhist, Brahman, and Hindoo adduce The im.age merely serves to reproduce The great idea, which, though not defined. Has yet to every phase some form assigned. "The Christians raise to saints memorial shrines. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 87 And loved relations; where, then, draw the lines? "If Hindoos to their saints due honors use, Which shall be blamed, and who shall dare ac- cuse? " While Mussulmen, who so from idols shrink When others bow, — what shall those others think Of Mecca's black, unshapen stone, and tomb? And what, when to their consciousness there loom The thousands who before Mahomet's name Fall and adore? "Are not these acts the same? "Mahomet, who was man, nor greatness earned. Above Confucius, or Gautama learned. " Gautama Buddh his followers forbid To search the realms, where mystery is hid, Where origin unfolds itself complete. Since this involves inquiry indiscreet. 88 SEQUEL TO THE And questioning of God. "But 'tis comprised , '^^^^ In ancient literature, and clear advised philoso- Ph- By 'Constitution of the Cosmos' tried, returns with Symbolical expressions set aside, vernal What previous hierophants confirmed Is now by modern thinkers reaffirmed; The precept old, is of new thought the kernel — That spirit and that matter are eternal. "The written word of India's ancient minds. The present to the past securely binds. While recent sciences, and theory. Advance conclusions in philosophy, Like echoes sounding from the Orient, Reverberating to the Occident. "Thus thought, revolving like the circling earth, Completes an era, and attains new birth. Chinese " gyj- you, Mugata, searching annals old, theory of man Accounting for man's origin, unfold PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. A Strained, material liypothesis, Resolving man into a synthesis Of elements, to substance attribute The natures differing of man and brute "With this, can reason not affiliate; For, as these elements disintegrate. Must mind and intellect and thought disperse, And you man's dignity thereby asperse. "Man's mind, superior, is tenant proud, Of body, with superior powers endowed. While virtue dwells in that ethereal Which vivifies inert material. "Among the Christian sects is one embraced, Whose principles and tenets may be traced To Eastern thought. "Called Evolutionists, The nam.e and creed misled, and as Buddhists 1 them regarded, till they clearly styled 90 SEQUEL TO THE The Themselves as Christian doctrine "f Their belief compiled evolu- tion From others seems, and, like to yours, combined With theories of matter, while the mind. From this evolved, is but an adjunct thin. Or energy kinetic, held within "With me they argue, that through beasts to man Come life and thought. For beasts they further plan A full advancement unto man's estate; While men progress somewhat, to compensate What animals acquire. "For them this creed Fulfillment gives complete; more than concede The transmigrationists, while man remains But what he was and is, and nothing gains. "This hope for beasts entirely subsists; While for the human race, in it exists A something vague, and undefined, and dim, Of promised rise, while in the interim. The highest intellectuality PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 91 The universe implies of entity A culmination sees in man effected; Its only adoration is directed To that humanity, which, freed from crime, Shall yet develop o'er the wrecks of time. " All other creeds have modes of worship ren- dered, To past or present forms by life engendered. While this, illogical, belief requires in nonexistent life, which their desires For future evolution formulate. Confucianism, more discriminate And more consistent, gives its fealty To noble, dignified humanity. Which has existed, and the right acquired. To be through ages honored and admired. " If life can be educed from matter dead. Then thought must be inert, and reason sped. " If mind, conceiving progeny, can breed Above itself an ideal, then, indeed, Can logic without premise be instilled. 92 SEQUEL TO THE And man a tower without foundation build. "In reason, thus the evolutionist Lags far behind the Eastern rationalist, Origin "Who sees life breathing througii the universe, life And law to order bound, while they reverse This logic, seeking to consolidate All cosmic origin and concentrate. In undiscovered atom, life's first germ. Which shall their theory serve to confirm. " If moral qualities and intellect Derive from nothingness, we may expect "That deepest darkness light originates. And motion but from stillness emanates. " And yet no evolutionist would dare Subscribe to these, for with most tender care, "In one small nest, two birds of hue diverse Secure they bind, though each to each adverse; "And teaching matter is of life the source, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 93 They hold the conservation of all force. "Those who to reason's tenets strict adhere, Have no fallacious postulates to fear; "No logic to discount, or defalcation. But quite consistent find each explanation. ^'f^^ "Life must by former life have been preceded, >!0/ SpO)l- taneoiii And mind but from intelligence proceeded, As bubbling spring must from a fountain rise. Though it behind a rocky barrier lies. "if life into existence sudden sprung. From fate implacable, a moment v/rung Concession brief to be, and no assurance For its continuing, without endurance, — Then what with time began, with time must end; And life inaugurate at birth depend On physical conditions which ordain Life's origin and only can sustain. " Escaping this inevitable law. And rule of logic, where exists no flaw, We argue that, admitting transmigration 94 SEQUEL TO THE Through eons numberless, and consummation In perfect man, evolved of many lives, The human mind most rest and joy derives, " Though reason fails, nor can make inquiry Of records, or av/aken memory." Mugata then: "If animals can sever ^'-i^"- The links which bind to matter gross, and ever ui^ainst Become as men, why not as yet perfected tion And metamorphosis complete effected r* "If there are monkeys now, it is because They could not, by outraging nature's laws, Transform to men. " If monkeys will but speak What they may know, then none will be more meek Than I to listen. " In the rocky pages Of nature's book, outspread in ancient ages, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 95 Remains of greater quadrumana found Than those that now exist on earth, abound; While man's traditions, carefully preserved, Of primal innocence from which he swerved, Quite clearly these two facts accentuate. Of man and monkey both degenerate. "A logic similar continues good, By all investigators understood: "Sea monsters, elephants, and birds are less Gigantic than of old, as all confess; "While flying dragons once soared through the air. And griffins, with whose forms none now com- pare, Whose bones, in rock preserved, alone attest The truth of written wonders, which impressed The world as fiction, till to facts removed, As other mai'vels may be yet approved. "But transmigration, which Buddhists declare, And transformation into spirits rare, 96 SEQUEL TO THE Remain unproven still, though reason's aid Invoked, has shown it utmost powers displayed. "Nor can its theoiy, by evidence Of facts or nature gaining countenance, Find any help; and if it should, 'tis plain So many lives the world could not contain. " A burning ardent, whose extinguished tlame Has been rekindled, is not yet the same, " It to a different source existence owes; And, after rain, when glistening drops disclose A rainbow brilliant, 't is no repetition. But every moment new; by this condition, We know that transmigration is illusion. And should be passed as but a fond delusion. " That goodness will be tuially repaid, — Though its reward seems uselessly delayed, — And evil acts as certainly chastised. Is, by the 'Book of Changes,' authorized: '"Those who good deeds will multiply, shall count PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 97 As joy, to oveiflowing joy shall mount, "'And those who evil deeds with evil cover. Shall heap calamities to running over.' " And adding this precept, for guidance given, It names ' Sincerity ' the way of heaven." Then said Arjuna: " Holding just reward Of good and evil are we in accord; Though numbered as the sects of each belief Are methods held by which each seeks relief. "The grounds, however, upon which is rested Life's continuity, must needs be vested On better-reasoned and more firm foundation Than any yet-conceived elucidation Arising, by the terms of evolution. From matter, self-endowed with resolution And life and thought, which reason may be found The rather in analysis, unsound, Of that converse opinion, than can move 98 SEQUEL TO THE By facts which nature or observance prove. " Far easier, by reasoning to plead That life is self-existent, than accede To origin, however well deduced. From any evidence to be adduced. "That atom, ultimate and animated, Had antecedents, must be predicated; The antecedents then were antedated By predecessors who officiated As links connecting, and long lines unfold Of ancestors, through eons yet untold. Brother- "Thls common origin thus operates hood amo7ig To make all living organisms mates. Bud- (ihtsts " All men as brothers, and forgetfulness Of personality, with selfishness As barely duty; so the Buddhist leaves Himself aside, and fellowship conceives For all his race. " Enlightened Buddha gave This teaching unto those he 'hopes to save,' PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 99 With whom, partaking nature's attributes, He equal wisdom with himself imputes: " ' No life beyond my boundless love intrudes, In three worlds, which the universe includes.' " And now Phalil explained: " Mohammed taught, Brother- What Is your brother's is but yours, and naught 'Tatght That is your own but is your brother's right; %f^„ If aid he need, 'tis yours to help delight A brother's heart. "This deep fraternity With union