UBRARY OF CONGRESS 1>> * n ^ v* ,0 V V' ^> ^ c <«■ & v \ \ v ,0 6. ,0 J ^ % \L? ^. ,0 o ^ ^ 1 V * ^/,. & %: b N : -0- c o *& o x :'^ ^ .*>'• y> rPVs A' > «> % **' V , ri* .< ^ / oV V* O0 l v- V % <£ %: ^ D.T" ,%* %. ^ v W ',% fj~ \? <& O0' >- / ■%. ,0o. '°i- » \* ** ' services, or to say agreeable things to others, it is not from love of them, but purely for the sake of obtaining self-gratification. Suppose, for example, we are acquainted with a person who has committed an error in some public duty, who has done or said something that the public disapprove of, and which we see to be really wrong, Benevolence and Conscientiousness would prompt us to lay before our friend the very head and front of his offending, and conjure him to forsake his error, and publicly make amends : — Love of Approbation, on the other hand, would either render us averse to speak to him on the subject, lest he should be offended, or prompt us to extenuate his fault, and represent it as either positively no error at all, or as extremely trivial. If we analyze the motive which prompts to this course, we shall find that it is not love of our friend, or consideration for his welfare, but fear lest, by our presenting to him disagreeable truths, he should feel offended at us, and deprive us of the gratification afforded to our Love of Appro- bation by his good opinion : in short, the motive is purely selfish. Another illustration occurs. A manufacturer in a country town, having acquired a considerable fortune by trade, applied part of it in building a princely mansion, which he furnished in the richest and most expensive style of fashion. He asked his customers, near and distant, to visit him when calling on business, and led them into a MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 57 dining-room or drawing-room that absolutely daz- zled them with its magnificence. This excited their wonder and curiosity, which was precisely the effect he desired; he then led them over his whole apartments, and displayed before them his gran- deur and taste. In doing so, he imagined that he was conferring a high pleasure on them, and fill- ing their minds with an intense admiration of his greatness; but the real effect was very different. The motive of his conduct was not love of them, or regard for their happiness or welfare ; it was not Benevolence to others that prompted him to build the palace ; it was not Veneration, nor was it Conscientiousness. The fabric sprung from Self-esteem and Love of Approbation combined, no doubt, with considerable Intellect and Ideality. In leading his humble brethren in trade through the princely halls, over the costly carpets, and amidst the gilding, burnishing, and rich array, that everywhere met their eyes, he exulted in the consciousness of his own importance, and asked for their admiration, not as an expression of re- spect for any real benefits conferred upon them, but as the much relished food of his own selfish vanity. Let us attend, in the next place, to the effect of this display on those to whom it was addressed. To gain their esteem or affection, it was neces- sary to manifest towards them real Benevolence, real regard, and impartial justice ; in short, to cause another individual to love us, we must make 58 SUPREMACY OF THE v him the object of the moral sentiments, which have his good and happiness for their end. Here, however, these were not the inspiring motives of the conduct, and the want of them would be in- stinctively felt. The customers, who possessed the least shrewdness, would ascribe the whole ex- hibition to the vanity of the owner, and they would either pity or hate him ; if their own moral sentiments predominated, they would pity ; if their Self-esteem and Love of Approbation were para- mount, these would be offended at his assumed su- periority, and would rouse Destructiveness to hate him. It would only be the silliest and the vainest who would be at all gratified ; and their satisfac- tion would arise from the feeling, that they could now return to their own circle, and boast how great a friend they had, and in how grand a style they had been entertained, — this display being a direct gratification of their own Self-esteem and Love of Approbation, by their identifying them- selves with him. Even this pleasure could be reaped only where the admirer was so humble in rank as to entertain no idea of rivalship, and so limited in intellect and sentiments as not to per- ceive the worthlessness of the qualities by which he was captivated. In like manner, when persons, even of more sense than the manufacturer here alluded to, give entertainments to their friends, they sometimes fail in their object from the same cause. They wish to shew off themselves as their leading motive. MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 59 much more than to confer real happiness upon their acquaintances ; and, by the irreversible law of human nature, this must fail in exciting good- will and pleasure in the minds of those to whom it is addressed, because it disagreeably affects their Self-esteem and Love of Approbation. In short, to be really successful in gratifying our friends, we must keep our own selfish faculties in due subordination, and pour out copious streams of real kindness from the higher sentiments, ani- mated and elevated by intellect; and all who have experienced the heart-felt joy and satisfaction attending an entertainment conducted on this principle, will never quarrel with the homeliness of the fare, or feel uneasy about the absence of fashion in the service. Cautiousness is the next faculty, and is a senti- ment instituted to protect self from danger, and has clearly a regard to individual safety as its pri- mary object. This terminates the list of the feelings common to man with the lower animals,* and which, as we have seen, have self preservation as their lead- ing objects. They are given for the protection and advantage of our animal nature, and, when * Benevolence is stated in the works on Phrenology as common to man with the lower animals ; hut in them it appears to produce rather passive meekness and good nature, than actual desire for each other's happiness. In the human race, this last is its proper function ; and, viewed in this light, I here treat of it as exclusively a human faculty. 60 SUPREMACY OF THE v duly regulated, are highly useful, and also re- spectable, viewed with reference to that end; but they are sources of innumerable evils when allow- ed to usurp the ascendancy over the moral facul- ties, and to become the leading springs of our social intercourse. I proceed to notice the moral sentiments which constitute the proper human faculties, and to point out their objects and relations. Benevolence has no reference to self. It desires purely and disinterestedly the happiness of its ob- jects ; it loves for the sake of the person beloved ; if he be well, and the sunbeams of prosperity shine warmly around him, it exults and delights in his felicity. It desires a diffusion of joy, and renders the feet swift and the arm strong in the cause of charity and love. Veneration also has no reference to self. It looks up with a pure and elevated emotion to the being to whom it is directed, whether God or our fellow-men, and delights in the contemplation of their venerable and admirable qualities. It de- sires to find out excellence, and to dwell and feed upon it, and renders self lowly, humble, and sub- missive. Hope spreads its gay wing in the boundless re- gions of futurity. It desires good, and expects it to come ; ' it incites us to aim at a good which we can live without;' its influence is soft, sooth- ing, and happy ; but self is not its direct or par- ticular object. MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 61 Ideality delights in perfection from the pure pleasure of contemplating it. So far as it is con- cerned, the picture, the statue, the landscape, or the mansion, on which it abides with intensest rapture, will be as pleasing, although the property of another, as if all its own. It is a spring that is touched by the beautiful wherever it exists ; and hence its means of enjoyment are as unbounded as the universe is extensive. Wonder seeks the new and the striking, and is delighted with change ; but there is no desire of appropriation to self in its longings. Conscientiousness stands in the midway between self and other individuals. It is a regulator of our animal feelings, and points out the limit which they must not pass. It desires to do to another as we would have another to do to us, and thus is a guardian of the welfare of our fellow men, while it sanctions and supports our personal feelings within the bounds of a due moderation. It is a noble feeling; and the mere consciousness of its being bestowed upon us, ought to bring home to our minds an intense conviction that the Author of the universe is at once wise and just. Intellect is universal in its application. It may become the handmaid of any of the faculties ; it may devise a plan to murder or to bless, to steal or to bestow, to rear up or to destroy; but, as its proper use is to observe the different objects of creation, to mark their relations, and direct the propensities and sentiments to their proper and 6 62 SUPREMACY OF THE legitimate enjoyments, it has a boundless sphere of activity, and, when properly exercised and applied, is a source of high and inexhaustible delight. Keeping in view the great difference now point- ed out between the animal and properly human faculties, the reader will perceive that three con- sequences follow from the constitution of these powers : First, All the faculties, when in excess, are insatiable, and, from the constitution of the world, never can be satisfied. They indeed may be soon satisfied on any particular occasion. Food will soon fill the stomach ; indulgence will speedily assuage Amativeness ; success in a specu- lation will render Acquisitiveness quiescent for the moment : a triumph will satisfy for the time Self-esteem and Love of Approbation ; a long concert will fatigue Tune ; and, too long a dis- course afflict Causality. But after repose they will all renew their solicitations. They must all there- fore be regulated; and, in particular, the lower propensities, from having self as their primary object, and being blind to consequences, do not set limits to their own indulgence; and hence lead to misery to the individual, and injury to society, when allowed to exceed the limits prescribed by the superior sentiments and intellect. As this circumstance attending the propensities is of great practical importance, I shall make a few observations in elucidation of it. The births and lives of children depend upon circumstances, MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 63 over which unenlightened men have but a limited control; and hence an individual, whose supreme happiness springs from the gratification of Philo- progenitiveness will, by the mere predominance of that propensity, be led to neglect or infringe the natural laws, on which the lives and welfare of children depend, and which can be observed only by active moral and intellectual faculties. Hence he will be in constant danger of anguish and dis- appointment, by the removal of his children, or by their undutiful conduct and immoral behaviour. Besides, Philoprogenitiveness, acting along with Self-esteem and Love of Approbation, would, in each parent, desire that his children should pos- sess the highest rank, the greatest wealth, and be distinguished for the most splendid talents. Now the highest, the greatest, and the most splendid of any qualities, necessarily imply the existence of inferior degrees, and are not attainable except by one. The animal faculties, therefore, must be re- strained in their desires, and directed to their ob- jects by the human facuhies, by the sentiments of Conscientiousness, Benevolence, Veneration, and Intellect, otherwise they will inevitably lead to disappointment. In like manner, Acquisitiveness desires wealth, and, as nature affords only a cer- tain number of quarters of grain annually, a cer- tain portion of cattle, of fruit, of flax, and other articles, from which food, clothing, and wealth, are manufactured ; and as this quantity, divided equally among all the members of a state, would 64 SUPREMACY OF THE afford but a moderate portion to each, it is self- evident that, if all desire to acquire and possess a large amount, ninetynine out of the hundred must be disappointed. This disappointment, from the very constitution of nature, is inevitable to the greater number ; and when individuals form schemes of aggrandisement, originating from de- sires communicated by the animal faculties alone, they would do well to keep this law of nature in view. When we look around, w r e see how few make rich ; how few succed in accomplishing all their lofty anticipations for the advancement of their children ; how few attain the summit of am- bition, compared with the multitudes who fall short. Love of Approbation and Self-esteem, when unregulated, desire the highest station of ambition; but, as these faculties exist in all men, and only one can be greatest, they will prompt one man to defeat the gratification of another. All this arises, not from error and imperfection in the institutions of the Creator, but from blindness in men to their own nature, to the nature of external objects, and to the relations established between these ; in short, blindness to the princi- ples of the divine administration of the world. Secondly. The animal propensities being infe- rior in their nature to the human faculties, their gratifications, when not approved of by the latter, leave a painful feeling of discontent and dissatis- faction in the mind, occasioned by the secret dis- clamation of their excessive action by the higher MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 65 feelings. Suppose, for example, a young person to set out in life, with the idea that the great ob- ject of existence is to acquire wealth, to rear and provide for a family, and to attain honor and dis- tinction among men ; all these desires spring from the propensities alone. Imagine him to rise early and sit up late, to put forth all the energies of a powerful mind in buying, selling, and making rich, and that he is successful ; it is obvious, that, in prompting to this course of action, Benevolence, Veneration, and Conscientiousness, had no share ; and that, in pursuing it, they have not received direct and intended gratification; they would have anxiously and wearily watched the animal facul- ties, longing for the hour when they were to say Enough; their whole occupation, in the mean time, being to restrain them from such gross ex- travagances as would have defeated their own ends. In the domestic circle, again, a spouse and children would gratify Philoprogenitiveness and Adhesiveness, and their advancement would please Self-esteem and Love of Approbation ; but here also the moral sentiments would act the part of mere spectators and sentinels to impose restraints ; they would receive no direct enjoyment, and would not be recognised as the fountain of the conduct. In the pursuit of honor, suppose an office of dignity and power, or high rank in society, the mainsprings of exertion would still be Self-esteem and Love of Approbation, and the moral senti- ments would be compelled to wait in tiresome 6* 66 SUPREMACY OF THE vacuity, without having their energies called di- rectly into play, so as to give them full scope in their legitimate sphere. Suppose, then, this individual to have reached the evening of life, and to look back on the pleas- ures and pains of his past existence, he must feel that there has been vanity and vexation of spirit, — the want of a satisfying portion ; and for this sufficient reason, that the highest of his faculties have been all along scarcely employed. In esti- mating, also, the real affection and esteem of man- kind which he has gained, he will find it to be small or great in exact proportion to the degree in which he has manifested, in his habitual con- duct, the lower or the higher faculties. If socie- ty has seen him selfish in his pursuit of wealth, selfish in his domestic affections, selfish in his am- bition ; although he may have gratified all these feelings without positive encroachment on the rights of others, they will still look coldly on him, they will feel no glow of affection towards him, no elevated respect, no sincere admiration ; he will see and feel this, and complain bitterly that all is vanity and vexation of spirit. But the fault has been his own; love, esteem, and sincere re- spect, arise, by the Creator's laws, not from con- templating the manifestations of plodding, selfish faculties, but only from the display of Benevo- lence, Veneration, and Justice, as the motives and end of our conduct; and the individual supposed has reaped the natural and legitimate produce of MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 67 the soil which he cultivated, and eaten the fruit which he has reared. Thirdly. The higher feelings, when directed by enlightened intellect, have a boundless scope for gratification ; their least indulgence is delight- ful, and their highest activity is bliss ; they cause no repentance, leave no void, but render life a scene at once of peaceful tranquillity and sustain- ed felicity ; and, what is of much importance, conduct proceeding from their dictates carries in its train the highest gratification to the animal propensities themselves, of which the latter are susceptible. At the same time, it must be observ- ed, that the sentiments err, and lead also to evil, when not regulated by enlightened intellect; that intellect in its turn must give due weight to the existence and desires of both the propensities and sentiments, as elements in the human constitution, before it can arrive at sound conclusions regard- ing conduct ; and that rational actions and true happiness flow from the gratification of all the faculties in harmony with each other; the senti- ments and intellect bearing the directing sway. This proposition may be shortly illustrated. Imagine an individual to commence life, with the thorough conviction that the higher sentiments are the superior powers, and that they ought to be the sources of his actions, the first effect would be to cause him to look habitually outward on other men and on his Creator, instead of looking inward on himself as the object of his highest and 68 SUPREMACY OF THE v chief regard. Benevolence would shed on his mind the conviction, that there are other human beings as dear to the Creator as he, as much enti- tled to enjoyment as he, and that his duty is to seek no gratification to himself which is to injure them ; but, on the contrary, to act so as to confer on them, by his daily exertions, all the services in his power. Veneration would give a strong feel- ing of reliance on the power and wisdom of God, that such conduct would conduce to the highest gratification of all his faculties ; it would add also an habitual respect for his fellow men, as be- ings deserving his regard, and to whose reasona- ble wishes he was bound to yield a willing and sin- cere obedience. Lastly, Conscientiousness would prompt him to apply the scales of rigid justice to his animal desires, and to curb and restrain each so as to prevent the slightest infraction on what is due to his fellow men. Let us trace, then, the operation of these prin- ciples in ordinary life. Suppose a friendship formed by such an individual : his first and fun- damental principle is Benevolence, which inspires with a sincere, pure, and disinterested regard for his friend ; he desires his welfare for his friend's sake ; next Veneration reinforces this love by the secret and grateful acknowledgment which it makes to Heaven for the joys conferred upon the mind by this pure emotion, and also by the habi- tual deference which it inspires towards our friend himself, rendering us ready to yield where com- MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 69 pliance is becoming, and curbing our selfish feel- ings when these would intrude by interested or arrogant pretensions on his enjoyment ; and third- ly, Conscientiousness, ever on the watch, pro- claims the duty of making no unjust demands on the Benevolence of our friend, but of limiting our whole intercourse with him on an interchange of kindness, good offices, and reciprocal affection. Intellect, acting along with these principles, would point out, as an indispensable requisite to such an attachment, that the friend himself should be so far under the influence of the sentiments, as to be able, in some degree, to meet them ; for, if he were immoral, selfish, vainly ambitious, or, in short, under the habitual influence of the propen- sities, the sentiments could not love and respect hhn j thvy might pity him as unfortunate, but love him they could not, because this is impossi- ble by the very laws of their constitution. Let us now attend to the degree in which such a friendship would gratify the lower propensities. In the first place, how would Adhesiveness exult and rejoice in such an attachment ! It would be overpowered with delight, because, if the intellect were convinced that the friend habitually acknow- ledged the supremacy of the higher sentiments, Adhesiveness might pour forth all its ardour, and cling to its object with the closest bonds of affec- tion. The friend would not encroach on us for evil, because his Benevolence and Justice would oppose this ; he would not lay aside restraint, and break through the bonds of affection by undue fa- 70 SUPREMACY OF THE miliarity, because Veneration would forbid this ; he would not injure us in our name, person, or repu- tation, because Conscientiousness, Veneration, and Benevolence, all combined, would prevent such conduct. Here then Adhesiveness, freed from the fear of evil, from the fear of deceit, from the fear of dishonor, because a friend who should habitu- ally act thus, could not possibly fall into dishon- or, would be at liberty to take its deepest draught of affectionate attachment ; it would receive a gra- tification which it is impossible it could attain, while acting' in combination with the purely self- ish faculties. What delight, too, would such a friendship afford to Self-esteem and Love of Ap- probation ! There would be an internal approval £>f ourselves, that would legitimately gratify Self- esteem, because it would arise from a survey ol pure motives, and just and benevolent actions. Love of Approbation also, would be gratified in the highest degree; for every act of affection, every expression of esteem, from such a friend, would be so purified by Benevolence, Veneration, and Conscientiousness, that it would form the le- gitimate food on which Love of Approbation might feast and be satisfied ; it would fear no hol- lowness beneath, no tattling in absence, no secret smoothing over for the sake of mere effect, no en- vyings, and no jealousies. In short, friendship founded on the higher sentiments, as the ruling motives, would delight the mind with gladness and sunshine, and gratify all the faculties, animal, moral, and intellectual, in harmony with each other. MORAL SENTIMENTS AND INTELLECT. 71 By this illustration, the reader will understand more clearly what I mean by the harmony of the faculties. The fashionable and commercial friend- ships of which I spoke, gratified the propensities of Adhesiveness, Love of Approbation, Self-es- teem, and Acquisitiveness, but left out, as funda- mental principles, all the higher sentiments: — there was, therefore, a want of harmony in these instances, an absence of full satisfaction, an un- certainty and changeableness, which gave rise to only a mixed and imperfect enjoyment while the friendship lasted, and to a feeling of painful dis- appointment, and of vanity and vexation, when a rupture occurred. The error, in such cases, con- sists in founding attachment on the lower facul- ties, seeing they, by themselves, are not calculat- ed to form a stable basis of affection, instead of building it on them and the higher sentiments, which afford a foundation for real, lasting, and satisfactory friendship. In complaining of the vanity and vexation of attachments springing from the lower faculties exclusively, we are like men who should try to build a pyramid on its smaller end, and then, lament the hardness of their fate, and speak of the unkindness of Provi- dence, when it fell. A similar analysis of all oth- er pleasures founded on the animal propensities chiefly, would give similar results. In short, hap- piness must be viewed by men as connected in- separably with the exercise of the three great classes of faculties, the moral sentiments and in- 72 FACULTIES OF MAN tellect exercising the directing and controlling sway, before it can be permanently attained, SECT. V. THE FACULTIES OF MAN COMPARED WITH EXTERNAL OBJECTS. Having considered man as a. physical being, and briefly adverted to the adaptation of his constitu- tion to the physical laws of creation; having viewed him as an organised being, and traced the relations of his organic structure to his external circumstances; having taken a rapid survey of his faculties, as an animal, moral, and intellectual being, — with their uses and the forms of their abuse, — and having contrasted these faculties with each other, and discovered the supremacy of the moral sentiments and intellect, I proceed to com- pare his faculties with external objects, in order to discover what provision has been made for their gratification. 1. Amativeness is a feeling obviously necessary to the continu- ance of the species ; and one which, properly regulated, is not offensive to reason ; — opposite sexes exist to provide for its gratification.* 2. Philoprogenitiveness is given, — and offspring exist. 3. Cokcejvtrativeness is conferred, — and the other faculties are its objects. 4. Adhesiveness is given, — and country and friends exist. 5. Combativeness is bestowed, — and physical and moral obstacles exist, requiring courage to meet and subdue them. * The nature and sphere of activity of the phrenological faculties is explained at length in the ' System of Phrenology,' to which I beg to refer. Here I can only indicate general ideas. COMPARED WITH EXTERNAL OBJECTS. 73 6. Destructiveness is given, — and man is constituted with a carnivorous stomach, and animals to be killed and eaten exist. Besides, the whole combinations of creation are in a state of decay and renovation. In the animal kingdom almost every species of creatures is the prey of some other ; and the faculty of Destructiveness places the human mind in harmony with this order of creation. Destruction makes way for renovation, and the act of renovation furnishes occasion for the activity of our powers ; and activity is pleasure. That destruction is a natural institution is unquestionable. Not only has nature taught the spider to construct a web for the purpose of ensnaring flies, that it may devour them, and constituted beasts of prey with carnivorous teeth, but she has formed even plants, such as the Drosera, to catch and kill flies, and use them for food. Destructiveness serves also to give weight to indignation, a most important defensive as well as vindicatory purpose. It is a check upon undue encroachment, and tends to constrain mankind to pay regard to the rights and feelings of each other. When properly regulated, it is an able assistant to justice. 7. Constructiveness is given, — and materials for constructing artificial habitations, raiment, ships, and various other fabrics that add to the enjoyment of life, have been provided to give it scope. 8. Acquisitiveness is bestowed, — and property exists capable of being collected, preserved, and applied to use. 9. Secretiveness is given, — and our faculties possess internal activity requiring to be restrained, until fit occasions and legiti- mate objects present themselves for their gratification ; which restraint is rendered not only possible but agreeable, by the propensity in question. While we suppress and confine one feeling within the limits of our own consciousness, we exercise and gratify another in the very act of doing so. 10. Self-Esteem is given, — and we have an individual existence and individual interests, as its objects. 11. Love of Approbation is bestowed, — and we are surrounded by our fellow men, whose good opinion is the object of its desire. 12. Cautiousness is given, and it is admirably adapted to the nature of the external world. The human body is combustible, is liable to be destroyed by violence, to suffer injury from extreme wet and winds, &c. ; and it is necessary for us to be habitually watchful to avoid these sources of calamity. Accord- 7 74 FACULTIES OF MAN ingly, Cautiousness is bestowed on us as an ever watchful senti- nel, constantly whispering, « Take care.' There is ample scope for the legitimate and pleasurable exercise of all our faculties, without running into these evils, provided we know enough, and are watchful enough ; and, therefore, Cautiousness is not overwhelmed with inevitable terrors. It serves merely as a warder to excite us to beware of sudden and unexpected danger; it keeps the other faculties at their post, by furnishing a stimulus to them to observe and trace consequences, that safety may be insured ; and, when these other faculties do their duty in proper form, the impulses of Cautiousness are not painful, but the reverse : they communicate a feeling of internal security and satisfaction, expressed by the motto Semper paratus ; and hence this faculty appears equally benevolent in its design, as the others which we have contemplated. Here, then, we perceive a beautiful provision made for supporting the activity of, and affording legitimate gratification to, the lower propensities. These powers are conferred on us clearly to sup- port our animal nature, and to place us in harmony with the external objects of creation. So far from their being injurious or base in themselves, they possess the dignity of utility, and the estimable quality of being sources of high enjoyment, when legitimately indulged. The phrenologist, there- fore, would never seek to extirpate, nor to weaken them too much. He desires only to see their excesses controlled, and their exercise directed in accordance with the great institutions and de- signs of the Creator. The next class of faculties is that of the moral sentiments proper to man. These are the fol- lowing : J COMPARED WITH EXTERNAL OBJECTS. 75 Benevolence is given, — and sentient and intelligent beings are created, whose happiness we are able to increase, thereby affording it its scope and delight. It is an error to imagine, that creatures in misery are the only objects of benevolence, and that it has no function but the excitement of pity. It is a wide-spreading fountain of generous feeling, desiring for its gratification not only the removal of pain, but the maintenance and augmentation of positive enjoyment ; and the happier it can render its objects, the more complete are its satisfaction and delight. Its exercise, like that of all the other faculties, is a source of great pleasure to the individual himself; and nothing can be conceived more admirably adapted for affording it scope, than the system of creation exhibited on earth. From the nature of the human faculties, each individual, without injuring him self, has it in his power to confer prodigious benefits, or, in other words, to pour forth the most copious streams of benevo- lence on others, by legitimately gratifying their Adhesiveness, Constructiveness, Acquisitiveness, Love of Approbation, Self- Esteem, Cautiousness, Veneration, Hope, Ideality, Conscien- tiousness, and their Knowing and Reflecting Faculties. Veneration. — The legitimate object of this faculty is the Divine Being ; and I assume here, that phrenology enables us to demon- strate the existence of God. The very essay in which I am now engaged, is an attempt at an exposition of some of his attributes, as manifested in this world. If we shall find contrivance, wis- dom, and benevolence in his works, unchangeableness, and no shadow of turning in his laws ; perfect harmony in each depart- ment of creation, and shall discover that the evils which afflict us are much less the direct objects of his arrangements than the consequences of ignorant neglect of institutions calculated for our enjoyment,— then we shall acknowledge in the Divine Being an object whom we may love with our whole soul, reverence with the deepest emotions of veneration, and on whom Hope and Conscientiousness may repose with a perfect and unhesitating reliance. The exercise of this sentiment is in, itself a great positive enjoyment, when the object is in harmony with all our other faculties. Further, its activity disposes us to yield obedience to the Creator's laws, the object of which is our own happiness ; and hence its exercise is in the highest degree provided for. Revelation unfolds the character and intentions of God where reason cannot penetrate, but its doctrines do not fall within the limits prescribed to this Essay. 76 FACULTIES OF MAN v Hope is given, — and our understanding, by discovering the laws of nature, is enabled to penetrate into the future. This sentiment, then, is gratified by the absolute reliance which Causality war- rants us to place on the stability and wisdom of the divine arrangements; its legitimate exercise, in reference to this life, is to give us a vivifying faith, that while we suffer evil, we are undergoing a chastisement for having neglected the institutions of the Creator, the object of which punishment is to force us back into the right path. Revelation presents to Hope the certainty of a life to come ; and directs all our faculties in points of Faith. Ideality is bestowed, — and not only is external nature invested with the most exquisite loveliness, but a capacity for moral and intellectual refinement is given to us, by which we may rise in the scale of excellence, and at every step of our progress reap direct enjoyment from this sentiment. Its constant desire is for 6 something more excellent still : ' in its own immediate impulses it is delightful, and external nature and our own faculties re- spond to its call. Wonder prompts to admiration, and desires something new. When we contemplate man endowed with intellect to discover a Deity and to comprehend his works, we cannot doubt of Wonder being provided with objects for its intensest exercise ; and when we view him placed in a world where all old things are constantly passing away, and a system of renovation is incessantly pro- ceeding, we see at once how vast a provision is made for the gratification of his desire of novelty, and how admirably it is calculated to impel his other faculties to activity. Conscientiousness exists, — and it is necessary to prove that all the divine institutions are founded in justice, to afford it full satisfaction. This is a point which many regard as involved in much obscurity : I shall endeavour in this Essay to lift the veil, for to me justice appears to flow through every divine institution. One difficulty, in regard to Conscientiousness, long appeared inex- plicable ; it was, how to reconcile with Benevolence the institu- tion by which this faculty visits us with remorse, after offences are actually committed, instead of arresting our hands by an irresistible veto before them, so as to save us from the perpetra- tion altogether. The problem is solved by the principle, That happiness consists in the activity of our faculties, and that the arrangement of punishment after the offence is far more con- COMPARED WITH EXTERNAL OBJECTS. 77 ducive to activity than the opposite. For example ; if we desired to enjoy the highest gratification of Locality, Form, Coloring, Ideality, and Wonder, in exploring a new country, replete with the most exquisite beauties of scenery and most captivating natural productions, and if we found among these, precipices that gratified Ideality in the highest degree, but which endan- gered life when we advanced so near as to fall over them, and neglected the law of gravitation, whether would it be most bountiful for Providence to send an invisible attendant with us, who, whenever we were about to approach the brink, should interpose a barrier, and fairly cut short our advance, without requiring us to bestow one thought upon the subject, and without our knowing when to expect it and when not, — or to leave all open, but to confer on us, as he has done, eyes fitted to see the precipice, faculties to comprehend the law of gravitation, Cautiousness to make us fear the infringement of it, and then to leave us to enjoy the scene in perfect safety if we used these powers, but to fall over and suffer pain by bruises and death if we neglected to exercise them ? It is obvious that the latter arrangement would give far more scope to our various powers ; and if active faculties are the sources of pleasure, as will be shown in the next section, then it would contribute more to our enjoyment than the other. Now, Conscientiousness punishing after the fact, is analogous in the moral world, to this arrange- ment, in the physical. If Intellect, Benevolence, Veneration, and Conscientiousness, do their parts, they will give distinct intimations of disapprobation before commission of the offence, just as Cautiousness will give intimations of danger at sight of the cliff; but if these are disregarded, and we fall over the moral precipice, remorse follows as the punishment, just as pain is the chastisement for tumbling over the physical brink. The object of both institutions is to permit and encourage the most vigorous and unrestrained exercise of our faculties, in accordance with the physical, moral, and intellectual laws of nature, and to punish us only when we transgress these limits. Firmness is bestowed, — and the other faculties of the mind are its objects. It supports and maintains their activity, and gives determination to our purposes. The next Class of Faculties is the Intellectual. 7* 78 FACULTIES OF MAN. The provisions in external nature for the grati- fication of the Senses of Hearing, Seeing, Smell- ing, Taste, and Touch, or Feeling, are so obvious that it is unnecessary to enlarge upon them. Individuality and Eventuality, or the powers of observing things that exist, and occurrences, are given ? and ' all the truths which Natural Philosophy teaches, depend upon matter offact 9 and that is learned by observation and experiment, and never could be discovered by reasoning at all.' Here, then, is ample scope for the exercise of these powers. "and the sciences of Geometry, Arith- metic, Algebra, Geography, Chemis- try, Botany, Mineralogy, Zoology, A,natomy, and various others, exist, as ► are bestowed, chimneys, ladders, masts, to slip in the street, &c. by which accidents life is frequently alto- gether extinguished, or rendered miserable from lameness and pain ; and the question arises, Is human nature provided with any means of protec- tion against these evils, at all equal to their fre- quency and extent? The lower animals are equally subject to this law ; and the Creator has bestowed on them ex- ternal senses, nerves, muscles, bones, an instinc- tive sense of equilibrium, the sense of danger, or cautiousness, and other faculties, to place them in accordance with it. These appear to afford suffi- cient protection to animals placed in all ordinary circumstances; for we very rarely discover any of them, in their natural condition, killed or mu- tilated by accidents referable to gravitation. Where their mode of life exposes them to extra- ordinary danger from this law, they are provided with additional securities. The monkey, which climbs trees, enjoys great muscular energy in its legs, claws, and tail, far surpassing, in proportion to its gravitating tendency, or its bulk and weight, what is bestowed on the legs and arms of man ; so that, by means of them, it springs from branch to branch, in nearly complete security against the law in question. The goat, which browses on the brinks of precipices, has received a hoof and legs, that give precision and stability to its steps. Birds, which are destined to sleep on branches of trees, are provided with a muscle passing over INFRINGEMENTS OF THE PHYSICAL LAWS. 107 the joints of each leg, and stretching down to the foot, which, being pressed by their weight, pro- duces a proportionate contraction of their claws, so as to make them cling the faster, the greater their liability to fall. The fly, which walks and sleeps on perpendicular walls, and the ceilings of rooms, has a hollow in its foot, from which it ex- pels the air, and the pressure of the atmosphere on the outside of the foot holds it fast to the ob- ject on which the inside is placed. The sea-horse, which is destined to climb up the sides of ice-hills, is provided with a similar apparatus. The camel, whose native region is the sandy deserts of the torrid zone, has broad-spreading hooves to sup- port it on the loose soil. Fishes are furnished with air bladders, by dilating and contracting of which they can accommodate themselves with perfect precision to the law of gravitation. In these instances, the lower animals, under the sole guidance of their instincts, appear to be plac- ed admirably in harmony with gravitation, and guaranteed against its infringement. Is Man, then, less an object of love with the Creator ? Is he alone left exposed to the evils that spring inev- itably from its neglect ? His means of protection are different, but when understood and applied, they will probably be found not less complete. Man, as well as the lower animals, has received bones, muscles, nerves, an instinct of equili- brium,* and organs of Cautiousness ; but not in * Vide Essay on Weight, Phren. Journ. vol. ii. p. 412. 108 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM** equal perfection, in proportion to his figure, size, and weight, with those bestowed on them : — The difference, however, is far more than compensated by other organs, particularly those of Construc- tiveness and Reflection, in which he greatly sur- passes them. Keeping in view that the external world, in regard to man, is arranged on the prin- ciple of supremacy in moral sentiments and intel- lect, we shall probably find, that the calamities suffered by him from the law of gravitation, are referable to predominance of the animal propensi- ties, or to neglect of proper exercise of his intel- lectual powers. For example, when coaches break down, ships sink, men fall from ladders, &c. how generally may the cause be traced to decay in the vehicle, the vessel, or ladder, which a predomi- nating Acquisitiveness alone prevented from being repaired ; or when men fall from houses, scaffolds, or slip on the street, &c. how frequently should we find their muscular, nervous, and mental ener- gies, impaired by preceding debaucheries ; in other words, by predominance of the animal fac- ulties, which, for the time, diminished their natur- al means of accommodating themselves to the law from which they suffer. Or, again, the slater, in using a ladder, assists himself by Constructiveness and Reflection ; but, in walking along the ridge of a house, or standing on a chimney, he takes no aid from these faculties ; he trusts to the mere instinctive power of equilibrium, in which he is inferior to the lower animals, and, in so doing, INFRINGEMENTS OF THE PHYSICAL LAWS. 109 clearly violates the law of his nature, that requires him to use reflection, where instinct 'is deficient. Causality and Constructiveness could invent means by which, if he slipped from a roof or chimney, his fall might be arrested. A small chain, for instance, attached by one end to a girdle round his body, and the other end fastened by a hook and eye to the roof, might leave him at liberty to move about, and break his fall, in case he slipped. How frequently, too, do these accidents happen, after disturbance of the faculties and corporeal functions by intoxication? The objection will probably occur, that in the gross condition in which the mental powers exist, the great body of mankind are incapable of exert- ing habitually that degree of moral and intellec- tual energy, which is indispensable to observance of the natural laws; and that, therefore, they are, in point of fact, less fortunate than the lower ani- mals. I admit, that, at present, this representa- tion is to a considerable extent just ; but nowhere do I perceive the human powers exercised and instructed, in a degree at all approaching to their limits. Let any person recollect of how much greater capacity for enjoyment and security from danger he has been conscious, at a particular time, when his whole mind was filled with, and excited by, some mighty interest, not only allied to, but founded in, morality and intellect, than in that languid condition which accompanies the absence of elevated and ennobling motives, and 10 110 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM ^ he may form some idea of what man is capable of reaching when his powers shall have been cul- tivated to the extent of their capacity. At the present moment, no class of society is systemati- cally instructed in the constitution of their own minds and bodies, in the relations of these to exter- nal objects, in the nature of these objects, in the natural supremacy of the moral sentiments, in the principle that activity in the faculties is the only source of pleasure, and that the higher the powers, the more intense the delight ; and, if such views be to the mind, what light is to the eyes, air to the lungs, and food to the stomach, there is no won- der that a mass of inert mentality, if I may use such a word, should everywhere exist around us, and that countless evils should spring from its con- tinuance in this condition. If active moral and intellectual faculties are the natural fountains of enjoyment, and the external world is created with reference to this state ; it is as obvious that misery must result from animal supremacy and intellec- tual torpidity, as that flame, which is constituted to burn only when supplied with oxygen, must inevitably become extinct, when exposed to carbo- nic acid gas. Finally, if the arrangement by which man is left to discover and obey the laws of his own nature, and of the physical world, be more conducive to activity, than intuitive knowledge, the calamities now contemplated appear to be in- stituted to force him to his duty ; and his duty, when understood, will constitute his delight. INFRINGEMENTS OF THE PHYSICAL LAWS. Ill While, therefore, we lament the fate of individ- ual victims to the law of gravitation, we cannot condemn that law itself. If it were suspended, to save men from the effects of negligence, not only would the proud creations of human skill tot- ter to their base, and the human body rise from the earth, and hang midway in the air, but our highest enjoyments would be terminated, and our faculties become positively useless, by being de- prived of their field of exertion. Causality, for instance, teaches that similar causes will always, cceteris paribus, produce similar effects; and, if the physical laws were suspended or varied, to ac- commodate man's negligence or folly, it is obvious that this faculty would be without an object, and that no definite course of action could be entered upon with confidence in the result. If, then, this view of the constitution of nature were kept stea- dily in view, the occurrence of one accident of this kind would suggest to Reflection means to prevent others. Similar illustrations and commentaries might be given, in regard to the other physical laws to which man is subject ; but the object of the pres- ent Essay being merely to evolve principles, I confine myself to gravitation, as the most obvious and best understood. I do not mean to say, that, by the mere exercise of intellect, man may absolutely guarantee him- self against all accidents ; but only that the more ignorant and careless he is, the more he will suffer, 112 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM and the more intelligent and vigilant, the less; and that I can perceive no limits to this rule. The law of most civilized countries recognizes this principle, and subjects owners of ships, coaches, and other vehicles, in damages arising from gross infringements of the physical laws. It is unquestionable that the enforcement of this liability has increased security in travelling in no trifling degree. SCET. II. ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND, FROM INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. An organised being, I have said, is one which derives its existence from a previously existing or- ganised being, which subsists on food, grows, at- tains maturity, decays and dies. Whatever the ultimate object of the Creator, in constituting or- ganised beings, may be, it will scarcely be de- nied, that part of His design is, that they should enjoy their existence here ; and, if so, every par- ticular part of their systems will be found con- ducive in its intention to this end. The first law, then, that must be obeyed, to render an organised being perfect in its kind, is, that the germ from which it springs shall be complete in all its parts, and sound in its whole constitution ; the second is, that the moment it is ushered into life, and as long as it continues to live, it shall be supplied with food, light, air, and every physical aliment necessary for its support ; and the third law is 5 INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 113 that it shall duly exercise its functions. When all these laws are obeyed, the being should enjoy pleasure from its organised frame, if its Creator is benevolent ; and its constitution should be so adapted to its circumstances, as to admit of obe- dience to them, if its Creator is wise and powerful. Is there, then, no such phenomenon on earth, as a human being existing in full possession of organic vigour, from birth till advanced age, when the or- ganised system is fairly worn out ? Numberless examples of this kind have occurred, and they show to demonstration, that the corporeal frame of man is so constituted, as to admit the possibili- ty of his enjoying organic health and vigour, dur- ing the whole period of a long life. In the life of Captain Cook it is mentioned, that ' one circum- stance peculiarly worthy of notice is, the perfect and uninterrupted health of the inhabitants of New Zealand. In all the visits made to their towns, where old and young, men and women, crowded about our voyagers, they never observed a single person who appeared to have any bodily complaint; nor among the numbers that were i seen naked, was once perceived the slightest eruption upon the skin, or least mark which indi- cated that such an eruption had formerly existed. ! Another proof of the health of these people is the I 1 facility with which the wounds they at any time ! receive are healed. In the man who had been j shot with the musket ball through the fleshy part of his arm, the wound seemed to be so well digest- 10* 114 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* ed, and in so fair a way of being perfectly heal- ed, that if Mr Cook had not known that no appli- cation had been made to it, he declared that he should certainly have inquired, with a very inter- ested curiosity, after the vulnerary herbs and surgical art of the country. An additional evi- dence of human nature's being untainted with disease in New Zealand, is the great number of old men with whom it abounds. Many of them, by the loss of their hair and teeth, appeared to be very ancient, and yet none of them were decrepit. Although they were not equal to the young in muscular strength, they did not come in the least behind them with regard to cheerfulness and vivacity. Water, as far as our navigators could dis- cover, is the universal and only liquor of the New Zealanders. It is greatly to be wished that their happiness in this respect may never be destroyed by such a connexion with the European nations, as shall introduce that fondness for spirituous liquors which hath been so fatal to the Indians of North America.'— Kippis' Life of Captain Cook. Dub- lin, 1788, p. 100. Now, as a natural law never admits of an ex- ception ; for example, as no man ever sees without eyes, or digests without a stomach, we are entitled to say, that the best condition in which an organ- ized being has ever been found, is fairly within the capabilities of the race. A human being, vig- orous and healthy from the cradle to the grave, could no more exist, unless the natural constitu- INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 115 tion of his organs permitted it, of design, than vis- ion could exist without eyes. Health and vigour cannot result from infringement of the organic laws ; for then pain and disease would be the ob- jects of these laws, and beneficence, wisdom, and power, could never be ascribed to the Creator, who had established them. Let us hold, then, that the organised system of man, in itself — admits of the possibility of health, vigour, and organic enjoyment, during the full period of life ; and pro- ceed to inquire into the causes why these advan- tages are not universal. One organic law, is, that the germ of the infant being must be complete in all its parts, and per- fectly sound in its condition, as an indispensable requisite to its vigorous developement, and full en- joyment of existence. If the corn that is sown is weak, wasted, and damaged, the plants that spring from it will be feeble, and liable to speedy decay. The same law holds in the animal kingdom ; and I would ask, has it hitherto been observed by man ? It is notorious that it has not. Indeed, its exist- ence has been either altogether unknown, or in a very high degree disregarded by human beings. The feeble, the sickly, the exhausted with age, and the incompletely developed, through extreme youth, marry, and, without the least compunction regarding the organization which they shall trans- mit to their offspring, send into the world misera- ble beings, the very rudiments of whose existence are tainted with disease. If we trace such conduct 116 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM., to its source, we shall find it to originate either in animal propensity, intellectual ignorance, or more frequently in both. The inspiring motives are generally mere sensual appetite, avarice, or ambi- tion, operating in the absence of all just concep- tions of the impending evils. The punishment of this offence is debility and pain, transmitted to the children, and reflected back in anxiety and sorrow on the parents. Still the great point to be kept in view, is, that these miseries are not legitimate consequences of observance of the organic laws, but the direct chastisement of their infringement. These laws are unbending, and admit of no ex- ception ; they must be fulfilled, or the penalties of disobedience will follow. On this subject pro- found ignorance reigns in society. From such observations as I have been able to make, I am convinced that the union of certain tempera- ments and combinations of mental organs in the parents, are highly conducive to health, talent, and morality in the offspring, and vice versa, and that these conditions may be discovered and taught with far greater certainty, facility, and advantage, than is generally imagined. It will be time enough to conclude that men are natur- ally incapable of obedience to the organic laws, after their intellects have been instructed, their moral sentiments trained to observance of the Creator's natural institutions, as at once their duty, their interest, and a grand source of their happiness ; and they have continued to rebel. INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 117 A second organic law regards nutriment, which must be supplied of a suitable kind, and in due quantity. This law requires also free air, light, cleanliness, and attention to every physical ar- rangement by which the functions of the body may be favored or impaired. Have mankind, then, obeyed or neglected this institution? I need scarcely answer the question. To be able to obey institutions, we must first know them. Before we can know the organic constitution of our body, we must study that constitution, and the study of the human constitution is anatomy and physiology. Before we can be acquainted with its relations to external objects, we must learn the existence and qualities of these objects, (unfolded by chemistry, natural history, and nat- ural philosophy), and compare them with the con- stitution of the body. When we have fulfilled these conditions, we shall be better able to dis- cover the laws which the Creator has instituted in regard to our organic system. It will be said, however, that such studies are impracticable to the great bulk of mankind, and, besides, do not appear much to benefit those who pursue them. They are impracticable only while mankind prefer founding their public and private institutions on the basis of the propensities, instead of that of the sentiments. I have mentioned, that exercise of the nervous and muscular systems is required of all the race by the Creator's fiat, that if all, who are capable, would obey this law, a moderate extent 118 CALAMITIES ARISING FROlvf of exertion, agreeable and salubrious in itself, would suffice to supply our wants, and to sur- round us with every beneficial luxury ; and that a large portion of unemployed time would remain. The Creator has bestowed on us Knowing Facul- ties, fitted to explore the facts of these sciences, Reflecting Faculties to trace their relations, and Moral Sentiments calculated to feel interest in such investigations, and to lead us to reverence and obey the laws which they unfold ; and, finally, he has made this occupation, when entered upon with the view of tracing His power and wisdom in the subjects of our studies, and of obeying His institutions, the most delightful and invigorating of all vocations. In place, then, of such a course of education being impracticable, every arrange- ment of the Creator appears to be prepared in direct anticipation of its actual accomplishment. The second objection, that those who study these sciences are not more healthy and happy, as organised beings, than those who neglect them, admits also of an easy answer. Parts of these sciences are taught to a few individuals, whose main design in studying them is to apply them as means of acquiring wealth and fame ; but they have nowhere been taught as connected parts of a great system of natural arrangements, fraught with the highest influences on human enjoyment ; and in no instance have the intellect and senti- ments been systematically directed to the natural laws, as the grand fountains of happiness and INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 119 misery to the race, and trained to observe and obey them as the Creator's institutions. A third organic law, is, that all our functions shall be duly exercised ; and is this law observed by mankind? Many persons are able, from ex- perience, to attest the severity of the punishment that follows from neglecting to exercise the nerv- ous and muscular systems, in the lassitude, indi- gestion, irritability, debility, and general uneasi- ness that attend a sedentary and inactive life. But the penalties that attach to neglect of exercising the brain are much less known, and, therefore, I shall notice them more at length. How often have we heard the question asked, What is the use of education ? The answer might be illustrated by explaining to the inquirer the nature and objects of the various organs of the body, such as the limbs, lungs, eyes, and then asking him if he could perceive any advantage to a being so constituted, in obtaining access to earth, air, and light. He would, at once, declare, that they were obviously of the very highest utility to him, for they were the only conceivable objects, by means of which these organs could obtain scope for action, which action we suppose him to know to be pleasure. To those, then, who know the constitution of the intellectual and moral powers of man, I need only say, that the objects introduced to the mind by education, bear the same relation to them that the physical elements of nature bear to the nerves and muscles ; they afford them scope for action, and 120 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* yield them delight. The meaning which is com- monly attached to the word use in such cases, is how much money, influence, or consideration, will education bring ; these being the only objects of strong desire with which uncultivated minds are acquainted ; and they do not perceive in what way education can greatly gratify such propensities. But the moment the mind is opened to the per- ception of its own constitution and to the natural laws, the great advantage of moral and intellec- tual cultivation, as a means of exercising the faculties, and of directing the conduct in obedi- ence to these laws, becomes apparent. But there is an additional benefit arising from healthy activity of brain, which is little known. The brain is the fountain of nervous energy to the whole body, and different modifications of that energy appear to take place, according to the mbde in which the faculties and organs are affected. For example, when misfortune and dis- grace impend over us, the organs of Cautiousness, Self-esteem, Love of Approbation, &c. are pain- fully excited ; and then they transmit an impared or a positively noxious nervous influence to the heart, stomach, intestines, and thence to the rest of the body ; the pulse becomes feeble and irregu- lar, digestion is deranged, and the whole corpo- real frame wastes. When, on the other hand, the cerebral organs are agreeably affected, a benign and vivifying nervous influence pervades the frame, and all the functions of the body are performed INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 121 with more pleasure and completeness. Now, it is a law, that the quantum of nervous energy increases with the number of cerebral organs roused to activity. In the retreat of the French from Moscow, for example, when no enemy was near, the soldiers became depressed in courage, and enfeebled in body, they nearly sunk to the earth through exhaustion and cold ; but no sooner did the fire of the Russian guns sound in their ears, or the gleam of their bayonets flash in their eyes, than new life seemed to pervade them. They wielded powerfully the arms, which a few moments before, they could scarcely carry or trail on the ground. No sooner, however, was the enemy repulsed, than their feebleness returned. The theory of this is, that the approach of the combat called into activity a variety of additional faculties ; these sent new energy through every nerve, and while their vivacity was maintained by the external stimulus, they rendered the soldiers strong beyond their merely physical condition. Many persons have probably experienced the ope- ration of the same principle. When sitting feeble and listless by the fire, we have heard of an acci- dent having occurred to some beloved friend, who required our instantaneous aid, or an unexpected visitor has arrived, in whom our affections were bound up, in an instant our lassitude was gone, and we moved with an alertness and animation that seemed surprising to ourselves. The cause was the same ; these events roused Adhesiveness, 11 122 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM** Benevolence, Love of Approbation, Intellect, and a variety of faculties, which were previously dor- mant, and their influence invigorated the limbs, Dr Sparmann, in his Voyage to the Cape, men- tions, that 6 there was now again a great scarcity of meat in the waggon ; for which reason my Hottentots began to grumble, and reminded me that we ought not to waste so much of our time in looking after insects and plants, but give a bet- ter look out after the game. At the same time, they pointed to a neighbouring dale overrun with wood, at the upper edge of which, at the distance of about a mile and a quarter from the spot where we then were, they had seen several buffaloes. Accordingly, we went thither ; but though our fatigue was lessened by our Hottentots carrying our guns for us up a hill, yet we were quite out of breath, and overcome by the sun, before we got up to it. Yet, what even now appears to me a matter of wonder is, that as soon as we got a glimpse of the game, all this languor left us in an instant. In fact, we each of us strove to fire before the other, so that we seemed entirely to have lost sight of all prudence and caution.' — ' In the mean time, our temerity, which chiefly pro- ceeded from hurry and ignorance, was considered by the Hottentots as a proof of spirit and intre- pidity hardly to be equalled.' It is part of the same law, that the more agree- able the mental stimulus, the more benign is the nervous influence transmitted to the body. INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 123 I If we imagine a man or woman, who has receiv- ed from nature a large and tolerably active brain, but who has not enjoyed the advantages of a sci- entific or extensive education, so as to feel an in- terest in moral and intellectual pursuits for their own sake, and who, from possessing wealth suffi- cient to remove the necessity for labor, is engaged in no profession, we shall find a perfect victim to infringement of the natural laws. The individual ignorant of these laws, will, in all probability, neglect nervous and muscular exercise, and suffer the miseries arising from impeded circulation and impaired digestion ; in entire want of every ob- ject on which the energy of his brain might be expended, its stimulating influence on the body will be withheld, and the effects of muscular in- activity tenfold aggravated ; all the functions will, in consequence, become enfeebled ; lassi- tude, uneasiness, anxiety, and a thousand evils, will arise, and life, in short, will become a mere endurance of punishment for infringement of in- stitutions, calculated, in themselves, to promote happiness and afford delight, when known and obeyed. This fate frequently overtakes uneducat- ed females, whose early days have been occupied with business, or the cares of a family, but which occupations have ceased before old age had di- minished corporeal vigour; it overtakes men also, who, uneducated, retire from active business in the prime of life. In some instances, these evils accumulate to such a degree that the brain itself 124 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM gives way, its functions become deranged, and in- sanity is the result. It is worthy of remark, that the more elevated the objects of our study, the higher in the scale are the mental organs which are exercised, and the higher the organs the more pure and intense is the pleasure; and hence, a vivacious and regu- larly supported excitement of the moral senti- ments and intellect, is, by the organic law, high- ly favorable to health and corporeal vigour. In the fact of a living animal being able to retain life in an oven that will bake dead flesh, we see an illustration of the organic law rising above the purely physical; and, in the circumstance of the moral and intellectual organs transmitting the most favorable nervous influence to the whole bodily system, we have an example of the moral and intellectual law rising higher than the mere organic. No person after having his intellect and senti- ments imbued with a perception of, and belief in, the natural laws, as now explained, can possibly desire idleness, as a source of pleasure; nor can he possibly regard muscular exertion and mental activity, when not carried to excess, as anything else than enjoyments kindly vouchsafed to him by the benevolence of the Creator. The notion that moderate labor and mental exertion are evils, can originate only from ignorance, or from viewing the effects of over-exhaustion as the result of the natural law, and not as the punishment for in- fringement of it. INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 125 If, then, we sedulously inquire, in each particu- lar instance, into the cause of the sickness, pain, premature death, and general derangement of the corporeal