blessed our Moslem chivaliy. And triumph of our arms. " Disunion rank. Divisions and dissensions, quickly sank The empire, and disrupted; but, renewed. It Phenix-like will rise in plenitude. When brothers with their brothers true unite. And in Mohammed's name the nations smite; 100 SEQUEL TO THE "When shall unfurl the sacred standard high, The faithful summoning to dare or die." Then spoke Mugata: " Tis religion phrased, To practice wisdom, and by Chung Yung praised, "That book of knowledge how to live informs; To heaven's will our piety conforms; For under heaven our religion sees B.ut one great family. "By its decrees Great rulers are as elder brothers viewed. Great ministers mere officers construed, In one vast clan, and all, as brothers, owed The self-same parents; nature's gifts bestowed With equalness, prove all should be enjoyed As for the common weal, nor aught employed To use exclusive. "Heaven and earth combining As parents, in equality conjoining All men alike, and so Confucianists PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 101 Accept that prudent counsel, which insists — " 'Fear greatly, lest 'gainst heaven ye offend;' And Mencius says, 'That he who can extend No pity, is not man;' while Kong-fu-tze All duty sums in 'Reciprocity'; "Which we interpret, as may clear be seen, An equal interchange of acts to mean. "To this great principle the Congress bowed Unqualified assent, and God allowed As Father of the nations, while with men Was brotherhood acknowledged, who, till then, Were heathen named, by whom no germ of good Was known, nor could by them be understood. The "We have approved the universal prayer, Chris- iia?i-s Which seems complete dependence to declare '''^^"' On heaven's will. "We say with all our heart The words, ' Our Father who in heaven art,' And ' hallowed be thy name,' with one consent; 102 SEQUEL TO THE While from a Father's hand benevolent We ask for daily sustenance, and crave Forgiveness, and deliverance to save From evil powers unknov/n. "The Fatherhood Of God we magnify, as children should; But for what kingdom down from heaven they pray. On earth to come, 1 heard no Christian say. Appear- " ] gathered also this, as we confess: ance of a fcurth That death transfers to unknown restfulness; "But, once removed from earthly scenes to bliss, Why should that kingdom ever come to this?" As thus the three, in converse occupied. This question reached, which no one could de- cide, A man approached, to whom Arjuna turned, As if a form familiar he discerned. And said reflectively: "This man I know PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 103 Was present at the Parliament, although His name 1 heard not." Then cosmopolite Arjuna, with well-chosen words polite, The stranger, mild and gentle, thus addressed: "You, sir, by face and feature are impressed Upon my memoiy, in consequence Of strict attendance at each conference By that Religious Padiament convened In great Chicago— and whose Congress gleaned The thought of ages. "We are three who took Such interest in knowledge, we forsook Our ways accustomed, and to habit grown, To follow any hope for truth new sown Among mankind, and, interested, heard What was outlined, and sought in eveiy word The meaning to unfold. '55 "Together here, We now discuss these things as they appear To our conceptions. 104 SEQUEL TO THE " If in our discourse it is your pleasure to unite, a source Of joy 'twill prove to us, for counsel brings Instruction, when conjoined to counselings." Then said the man: " I will with gladness pause, Where things of heaven and earth, or nature's laws Are subjects of discussion and debate; For these inquiries ever dominate. In interest, aught else that may arise For man's intelligence to scrutinize. " Who sees the book of nature wide unclosed In all its varying phases, is disposed To thoughts on that Creator which impart That reverence which should occupy the heart. 'As 1 to you, so also you to me ^ave grown familiar in Attended in convention. Have grown familiar in the halls where we PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 105 "1 obsei'ved Your system, and your arguments have served To waken thought anew. "Your names I know, And that to honor virtue, you forego All ease in wisdom's cause, your zeal inspired By great and universal Truth admired." "Are you, then. Christian?" Now inquired Phalil. The man replied: "A witness, I fulfill ' The What 1 conceive of duty, and affirm nsntuess declares That I an Israelitish Christian term """■^ Myself to be, and properly describe. Though boasting not of Judah's royal tribe. "For I to Israel but appertain, And this adoption legally may gain Through that great Son, to Abraham decreed. With heirship of the world, the promised Seed; 106 SEQUEL TO THE For if within that covenant we draw, Then we as children rank, and heirs at law." Arjuna said: " i now with joy perceive. That you into our counsels interweave New vigor, and that wisdom will proceed From wisdom." Then pronounced Phalil: " Indeed, It seemeth strange to one who proud avers His lineage direct, and race refers To Abraham, by blood and faith allied. To hear such Christian claims to him implied. "The Christians that 1 heretofore have met, With you do not agree, but quite forget The father of the faithful, and address His blood with taunts, his followers oppress." Then spoke the witness: PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 107 "Though all men may strive For precedence, and quarrel, still will thrive The truth in many hearts; as when of old A tale of bitter sorrows manifold Distressed Elijah, upon Horeb told. And Abram's God his loneliness consoled, "That seven thousand men in Israel Had never bowed the knee, nor worshiped Bel. "The God whom faithful Abraham adored Remains the same benign and gracious Lord, Eternal, without change or parallax, Omnipotent, nor will his love relax. " But call by any name, in any tongue, He still will hear, where'er his praise is sung. Or care desired; and where, among the nations. One worketh righteousness, his supplications Arise approved. "The Parliament's conclusion Father- Qf Fatherhood of God, was fresh infusion hood of God Of precept old; and brotherhood of man 108 SEQUEL TO THE Was taught by ancient hard Athenian. 'fe' "When Paul, at Athens, found -an altar reared To ' Unknown God,' whom, yet avowed and feared. They recognized and worshiped, he denounced Them not as heathen, but, urbane, announced — 'Whom ye in ignorance adore, I preach To you.' The thoughts of your own poets reach This truth: 'We are his offspring:' gently states — ' Of but one blood earth's nations he creates.' " To Abraham, two thousand years before. In substance this declared, ere Grecian lore Embodied, or inspired Paul adduced, And ere the Parliament anew produced, Near forty centuries upon it piled, Almost o'erwhelmed, and its clear light defiled." Then said Arjuna in amazement: "Sir, Your words, profound and strange, surprise and stir Emotions new, for you with certainty PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 109 Speak bold on matters which most frequently, By earnest friends, as doubtful are supposed; But your asseverations have disclosed Some deeper mysteries than have appeared Within the Christian system as upreared For our investigation in convention Assembled in Chicago. "Your contention For such antiquity, authenticated, Will prove what we as ancient venerated. To be but young. "How you, as Christian classed. Can lay such deep foundation in the past, I fain would understand. "The Christ but taught In recent history, and ancient thought. His whole morality anticipated, While teachers many recapitulated." The man replied: no SEQUEL TO THE " I must to your request '^'"' Show fullest answer; 't is 'The Word's' behest, Chris- tian To give a reason, whomsoe'er shall ask hope The Christian's hope, and mine the honored task. " To you 1 need not prove that God exists. The Parliament's whole reasoning consists In demonstrating Being \ox the Head And Author of the universe; thus led By stern necessity, which would account For law and order ruling paramount. " 1 heard you argue that One Great Supreme Held domination, and your speeches teem With awe expressed, yet, unto him attain, As only 'God Unknown,' whom Athens' fane Acknowledged. " Here is reason's limitation Established. You compared this termination To wall impenetrable, which debars Progression farther, though the sun and stars Of heaven declare ' Beyond is God abiding,' And reason yields to faith for future guiding. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. Ill Relation- " Pq,- j-eason is of faith another phase, sni/i of '■ faith And faith, as supplementing reason, plays and reason Fraternal part; thus, hand in hand together, They walk consistently, not heeding whether The one or other first explores the way. So reason knows that each recurring day Has its tomorrow, and will be succeeded By yet another; but if faith receded From reason's side, or faith in reason failed, Then would its whole foundation be assailed. "Those who such faith in reason thus allow. To reason in the faith must equal bow "The faith in reason will I justify, And reasoning's conclusions amplify. Beyond where you will trust its trembling ray. And, clearly, some great attributes display, Which that ' Unseen One' surely must possess Or yet a mightier providence confess. "He exercises mind supreme; to will Is to decree, and unopposed fulfill. 