frame of man, which we see around us, and endeavour to discover whether it has originat- ed in obedience to the physical and organic laws, or sprung from infringement of them, we shall be able to form some estimate how far bodily suffer- ing is justly attributable to imperfections of na- ture, and how far to our own ignorance and neg- lect of divine institutions. The foregoing principles being of much prac- tical importance, may', with propriety, be eluci- dated by a few cases of actual occurrence. Two or three centuries ago, various cities in Europe were depopulated by the plague, and, in particu- lar, London was visited by an awful mortality from this cause, in the reign of Charles the Sec- ond. The people of that age attributed this scourge to the inscrutable decrees of Providence, and some to the magnitude of the nation's moral iniquities. According to the views now present- ed, it must have arisen from infringement of the organic laws, and been intended to enforce strict- er obedience to them in future. According to this view, there was nothing inscrutable in its cau- ses or objects, which, when clearly analysed, appear to have had no direct reference to the moral con- dition of the people : I say direct reference to the moral condition of the people, because it would be easy to show, that the physical, organic, and 11* 126 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM all the other natural laws, are connected indirect- ly, and constituted in harmopy, with the moral law; and that infringement of the one often leads to disobedience to another, and brings a double punishment on the offender. But, in the mean time, I observe that the facts recorded in history exactly correspond with the theory now propound- ed. The streets of London were excessively nar- row, the habits of the people dirty, and no ade- quate provision was made for removing the filth unavoidably produced by a dense population. The great fire in that city, which happened soon after the pestilence, afforded an opportunity of remedying, in some degree, the narrowness of the streets; and habits of increasing cleanliness abat- ed the filth ; these changes brought the people into a closer obedience to the organic laws, and no plague has spice returned. Again, till very lately, thousands of children died yearly of the smallpox, but, in our day, vaccine inoculation saves ninetynine out of a hundred, who, under the old system, would have died. The theory of its operation is not. known, but we may rest assur- ed, that it places the system more in accordance with the organic laws, than in the cases where death ensued. A gentleman, who died about ten years ago at an advanced period of life, told me, that, six miles west from Edinburgh, the country was so unhealthy in his youth, that every spring the farmers and their servants were seized with fever and ague, and required regularly to undergo INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 127 bleeding, and a course of medicine, to prevent attacks, or restore them from their effects. At the time, these visitations were believed to be sent by Providence, and to be inherent in the con- stitution of things; after, however, said my in- formant, an improved system of agriculture and draining was established, and vast pools of stag- nant water formerly left between the ridges of the field were removed, dunghills carried to a dis- tance from the houses, and the houses themselves made more spacious and commodious, every symp- tom of ague and marsh-fever disappeared from the district, and it became highly salubrious. In other words, as soon as the gross infringement of the organic laws was abated by a more active ex- ertion of the muscular and intellectual powers of man, the punishment ceased. In like manner, how many calamities occurred in coalpits, in con- sequence of infringement of a physical law, viz. by introducing lighted candles and lamps into places filled with hydrogen gas, that had emanat- ed from seams of coal, and which exploded, scorched, and suffocated the men and animals within its reach, until Sir Humphrey Davy discov- ered that the Creator had established such a rela- tion betwixt flame, wire-gauze, and hydrogen gas, that by surrounding the flame with gauze, its pow- er of exploding hydrogen was counteracted. By the simple application of a covering of wire- gauze, put over and around the flame, it is pre- vented from igniting gas beyond it, and colliers 128 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM are now able to carry, with safety, lighted lamps into places highly impregnated with inflammable air. I have been informed, that the accidents from explosion, which still occasionally occur in coal mines, arise from neglecting to keep the lamps in perfect condition. It is needless to multiply examples in support of the proposition, that the organized system of man, in itself, admits of a healthy existence from infancy to old age, provided its germ has been healthy, and its subsequent condition has been uniformly in harmony with the physical and organic laws ; but it has been objected, that al- though the human faculties may perhaps be ade- quate to discover these laws, and to record them in books, yet they are totally incapable of retaining them in the memory, and of formally applying them in every act of life. If, it is said, we could not move a step without calculating and adjusting the body to the law of gravitation, and could nev- er eat a meal without a formal rehearsal of the organic laws, life would become oppressed by the pedantry of knowledge, and rendered miserable by petty observances and trivial details. The answer to this is, that all our faculties are adapted by the Creator to the external world, and act instinctive- ly when their objects are placed in the proper light before them. For example, in walking on a foot-path in the country during day, we are not conscious, in adjusting our steps to the inequalities of the surface, of being overburdened by mental INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 129 calculation. In fact, we perform this adjustment with so little trouble, that we are not aware of having made any particular mental or muscular effort. But, on returning at night, when we can- not see, we stumble, and discover, for the first time, how important a duty our faculties had been performing during day, without our having ad- verted to their labors. Now, the simple medium of light is sufficient to bring clearly before our eyes the inequalities of ground; but to make the mind equally familiar with the nature of the count- less objects, and their relations, which abound in external nature, an intellectual light is necessary, which can be struck out only by exercising and applying the knowing and reflecting faculties ; but the moment that light is obtained, and the quali- ties and relationships in question are perceived by its means, the faculties, so long as the light lasts, will act instinctively in adapting our conduct to the nature of the objects, just as in accommodating our movements to the unequal surface of the ground. It is no more necessary for us to go through a course of physical, botanical, and chem- ical reasoning, before we are able to abstain from eating hemlock, after its properties are known, than it is to go through a course of mathematical demonstration, before lifting the one foot higher than the other, in ascending a stair. At present, physical and political science, morals and religion, are not taught as parts of one connected system ; nor are the relations between them and the consti- 130 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* tution of man pointed out to the world. In con- sequence, theoretical knowledge and practice are often widely separated. Some of the advantages of the scientific education now recommended would be the following : In the 1st place, the physical and organic laws, when truly discovered, appear to the mind as in- stitutions of the Creator, wise and salutary in themselves, unbending in their operation, and uni- versal in their application. They interest our in- tellectual faculties, and strongly impress our senti- ments. The necessity of obeying them, comes upon us with all the authority of a mandate of God. While we confine ourselves to a mere re- commendation to beware of damp, to observe temperance, or to take exercise, without explain- ing the principle, the injunction carries only the weight due to the authority of the individual who gives it, and is addressed to only two or three fac- ulties, Veneration and Cautiousness, for instance, or Self-love in him who receives it. But if we are made acquainted with the elements of the physical world, and with those of our organized system, — with the uses of the different parts of the latter, and the conditions necessary to their healthy action, — with the causes of their derange- ment, and the pains consequent thereon : and if the obligation to attend to these conditions be enforced on our moral sentiments and intellect, then the motives to observe the physical and organic laws, as well as the power of doing so^ INFRINGEMENT OF THE ORGANIC LAWS. 131 will be prodigiously increased. Before we can dance well, we must not only know the motions, but our muscles must be trained to execute them. In like manner, to enable us to act on precepts, we must not only comprehend their meaning, but our intellects and sentiments must be disciplined into actual performance. Now, the very act of acquiring connected scientific information con- cerning the natural world, its qualities, and their relations, is to the intellect and sentiments what practical dancing is to the muscles ; it invigorates them; and, as obedience to the natural laws must spring from them, exercise renders it more easy and delightful. 2. It is only by being taught the principle on which consequences depend, that we see the in- variableness of the results of the physical and or- ganic laws ; acquire confidence in, and respect for the laws themselves ; and fairly endeavour to ac- commodate our conduct to their operation. Dr Johnson defines 'principle' to be 'fundamental truth; original postulate; first position from which others are deduced;' and in these senses I use the word. The human faculties are instinctively active, and desire gratification ; but Intellect itself must have fixed data, on which to reason, other- wise it is itself a mere impulse. The man in whom Constructiveness and Weight are powerful, will naturally betake himself to constructing ma- chinery ; but, if he be ignorant of the principles of mechanical science, he will not direct his 132 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND efforts to as important ends, and attain them as successfully, as if his intellect were stored with these. Principles are deduced from the laws of nature. A man may make music by the instinc- tive impulses of Time and Tune ; but there are immutable laws of harmony ; and, if ignorant of these, he will not perform so invariably, correctly, and in good taste, as if he knew them. In every art and science, there are principles referable solely to the constitution of nature, but these admit of countless applications. A musician may produce gay, grave, solemn, or ludicrous tunes, all good of their kind, by following the laws of harmony; but he will never produce one good piece by violating them. While the inhabitants west of Edinburgh allowed the stagnant pools to deface their fields, some seasons would be more healthy than others ; and, while the cause of the disease was unsuspected, this would con- firm them in the notion that health and sickness were dispensed by an overruling Providence, on inscrutable principles, which they could not com- prehend ; but the moment the cause was known, it would be found that the most healthy seasons were those that were cold and dry, and the most sickly those that were warm and moist ; and they would then perceive, that the superior salubrity of one year, and unwholesomeness of another, were clearly referable to one principle, and would be both more strongly prompted, and rendered morally and intellectually more capable of apply- FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 133 ing the remedy. If some intelligent friend had merely told them to drain their fields, and remove their dunghills, they would not probably have done it; but whenever their intellects were en- lightened, and their sentiments roused, to appre- ciate the advantages of adopting, and disadvan- tages of neglecting, the improvement, it became easy. The truth of these views may be still further illustratrated by examples. A young gentleman of Glasgow, whom I knew, went out, as a mer- chant to North America. Business required him to sail from New York to St Domingo. The weather was hot, and he, being very sick, found the confinement below deck, in bed, as he said, intolerable ; that is, this confinement was, for the moment, more painful than the course which he adopted, of laying himself down at full length on the deck, in the open air. He was warned by his fellow passengers, and the officersof the ship, that he would inevitably induce fever by this proceed- ing : but he was utterly ignorant of the physical and organic laws ; his intellect had been trained to regard only wealth and present pleasure as objects of real importance ; it could perceive no necessary connexion between exposure to the mild and grate- ful sea breeze of a warm climate and fever, and he obstinately refused to quit his position. The con- sequence was, that he was rapidly taken ill, and lived just one day after arriving at St Domingo. Knowledge of chemistry and physiology would 12 134 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND have enabled him, in an instant, to understand that the sea air, in warm climates, holds a pro- digious quantity of water in solution, and that damp and heat, operating together on the human organs, tend to derange their healthy action, and ultimately to destroy them entirely : and if his sentiments had been deeply imbued with a feeling of the indispensable duty of yielding obedience to the institutions of the Creator, he would have ac- tually enjoyed, not only a greater desire, but a greater power of supporting the temporary in- convenience of the heated cabin, and might, by possibility, have escaped death. Captain Murray, R. N. mentioned to D* A. Combe, that, in his opinion, most of the bad ef- fects of the climate of the West Indies might be avoided by care and attention to clothing ; and so satisfied was he on this point, that he had petitioned to be sent there in preference to the North American station, and had no reason to regret the change. The measures which he adopted, and their effects, are detailed in the following interesting and instructive letter : * Assynt, April 22, 1827. 1 My Dear Sir, 6 I should have written to you before this, had I not been anxious to refer to some memorandums, which I could not do before my return home from Coul. I attribute the great good health enjoyed FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 135 by the crew of his Majesty's ship Valorous, when on the West India station, during the period I had the honor of commanding her, to the follow- ing causes. 1st, To the keeping the ship perfectly dry and clean ; 2dly, To habituating the men to the wearing of flannel next the skin ; 3dly, To the pre- caution 1 adopted, of giving each man a propor- tion of his allowance of cocoa before he left the ship in the morning, either for the purpose of watering,' or any other duty he might be sent upon ; and, 4thly, To the cheerfulness of the crew. 1 The Valorous sailed from Plymouth on the 24th December, 1823, having just returned from the coast of Labrador and Newfoundland, where she had been stationed two years, the crew, including officers, amounting to 150 men. I had ordered the purser to draw two pairs of flannel drawers, ;and two shirts extra for each man, as soon as I knew that our destination was the West Indies ; and, on our sailing, I issued two of each to every man and boy in the ship, making the officers of each division responsible for the men of their res- pective divisions wearing these flannels during the day and night ; and, at the regular morning nine o'clock musters, I inspected the crew personally ; for you can hardly conceive the difficulty I have had in forcing some of the men to use flannel at first ; although I never yet knew one who did not, from choice, adhere to it, when once fairly adopt- ed. The only precaution after this, was to see that, in bad weather, the watch, when relieved, 136 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND did not turn in in their wet clothes, which the young hands were apt to do, if not looked after ; and their flannels were shifted every Sunday. ' Whenever fresh beef and vegetables could be procured at the contract price, they were always issued in preference to salt provision. Lime juice was issued whenever the men had been fourteen days on ship's provisions ; and the crew took their meals on the main deck, except in very bad weather. 6 The quarter and main decks were scrubbed with sand and ^yater, and w r et holy stones, every morn- ing at daylight. The lower deck, cock-pit, and store-rooms were scrubbed every day after break- fast, with dry holy stones and hot sand, until quite white, the sand being carefully swept up, and thrown overboard. The pump-well was also swabbed out dry, and then scrubbed with holy stones and hot sand ; and here, as well as in ev- ery part of the ship which was liable to damp, Brodiestoves were constantly used, until every appearance of humidity vanished. The lower deck and cock-pit were washed once every week in dry weather ; but Brodiestoves were constantly kept burning in them, until they were quite dry again. 'The hammocks were piped up, and in the net- tings, from 7 a. m. until dusk, when the men of each watch took down their hammocks alternate- ly, by which means, only one-half of the ham- mocks being down at a time, the tween decks FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 137 were not so crowded, and the watch relieved was sure of turning into a dry bed on going below. The bedding was aired every week, once at least. The men were not permitted to go on shore in the heat of the sun, or where there was a proba- bility of their getting spirituous liquors; but all hands were indulged with a run on shore, when out of reach of such temptation. 1 1 was employed on the coast of Caraccas, the West India Islands, and Gulf of Mexico ; and, in course of service, I visited Trinidad, Margarita, Cocha, Cumana, Nueva Barcelona, Laguira, Porto Cabello, and Maracaibo, on the coast of Carac- cas ; all the West India Islands, from Tobago to Cuba, both inclusive ; as also, Caragao and Aru- ba, and several of those places repeatedly ; also to Vera Cruz and Tampico, in the Gulf of Mex- ico, which you will admit must have given a trial to the constitutions of my men, after two years amongst the icebergs of the Labrador, without an intervening summer between that icy coast and the coast of Caraccas ; yet I arrived in England on June 24th, without having buried a single man or officer belonging to the ship, or indeed having a single man on the sick list ; from which I am satisfied that a dry ship will always be a healthy one in any climate. When in command of the Recruit, of 18 guns, in the year 1809, I was sent to Vera Cruz, where I found the 46, the 42, the 18, and gun-brig ; we were joined by the 36, and the 12* 138 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND 18. During the period we remained at anchor (from 8 to 10 weeks), the three frigates, lost from 30 to 50 men each, the brigs 16 to 18, the most of her crew, with two different commanders ; yet the Recruit, although moored in the middle of the squadron, and constant intercourse held with the other ships, did not lose a man, and had none sick. Now, as some of these ships had been as long in the West Indies as the Recruit, we cannot attribute her singularly healthy state to seasoning, nor can I to superior cleanliness, because even the breeches of the carronades, and all the pins, were polished bright in both and , which was not the case with the Re- cruit. Perhaps her healthy state may be attribut- ed to cheerfulness in the men ; to my never al- lowing them to go on shore in the morning, on an empty stomach ; to the use of dry sand and holy- stone for the ship ; to never working them in the sun; perhaps to accident. Were I asked my opinion, I would say that I firmly believe that cheerfulness contributes more to keep a ship's company healthy, than any precaution that can be adopted ; and that, with this attainment, com- bined with the precautions I have mentioned, I should sail for the West Indies, with as little anxiety as I would for any other station. My Valorous fellows were as cheerful a set as I ever saw collected together.' Suppose that two gentlemen were to ascend one of the Scottish mountains, in a hot summer day, FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 139 and to arrive at the top, bathed in perspiration, and exhausted with fatigue. That one of them knew intimately the physical and organic laws, and that, all hot and wearied as he was, he should button up his coat clos-er about his body, wrap a handkerchief about his neck, and continue walk- ing, at a quick pace, round the summit, in the full blaze of the sun. That the other, ignorant of these laws, should eagerly run to the base of a projecting cliff; stretch himself at full length on the turf, under its refreshing shade ; open his vest to the grateful breeze ; and, in short, give himself up entirely to the present luxuries of cool- ness and repose ; — the former, by warding off the rapid chill of the cool mountain air, would de- scend with health unimpared ; while the latter would carry with him, to a certainty, the seeds of rheumatism, consumption, or fever, from permit- ting perspiration to be instantaneously checked, and the surface of the body to be cooled with an injurious rapidity. I have put these cases hypo- thetically, because, although I have seen and ex- perienced the benefits of the former method, I have not directly observed the opposite. No season, however, passes in the Highlands, in which some tragedy of the latter description does not occur; and, from the minutest information that I have been able to obtain, the causes have been such as are here described. I shall conclude these examples by a case which is illustrative of the points under consider- 140 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND ation, and which I have had too good an opportu- nity of observing in all its stages. An individual in whom it was my duty as well as pleasure, to be greatly interested, had resolved on carrying Mr Owen's views into practical effect, and got an establishment set agoing on his prin- ciples, at Orbiston, in Lanarkshire. The labor and anxiety which he underwent at the commence- ment of the undertaking, gradually impaired an excellent constitution ; and, without perceiving the change, he, by way of setting an example of industry, took to digging with the spade, and ac- tually worked for fourteen days at this occupation, although previously unaccustomed to labor. This produced haemoptysis. Being unable now for bo- dily exertion, he gave up his whole time to direct- ing and instructing the people, about 250 in num- ber, and for two or three weeks spoke the whole day, the effusion from his lungs continuing. Na- ture rapidly sunk under this irrational treatment ; and at last he came to Edinburgh for medical ad- vice. When the structure and uses of his lungs were explained to him, and when it was pointed out that his treatment of them had been equally injudicious as if he had thrown lime or dust into his eyes, after inflammation, he was struck with the extent and consequences of his own ignorance, and exclaimed, How greatly he would have been benefited if one month of the five years which he had been forced to spend in a vain attempt at ac- quiring a mastery over the Latin tongue, had been FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 141 dedicated to conveying to him information con- cerning the structure of his body, and the causes which preserve and impair its functions. He had departed too widely from the organic laws to admit of an easy return ; he was seized with in- flammation of the lungs, and with great difficulty got through that attack; but it impared his con- stitution so grievously, that he died, after a linger- ing illness of eleven months. He acknowledged, however, even in his severest pain, that he suffered under a just law. The lungs, he saw, were of the first-rate importance to life, and their proper treat- ment was provided for by this tremendous punish- ment, inflicted for neglecting the conditions requi- site to their health. Had he given them rest, and returned to obedience to the organic law, at the first intimation of departure from it, the door stood wide open and ready to receive him ; but, in utter ignorance, he persevered for weeks in direct op- position to these conditions, till the fearful result ensued. This last case affords a striking illustration of the independence of the different institutions of the Creator, and of the necessity of obeying all of them, as the only condition of safety and enjoy- ment. The individual here alluded to, was deeply engaged in a most benevolent and disinterested experiment for promoting the welfare of his fellow creatures; and superficial observers would say that this was just an example of the inscrutable decrees of Providence, which visited him with 142 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND sickness, and ultimately with death, in the very midst of his most virtuous exertions. But the in- stitutions of the Creator are wiser than the imagi- nations of such men. The first principle on which existence on earth, and all its advantages depend, is obedience to the physical and organic laws. The benevolent Owenite neglected these, in his zeal to obey the moral law ; and, if it were possible to dispense with the one, by obeying the other, the whole theatre of man's existence would speedily become deranged, and involved in inexplicable disorder. Having traced bodily sufferings, in the case of individuals, to neglect of, or opposition to, the organic laws, by their progenitors or by them- selves, I next advert to another set of calamities, that may be called social miseries, and which ob- viously spring from the same causes ; but of which latter fact complete evidence was not possessed until Phrenology was discovered. And, first, in regard to evils of a domestic nature : — One fertile source of unhappiness arises from persons uniting in marriage whose tempers, talents, and disposi- tions do not harmonize. If it be true that natural talents and dispositions are connected by the Cre- ator with particular configurations of brain, then it is obviously one of His institutions that, in form- ing a compact for life, these should be attended to.* If we imagine an individual endowed with * See Appendix, Note 2. FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 143 the splendid cerebral developement of Raphael, under a mere animal impulse, uniting himself for life with a female, possessing a brain like that of Mary Macinnes,* which by no possibility, could sympathise with his, this proceeding would be as direct an obstacle to happiness, as if a man were to surround himself with ice to remove sensations of cold. Until Phrenology was discovered, no natu- ral index to mental qualities, that could be practi- cally relied on, was possessed, and each individual was left to his own sagacity in directing his con- duct; but the natural law never bended one iota to accommodate itself to that state of ignorance. The Creator having bestowed on mankind faculties fitted to discover Phrenology, having constituted them so that their greatest enjoyment should con- sist in activity, framed his institutions in such a way as to confer happiness when they were dis- covered, and observed, and to carry punishment when unknown and infringed, as an arrangement at once benevolent and wise for the race. If it be the fact, that natural talents and dispositions are indicated by cerebral developement ; and if an individual, after this truth reaches his mind, shall form a connexion fitted to occasion him sorrow, it is obvious he must do so from one of two causes, either from contempt of the effects of developement of brain, and a secret belief that he may evade its consequences, which is just contempt of an or- * Casts of these heads are sold in the shops, and will be found in many Phrenological collections. 144 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND ganic law, and disbelief in its consequences ; or, secondly, from the predominance of avarice, or some animal or other feeling precluding his yield- ing obedience to what he sees to be an institution of the Creator. In either case, he must abide the consequences ; and although these may be griev- ous, they cannot be complained of as unjust. In the play of the Gamester, Mrs Beverly is repre- sented as a most excellent wife, acting habitually under the guidance of the moral sentiments and intellect ; but she is married to a being who, while he adores her, reduces her to beggary and misery. His sister utters an exclamation to this effect : — Why did just Heaven unite such an angel to so heartless a thing ! The parallel of this case occurs too often in real life; only it is not 'just Heaven ' that makes such matches, but ignorant and thoughtless human beings, who imagine them- selves absolved from all obligation to study and obey the natural laws of Heaven, as announced in the general arrangement of the universe. Phre- nology will put it in the power of mankind to mitigate these evils, when they choose to adopt its dictates as a practical rule of conduct. The justice and benevolence of rendering the individuals themselves unhappy who neglect this great institution of the Creator, become more striking when in the next place, we consider the effects, by the organic law, of such conduct on the children of these ill-assorted unions. FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 145 Physiologists, in general, are agreed, that a vigorous and healthy constitution of body in the parents, communicates existence, in the most per- fect state, to the offspring,* and many observers of mankind, as well as medical authors, have re- marked, also, the transmission, by hereditary de- scent, of mental talents and dispositions. Dr King, in speaking of the fatality which at- tended the House of Stuart, says, 'If I were to ascribe their calamities to another cause (than an evil fate), or endeavour to account for them by any natural means, I should think they were chiefly owing to a certain obstinacy of temper, which appears to have been hereditary and inhe- rent in all the Stuarts, except Charles II.' It is well known that the caste of the Brahmins is the highest in point of intelligence as well as rank of all the castes in Hindostan ; and it is mentioned by the missionaries as an ascertained fact, that their children are naturally more acute, intelligent, and docile, than the children of the inferior castes, age and other circumstances be- ing equal. Dr Gregory, in treating of the temperaments in his Conspectus Medicince Theoretics, says, ' Hujusmodi varietates non corporis modo, verum et animi quoque, plerumque congenita, nonnun- * Very young hens lay small eggs; but a breeder of fowls will never set these to be hatched, because the animals produced would be feeble and imperfectly developed. They select the largest and freshest eggs, and endeavour to rear the healthiest stock possible. 13 146 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND quam haereditariae, observantur. Hoc modo pa- rentes saepe in proles reviviscunt ; certe parenti- bus liberi similes sunt, non vultum modo et cor- poris formam, sed animi indolem, et virtutes, et vitia. Imperiosa gens Claudia diu Romae floruit, impigra, ferox, superba ; eadem illachrymabilem Tiberium, tristissimum tyrennum, produxit; tan- dem in immanem Caligulam, et Claudium, et Agrippinam, ipsumque demum Neronem, post sex- centos annos, desitura.' *— Cap. i. sect. 16. Phrenology reveals the principle on which these phenomona take place. Mental talents and dis- positions are determined by the size and constitu- tion of the brain. The brain is a portion of our organised system, and as such, is subject to the organic laws, by one of which its qualities are transmitted by hereditary descent. This law, how- ever faint or obscure it may appear in individual cases, becomes absolutely undeniable in nations. When we place the collection of Hindoo, Charib, Negro, New Holland, North American, and Euro- pean skulls, possessed by the Phrenological Socie- ty, in juxtaposition, we perceive a national form and combination of organs in each actually ob- truding itself upon our notice, and corresponding with the mental characters of the respective tribes; the cerebral developement of one tribe is seen to * Parents frequently live again in their offspring. It is quite cer- tain that children resemble their parents, not only in countenance and the form of their body, but also in their mental dispositions, in their virtues and vices, &c. FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 147 differ as widely from that of another, as the Eu- ropean mind does from that of the New Holland- er. Here, then, each Hindoo, Chinese, New Hol- lander, Negro, and Charib, obviously inherits from his parents a certain general type of head ; and so does each European. If, then, the general forms and proportions are thus so palpably trans- mitted, can we doubt that the individual varieties follow the same rule, modified slightly by causes peculiar to the parents of the individual ? The differences of national character are equally con- spicuous as those of national brains, and it is sur- prising how permanently both endure. It is ob- served by an author in the Edinburgh Review, that 'the Vicentine district is, as every one knows, and has been for ages, an integral part of the Venetian dominions, professing the same religion, and governed by the same laws, as the other con- tinental provinces of Venice ; yet the English character is not more different from the French, than that of the Vicentine from the Paduan ; while the contrast between the Vicentine and his other neighbour, the Veronese, is hardly less re- markable.'— No. lxxxiv. p. 459. If, then, form, size, and constitution of brain, are transmitted from parents to children, if these determine natural mental talents and dispositions, which in their turn exercise the greatest influence over the happiness of individuals through the whole of life, it becomes extremely important to discover according to what laws this transmis- 148 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND sion takes place. Three principles present them- selves to our consideration, at the first aspect of the question. Either, in the first place, the con- stitution and qualities of brain, which the parents themselves inherit at birth, are transmitted abso- lutely, so that the children, sex following sex, are exact copies, without variation or modification, of the one parent or the other ; or, secondly, the natu- ral and inherent qualities of the father and moth- er combine, and are transmitted in a modified form to the offspring; or, thirdly, the qualities of the children are determined jointly by the consti- tution of the stock, and by the faculties which predominate in power and activity in the parents, at the particular time when the organic existence of each child commences. Experience shows that the first cannot be the law ; for, as often mentioned, a real law of nature admits of no exceptions, and it is well established, that the minds of children are not exact copies, without variation or modification, of those of the parents, sex following sex. Neither can the se- cond be the law, because it is equally certain that the minds of children, although sometimes, are not always, in talents and disposition, perfect modifi- cations of those of the father and mother. If this law prevailed, no child would be a copy of the father, none a copy of the mother, nor of any collateral relation, but each would be invariably a compound of the two parents, and all the chil- dren would be exactly alike, sex only excepted. FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 149 Experience shows, that this cannot be the law. What, then, does experience say to the third idea, that the mental character of each child is deter- mined by the particular qualities of the stock, combined with those which predominate in the parents, when its existence commenced. I have already adverted to the influence of the stock, and shall now illustrate that of the con- dition of the parents, when existence is commu- nicated. A strong illustration, in the case of the lower animals, appeared in the Edinburgh Review, No. lxxxiv. p. 457. * Every one conversant with beasts,' says the reviewer, * knows, that not only their natural, but that many of their acquired qualities, are trans- mitted by the parents to their offspring. Perhaps the most curious example of the latter fact may be found in the pointer. ' This animal is endowed with the natural in- stinct of winding game, and stealing upon his prey, which he surprises, having first made a short pause, in order to launch himself upon it with more security of success. This sort of semi- colon in his proceedings, man converts into a full stop, and teaches him to be as much pleased at seeing the bird or beast drop by the shooter's gun, as at taking it himself. The staunchest dog of this kind, and of the original pointer, is of Spanish origin, and our own, is derived from this race, crossed with that of the foxhound, or other 13* 150 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND breed of dog, for the sake of improving his speed, This mixed and factitious race, of course, natu- rally partakes less of the true pointer character ; that is to say, is less disposed to stop, or at least he makes a shorter stop at game. The factitious pointer is, however, disciplined, in this country, into staunchness ; and, what is most singular, THIS QUALITY IS, IN A GREAT DEGREE, INHERITED by his puppy, who may be seen earnestly standing at swallows or pigeons in a farm-yard. For in- tuition, though it leads the offspring to exercise his parent's faculties, does not instruct him how to direct them. The preference of his master afterwards guides him in his selection, and teaches him what game is better worth pursuit. On the other hand, the pointer of pure Spanish race, un- less he happen to be well broke himself, which in the south of Europe seldom happens, produces a race which are all but unteachable, according to our notions of a pointer's business. They will make a stop at their game, as natural instinct prompts them, but seem incapable of being drilled into the habits of the animal, which education has formed in this country, and has rendered, as I have said, in some degree, capable of transmitting his acquirements to his descendants. ' Acquired habits are hereditary in other ani- mals besides dogs. English sheep, probably from the greater richness of our pastures, feed very much together ; while Scotch sheep are obliged to extend and scatter themselves over their hills, FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 151 for the better discovery of food. Yet the English sheep, on being transferred to Scotland, keep their old habit of feeding in a mass, though so little adapted to their new country ; so do their de- scendants ; and the English sheep is not thorough- ly naturalized into the necessities of his place till the third generation. The same thing may be observed as to the nature of his food, that is ob- served in his mode of seeking it. When turnips were introduced from England into Scotland, it was only the third generation which heartily adopted this diet, the first having been starved into an acquiescence in it.' In these instances, long continued impressions on the parents appear to have at last effected change of disposition in the offspring. ' We have seen,' says an author whom I have already quoted, 'how wonderfully the be€ works — according to rules discovered by man thousands of years after the insect had followed them with perfect accuracy. The same little animal seems to be acquainted with principles of which we are still ignorant. We can, by crossing, vary the forms of cattle with astonishing nicety ; but we have no means of altering the nature of an ani- mal, once born, by means of treatment and feed- ing. This power, however, is undeniably pos- sessed by the bees. When the queen-bee is lost, by death or otherwise, they choose a grub from among those who are born for workers ; they make three cells into one, and, placing the grub 152 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND there, they build a tube round it ; they afterwards build another cell, of a pyramidal form, into which the grub grows : they feed it with peculiar food, and tend it with extreme care. It becomes, when transformed from the worm to the fly, not a work- er, but a queen-bee.' — Objects, Advantages, and Pleasures of Science, p. 33. It is difficult to con- ceive that man will ever possess such a power as this last. Man, however, as an organized being, is subject to laws similar to those which govern the organi- zation of the lower animals. Dr Pritchard, in his Researches into the Physical History of Man- kind, has brought forward a variety of interesting facts and opinions on this subject of transmission of hereditary qualities in the human race. He says, ' Children resemble, in feature and consti- tution, both parents, but, I think, more generally the father. In the breeding of horses and oxen, great importance is attached, by experienced pro- pagators, to the male. In sheep, it is commonly observed that black rams beget black lambs. In the human species, also, the complexion chiefly follows that of the father ; and I believe it to be a general fact, that the offspring of a black father and white mother is much darker than the progeny of a white father and a black mother.' — Vol. ii. p. 551. These facts appear to me to be referable to both causes. The stock must have had some influence, but the mother, in all these cases, is not impressed by her own color, because she does not FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 153 look on herself; while the father's complexion must strikingly attract her attention, and may, in this way, give the darker tinge to the offspring.* Dr Pritchard states the result of his investi- gations to be, First, That the organization of the offspring is always modelled according to the type of the original structure of the parent ; and, Secondly, ' That changes, produced by external causes in the appearance or constitution of the individual are temporary ; and, in general, ac- quired characters are transient ; they terminate with the individual, and have no influence on the progeny.' — Vol. ii. p. 536. He supports the first of these propositions by a variety of facts occur- ring ' in the porcupine family,' ' in the hereditary nature kj£ cumpiexion,' and, ' in the growth of su- pernumerary fingers or toes, and corresponding deficencies.' ' Maupertuis has mentioned this phenomenon ; he assures us, that there were two families in Germany, who have been distin- guished for several generations by six fingers on each hand, and the same number of toes on each foot,' &c. He admits, at the same time, that the second proposition is of more difficult proof, and that an opinion contrary to it ' has been maintain- ed by some writers, and a variety of singular facts have been related in support of it.' But many of these relations, as he justly observes, are obviously fables. * Black hens lay dark-colored eggs, 154 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND In regard to the foregoing propositions, I would observe, that a manifest distinction exists between transmission of monstrosities, or mutilations, which constitute additions to, or abstractions from, the natural lineaments of the body, and transmission of a mere tendency in particular organs to a greater or less developement of their natural functions. This last appears to me to be influ- enced by the state of the parents, at the time when existence is communicated to the offspring. On this point Dr Pritchard says, { The opinion which formerly prevailed, and which has been entertained by some modern writers/ among whom is Dr Darwin, that at the period when organiza- tion commences in the ovum, that is, at or soon after the time of conception, the structure of the foetus is capable of undergoing modification from impressions on the mind or senses of the parent, does not appear altogether so improbable. It is contradicted, at least, by no fact in physiology. It is an opinion of very ancient prevalence, and may be traced to so remote a period, that its rise cannot be attributed to the speculations of phi- losophers, and it is difficult to account for the origin of such a persuasion, unless we ascribe it to facts which happened to be observed.' p. 556. A striking and undeniable proof of the effect on the character and dispositions of children, pro- duced by the form of brain transmitted to them by hereditary descent, is to be found in the pro- geny of marriages between Europeans, whose FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 155 brains possess a favorable developement of the moral and intellectual organs, and Hindoos, and native Americans, whose brains are inferior. All authors agree, and report the circumstance as singularly striking, that the children of such unions are decidedly superior in mental qualities to the native, while they are still inferior to the European parent. Captain Franklin says, that the half-bred American Indians ' are upon the whole a good looking people ; and, where the experiments have been made, have shown much expertness in learning, and willingness to be taught ; they have, however, been sadly neglect- ed.' p. 86. He adds, ' It has been remarked, I do not know with what truth, that half breeds show more personal courage than the pure breeds.' Captain Basil Hall, and other writers on South America, mention that the offspring of native American and Spanish parents, constitute the most active, vigorous, and powerful portion of the inhabitants of these countries ; and many of them rose to high commands during the revolu- tionary war. So much is this the case in Hin- dostan, that several writers have already pointed to the mixed race there, as obviously destined to become the future sovereigns of India. These individuals inherit from the native parent a cer- tain adaptation to the climate, and from the European parent a higher developement of brain* the two combined constituting their superiority. 