112 SEQUEL TO THE Argil- "jhe wondrous plan and system which expand vient from As nature is unfolded, at demand nature' Of man's intelligence, with force appeal To admiration, and approval's seal Unquestioned wins; so far above conception Acknowledged, of his finite powers inception. "Thus argued Cicero: 'All nature shows Intelligence and order; these disclose Infallible and unambiguous proof, That mind divine, and infinite, aloof Unrivaled dwells; and, as revealed at night. The moon and planets, by reflected light Of distant, lustrous sun illuminated, Is God in nature, fully demonstrated.' Goodness .' j|^j5 i,^ j^g^if t]-,g 'Unseen One' concedes of God Proven As ' Good Supi'eme,' for symmetry upleads To high regard, and clearly adumbrates The Author gracious; this but illustrates That law and order, being good, innate,- Which mind and reason both adjudicate,— So chaos and disorder are proclaimed PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 113 To be as synonyms with evil named. "That men from God the faculties receive To recognize, contemplate, and perceive In nature beauties prodigal, behold The grandeur of the universe unfold, Proves goodness and good will to men below; For, like the beasts, he might exist, and go With eyes fixed ever downward, occupied With creature needs, which, for the nonce sup- plied, Anxiety at peace, and slumbering, Untroubled rests, nor heeds what time may bring. " With every sense by man possessed, is power To compass and enjoy; while eveiy hour The object is provided to produce The joy intended, and subseive the use And purpose in creation, which assists The aim for which capacity exists. "This also demonstrates benignity, And great good will; for if malignity In heaven overruled, and good repressed. 114 SEQUEL TO THE Impressions evil only manifest Through nature, to the senses could with ease Have been conveyed, as now are those that please. "With equal sunshine while the rain descends On all, must man acknowledge good transcends. "The systems of philosophy which deal With man's condition, and his future weal, From but one premise and one point diverge. Exemplifying that in this converge All human destinies; "That evil dwells Prcva- With hapless man, and death at last compels lence of evil Relinquishment of life. "This not denied, Yet is the evil overmagnifled. And so conceals the great preponderation Which nature liolds of good for approbation. As children, for a trifle they have not, Have blessings numberless complete forgot. " What is of force in argument derived PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. H5 From one, unfortunate, of sense deprived, Or born defective in whate'er degree, As placed against the thousands who are free From fault or blemish? "Does not imperfection. Thus seldom found, prove that the one exception Can explanation tmd, and cause, that could Show what o'ercame the natural and good?" Arjuna said: "Tis true the tendency Phil- Of earnest searchers in philosophy, OSOpIlV rr • J-i. i. Starts On human suffermg to meditate, ^'"'"asfts And start from evil as a postulate premise ^^^^ j^g admitted; but necessity Demands, avoiding the absurdity That evil is of good a cultivation. Or good from evil is an emanation. "Tis evil felt to have our joys decrease, And, in a sense, 'tis evil but to cease Of consciousness to be perceptible, While hidden and incomprehensible. 116 SEQUEL TO THE " If we, as Buddhists, can ourselves convince Of our own theories, why then evince A dread of ill, and death, and age forlorn, As evils which humanity must mourn?" The witness then: 'Philosophy erects An obstacle before it, and expects To reason it away, endeavoring To win the understanding; carrying Conviction that in death but change occurs — Transition, and not ill — while life recurs Immediate and new; but this belief. Incompetent to furnish that relief Which heart requires, is insusceptible Of any proof or basis sensible, "And but accomplishes a resignation Which not of joy contains anticipation. "While reason's limitations physical Debar advance, the antithetical Beyond existing, where God dwells unseen, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 117 Light [sjo reason knows, nor powers intei-vene may come That from its regions, closed to reason's ingress, from luhere A Hglit may be permitted thence to egress, source 'of IHuminlng the void, where reason stands ,/^f Dismayed. d-jjells "If he who rules within, commands, The veil will open, and the knowledge flow. To intellects he gave the power to know, And evermore desire to understand. Enlightenment still craving at his hand. " But what today is needed, is to lift Religion from the depths obscure, and sift From speculations philosophical, And pitfalls many, theoretical. Which, Protean, assume what form may suit The passing argument. "in vain refute A statement, lo! in other form it shapes, And, thus transformed, intangible escapes. "Tis facts are needed, which are manifold. 118 SEQUEL TO THE A firm And but awaiting ready champion bold; foutida- Hon on Who dai'cs announce, arrange, and methodize, needlli With truth, will truth forever harmonize. for belief "While speculation facts that suit selects, T is science, leaving theory, elects To rest on facts, established and unmoved; For facts by facts can never be disproved. "The question then arises, If indeed A light does from within the veil proceed, And been vouchsafed to man, how recognize. And where, and how, and when, and why denies The keeper, that to all alike created, The knowledge should be quick communicated? Inter- "Imagination, with no curb or stay, prctation of the Can soar to any height, or age, or day, the'te^i Can revel in the past, the present sketch ofreve- q^ j^^j^ ^|^^^ pleases; but to fetch lation • i^ A fact from out the future, has not dared PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 119 The most imaginative mind, nor cared To risk tlie test of time. "Tlie ancient sages Turned, for their arguments, back through the ages. "Confucius, Mencius, or Gautama wise. Ne'er entered in this realm, where hidden lies The future, and where fact could controvert, Or, shown victorious, could the truth assert. "Yet this the field where reason hopes to tlnd Assurance of a power above the mind, Inspiring trust in what, by faith agreed. And prompting action, reason must accede. "For reason knows the past; the present meas- ures; But, to its sense, the future's hidden treasures, So far beyond its powers to attain. Must, lacking aid, forever sealed remain. "The wonders which an era could convert. 120 SEQUEL TO THE Alone through human evidence exert A further sway, and credibility Of witnesses is questioned easily. "But that which future time unfolds invites Investigation, and the search requites, By furnishing complete its refutation, Or, in agreement, perfect confirmation; "While that which stands the test of prophecy, Needs on no other witness to rely. "For through each age its warning voice re- sounds. And in fulfillment caviling confounds. ^^"' "One sole and only 'Writing' in the world, Bible the ■ ^ only book This realm has entered, and defiance hurled //,„ At time to controvert, and meek appealed '^'Ztou "^'^ reason, meeting open in the field, fhe With man's ideas in entire accord: future 'Let us together reason, saith the Lord.' PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 121 " Such gracious invitation to refuse, Is less tlian reason. Tliey wIto reason use Would seize the opportunity, perchance, To tread where, otherwise, were no advance. Prophecy "This ancient Writing — sacred held, and shielded concern- ing Through ages by a nation who have wielded a^j^ile Dominion, and in turn decayed and scattered, Cr^a/ jl^^jj. pQijj-y destroyed, and kingdom shattered — Contains a book revered by friends and foes Ere Alexander, called the Great, arose, For five half centuries, whose seer foretold A silver age, to follow age of gold, And brazen to succeed, inaugurate By king of Grecia, who should dominate And conquer by his arms. "The first great king Should be all-powerful, but his death should bring Disruption, and, divided into four. The kingdom should be weaker than before. "When Alexander on triumphant way Approached Jerusalem, while Tyre lay 122 SEQUEL TO THE In ruins on his path; while devastation Had marked his every step, in attestation Of all his grandeur, — from the city gate Advanced procession strange to contemplate, And maiA-'elous to conquering warrior's eyes: A cavalcade of priests in peaceful guise. With flowing garments white, while at its head Jerusalem's high priest his brethren led. "A man unto his people long endeared, in service aged, whose ample, snowy beard Falls o'er his breast, whose features striking add To dignity; in robes of office clad. In duty to fulfill the obligation Of Moses' law, — ere warfare's declaration, Or joining battle, that the priest should stand To offer peace. " He thus the law's command Obeyed. Great Alexander, then, with speed Alighted, deferential, from his steed, On foot approached, and low before him bent His lofty, brazen crest, and with him went PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS 123 Into the city, where The Book unsealed His future conquering course, his brazen shield And helmet marking age of brass at hand, With Grecian empire over Median land. " He marched away, and left Jerusalem The only city competent to stem Destruction's tide, which followed in his track; While his astonished army, turning back, Asked explanation why he strangely spared That oft rebellious city, and why shared It not the fate of others? "He replied: " In Macedonia, ere my arms had tried The fortunes dubious of lingering war. Or foreign conquest's tyrannous furor Possessed me, that high priest in vision rose Before my eyes, to prophet-like unclose The future; " ' His white hair identified With priestly robes and manner dignified. While saying to me, in a kindly voice, 124 SEQUEL TO THE " Come over here, and conquer, and rejoice.'" T^^"' "This ancient book, inspired, had announced rise of the Per- The Persian Cyrus, and his name pronounced siati Cyrus Two conturies before his birth, and hailed As chosen to rebuild what, unassailed And proudly yet unfallen, stood, nor feared An enemy which yet had not appeared. Therisi' "The iron rule of Rome's twofold division, oft/ie Roman Its clay and iron fragments, with precision Empire foretold Are numbered and described; and with persist- ence, For five and twenty centuries of existence. Has witnessed in the world this book prophetic, Though often victim of some theoretic Interpretation which destroys its strength; Yet histoiy, adown its weary length. Gives full approval, while the Book incites To observation, and the test invites. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 125 "Tis written in this Book to us confided, That of the kingdoms ten, which Rome divided, Are three reserved, at some near future day To be of Russian bear the lawful prey. judah's " For seventeen centuries before the fall prosper- iiyunto Of David's city, — towers, moat, and wall, the time ^, _,. ■ i i r-. ofshiioh Or Titus, with the Roman eagles high And proud displayed, Jerusalem drew nigh, Ere Israel was a nation, it was writ In this great Writing, Judah's tribe should sit And rule maintain, nor scepter e'er resign Till Shiloh should be come to Judah's line. The "For fifteen centuries ere Israel scatter- ing of ^-a^S scattered, and the kingdom final fell, forlZd While later prophets oft reiterated What had for ages been enunciated, Was that most marvelous calamity Revealed of Israel's futurity; i:6 SEQUEL TO THE "And by the self-same voice is farther told, That yet the future does for Israel hold A joyous gathering again, and rest In their own land, to be in peace possessed. Degra- "jNjear thirty centuries and four have passed (iation andridi- Slnce Written records, definite, forecast iule of Israel That isracl a by-word on the tongue Of nations should become, while yet but young, The waiting people, with no land acquired. At threshold stood of Canaan desired. "Who can at Judah's remnant, earnest gaze. And not acknowledge the mysterious ways Of God, with Judah's people, who, dispersed Among the nations, by their prophets cursed. Have yet remained a people separated. With language and religion unrelated To any, while their customs, laws and race And features, blighting time cannot efface. "That inspiration could alone declare PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 127 What should befall, and how a race should fare Through four and thirty centuries' turmoil Of war and peace, captivity and toil. While through it, separation prophesied, Maintained completely, and by none denied, Must be acknowledged, for no human lore Could single penetrate the future's store. "A solecism, Israel as a nation Remains today; if by interrogation Of histoiy for parallel inquire, The search is vain, and useless the desire. " No people conquered and dispersed preserved A nationality, or e'er reserved A heritage intact, inalienable. Save for a purpose fixed, and immutable. " Who can discover in an English face The Norse, or Saxon, Dane, or Norman race? " Barbaric Goths, and Vandals captive led. Were Roman ere two generations fled. 128 SEQUEL TO THE Prophecy "^^^^ eq.uallv their own Messiah King, concern- " '^ ingihe Whose coming, Judah's priests and prophets sing, Messia/i Whose sacrifice and wounding by his friends, And in three days revival, perfect blends With its accomplishment, which warning spoke For seven hundred years, ere deeds awoke." Then said Arjuna, pondering and slow, "I have with Christians many talked, although None ever made such claims in any way, Nor have I heard these things until today." The witness then: "No! 'tis too sadly true, The Chnstians know not what is justly due The grandeur of their faith, and, while they cling To sacrificial Lamb, forget the King. "He is the end, and partial fulfillment Of dispensation old, the Blessing sent To present grace, the future Gloiy real. Which lightning shall to eveiy eye reveal. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 129 Perfect "Xhe Wi'ltings of the former dispensation, agree- ment of '\\\Q iiistoiy of Israel's conservation, the old and new Its Origin and future, liave outlined With no essential factor undefined. !>!s:s "The Writings of the Christian age agree in every type, and symbol, or trope. With those which went before in time, and season. Which is their own foundation, source, and reason. "Nor one can stand without the other's aid; And truth in each, by other is displayed. "While modern systems of Christianity May lack not charity or piety, They study but miorality, nor know The pearls of fact and histoiy, which grow A precious chain, as down the stream of time The bark of human progress sails sublime. In everlasting purpose, fixed its course. Though swerving here and there by vaiying force Of man's uncertainties, and overlook The wondrous fact that Abraham forsook His native land, a wanderer became. 130 SEQUEL TO THE Forswore his countiy, called another name; By God's command, commission bore to found A house and family which should redound In blessing to the world; which Abram heard, Believed, and treasured, acted at the word. Ahra- "Through forty centuries have there and here hatnic brother- The tldlngs found a sorrowing heart to cheer, hood in blessing Till now, assembled, all the world appears. And of that Abrahamic union hears, Which, unto one delivered, was for all Whene'er the blessings promised should befall. "Again, long ages after, in conclave To all the world, though unacknowledged, gave Chicago's Parliament, and newly named. That gospel, first to Abraham proclaimed, — The brotherhood, through Abraham awaited. With all earth's families in blessing mated." '& Arjuna then inquired: " Sir, you bring Such arguments and facts and reasoning. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 131 I would desire to ask, and comprehend On what foundation sure these claims depend; And how he certain that the written word Was not recorded after had occurred These great events, so strangely in precise Agreement with each other, and concise In every detail?" Then the man replied: The "When Ptolemy Philadelphus, in his pride, Septua- gint Desired in Alexandria to amass A wondrous library, which should surpass The world beside, ambassadors were sent To Judah's royal city, to present Request and gain permission to translate Their sacred books, so long inviolate From foreign eye,— so far beneath their plane, Unconsecrated, and believed profane, — Into another tongue. "Such compliments Proclaimed celebrity, and reverence By others offered. 132 SEQUEL TO THE "Though the keepers held It desecration, yet, by fear impelled. Consent bestowed. "A Ptolemy destroyed Jerusalem before; but now employed In peaceful arts, not ample cause to dare The tyrant's power, and woes beyond compare. "A royal bibliomania, assisted By arms, can only be by arms resisted. "The Holy Scriptures, heretofore reserved, Were now in Greek and Hebrew, both, preserved. And ne'er again to Gentile faith denied. The sacred books thus doubly testified. "Oh, providence of God, to multiply, And witnesses to doubting world supply! " So, henceforth, censurers could not forget That ere Pataliputra's council met. In Great Asoka's time, 'twas so renowned That in two languages 't was to be found. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 133 "And down the ages, side by side, unchanged For two and twenty centuries, are ranged These two editions of the sacred word, In tongues antagonistic, never heard In unison, save here, unparalleled. An enemy, to witness truth compelled. Present " While Egypt as a kingdom base remains, evidence ,,,-,, i ■ for While Tyre s bare rock the fishers nets sustams, Prophecy ^yj^jig Babylou, a heap of ruins, lies Without inhabitant, so long complies The present with the ancient prophecies Existing five and twenty centuries." Arjuna said: "These things, though strange and new, The evidence you mention marks as true. " But why such data never used to show Those you deem heathen, who but reverence know For all the honored past, and dare not test 13+ SEQUEL TO THE The things too recent, thinking old are best?" The witness then: "You ask a question hard: Nor can I say why Christians thus regard The faith as needing not support derived From undisputed truths, and have contrived To so reduce to moral sentiment Their whole religion, nor deem pertinent Inquiry into facts, nor why defer To faith for what the judgment may refer To proof immutable, nor why confine Their preaching to the heathen to the line Of mere morality; but those who seek, In love of truth, with gentle spirit meek. Will, seeking, find what can to them express The cravings of the heart for righteousness. "This wonderful Greek version was designed, Its keeping to an enemy consigned. In blessing to the Gentile world committed. And through the multiplying, thus transmitted PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 135 To early Christians, what, in jealous pride. By zealous keepers would have been denied." And then Arjuna: "Truth and holiness, With purity and tender-heartedness. By Parsee, Hindoo, Brahman promulgated, Confucian, Buddhist, Christian inculcated, Mohammedan and Jew indoctrinated — From whence arose, by whom communicated, Thus universal in the Orient, And which, original, to others lent? " For that from whence the pure beginnings flow, The fountain source must be; the others glow But by reflected light; and how descried In that antiquity, which must decide?" The ready witness, for solution pressed, in mild reply Arjuna thus addressed: "Tis true, as you with logic well attest, Antiquity must answer, or, confessed 136 SEQUEL TO THE As wanting proof, tlie question ever rest, Although including eveiy interest And destiny of man " Impossible The To entertain the thought illogical, varioics systems That vadous sources philosophical, \tphy ^^'^^ differing data hypothetical, founded j[-|g selfsame system should have formulated, on the •' same When from the selfsame facts, quite undebated, facts Of life and being, matter, law, and motion, With firm conviction, and entire devotion. Such opposite conclusions are conceived As these that follow, each by some believed: "There is no matter — 'tis but fallacy; Or, all is matter — all else fantasy; "Yet, still more strange, demanding our attention. To be explained, though passing comprehension. That all the thought of India asserts. And, looking backward, equally reverts To still remembered period remote. Though in the ages too far lost to quote, — PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 137 That innocence primeval once existed, But man has fallen thence, and has persisted In evil ways. "Why thus himself accuse.? And why did man such privilege abuse? "This universal crimination bears But one interpretation, and forswears All inference from logic, or can trace No reason in experience' stern face. "All India's reformers testified, - What history has fully ratified, That, in their time, corruption ruled supreme, But through the ages they discerned a gleam Of clearer light, and 'twas their aspiration To fan it to a flame of reformation; " Referring to the prophets of an age. Who, long forgotten, yet the time presage, And for themselves not claiming exaltation Above the humblest; who by contemplation Their course of thought and action should pursue, 138 SEQUEL TO THE To whom should equal sovereignty ensue. Christ "But Judah's Christ King, lineal descended would teach hut From David's royal line, and apprehended Father's ^y '^^•''^'^ miraculous. the Son divine witi Qi QqJ jj^g Father, could but intertwine In all his speech, the moral teaching deigned From God unto his people, and contained In code of law, on stone-engraven plates For fifteen centuries. The Son but states Again his Father's will, and in discourse On Olive's mountain, turned to ancient source From whence inspired David drew his theme Above ten centuries before. Why deem It strange the Son the Father's word confirms. And ' Blessed be the meek' anew affirms, 'For they the earth inherit,' in the time When all creation to its former prime Shall be restored again, and evils blend No more with good, but meet the fore-doomed end? 'The wondrous story of the dealings high PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 139 jcthro Of Israel's God, when Egypt's despots tiY and Solomon The people sore, their desert wandering, spread the The moral law from Sinai thundering, "f^^flo all the world were known. ^'"^''Z That honored man, Ood ' The princely Jethro, priest of Midian, And father-in-the-law of Moses meek. Who sole to Moses dared in counsel speak, To his own country carried knowledge gained Of that true God, whom he from thence main- tained As God alone. "You prince Gautama place Six centuries B. C., of royal race. " But one account with this so disagrees. That for the argument to meet all pleas. The most shall be conceded, so the last And oldest date demanded shall contrast With history, and centuries ten permitted. With six and twenty years beside admitted; "While if, indeed, Gautama then was born, 140 SEQUEL TO THE Was Judah's Solomon on that bright mom Eight years of age. "And wiien Gautama wore But twelve short summers, Solomon then bore The weight of empire; while the world convened 'To hear,' and of God-given wisdom gleaned, That eveiy land and nation might have share In Israel's blessing, and his God declare. "So India sent gold and jewels rare. To deck the temple, far above compare. And Hiram, king of Tyre, magnified The name of Israel's God, and glorified. When prince Gautama numbered fourteen years, And long before, 'mid sorrowing and tears, He, parting from his state, preferred instead A dread ascetic's life, and humbly led. While teaching principles to Moses given. Five centuries before, from God in heaven. "That Moses said, 'The Lord your God shall raise From out your brethren,' whose name is praise, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 141 'A prophet like to me, and unto Him Ye all shall harken.' "Through live centuries grim Had this idea, by the world possessed, With expectation furnished eveiy breast. "And as we trace the moral law, outspread From Sinai's mountain, as its fountain head. So, with it, of the prophet to arise, The story equal went; with this comprise The primal innocence, by India's thought Conceded, and through all their writings taught. Behold, three witnesses at once appear, Which to their origin, with index clear. Undoubted point. "These three together owe One common fount, and from one lineage grow. "Together migrating, they testify Their parentage, and can disproof defy. "The Sanskrit Buddha, turning Westward, leads 142 SEQUEL TO THE For primal root, and in tliis language reads Relationslnip to Persian, classical. And modern Greek, while other tongues but tell Of this, the underlying link, which binds The ancient languages and ancient minds; Which gives a key to principles the same, And indicates the source from whence they came. "The Sanskrit 'Dharma' to the Siamese Is ' Nature's essence,' and with this agrees Another witness. Grecian 'pneuma' holds The meaning ' Nama,' — Siamese, — unfolds; And in this 'spirit' both bear evidence That weaves the thought of two great continents." Now spoke Arjuna: "Truly, facts evince Such testimony as may well convince The understanding, and 't is reason's task. For reconcilement to sincerely ask. "Between Siam and Solomon's Judea, Far Eastern Buddh, and Parsee of Media, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 1« Is void impassable, o'er which you leap, And leave untouched an adamantine steep, Against whose Vedic rocks Buddhism rushed in its young vigor, only to be crushed; "And now in India, its motherland, But few the followers it can command." The witness said: "Your challenge is but just; For that which wins the confidence and trust Must be well armed, and, every point defended. By highest reason also be commended. ivords " Like Tacitus, before the Savior's birth, Tacitus Recording that the nations of the earth Were looking for a Leader to arise From out Judea, and in rule comprise A world in empire, so, in words pathetic. Convincing, and in eloquence prophetic. That great and earnest thinker and professor, Max Miiller, logic's able intercessor, Most nobly pleads: 144 SEQUEL TO THE "T'nere must be yet conserved A 'great and golden dawn of truth' reserved: Professor ^j\-^Q^Q jg ^ [^^^^ religjon still behind Max * Miiiiers Those called religions. Happy who can find words The sacred truth, in days materialistic, And tendencies so wholly atheistic' " if now, indeed, a key can be supplied, And error shall no more avail to hide In stolen garments, but, the truth uncovered, Its hidden treasure to all eyes discovered, " Supremely honored he to whom referred The privilege to open is transferred: "And happy they to whom shall be revealed That missing link the ages long concealed. What "The world of sects is looking for supports \e sect. are seek the sects Q^^ ^j-iich to bulld religion, which comports With all of truth, and seeking unity. For each alone is weak confessedly. And cannot its own influence extend. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 145 Nor evil's power successfully contend. " It is not true tiiat by assimilation, In heterogeneous conglomeration, Of all beliefs, will truth's configuration Be aught unveiled; but by discrimination. With careful sifting and investigation, That truth shall be achieved as compensation. " i^or errors, Protean and numberless. To not one grain of truth can give egress. " Professor Miiller, learned exponent Of Eastern Buddha, to the Occident Concise pronounced: '"That foreign thought invading, The teaching of your lordly Buddh pervading. Has influenced in aught, no scholar dreams; But by its own intrinsic light it beams, A daughter, yet more beautiful it glows Than Brahman mother ever could disclose.' "And yet another scholar's allegation, 146 SEQUEL TO THE In seeming contradiction gives negation; For this asserts: '"Buddhism, as connected, Has, with Christianity, long been suspected.' "To prove these true, to toucli the secret spring. And reunite the scattered truths which cling To eveiy creed, in some degree, has proved A marvelous enigma, still unmoved. "That India commercially was bound With Palestina's sea, the proofs are found. Solomon " Jq Solomon the riches of the East held in- tercourse In ships of Tarshish came; nor had decreased India This intercourse in great Asoka's day, When seven centuries had passed away, Bud- "With whom signed bonds of peace five Grecian dliist mission- kiUgS; aries came While, in the ship which gems and treasure from , . Asoka brings, Came Buddhist missionaries by behest, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. U7 To share their nobler treasures with the West: "And unto Egypt, emissaries, sent, Taught Buddhist doctrines from the Orient, Soon after Alexander, named the Great, Had perished at the zenith of his state. "Tis thus revealed that knowledge was endued, As now, by earnest seeking long pursued; " That wisest men of those forgotten ages, For learning traveled, quite like modern sages, As Plato and Herodotus, both versed In lore and histoiy, the world traversed. Bud- " As 'gainst their Roman mother have protested adiiid Sectarian daughters many, and contested ofBrah- ^j^j^ j^^^ ^^j. gp^pi^g^ 5till by none attained. So has Buddhism from the Brahman gained Its parentage, and that directly traced To earlier era, with no link effaced, its ultimatum reaches, when appears A name, and mystery in learning's ears. "To Media and Persia comes again 148 SEQUEL TO THE ^°''''' Ali India's circling thought for origin. aster ail o o o ancient wystc-y '"i-jg action and reaction, end and source,^ All Asia compassing within its course, — "Where theory meets shipwreck and disaster, And founders on the name of Zoroaster. "To those philosophers who find solution In deeming thought is but an evolution, And grows from small beginnings primitive, Considering its last derivative Superior in eminence to those That any earlier eras could unclose, The ancient Vedas, to this supposition Replying, quite reverse the proposition. " For Zoroaster, from where'er derived. At many modern standards had arrived. While after-ages liave personified The elements, and nature deified, " He recognized they, by creative will, Their proper functions in the cosmos till; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 149 "And simple truths became depravity, Wliich he delivered in their purity. "He of himself can give best evidence When error is removed from facts and sense. "So early was he in the eons old, That, in tradition Persian, is extolled The sage from Iran, who o'er Oxus bore The fire religion, ere yet Persia wore The diadem of empire. " in the time T^'e Of Moses, when the Canaanitish crime tiirbuUnt . . eraof Unquestioued had attained its culmmation, "'" A season of revolt and agitation. With great religious action subsequent. The whole of Western Asia underwent. " Not passing strange when Canaan expected A nation to invade them, which, protected By wondrous God, in fire them defending. Before whose power and might, all gods tran- scending, 150 SEQUEL TO THE The nations trembled, though their gathered bands Gave opposition armed, nor stayed their liands; "The hosts invasion meeting with defiance, Or, fearful, offering friendship and alliance. " In this abnormal era, turbulent, Philosophers have proved it evident Must Zoroaster in a neighbor land Have lived and taught, and learned to understand Deep mysteries, but deemed development Of later ages in accomplishment. "The thinking worid's religious trend of thought, In these, the latter days, inquiring sought In amity and brotherhood to bind In solid phalanx forces that, combined. Must face the growing lawless power presaged. Which now is rising, threatening and enraged. " So, when unfolded, shows a golden chain Which in religious brotherhood again Will reunite blood-brothers, long estranged. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. HI As once before in troublous times deranged: So, after thirty centuries and five, Tliese two the covenant anew revive: When proud Parsee his mountains wild forsakes, And with his wayward Buddhist daughter takes The hand of persecuted Israel, Whose Christian child with him unites to tell Of Abram's God, the awful majesty. Omnipotent through all eternity, " By proclamation to all nations sent From great Chicago's wondrous Parliament." Arjuna spoke: " Enigmas new your speech Before my mind constructs; nor can I reach Solution of these mysteries profound. As underlaid, and seeming to surround All India's thought; and how amalgamate Such elements diverse into a state Of comity, and partially to blend, So each the other e'en can comprehend." I?2 SEQUEL TO THE Replied the witness: " This great Parliament The Has demonstrated that, with one consent, nu-iii The human heart to God Supreme must turn, that, ill And, in Its need, for its Creator yearn. men seek dcs'H- '"Tis not by reconcilement of the sects, ^'"^ Nor of their tenets, the desired effects Of unanimity will bring redress, But by abandonment of narrowness. Moses "When Moses fled from roval Pharaoh's hate and jethro To Midian, he found associate Muiia'n And friend, and father by the marriage tie, in Jethro, prince and priest of those Magi Of whom was Moses taught in Egypt's lore, Ere yet his mother's precepts fruitage bore. "Of noble nature, and akin by race To Moses, Jethro quick extended grace. So, henceforth, forty years by Moses led, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 153 The flocks of Jethro wandered, watched and fed, O'er h'ak's fertile plains and vernal h.ills. While Moses into Jethro's mind instills. With Egypt's learning astronomical. The story of downtrodden Israel, And of the Hebrew's God, for whom he dared The Pharaoh's enmity, and nothing cared For Egypt's state, which by the daughter fair Was his inheritance as Pharaoh's heir. " So Jethro doubted, but when Moses came With hosts of Israel to Horeb's fiame, His father there, the princely Jethro, met His son-in-law, although by doubts beset. "When Sinai's thunders on his ear resounded, God spoke from heaven, and the trumpet sounded; Then Jethro sacrificed, and sanctified The name of Israel's God, and glorified. " Confessing, said, 'Assuredly I know The Lord is greater than all gods below.' "So back to Irak's pastures Jethro went. 154 SEQUEL TO THE jethro ^p j ^q\^ |-|^g wonders from the heavens sent, retiiJ'ns to Which some believed; and as in time increased Midian The wanderers of h'ak, in the East Of Iran roaming, toward the North progressed, Succeeding with tlieir tenets to invest The Persian realms, unto the Northern sea, — So Jethro on the plams of Araby Is Zoroaster, Magian priest and prince, 'And owning camels old,' as facts convince. "And Zoroaster gives concise account Of that which Jethro heard at Horeb's Mount: Zoro- '"1 journeyed to a burning mountain's side, aster's descrip- But I escaped; 1 spoke, and God replied; the scene I talked uuto the gathered multitude atHoreb ^ q^ |s,-ael) there present, and construed In counsel to my son, whose God I trust, Who is supreme and merciful and just. "'With powerful allies I have connection. (The hosts of Israel will give protection.) " ' I doubted once in Midian, but now PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 155 1 know, and saw, the God to whom I bow. '"As in the faith 1 triumphed, so I wait That glorious kingdom from the heavenly state, Which shall come speedily. '"Two brothers dwell. And rule the hosts ofwanderiiig Israel : y4aron and Moses, in the Hebreii> famed, Are Frashaoshtra and Jamaspa named hi Midian tongue, to me in close relation By marriage bound, and of a kindred nation. "'The one is minister of God the King Above all gods, whose praises ever sing Our voices, when Ahura we proclaim. And Mazdao, 'The Wise,' for aye the same; " 'Who is but One, with holy ones attending. And fire, as his ally, him defending. '"To Him I offer sacrifice and prayer, And trust the future to His guardian care. ■'"He gives all good; from Him salvation grows. 156 SEQUEL TO THE To but one author man all evil owes, '"Who enters in the world of God, invading, Corrupting earth, and man himself degrading; '"But when the time appointed shall arrive. No longer may man's misery contrive, '"But be with hell forevermore destroyed, And man in evil ne'er again employed, While everlasting happiness enjoyed O'er all the earth, complete and unalloyed; " 'The broken chains of death, no more the dread Of all the ages, risen from the dead.' The "Thus Jethro, now as Zoroaster styled, spreadof jeihros Gave truth unto his people in the wild >c igion ^^ i^-ji^'g fastnesses, from whence, subverted, All Bactria and Persia were converted. "So from the Oxus vale, o'er Asia swelled A wave of knowledge of the true God, held And underlying all of Asian thought Which Zoroaster from Mount Sinai brought; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 157 "Who taught in Iran, who was founder called Of Magian art, which all the world enthralled With reverence of the stars; " Of Aiyan priests The first; who taught the sacrifice of beasts; Who heard and worshiped at the mount of flame; Whose followers the after-ages blame For quite forgetting God in adoration. And to His symbol giving veneration. Simitar "ys^g Moscs to the Hcbrews, so by hands laws given Of Zoroaster came the same commands. by Moses and zoroas- " The hlstoiy of Noah, and the tree ter Containing gifts of immortality, " Its fearful guardians, and fall of man From state of innocence primordian, " Have each transmitted to posterity. With single heart, and in simplicity. "By both the marriage nte is clear defined; Each to its own religion is confined; 158 SEQUEL TO THE "While man and woman, equal, proudly stand. And side by side obey the law's demand; "In sanitaiy regulations made Equivalent, the selfsame care displayed. "By both the sacred emblem, tire, preseived In synagogue and fire temple, sei-ved By zealous priests, are evidence today. While each a kingdom and a Savior pray To come to judgment, and the earth restore To what it was in long-lost days of yore. Parai- "The Hebrews, 'mong the nations of the West, ids be- tween Accumulating riches, though oppressed, 'Znd Maintaining their religion, laws divine, Parsces ^^^ pedigree in one unbroken line, Are witness, as their brothers in the East, Whose ancient empire equal has decreased, "Whose pride of blood, no other parallel The world can furnish, but in Israel. "The children of the Midian prince and sage, The priestly Jethro, rich in eveiy age. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 159 "With rigid care their customs all retain, Their ancient race in purity maintain, "And 'mong the Hindoo millions situate, An island stand, apart and isolate; "While down the ages Hindoo thought availed No more with them, than Europe has prevailed Upon the Hebrew people." Questioned now Arjuna: "You the tie of blood allow; Relation- gut how derived, and what the argument ship ex- pounded That can support? Methinks the testament, mbrew As needing no uncertain evidence, Parst ^^"^ stand alone with innate confidence," The witness said: "The facts to you must speak In unmistaken tones. When Moses meek. To Midian for refuge turned in dread, 160 SEQUEL TO THE He knew the nation unto whom he fled Would have for Israel a friendly will, And, pitying, a kindred's part fulfill. " Four hundred years before, in Canaan, To Abraham a son, named Midian, Was of Ketura born, his Kenite mate; And Abrahamic blood would advocate A brother's cause, "As through the line direct. With Abraham two covenants connect The Christian's hope; and while, through that derived. The Holy Bible has to him arrived. The gospel of the kingdom publishing. So in these latter days of questioning Its inspiration, e'en by friends pretended. By other witness are its claims defended. "Through unexpected line, long separated. Diverse and independent, are collated, From other tongue, the story of the king. And knowledge of the kingdom which shall bring PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 161 Again to earth the peace so long desired, For which the Christian, in the prayer inspired. Should hourly pray. "As proud the Hebrew race Denied to Gentiles any meed of grace, So has the Christian world itself conceived The keeper sole of every truth achieved; " But learned at second Pentecostal day, In fair Chicago's Parliament, to say What that first Pentecost revealed of