156 ON THE EVILS THAT BEFALL MANKIND Another example of the same law occurs in Persia. In that country, it is said that the cus- tom has existed for ages among the nobles, of purchasing beautiful female Circassian captives, and forming alliances with them as wives. It is ascertained that the Circassian form of brain stands comparatively high in the developement of the moral and intellectual organs.* And it is mentioned by some travellers, that the race of nobles in Persia is the most gifted in natural qualities, bodily and mental, of any class of that people ; a fact diametrically opposite to that which takes place in Spain, and other European countries, where the nobles intermarry constantly with each other, and set the organic laws alto- gether at defiance. The degeneracy and even idiocy of some of the noble and royal families of Spain and Portugal, from marrying nieces, and other near relations, is well known ; and defective brains, in all these cases, are observed. The father of Napoleon Bonaparte, says Sir Walter Scott, ' is stated to have possessed a very handsome person, a talent for eloquence, and a vivacity of intellect, which he transmitted to his son.' ' It was in the middle of civil discord, * In Mr W. Allan's picture of the Circassian Captives, the form of the head is said to be a copy from nature, taken by that artist, when he visited the country. It is engraved by Mr James Stewart with great beauty and fidelity, and may be consulted as an example of the superiority of Circassian developement of the brain. FROM INFRINGEMENT OF ORGANIC LAWS. 157 fights, and skirmishes, that Charles Bonaparte married L^titia Ramolini, one of the most beau- tiful young women of the island, and possessed of a great deal of firmness of character. She par- took of the dangers of her husband during the years of civil war, and is said to have accompa- nied him on horseback on some military expedi- tions, or perhaps hasty flights, shortly before her being delivered of the future Emperor.' — Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, vol. iii» p- 6. The murder of Davip Rizzio was perpetrated by armed nobles, with many circumstances of vio- lence and terror, in the presence of Mary, Queen of Scotland, shortly before the birth of her son, afterwards James the First of England. The con- stitutional liability of this monarch to emotions of fear, is recorded as a characteristic of his mind ; and it has even been mentioned that he started in- voluntarily at the sight of a drawn sword. Queen Mary was not deficient in courage, and the Stu- arts, both before and after James the First, were distinguished for this quality ; so that he was a marked exception to the dispositions of his family. Napoleon and James form striking contrasts ; and it may be remarked that the mind of Napoleon's mother appears to have risen to the danger to which she was exposed, and braved it ; while the circumstances in which Queen Mary was placed, were calculated to inspire her with fear alone. Further evidence of the same law may still be mentioned. Es^uirol, the celebrated French 14 158 ORGANIC LAWS. medical writer, in adverting to the causes of mad- ness, mentions that many children whose exist- ence dated from periods when the horrors of the French Revolution were at their height, turned out subsequently to be weak, nervous, and irrita- ble in mind, extremely susceptible of impressions, and liable, by the least extraordinary excitement, to be thrown into absolute insanity. Again, in a case which fell under my observation, the father of a family was sick, had a partial recovery, but relapsed, declined, and in two months died. Se- ven months after his death, a son was born, of the full age ; and the origin of whose existence was referable to the period of the partial recovery. At that time, and during the subsequent two months, the faculties of the mother were in the highest state of excitement, in ministering to her husband, to whom she was greatly attached $ and, after his death, the same excitement continued to operate, for she was then loaded with the charge of a numerous family, but not depressed; for her circumstances were comfortable. The child is now more than ten years old ; and, while his constitution is the most delicate, his devel- opement of the mental organs, and the natural activity of these, is decidedly the greatest of the family. Another illustration of the same law is found in the fact, that, when two parties marry very young, the eldest of their children generally inherits a less favorable developement of the moral and intellectual organs, than those pro- TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 159 duced in more mature age, — which is in exact correspondence with the doctrine, that the animal faculties in men, in general, are most vigorous in early life, and will then be most readily trans- mitted to offspring. Indeed, it appears difficult to account for the wide varieties in the form of the brain in children of the same family, unless on the principle, that the organs which predomi- nate in activity and vigour in the parents, at the time when existence is communicated, determine the tendency of corresponding organs to develope themselves largely in the children. If this is really the law of nature, as there is great reason for believing, then parents, in whom combative- ness and destructiveness are in habitual activity, will transmit these organs, in a state of high de- velopement and excitement, to their children; and those in whom the moral and intellectual organs exist in supreme vigour, will transmit these in greatest perfection. This view is in harmony with the fact that chil- dren generally, although not universally, resemble the parents in their mental qualities ; because the largest organs being naturally the most active, the general and habitual state of the parents will be strongly marked by those which predominate in size in their own brains ; and on the principle of predominance in activity and energy causing the transmission of similar qualities to the off- spring, the children will, in this way, very gener- ally resemble the parents. But they will not 160 ORGANIC LAWS. always do so ; because, even Mary Macinnes, in whom the moral and intellectual organs were extremely deficient, might have been exposed to external influences which, for the time being, might have excited them to unwonted vivacity; and, according to the rule, as now explained, a child, dating its existence from that period, might have inherited a higher organization of brain than her own. Or, a person with a very excellent mo- ral developement, might, by some particular oc- currence, have his animal propensities roused to unwonted vigour, and his moral sentiments thrown, for the time, into the shade ; and any offspring connected with that condition, would prove infe- rior to himself in the developement of the moral organs, and greatly surpass him in the size of those of the propensities. I do not present these views as ascertained phrenological science, but as inferences strongly supported by facts, and consistent with known phenomena. If we suppose them to be true, they will greatly strengthen the motives for pre- serving the habitual supremacy of the moral sen- timents and intellect, when, by doing so, im- proved moral and intellectual capacities may be conferred on offspring. If it be true that this lower world, so far as man is concerned, is framed to harmonize with the supremacy of the higher faculties of the mind, what a noble prospect would this law open up of the possibility of man ulti- mately becoming capable of placing himself more TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 161 fully in accordance with the Divine institutions, than he has hitherto been able to accomplish ; and, in consequence, of reaping numberless en- joyments that appear destined for him by his Cre- ator, and avoiding thousands of miseries that now render his life a series of calamities. The views here expounded also harmonize with the second principle of this "Essay, namely, That, as activity in the faculties is the fountain of enjoyment, the whole constitution of nature is designedly framed to call on them for ceaseless exertion. What scope for observation, reflection, the exercise of moral sentiments, and regulating of animal im- pulse, does not this picture of nature present ! I cordially agree, however, with Dr Pritch- ard, that this subject is still involved in very great obscurity. ' We know not, 5 says he, f by what means any of the facts we remark are ef- fected ; and the utmost we can hope to attain, is, by tracing the connexion of circumstances, to learn from what combinations of them we may expect to witness particular results.' — Vol. ii. p. 542. But much of the darkness may be traced to the past ignorance of mankind concern- ing the functions of the brain. If we consider that it has all along been the most important organ of our system ; that, from its office, mental impressions must almost necessarily have exercis- ed a powerful influence over the developement of its parts, and that the relative size of these deter- mines the predominance of particular talents and 14* 162 ORGANIC LAWS. dispositions ; but, nevertheless, that all past obser- vations have been conducted without the know- ledge of these principles ; it will not appear marvellous that merely confusion and contradic- tion have existed in the results drawn. At the present moment, accordingly, almost all that phre- nologists can pretend to accomplish, is, to point out the mighty void ; to offer an exposition of its causes ; and to state such inferences as their own very limited observations have hitherto enabled them to deduce. Far from pretending to be in possession of certain and complete knowledge on this subject, I am inclined to think, that, although every conjecture now hazarded were true, several centuries of observation will probably be required to render the principles completely practical. At present we have almost no information concern- ing the effects, on the children, of different tem- peraments, of different combinations in the cere- bral organs, of differences of age, &c. in the parents. It is astonishing, however, to what extent mere pecuniary interests excite men to investigate and observe the Natural Laws, and how small an in- fluence moral and rational considerations exert in leading them to do so. Before a common insur- ance company will undertake the risk of paying £100, on the death of an individual, they require the following questions to be answered by credible and intelligent witnesses : ' 1. How long have you known Mr A. B. ? TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 163 ' 2. Has he had the gout ? 6 3. Has he had a spitting of blood, asthma, consumption, or other pulmonary complaint? t 4. Do you consider him at all predisposed to any of these complaints ? ' 5. Has he been afflicted with fits, or mental derangement ? ' 6. Do you think his constitution perfectly good, in the common acceptation of the term ? '7. Are his habits in every respect strictly regu- lar and temperate ? 1 8. Is he at present in good health ? ' 9. Is there any thing in his form, habits of liv- ing, or business, which you are of opinion may shorten his life ? 1 10. What complaints are his family most sub- ject to ? '11. Are you aware of any reason why an insur- ance might not with safety be effected on his life?' A man and woman about to marry, have in the general case, the health and happiness of five or more human beings depending on their attention to consideration, essentially the same as the fore- going, and yet how much less scrupulous are they than the mere speculators in money ? There is no moral difficulty in admitting and admiring the wisdom and benevolence of the institution, by which good qualities are transmit- ted from parents to children ; but it is frequently held as unjust to the latter, that they should in- 164 ORGANIC LAWS. herit parental deficiencies, and so be made to suffer for sins which they did not commit. In solving this difficulty, I must again refer to the suprema- cy of the moral sentiments, as the theory of the Constitution of the world. The animal propensi- ties are all selfish, and regard only the immediate and apparent interest of the individual ; while the higher sentiments delight in that which communi- cates the greatest quantity of enjoyment to the greatest number. Now, let us suppose the law of hereditary descent to be abrogated altogether, that is to say, that each individual of the race at birth were endowed with fixed natural qualities, without the slightest reference to what his parents had been, or done ; — this form of constitution would obviously cut off every possibility of improvement in the race. Every phrenologist knows, that the New Hollanders, Charibs, and other savage tribes, are distinguished by great deficiencies in the moral and intellectual organs.* If, however it be true, that considerable developement of intellectual organs is indispensable to the comprehension of science, and the practice of virtue, it would, on the present supposition, be impossible to raise the New Hollanders, as a people, one step higher in capacity for intelligence and virtue than they now are. We might cultivate each generation up to the limit of its powers, but there the improvement, and a low one it would be, would stop; for the next * This fact is demonstrated by specimens in most Phrenological Collections. TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 165 generation, being produced with brains equally de- ficient in the moral and intellectual regions, no principle of increasing amelioration would exist. The same remarks are applicapable to every tribe of mankind. If we assume modern Europeans as the standard, then, if the law of hereditary de- scent were abrogated, every deficiency that at this moment is attributable to imperfect or dis- proportionate developement of brain, would be irremediable, and continue as long as the race existed. Each generation might be cultivated till the summit level of its capacities was attain- ed, but there each succeeding generation would remain. When we contrast with this prospect the very opposite effects flowing from the law of hereditary transmission of qualities in an increas- ing ratio, the whole advantages are at once per- ceived to be on the side of the latter constitution. According to this rule, the children of the indi- viduals who have obeyed the organic, the moral, and the intellectual laws, would start from the highest level of their parents, not only in acquir- ed knowledge, but in consequence of that very obedience, they would inherit an enlarged de- velopement of the moral and intellectual organs, and thereby enjoy an increasing capability of dis- covering and obeying the Creator's institutions. This improvement, will, no doubt, have its limits ; but it may probably extend to that point at which man will be capable of placing himself in harmony with the natural laws. The effort necessary to 166 ORGANIC LAWS. maintain himself there, will still provide for the activity of his faculties. 2dly, We may suppose the law of hereditary descent to be limited to the transmission of good, &nd abrogated as to the transmission of bad quali- ties ; and it may be thought that this arrangement would be more benevolent and just. There are objections to this view, however, which do not oc- cur at once to the mind. We see as matter of fact, that a vicious and debased parent is actually defective in the moral and intellectual organs. Now, if his children should take up exactly the same developement as himself, this would be transmission of imperfections, which is the very point objected to ; or, if he were to take up a developement fixed by nature, and not at all refer- able to that of the parent ; this would render the whole race stationary in their first condition, without the possibility of improvement in their capacities, which also we have seen would be an evil greatly to be deprecated. 3dly. The bad developement might be supposed to transmit, by hereditary descent, a good devel- opement ; but this would set at nought the su- premacy of justice and benevolence ; it would render the consequences of contempt for, and vio- lation of the divine laws, and of obedience to them, in this particular, precisely alike. The debauchee, the cheat, the murderer, and the robber, would, according to this view, be able to look upon the prospects of their prosperity, with the same confi- TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 167 dence in their welfare and happiness, as the pious and intelligent Christian, who had sought to know God and to obey his institutions during his whole life. Certainly no individual, in whom the higher sentiments prevail, will for a moment regard this imagined change as any improvement on the Cre- ator's arrangements. What a host of motives to moral and religious conduct would at once be withdrawn, were such a spectacle of divine gov- ernment exhibited to the mind. In proportion as the brain is improved, the aptitude of man for dis- covering and obeying the natural laws will be in- creased. For example, it appears to me that the native American savages, and native New Hol- landers, cannot, with their present brains, adopt European civilization. The reader will find in the Phrenological Collections specimens of their skulls, and, on comparing them with those of Europeans, he will observe that, in the former, the organs of reflecting intellect, Ideality, Conscien- tiousness, and Benevolence, are greatly inferior in size to the same organs in the latter. If, by obey- ing the organic laws, the moral and intellectual organs of these savages could be considerably en- larged, they would desire civilization, and would adopt it when offered. If this view be well found- ed, all means used for their cultivation, which are not calculated at the same time to improve their cerebral organization, will be limited in their effects by the narrow capacities attending their present developement. In youth, all the organs 168 ORGANIC LAWS. of the body are more susceptible of modification than in advanced age ; and hence the effects of education on the young may arise from the greater susceptibility of the brain to impressions at that period than later. 4thly. It may be supposed that human happiness would have been more completely secured, by en- dowing all individuals at birth with that degree of developement of the moral and intellectual or- gans, which would have best fitted them for dis- covering and obeying the Creator's institutions, and by preventing all aberrations from this stand- ard ; just as the lower animals appear to have re- ceived instincts and capacities, adjusted with the most perfect wisdom to their conditions. Two re- marks occur on this supposition. First ; We are not competent at present to judge correctly how far the developement actually bestowed on the human race, is, or is not, wisely adapted to their circum- stances ; for there may, by possibility, be depart- ments in the great system of human society, exact- ly suited to all existing forms of brain, not imper- fect through disease, if our knowledge were suffi- cient to discover them. The want of a natural index to the mental dispositions and capacities of individuals, and of a philosophical theory of the constitution of society, has hitherto precluded the possibility of arriving at sound conclusions on this question. It appears to me probable, that, while there may be great room for improvement in the talents and dispositions of vast numbers of individ- TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 169 uals, the imperfections of the race in general may not be so great, as we, in our present state of ig- norance of the aptitudes of particular persons for particular situations, are prone to infer. But, se- condly, on the principle that activity in the facul- ties is the fountain of enjoyment, it may be con- sidered whether additional motives to the exercise of the moral and intellectual powers, and, conse- quently, greater happiness, are not conferred by leaving men, within certain limits, to regulate the talents and tendencies of their descendants, than by endowing each individual with the best quali- ties, independently of the conduct of his parents. On the whole, therefore, there seems reason for concluding, that the actual institution, by which both good and bad qualities* are transmitted, is fraught with higher advantages to the race, than the abrogation of the law of transmission altogeth- er ; or than the supposed change of it, by which bad men would transmit good qualities to their children. The actual law, when viewed by the moral sentiments and intellect, both in its princi- ples and consequences, appears bepeficial and ex- pedient. When an individual sufferer, therefore, * In using the popular expressions ' good qualities' and < bad qual- ities,' I do not mean to insinuate, thai any of the tendencies bestow- ed on man are essentially bad in themselves. Destructiveness and Acquisitiveness, for example, are, when properly directed, unques- tionably good ; but they become the sources of evil, when their or- gans are too large, in proportion to those of the moral sentiments and intellect. By bad qualities, therefore, I always mean either disease, or unfavorable proportions among the different organs. 15 170 ORGANIC LAWS. complains of its operation, he regards it through the animal faculties alone; his self-love is annoy- ed, and he carries his thoughts no further. He never stretches his mind forward to the conse- quences to mankind at large, if the law which grieves him were reversed. The animal faculties regard nothing beyond their own immediate and apparent interest, and they do not even discern it correctly ; for no arrangement that is beneficial for the race can be injurious to individuals, if its operations in regard to them were distinctly trac- ed. The abrogation of the rule, therefore, under which they complain, would, we may be certain, bring ten thousand times greater evils, even upon themselves, than its continuance. On the other hand, an individual sufferer under a hereditary pain, in whom the moral and intellec- tual faculties predominate, who should see the principle and consequences of the institution of hereditary descent, as now explained, would not murmur at them as unjust ; he would bow with submission to an institution, which he perceived to be fraught with blessings to the race, when it was known and observed, and the very practice of this reverential acquiescence would be so de- lightful, that it would diminish, in~ a great de- gree, the severity of the evil. Besides, he would see the door of mercy standing widely open, and inviting his return ; he would perceive that every step which he made in his own person towards exact obedience to the Creator's institutions, TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 171 would remove by so much the organic penalty transmitted through his parents' transgressions, and that his posterity would reap the full benefits of his more dutiful observance. It may be objected to the law of hereditary transmission of organic qualities, that the children of a blind and lame father have sound eyes and limbs : But, in the 1st place, these defects are generally the result of accident or disease, occur- ring either during pregnancy, or posterior to birth, and seldom or never the operation of nature ; and, consequently, the original physical principles re- maining entire in the constitution, the bodily im- perfections are not transmitted to the progeny. 2dly. Where the defects are congenite or consti- tutional, it frequently happens that they are trans- mitted through successive generations. This is exemplified in deafness, in blindness, and even in the possession of supernumerary fingers or toes. The reason why such peculiarities are not trans- mitted to all the progeny, appears to be simply that, in general, only one parent is defective. If the father, for instance, be blind or deaf, the mother is generally free from that imperfection, and her influence naturally extends to, and modifies the result in, the progeny. If the law of hereditary transmission of mental qualities be, as now explained, dependent on the organs in highest excitement in the parents, it will account for the varieties, along with the general resemblance, that occur in children of the same 172 ORGANIC LAWS. marriage. It will account also for the circum- stance of genius being sometimes transmitted and sometimes not. Unless both parents possess the developements and temperament of genius, the law would not certainly transmit these qualities to the children ; and even although both did possess these endowments, they would be transmitted only on condition of the parents obeying the organic laws, one of which forbids that excessive exertion of the mental and corporeal functions, which ex- hausts and debilitates the system ; an error almost universally committed by persons endowed with high original talent, under the present condition of ignorance of the natural laws, and erroneous fashions and institutions of society. The suppos- ed law would be disproved by cases of weak, im- becile, and vicious children, being born to parents whose own constitution and habits had been in the highest accordance with the organic, moral, and intellectual laws ; but no such cases have hitherto come under my observation. Further ; after birth, it is quite certain that the organs most active in the parents have a decided tendency to cause and increase in the size of cor- responding organs in the children, by habitually exciting and exercising them, which favors their growth. According to this law, habitual severity, chiding, and imperious conduct, proceeding from over-active Self-esteem and Destructiveness in the parents, rouse these faculties in the children, pro- duce hatred and resistance, and increase the ac- TRANSMISSION OF HEREDITARY QUALITIES. 173 tivity of the same organs, while those of the moral sentiments and intellect are left in a state of apathy. Rules, however, are best taught by examples ; and I shall, therefore, proceed to mention some facts that have fallen under my own notice, or been communicated to me from authentic sources, illustrative of the practical consequences of in- fringing the law of hereditary descent. A man, aged about fifty, possessed a brain, in which the animal, moral, and knowing intellectual organs were all strong, but the reflecting weak. He was pious, but destitute of education; he married an unhealthy young woman, deficient in moral developement, but of considerable force of character ; and several children were born. The father and mother were far from being happy ; and, when the children attained to eighteen or twenty years of age, they were adepts in every species of immorality and profligacy ; they picked their father's pockets, stole his goods, and got them sold back to him, by accomplices, for mo- ney, which was spent in betting and cock-fighting, drinking, and low debauchery. The father was heavily grieved ; but knowing only two resources, he beat the children severely as long as he was able, and prayed for them ; his own words were, that ' if, after that, it pleased the Lord to make vessels of wrath of them, the Lord's will must just be done/ I mention this last observation, not in jest, but in great seriousness. It was im- 15* 174 MISERIES ARISING FROM * possible not to pity the unhappy father ; yet, who that sees the institutions of the Creator to be in themselves wise, but in this instance to have been directly violated, will not acknowledge that the bitter pangs of the poor old man were the conse- quences of his own ignorance ; and that it was an erroneous view of the divine administration, which led him to overlook his own mistakes, and to at- tribute to the Almighty the purpose of making vessels of wrath of his children, as the only expla- nation which he could give of their wicked dispo- sitions. Who that sees the cause of his misery must not lament that his piety should not have been enlightened by philosophy, and directed to obedience, in the first instance, to the organic in- stitutions of the Creator, as one of the prescribed conditions, without observance of which he had no title to expect a blessing upon his offspring. In another instance, a man, in whom the animal organs, particularly those of Combativeness and Destructiveness, were very large, but with a pretty fair moral and intellectual developement, married, against her inclination, a young woman, fashion- ably and showily educated, but with a very decid- ed deficiency in Conscientiousness. They soon became unhappy, and even blows were said to have passed between them, although they belong- ed to the middle rank of life. The mother, in this case, employed the children to deceive and plunder the father, and, latterly, spent the pro- duce in drink. The sons inherited the deficient NEGLECT OF ORGANIC LAWS IN MARRIAGE. 175 morality of the mother, and the ill temper of the father. The family fireside became a theatre of war, and, before the sons attained majority, the father was glad to get them removed from his house, as the only means by which he could feel even his life in safety from their violence ; for they had by that time retaliated the blows with which he had visited them in their younger years ; and he stated that he actually considered his life to be in danger from his own offspring. In another family, the mother possesses an ex- cellent developement of the moral and intellectual organs, while, in the father, the animal organs pre- dominate in great excess. She has been the un- happy victim of ceaseless misfortune, originating from the misconduct of her husband. Some of the children have inherited the father's brain, and some the mother's ; and of the sons whose heads resembled the father's, several have died through mere debauchery and profligacy under thirty years of age ; whereas, those who resemble the mother are alive and little contaminated, even amidst all the disadvantages of evil example. On the other hand, I am not acquainted with a single instance in which the moral and intellectual organs predominated in size, in both father and mother, and whose external circumstances also permitted their general activity, in which the whole children did not partake of a moral and in- tellectual character, differing slightly in degrees of excellence one from another, but all present- 176 MISERIES ARISING FROM * ing the decided predominance of the human over the animal faculties. There are well-known examples of the children of religious and moral fathers exhibiting disposi- tions of a very inferior description; but in all of these instances that I have been able to observe, there has been a large developement of the ani- mal organs in the one parent, which was just con- trolled, but not much more, by the moral and in- tellectual powers; and in the other parent, the moral organs did not appear to be in large pro- portion. The unfortunate child inherited the large animal developement of the one, with the defective moral developement of the other; and, in this way, was inferior to both. The way to satisfy one's self on this point, is to examine the heads of the parents. In all such cases, a large base of the brain, which is the region of the ani- mal propensities, will very probably be found in one or other of them. Another organic law of the animal kingdom de- serves attention ; viz. that by which marriages betwixt blood relations tend decidedly to the de- terioration of the physical and mental qualities of the offspring. In Spain kings marry their nieces, and, in this country, first and second cousins mar- ry without scruple ; although every philosophical physiologists will declare that this is in direct op- position to the institutions of nature. This law holds also in the vegetable kingdom. ' A provis- ion, of a very simple kind, is, in some cases, made NEGLECT OF ORGANIC LAWS IN MARRIAGE. 177 to prevent the male and female blossoms of the same plant from breeding together, this being found to hurt the breed of vegetables, just as breeding in and in does the breed of animals. It is contrived, that the dust shall be shed by the male blossom before the female is ready to be af- fected by it, so that the impregnation must be per- formed by the dust of some other plant, and in this way the breed be crossed.' — Objects <^c. of Science, p. 33. On the same principle, it is found highly advan- tageous in agriculture not to sow grain of the same stock in constant succession on the same soil. In individual instances, if the soil and plants are both possessed of great vigour and the highest qualities, the same kind of grain may be reaped in succession twice or thrice, with less per- ceptible deterioration than where these elements of reproduction are feeble and imperfect ; and the same thing appears in the animal kingdom* If the first individuals connected in near relation- ship, who unite in marriage, are uncommonly ro- bust, and possess very favorably developed brains, their offspring may not be so much deteriorated below the common standard of the country as to attract particular attention, and the law of nature is, in this instance, supposed not to hold ; but it does hold, for to a law of nature there never is an exception. The offspring are uniformly inferior to what they would have been, if the parents had united with strangers in blood of equal vigour and 178 ORGANIC LAWS. cerebral developement. Whenever there is any remarkable deficiency in parents who are related in blood, these appear in the most marked and aggravated forms in the offspring. This fact is so well known, and so easily ascertained, that I for- bear to enlarge upon it. So much for miseries arising from neglect of the organic laws in form- ing the domestic compact. I proceed to advert to those evils which arise from overlooking the operation of the same laws in ordinary relations of society. How many little annoyances arise from the mis- conduct of servants and dependents in various departments of life ; how many losses, and some- times ruin, arise from dishonesty and knavery in confidential clerks, partners, and agents. A mer- cantile house of great reputation, in London, was ruined and became bankrupt, by a clerk having embezzled a prodigious extent of funds, and ab- sconded to America ; another company in Edin- burgh, was talked of about a year ago, which had sustained a great loss by a similar piece of dis- honesty ; a company in Paisley was ruined by one of the partners having collected the funds, and eloped with them to the United States ; and late- ly, several bankers, and other persons, suffered severely in Edinburgh, by the conduct of an indi- vidual, some time connected with the public press. If it be true, then, that the mental qualities and dispositions of individuals are indicated and in- CHOICE OF SERVANTS, (^C 179 fluenced by the developement of their brains, and that their actual conduct is the result of this de- velopement, operated upon by their external cir- cumstances, including in this latter every moral and intellectual influence coming from without, is it not obvious, that one and all of the evils here enumerated flowed from infringement of the natu- ral institutions, that is to say, from having placed human beings decidedly deficient in moral or in- tellectual qualities in situations where these were required in a higher degree than they possessed them? If any man were to go to sea in a paper boat, which the very fluidity of the element would dis- solve, no one would be surprised at his being drowned: and, in like manner, if the Creator has constituted the brain so as to exert a great influ- ence on the mental dispositions, and if, neverthe- less, men are pleased to treat this fact with neg- lect and contempt, and to place individuals, natu- rally deficient in the moral organs, in situations where a great degree of these sentiments is re- quired, they have no cause to be surprised if they suffer the penalties of their own misconduct, in being plundered and defrauded. Although I can state, from experience, that it is possible, by the aid of Phrenology, to select in- dividuals whose moral and intellectual qualities may be relied on, yet, the extremely limited ex- tent of our practical knowledge in this respect falls to be confessed. To be able to judge accu- 180 ORGANIC LAWS. ,-S rately what combination of natural talents and dis- positions in an individual will best fit him for any given employment, we require to have seen a va- riety of combinations tried in that particular de- partment, and to have noted their effects. It is impossible, at least for me, to anticipate with un- erring certainty, what these effects will be : but I have ever found nature constant ; and after once discovering, by experience, an assortment of qual- ities suited to a particular duty, I have found no subsequent exception to the rule. Cases in which the predominance of particular regions of the brain, as the moral and intellectual, is very decid- ed, present fewest difficulties ; although, even in them, the very deficiency of animal organs may sometimes incapacitate an individual for important stations ; but where the three classes of organs, the animal, moral, and intellectual, are nearly in (equilibria, the most opposite results may ensue by external circumstances exciting the one or the other to decided predominance in activity. Having now adverted to calamities by external violence, — to bad health, — unhappiness in the do- mestic circle, arising from ill-advised unions, and viciously disposed children, — to the evils of plac- ing individuals, as servants, clerks, partners, pub- lic instructers, &c, in situations to which they are not suited, by their natural qualities, and trac- ed all of them to infringements or neglect of the physical or organic laws, I proceed to advert to CHOICE OF SERVANTS, &C. 181 the last, and what is reckoned the greatest of all calamities, death, and which itself is obviously a part of the organic law. Baron Cuvier, after stat- ing that the world we inhabit was at first fluid, and that highly crystalline rocks were deposited before animal or vegetable life began, has demon- strated, that then came the lowest orders of zoo phytes and of vegetables, — next fishes and rep- tiles, — and trees in vast forests, giving origin to our present beds of coal, then quadrupeds and birds, and shells and plants, resembling those of the present aera, but all of which, as species, have utterly perished from the earth ; next came allu- vial rocks, containing bones of mammoths, &c, and last of all came man. (Cuvier's Preface to his Ossemens Fossiles, and papers by Dr Fleming in Chalmers' Journal.) This shews that destruc- tion of vegetable and animal life were institutions of nature before man became an inhabitant of the globe. It is beyond the compass of philosophy to explain why the world was so constituted. I therefore make no inquiry why death was insti- tuted, and refer, of course, only to the dissolution of organized bodies, and not at all to the state of the soul or mind after its separation from the body. These belong to Revelation. Let us first view the dissolution of the body ab- stractedly from personal considerations, as a mere natural arrangement. Death, then, appears to be a result of the constitution of all organized be- ings ; for the very definition of the genus, is, that 16 182 ORGANIC LAWS. the individuals grow, attain maturity, decay, and die. The human imagination cannot conceive how the former part of this series of movements could exist without the latter, as long as space is necessary to corporeal existence. If all the veg- etable and animal productions of nature, from creation downwards, had grown, attained maturi- ty, and there remained, this world would not have been capable of containing one thousandth part of them ; so that, on this earth, decaying and dy- ing appear indispensably necessary to admit of reproduction and growth. Viewed abstractedly, then, organized beings live as long as health and vigour continue ; but they are subjected to a pro- cess of decay, which impairs gradually all their functions, and at last terminates in their dissolu- tion. Now, in the vegetable world, the effect of this law, is, to surround us with young forests, in place of the monotony of everlasting stately full grown woods, standing forth in awful endless ma- jesty, without variation in leaf or bough ; — with the vernal bloom of the meadows, changing grace- fully into the vigour of summer, and the maturity of autumn ; — with the rose, first simply and deli- cately budding, next fresh and lovely in its blow, and then rich and luxuriant in its perfect condition. In short, when we advert to the law of death, as instituted in the vegetable organized kingdom, and as related to our own faculties of Ideality, Wonder, &c, which desire and delight in the very changes which death introduces, we without hesi- DEATH. 183 tation exclaim, that all is wisely, admirably, and wonderfully made. Turning, again, to the animal kingdom, the same fundamental principle prevails. Death removes the old, the worn out, and decay- ed, and, in their place, the organic law introduces the young, the gay, and the vigorous, to tread the stage with increased agility and delight. This transfer of existence may readily be grant- ed to be beneficial to the young ; but, at first sight, it appears the opposite of benevolent to the old. To have lived at all, is felt as giving a right to continue to live ; and the question arises, how can the institution of death, as the result of the organic law, be reconciled with Benevolence and Justice ? In treating of the supremacy of the sentiments, I pointed out, that the grand distinction between them and the propensities, consist in this, that the former are disinterested, generous, and fond of the general good, and the latter altogether selfish in their desires. It is obvious, that death, as an institution of the Creator, must affect these two classes of faculties in the most different manner. The propensities, being confined in their gratifi- cation to self, and having no reference to the wel- fare of any other creature, a being endowed only with them and reflecting intellect, and enabled, by the latter, to discover death and its consequen- ces, would regard it as the most appalling of visi- tations, and would see in it only utter extinction of all enjoyment. The lower animals, then, whose 184 ORGANIC LAWS. whole being is composed of the inferior propensi- ties, and several knowing faculties, would see death, if they could at all anticipate it, only in this light. So tremendously fearful would it ap- pear to them, as the extinguisher of every pleasure which they had ever felt or could conceive, that we may safely predicate, that the bare prospect of it would render their lives wretched, and that nothing could compensate the agonies of terror, with which an habitual consciousness of it would inspire them. But, by depriving them of reflec- ting organs, the Creator has kindly and effectually preserved them from the influence of this evil. He has thereby rendered them completely blind to its existence. There is not the least reason to believe, that any one of the lower animals, while in health and vigour, has the slightest conception that it is a mortal creature, any more than a tree has that it will die. In consequence, it lives in as full enjoyment of the present, as if it were as- sured of every agreeable sensation being eternal. Death always takes the individual by surprise, whether it comes in the form of violence, suppres- sing life in youth, or of slow decay by age; there- fore, it really operates in their case as a transfer- ence of existence from one being to another, with- out consciousness of the loss in the one which dies. Let us, however, trace the operation of death, in regard to the lower animals, a little more in detail. DEATH. 