old, — The love of God can eveiy tongue infold. "And Zoroaster understood, believed That coming kingdom, which, not yet received. Is still the Christian's hope. "If India turns Where Zoroaster's fieiy mountain burns. Her ears will hear the words which Christians true Should, as a loving message, speak anew." Mugata then suggestion interposed: 162 SEQUEL TO THE China " You have in argument complete disposed claims gn-atcr Of Buddhlst claims, and laid a firm foundation antiquity Of histoiy and fact for your narration; " But our Confucius from still earlier source Drew inspiration for his wise discourse. "The famous Yao, as our annals note, Whom Mencius and Confucius ever quote. Gave counsel unto Shun, in days gone by. More ancient far than those you specify." The witness, mild and gentle, quick replied: China "Mugata, you, unknowing, now provide comes to . . , , , , , , i confirm A trcnchaut weapon that 1 shall employ, the truth jj_|Q^g|^ \)s\x\% not your records to destroy, But to defend, and prove in strict accord. As showing how the wisdom of the Lord In every nation kept some truth alive. Which, in the time appointed, should revive And come to fruitage; else how e'er explain That Hebrew and Chinese alike retain, In cherished records, stories told with pride, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 163 Of honored ancestors with heaven allied? "And links of truth appear no more forbid The light of day, though long in ages hid. "The Chinese annals furnish jewels five, Unset and rough, whose value must derive " And be enhanced by polishing and place Within the golden chains which interlace All human histoiy; so, when beside The Hebrew chronicle in test applied, As diamonds each in independence shine. Yet when their powers in brilliancy combine. Each must the other's radiance augment By mutual reflections incident. "The Chinese annals, in authentication. The Hebrew witness in asseveration. "Two names they give, and, furnishing a date. The statement of a fact corroborate — A fact too wonderful to credence earn. Were not the source unquestioned whence we learn; 164 SEQUEL TO THE "With counsel wise, contributing a key Wliich, careful used, unlocks the mystery Of their own origin, and loud declares The bond of blood, that every nation shares. vun, or. " Pq^,- thousand vears, and vet two hundred more, coimse/s With forty added unto half a score, S/iU)i, or shem Ere yet in Parliament the world, invited. Assembled, and in brotherhood united, Your records venerable represent. With no superfluous embellishment. That Shun, or Shem, to Yao counsel owed, While generations nine in peace abode. Within one dwelling sheltered. 'Jrj "So agree *see The Hebrew Scriptures: One half centuiy. Appen- dix, With two and forty centuries appended. Ere this great Congress of Religions ended. "When Noah, — Yao, — preaching righteousness. The birthright gave to Shem in bounteousness. With counselings and precepts for his need. While nine full generations of his seed PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 165 Rewarded Noe's age, and in his sight Grew up to man's prerogatives and might. "The sixth in generation gave the sign Of severation from the parent vine, Which then began. "The sons of Ham descended To Africa, where still traditions blended With marvels multitudinous recall Their coming from the regions Boreal, "While Eastward Japheth's families withdrew, To China's realms, yet left behind a few. Who followed in the ninth. "More slowly moving, The shepherd princes, — Mencius, approving, ' Pastors of men' denominates, — who brought The useful flax, its cultivation taught. And weaving. With the green mulberry tree The silkworm introduced, what prodigy That, adding knowledge of astronomy. The later comers gained ascendency. 166 SEQUEL TO THE "Yet not complete the brothers' separation; And Abraham, the tenth in generation, His brethren recognized. " To Noah given A covenant of safety from the heaven, His seed including; doubly thus united By tie of blood, and promise that affrighted No more the race should dwell, nor flood appall. And ne'er again the earth a curse befall. *t>'- Gods "So, unto Abraham, in covenant two cov- enants of Of promised blessing, whose accomplishment and The whole creation should in fullness share, ^^m-'ss While many nations should the future bear Of Abrahamic blood, in promise sealed To faithful Abraham, on Mamre's field, Was every son of Noah comprehended; And through a mother from each line descended, A strain of blood imparted was designed The brotherhood in antitype to bind. Three lines of Abra- "Of Shem was Sarah, wife to Abraham; hainic blood Egyptian Hagar, daughter unto Ham; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 167 Kenite Ketura came of Japheth's line. So 'all the seed' in Abraham entwine. *sec- " ji-,g Ql^^Qy son of Noah, Ham rejected, dix, The birthright lost; his brother Shem selected. Note E The second son received. " By this relation That ancient counsel gains interpretation Which Yao gave to Shun: "Hold fast sincerely Unto the mean,' may be supposed as clearly The middle line of Shem as indicating, Through which the truth, preseived, illuminating The ages dimly, should at last ablaze, Extremes unite in polyphonic praise." Arjuna questioned: "Ancient Egypt knew The A cultivation yet surpassed by few: influence of Egypt on Israel " A modlcum of truth its learning treasured, Though by the light of latest research measured; 168 SEQUEL TO THE "And thinkers many, of your language, say That when the captive Israel broke away From Egypt's heavy bondage, and emerged To nationality, their tenets verged Upon Egyptian thought; "Where they abode In safe asylum, their belief they owed?" The witness said: " More strange if had existed A total difference, which change resisted Through years of intimate association; But why on Israel the obligation To borrow Egypt's thought? and why suppose More influence from one than other flows? "They who so argue build a theoiy, With no foundation laid in history. " Four centuries before, to Abraham Had God revealed, and named Him.self 1 AM. "When Joseph came to Egypt as a slave, PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 169 Joseph Foretold the famine and the means to save, bycught the The Pharaoh made him second in the land, knowl- edge of kwdi placed his signet ring on Joseph's hand. Cod ijtto Egypt "The God of Abraham and Joseph blessed The grateful land, and Egypt him confessed. " But when arose a king in after years Who knew not Joseph, Abram's God appears, Inspiring Moses, who for Israel pleads, And from Egyptian bonds triumphant leads. "So through four centuries had Egypt bent To NUKPU NUK — I Am— in reverent And humble worship; and of Israel Had Egypt learned religion's ritual; While they to Amen Ra, — in Egypt's tongue, — The Great Creator, equal praises sung, The Hebrew nation, jealous, but adhered And loved the God whom Abraham revered." Arjuna, wondering, exclaimed anew: "The facts speak bold; the arguments are true. 170 SEQUEL TO THE Dissen- " | .^^ aiTiazed that Christians disagree siojis bring Among themselves, with such a history ruin To lay foundation in the distant past, And by the Book the future to forecast. "The sects among them, each in rivalry Is struggling for its own supremacy. " in India our numerous dissensions Have been our ruin; so may such contentions Destroy the Christian power and influence, And lawlessness arise in arrogance." Then said the man: "The future you portend Is logical, and but dissensions end. "Though truth will incorruptible endure, Yet error's veil endeavors to obscure; "As imitations surely indicate A something real, which they but vindicate. "The Church had birth at living fountain's brink; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 171 The Greeks but from the stream attained to drink; The Romans scarce unto the pool arrived; While modern sects a portion have derived; And each a little channel excavates, Which eveiy other brother alienates, Yet claims the mighty stream of Truth, enchained. Within its narrow limits is contained. "The Older Scriptures, by the New sustained, Foretell a time of trouble yet ordained. Which shall the latter days of earth betide: The Lawless One shall order override, And, prospering a season, yet shall meet Destruction sudden, and downfall complete, By coming of the Kingdom and The King, Who with Him legions of the saints shall bring." Asked now Arjuna: "What mysterious dream, Ques- Of prayer and sermon such a constant theme, Honing of the Is this strange kingdom, whose far hope you kingdom ' , , traced Through Zoroaster, — Jethro, — not effaced 172 SEQUEL TO THE From hope's fair treasury unto this day, Since Moses fled from Egypt's bonds away?" The witness now: "To Adam, at the fall. First A future victoiy o'er evil's thrall, promise oj a res- Its head dcstroyed, the race triumphant freed, ora ton^ Foreshadowed dimly, through the woman's Seed, domtnwn jj-, gpj(;ious promlse, since their innocence But victim fell to that intelligence Above their own; so, far the greater blame Upon the plotter and the tempter came, "And evil, punished in its root and head. Gives mercy place to pay the debt instead. . "To Abraham a promised Seed announced. And future blessing once again pronounced, With heirship of the world, in Adam lost; For sin, dominion of a world had cost. "To David yet again a Son assured, A kingdom promised, and to him secured By God, oath-bound, who by Himself hath sworn^ PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 173 In David's sight, wino Judafi's crown Inatln worn, Shall be established, and in righteousness Forever rule the earth in holiness. " in Jesus Christ this Son was manifested, And of the woman — virgin — born; invested Before his birth with heirship of the line Of David's kingdom, by command divine; " His one confession, when proud Pilate sued 'Art thou then Christ, a king?' again renewed His frequent teaching: '" Born unto this end. And in the world, I for this cause descend.' "His twofold mission — to undo the ill, And then restore — two comings will fulfill : "The first for penalty gave compensation; The second blesses with a restoration. H'oman's mission "Through woman's agency, by sin deceived, lo be the agent of E'MtViS troubles came, and death mankind hath restora- Hon grieved; 174 SEQUEL TO THE "So through the woman's Holy Seed conceived, By earth again shall Eden be received. 'They who inquire, and question miracle, Forgetting reason, are not logical. "The mysteiy and miracle of life; Of sleep, and death, where mysteiy is rife; "Of childhood, which to manhood shall ascend; Which human art can hinder not, nor lend A hand to help; of man the tlrst-create, — All these, confronting reason, correlate To miracle and marvel. "To achieve The miracle which reason must believe, — Of man and woman's first origination By power of God, — is but an attestation Of what is seen. "'Tis lesser miracle. That of a chosen mother virginal. Has God created One of sinless mold, Who in redemption shall the world enfold. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 175 iv/i^r^ "As nineteen centuries ago was asked t's the promise A Question, which the lack of faitii unmasked, of His coming? So yet demanded: 'Where is promise found Of this His coming? Evils yet abound, And since the fathers fell on sleep profound, No change occurs, no wakening trumpets sound.' " What Abraham and Moses yet await. May man with certain hope anticipate. "All Christians know that Christ shall come to reign; No Christian writers from this theme refrain. "The greatest poetry of Christian song Depicts its blessings, and the end of wrong. "Within all thought the idea embraced. Results in constant efforts to foretaste its benefits; while theories arise On eveiy hand, each claiming that the prize Of human happiness, the certain right Of all mankind, is just within their sight. " Obey their words, and then at once shall come 176 SEQUEL TO THE The long-awaited, earth's millennium. " Yet could they not control the blasting storm, Nor powers of nature would to them conform. Bless- "The pestilence that in the darkness walks, ings of the king- Destruction wasting that at noonday stalks. The burning heat, and withering cold's pervasion, Destroying drought, o'erwhelming floods' inva- sion. Alternately would still the earth afflict; Yet these shall that millennium restrict, "And all extremes in nature tempered be, While man, obedient, lives as lives the tree." Arjuna said: "These things necessitate Interposition, and immediate Activity, of Him who dwells on high. In minor matters far beneath His eye. Who rules the universe, and will not stay Or change the laws the elements obey; PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 177 God " Which through eternity forever keep above the lawsHe Their circling course in an unbroken sweep. makes " For as we argue, this is our assumption, Observing nature, which affords presumption." Replied the witness: " He who promulgates A law, and order by His will instates, The Universal Maker and Creator, Is than creation infinitely greater. " No law immutable before Him dwells, Who at His will their influence dispels. Else yet a power above Himself remains, — Which logic mocks, nor reason entertains. "Shall man a wonderful machine invent. And yet the imputation not resent, That he its powers cannot estimate, Its energies employ, nor use dictate, To sei've his purpose? "Why with insolence 178 SEQUEL TO THE So thus accuse divine Intelligence? " Shall He who in His wisdom formed the eye, All nature's beauties to Himself deny? "Shall He who planted and hath tuned the ear, The music of the spheres Himself not hear? "Shall He who giveth knowledge here below. His own creation's wonders yet not know; "And, knowing, intervene to regulate. And to His sovereign purpose consecrate? " But playthings in the hands of time are nations; As history moves on, events are stations, But marking points in one stupendous plan Involving worlds, and destiny of man; " Yet in the universe, no thing so small Escapes the eye that notes the sparrow's fall." Then said Arjuna: "There is best foundation For reason upon facts, than meditation PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 179 ^''''' Evolving from within can fabricate, proper cause WhiciT 00 two minds alike elucidate. for reason . . , " For if 1 think a thing, and argue from it. The fact is only, that I thought upon it. "This nothing proves, unless that truth, elusive, Beyond the ken of man yet flies delusive. And, never reached, yet many phases shows. Nor will itself in unity disclose. "Thus truth evades the reason deified, When by the jury of the facts 'tis tried." "Most true," the witness said: "What reason can, It has accomplished for unhappy man; " Confessing without remedy, yet weaving The threads of 'Love and Life' with death and grieving, 'The shuttles of its loom.' "Association Of passing strangeness, mingling of duration 180 SEQUEL rO THE With end, and love and life with misery, In endless treadmill of theosophy, " By paradoxy named 'cyclic progression,' The circle rounding, while no intercession Inexorable fate can ever move; Progression in a circle, who can prove?" ArJLina answered: "All my firm convictions. The inward growth of years, these contradictions Profoundly shake; a larger hope expanding Within me, thus a broader field demanding. With sure foundation, and the heights attaining Which reason never e'en aspired to gaining. " But, for this union that the Christian prays, Of blessed brotherhood in future days. In Messianic kingdom, as 1 learn. Both Jew and Christian but one hope discern?" The witness sad replied: PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 181 " You penetrate The veiy midst, by reason's power elate; And with it, touching, like Ithuriel, The mystery of outcast Israel At once reveals; for partial blindness sears The heart of Judah till his King appears; That universal brotherhood, announced. May be to Gentiles they in pride denounced. " The Parliament has this inaugurated, And prophecy's fulfillment initiated. "Who now, anointed in Christ Jesus' name, The gospel of the kingdom will proclaim?" The friends sat musing on this strange new light. Meanwhile the ship sped on into the night. APPENDIX Note A. Line 2, page 124. In all cases where dates are given the nearest centuiy has been named, to meet the exigencies of versification, as greater accuracy would have been cumbersome. Note B. Line 15, page 149. Abraham was given the land of Canaan before it had been occupied by any people, at the time when the earth was in process of division among the families of Noe; so that when his descend- ants under Moses conquered it, they were merely repossessing what was their own inalienable in- heritance. Note C. Line 4, page 163. The Chinese record of 2256 B. C, in the time 184 SEQUEL TO THE of Yao ( who was undoubtedly Noe ), which has generally been supposed to be the date of the deluge, cannot be reconciled with any other account of that occurrence. At the time to which the Chinese recorded date refers, nine generations lived in peace in one house, which was not true of the era of the del- uge, but was true of the later years of Noe's life in the days when the earth was divided and the families began to separate. This was during the lifetime of Peleg, and the date of his birth as pre- served by the Hebrews is 2247 B. C, differing very little from the Chinese date of 2256 B. C. Thus by both records are the two facts of the chronological era and the longevity of those times carefully treasured, as well as the names of Noe, or Yao, and his counsel to Shem, or Shun, the son chosen to inherit the birthright, which, with parting counsel, would naturally be given only at the close of Noe's life. With this mark of the days of division in the time of Peleg, the beginning of the Hindoo era of the Kali Yug, 3101 B. C, and the Septuagint date PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 185 for the deluge, about 3000 B. C, agree as well as it may be supposed two independent accounts could do under the circumstances, and in those uncertain ages of dispersion. Such approximations can only be explained by the knowledge of measuring the passage of time by astronomical phenomena, which Noe gave to his sons, the records of which fact remain. Note D. Line 15, page 164. The Hebrew chronology has been in this case corrected by the Septuagint numbers, which agree better with other records and avoid the evident incongruity that Noe lived till Abraham was nearly sixty years of age. Note E. Line 3, page 167. Shem has always been considered as the eld- est son of Noe, and he is called the elder brother of Japheth. 186 SEQUEL TO THE But in one instance, wlien Noe "knew what liis younger son had done unto him," the act wliich the younger son had done was really to cover his father without looking upon his state. This filial act of Shem, the younger son, was the cause of his inheritance of the birthright and the rejection of Ham, the elder son, who was rep- resented at that time as already the father of a family, and who refrained from an act of helpful- ness and showed a light disposition. Afterwards the elder son of Abraham, who was also of the blood of Ham, was equally rejected for levity, and the second son, from a mother of the line of Shem, was given the birthright. PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS. 187 THE CHART FRONTISPIECE The chart prefixed to this volume shows in a simple form the genealogy of religious thought as developed in these pages, and also will explain the figure on the cover. It veiy clearly evidences the brotherhood of man in the two covenants of Noe and Abraham, under a signature of blood in both cases. The identification of Zoroaster as Jethro is so striking and complete that it seems to solve deep and numerous mysteries; and in these latter days, when so many minds are seeking truth, it will demonstrate the absolute unity of all Truth. -s z^ ^^^ ^. I LIBRARY OF CONGRESS IllillllfllfPllliiilllllilli 015 973 523 •