185 It will not be disputed, that the world is calcu- lated to contain and support only a definite num- ber of living creatures, that the lower animals have received from nature powers of reproduction far beyond what is necesary to supply the waste of life by natural decay, and that they do not pos- sess intellect sufficient to restrain their numbers within the limits of their means of subsistence. Here, therefore, is an institution in which destruc- tion of life, to a great extent, is necessarily im- plied. Philosophy cannot tell why death was instituted at first, but, according to the views maintained in this Essay, we should expect to find it connected with, and regulated by, benevolence and justice ; that is to say, that it should not be inflicted for the sole purpose of extinguishing the life of individuals, to their damage, without any other result ; but that the general system under which it takes place should be, on the whole, favourable to the enjoyment of the race ; and this accordingly is the fact. Violent death, and the devouring of one animal by another, are not purely benevolent, because pure benevolence would never inflict pain ; but they are instances of destruction guided by benevolence ; that is, wherever death proceeds under the institutions of nature, it is accompanied with enjoyment or ben- eficial consequences to one set of animals or ano- ther. Herbivorous animals are exceedingly proli- fic, yet the supply of vegetable food is limited. Hence, after multiplying for a few years, extensive 16* 186 ORGANIC LAWS. starvation, the most painful and lingering of all deaths, and the most detrimental to the race, would inevitably ensue ; but carnivorous animals have been instituted who kill and eat them ; and by this means not only do carnivorous animals reap the pleasures of life, but the numbers of the herbivorous are restrained within such limits, that the individuals among them enjoy existence while they live. The destroyers, again, are limited in their turn : The moment they become too nume- rous, and carry their devastations too far their food fails them, and, in their conflicts for the sup- plies that remain, they extinguish each other, or die of starvation. Nature seems averse from in- flicting death extensively by starvation, probably because it impairs the constitution long before it extinguishes life, and has the tendency to produce degeneracy in the race. It may be remarked, al- so, speculatively, that herbivorous animals must have existed in considerable numbers before the carnivorous began to exercise their functions ; for many of the former must die, that one of the lat- ter may live ; if a single sheep and a single tiger had been placed together at first, the tiger would have eaten up the sheep at a few meals, and died itself of starvation, in a brief space afterwards. In natural decay, the organs are worn out by mere age, and the animal sinks into gradual in- sensibility', unconscious that dissolution awaits it. Further, the wolf, the tiger, the lion, and other beasts of prey, instituted by the Creator as instru- DEATH. 187 ments of violent death, are provided, in addition to Destructiveness, with large organs of Cautious- ness and Secretiveness, that prompt them to steal upon their victims with the unexpected sudden- ness of a mandate of annihilation, and they are impelled also to inflict death in the most instan- taneous and least painful method ; the tiger and lion spring from their cover with the rapidity of the thunderbolt, and one blow of their tremendous paws, inflicted at the junction of the head with the neck, produces instantaneous death. The eagle is taught to strike its sharp beak into the spine of the birds which it devours, and their agony endures scarcely for an instant. It has been objected, that the cat plays with the unhappy mouse, and prolongs its tortures ; but the cat that does so, is the pampered and well fed inhab- itant of a kitchen; the cat of nature is too eager to devour, to indulge in such luxurious gratifications of Destructiveness and Secretiveness. It kills in a moment, and eats. Here, then, is actually a regularly organized process for withdrawing indi- viduals of the lower animals from existence, al- most by a fiat of destruction, and thereby making way for a succession of other occupants. Man is not so merciful towards the lower crea- tures : but he might be so. Suppose the sheep in the hands of man, were to be guillotined, and not maltreated before its execution, the creature would never know that it had ceased to live. And, by the law which I have already explained, man does 188 ORGANIC LAWS. not with impunity add one unnecessary pang to the death of the lower animals. In the brutal butcher who inflicts torments on calves, sheep, and cattle, while driving them to the slaughter, and who puts them to death in the way supposed to be most conducive to the gratification of his Ac- quisitiveness, such as bleeding them to death, by successive stages, prolonged for days, to whiten their flesh, — the animal faculties of Destructive- ness, Acquisitiveness, Self-esteem, &c. predomi- nate so decidedly in activity, over the moral and intellectual powers, that he is necessarily exclud- ed from all the enjoyments attendant on the supre- macy of the human faculties ; he, besides, goes into society under the influence of the same base combination, and suffers at every hand animal retaliation, so that he does not escape with im- punity for his outrages against the moral law. Here, then, we can perceive nothing malevolent in the institution of death, in so far as regards the lower animals. A pang certainly does attend it ; but while Destructiveness must be recognized in the pain, Benevolence is equally perceptible in its effects. I mentioned formerly, that the organic law rises above the physical, and the moral and intellectual law above the organic ; and the present occasion affords an additional illustration of this fact. Un- der the physical law, no remedial process is insti- tuted to arrest, or restore, against the conse- quences of infringement. If a mirror falls, and DEATH. 189 is smashed, by the physical law it remains ever after in fragments ; if a ship sinks, it lies still at the bottom of the ocean, chained down by the law of gravitation. Under the organic law, on the other hand, a distinct remedial process is established. If a tree is blown over, every root that remains in the ground will double its exer- tions to preserve life ; if a branch is lopped off, new branches will shoot out in its place ; if a leg in an animal is broken, the bone will reunite ; if a muscle is severed, it will grow together ; if an artery is obliterated, the neighbouring arteries will enlarge their dimensions, and perform its functions. The Creator, however, not to encour- age animals to abuse this benevolent institution, has established pain as an attendant on infringe- ment of the organic law, and made them suffer for the violation of it, even while he restores them. It is under this law that death has received its organic pangs. Instant death is not attended with pain of any perceptible duration ; and it is only when a lingering death occurs in youth and middle age, that the suffering is severe ; dissolu- tion, however, does not occur at these periods as a direct and intentional result of the organic laws, but as the consequence of infringement of them under the fair and legitimate operation of these laws, the individual whose constitution was at first sound, and whose life has been in accordance with their dictates, lives till old age fairly wears out his organized frame, and then the pang of 190 ORGANIC LAWS. ** expiration is little perceptible.* The pains of premature death, then, are the punishments of infringement of the organic law, and the object of that chastisement probably is to impress upon us the necessity of obeying them that we may live, and to prevent our abusing the remedial pro- cess inherent to a great extent in our constitution. Let us now view death as an institution ap- pointed to man. If it be true, that the organic constitution of man, when sound in its elements, and preserved in accordance with the organic laws, is fairly calculated to endure in health from infancy to old age, and that death when it occurs during the early or middle periods of life, is the consequence of departures from the physical and organic laws, it follows, that, even in prema- ture death, a benevolent principle is discernible. * The following table is copied from an interesting article by Mr William Fraser, on the History and Constitution of Benefit or Friendly Societies, published in the Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal for October, 1827, and is deduced from Returns by Friendly Societies in Scotland for various years, from 1750 to 1821. It shows how much sickness is dependent on age. Average Sickness for Each Individual. Age. Weeks and Decimals. Weeks. Days. Hours. Proportion of Sick Members. Under 20 0.3797 2 16 1 in 136.95 20-30 0.5916 4 3 1 ... 87.89 30-40 0.6865 4 19 1 ... 75.74 40-50 1.0273 1 4 1 ... 50.61 50-60 1.8806 1 6 3 1 ... 27.65 60-70 5.6337 5 4 10 1 ... 9.23 Above 70 16.5417 16 3 19 1 ... 3.14 DEATH. 191 Although the remedial process restores animals from moderate injuries, yet the very nature of the organic law must place a limit to it. If life had been preserved, and health restored, after the brain had been blown to atoms, by a bomb shell, as effectually as a leg that is broken, and a fin- ger that is cut are healed, this would have been an actual abrogation of the organic law; and all the curbs which that law imposes on the lower pro- pensities, and all the incitements which the ob- servance of it affords to the higher sentiments, and intellect, would have been lost. The limit, then, is this; that any departure from the law against which restoration is permitted, shall be moderate in extent, and shall not involve, to a great degree, any organ essential to life, such as the brain, the lungs, the stomach, or intestines. The very maintenance of the law, with all its ad- vantages, requires that restoration from grievous derangement of these organs should not be per- mitted. When we reflect on the hereditary trans- mission of qualities to children, we clearly per- ceive benevolence to the race in the institution, which cuts short the life of an individual in whose person essential organs are so deeply diseased by departures from the organic law, as to be beyond the limits of the remedial process ; for the exten- sion of the punishment of his errors over an in- numerable posterity is thereby prevented. In premature death, then, we see two objects accom- plished ; first ; the individual sufferer is with- 192 ORGANIC LAWS. drawn from agonies which could serve no benefi- cial end to himself; he has transgressed the limits of recovery, and prolonged life would be protract- ed misery ; secondly; the race is guaranteed from the future transmission of his disease by heredita- ry descent. The disciple of Mr Owen, formerly alluded to, who had grievously transgressed the organic law, and suffered a punishment of equal intensity, ob- served, when in the midst of his agony, — fi Philo- sophers have urged the institution of death, as an argument against divine goodness, but not one of them could experience, for five minutes, the pain which I now endure, without looking upon it as a most merciful arrangement. I have departed from the natural institutions, and suffer the pun- ishment ; but, in death, I see only the Creator's benevolent hand, stretched out to terminate my ag- onies, when they cease to serve any beneficial end.' On this principle, the death of a feeble and sickly child is an act of mercy to it. It with- draws a being, in whose person the organic laws have been violated, from useless suffering ; cutting short, thereby, also, the transmission of its imper- fections to posterity. If, then, the organic insti- tutions which inflict pain and disease as punish- ments for transgressing them, are founded in be- nevolence and wisdom ; and, if death, in the ear- ly and middle periods of life, is an arrangement for withdrawing the transgressor from further suf- fering, after return to obedience is impossible, DEATH. 193 and protecting the race from the consequences of his errors, it also is in itself wise and benevolent. This, then, leaves us only death in old age as a natural and unavoidable institution of the Crea- tor. It will not be denied, that, if old persons, when their powers of enjoyment are fairly exhaust- ed, and their cup of pleasure full, could be re- moved from this world, as we have supposed the lower animals to be, in an instant, and without pain or consciousness, to make way for a fresh and vigorous offspring, about to run the career which the old have terminated, there would be no lack of benevolence and justice in the arrange- ment. At present, while we live in habitual ig- norance and neglect of the organic institutions, death probably comes upon us with more pain and agony, even in advanced life, than might be its legitimate accompaniment, if we placed ourselves in accordance with these ; so that we are not now in a condition to ascertain the natural quantum of pain necessarily attendant on death. Judging from analogy, we may conclude, that the close of a long life, founded at first, and afterwards spent, in accordance with the Creator's laws, would not be accompanied with great organic suffering, but that an insensible decay would steal upon the senses. Be this, however, as it may, I observe, in the next place, that as the Creator has bestowed on man animal faculties that fear death, and rea- son that carries home to him the conviction that he must die, it is an interesting inquiry, Whether 17 194 ORGANIC LAWS. he has provided any natural means, of relief, from the consequences of this combination of terrors ? He has bestowed moral sentiments on man, and arranged the whole of his existence on the princi- ples of their supremacy ; and these, when duly cultivated and enlightened, are calculated to with- draw from him the terrors of death, in the same manner as unconsciousness of its existence saves the lower animals from its horrors. In regard to the lower animals killed by vio- lence, if reason sees, on the one hand, a momen- tary pang in parting with life, it perceives the con- tinued existence and enjoyment of beasts of prey, as an advantage attending it on the other, so that every animal that is devoured ministers to the con- tinued life of another. The process is still one of a transfer of existence. In regard to man, again, the moral sentiments and intellect perceive, 1st. That Amativeness, Philoprogenitiveness, and Adhesiveness, are provided with direct ob- jects of gratification, in consequence of the insti- tution of death. If the sajne individuals had lived here forever, there would have been no field for the enjoyment that flows from the domestic union, and the rearing of offspring. The very institution of these propensities prove, that producing and rearing young, form part of the design of crea- tion ; and the successive production of young ap- pears necessarily to imply removal of the old. 2dly. All the other faculties would have been DEATH. 195 limited in their gratifications. Conceive, for a moment, how much exercise is afforded to our in- tellectual and moral powers, in acquiring knowl- edge, communicating it to the young, and in pro- viding for their enjoyments ; also, what a delight- ful exercise of the higher sentiments is implied in the intercourse between the aged and the young ; all which pleasures would have been unknown, if there had been no young in existence, which there could not have been, without a succession of individuals. 3dly. Constituted as man is, the succession of individuals withdraws beings whose physical and mental constitutions have run their course, and become impaired in sensibility, and substitutes, in their place, fresh and vigorous minds and bodies, far better adapted for the enjoyment of creation. 4thly. If I am right in the position, that the or- ganic laws transmit, in an increasing ratio, the qualities most active in the parents to their off- spring, the law of succession provides for a far higher degree of improvement in the race than could ever have been reached by the permanency of a single generation. Let us inquire, then, how the moral sentiments are affected by death in old age, as a natural in- stitution. Benevolence, glowing with a disinterested de- sire for the diffusion and boundless increase of enjoyment, utters no complaint against death in old age, as a transference of existence from a be- 196 ORGANIC LAWS. ing impaired in its capacity for usefulness and pleasure, to one fresh and vigorous in all its pow- ers, and fitted to carry forward, to a higher point of improvement, every beneficial measure pre- viously begun. Conscientiousness, if thoroughly enlightened, perceives no infringement of justice in a guest, satiated with enjoyment, being called on to retire from the banquet, to permit a stranger with a keener and more youthful appetite to par- take ; and Veneration, when instructed by intel- lect that this is the institution of the Creator, and made acquainted with its objects, bows in humble acquiescence to the law. Now, if these powers have acquired, in any individual, that complete supremacy which they arje clearly intended to hold, he will be placed by them as much above the ter- ror of death as a natural institution, as the lower animals are, by being ignorant of its existence. And unless the case were so, man would, by the very knowledge of death, be rendered, during his whole life, more miserable than they. In these observations, I have said nothing of the prospects of a future existence as a palliative of the evils of dissolution, because I was bound to regard death, in the first instance, as the result of the organic law, and to treat of it as such. But no one who considers that the prospects of a life to come, are directly addressed to Veneration, Hope, Benevolence, and Intellect, can fail to perceive that this consolation also is clearly founded on the principle, that supremacy in the sentiments is in- ORGANIC LAWS. 197 tended by the Creator to protect man from its terrors. The true view of death, then, as a natural insti- tution, is, that it is an essential part of the very system of organization; that birth, growing, and arriving at maturity, as completely imply decay and death in old age, as morning and noon imply evening and night, as spring and summer imply harvest, or as the source of a river implies a ter- mination of it. Besides, organized beings are constituted by the Creator to be the food of other organized beings, so that some must die that oth- ers may live. Man, for instance, cannot live on stones, or earth, or water, which are not organized, but on vegetable and animal substances ; so that death is as much, and as essentially, an inherent part of organization as life itself. If vegetables, animals, and men, had been destined for a dura- tion like that of the mountains, — instead of creat- ing a primitive pair of each, and endowing these with extensive powers of reproduction, so as to usher into existence young beings to grow up to maturity by insensible degrees, we may presume, from analogy, that the Creator would have furnish- ed the world with its definite complement of liv- ing beings, perfect at first in all their parts and functions, and that these would have remained, like hills, without dimunition, and without in- crease. To prevent, then, all chance of being misappre- hended, I repeat, that I do not at all allude to the 17* 198 OBGANIC LAWS. ^ state of the soul or mind, after death, but merely to the dissolution of organized bodies ; that, ac- cording to the soundest view which I am able to obtain of the natural law, pain and death in youth and middle age, in the human species, are conse- quences of departure from the Creator's laws; while death in old age, by insensible decay, is an essential and apparently indispensable part of the system of organized existence ; that this arrange- ment admits of the succession of individuals, sub- stituting the young and vigorous for the feeble and decayed; that it is directly the means by which organized beings live, and indirectly the means by which Amativeness, Philoprogeniti veness, and a variety of our other faculties obtain gratifica- tion ; that it admits of the race ascending to a great extent in the scale of improvement, both in their organic and mental qualities ; that the mor- al sentiments, when supreme in activity, and en- lightened by intellect, so as to perceive its design and consequences, are calculated to place man in harmony with it; while religion addresses its con- solation to the same faculties, and completes what reason leaves undone. If the views now unfolded be correct, death, in old age, will never be abolished, as long as man continues an organized being ; but pain and pre- mature death will constantly decrease, in the ex- act ratio of his obedience to the physical and or- ganic laws. It is interesting to observe, that there is already some evidence of this process be- ORGANIC LAWS. 199 ing actually in progress. About seventy years ago, tables of the average duration of life, in England, were compiled for the use of the Life Insurance Companies ; and from them it appears, that the av- erage of life was then twentyeight years ; that is, 1000 persons being born, and the years which each of them lived being added together, and divided by 1000, gave twentyeight to each. By recent tables, it appears that the average is now thirtytwo years to each ; that is to say, by superior morality, clean- liness, knowledge, and general obedience to the Creator's institutions, fewer individuals now perish in infancy, youth, and middle age, than did seventy years ago. Some persons have said, that the differ- ence arises from errors in compiling the old tables, and that the superior habits of the people are not the cause. It is probable, however, that there may be a portion of truth in both views. There may be some errors in the old tables, but it is quite natu- ral that increasing knowledge and stricter obe- dience to the organic laws, should diminish the number of premature deaths. If this idea be cor- rect, the average duration of life should go on in- creasing ; and our successors, two centuries hence, may probably attain to an average of forty years, and then ascribe to errors in our tables our low average of thirtytwo.* * While the above paragraph was in the press, an interesting ar- ticle on the « Diminished Mortality in England,' appeared in the Scotsman newspaper, of 16th April, 1828. It coincides with the views of the text ; and, as it proceeds on scientific data, it is printed in the Appendix, No. III. 200 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM SECT. III.- — CALAMITIES ARISING FROM INFRINGE- MENT OF THE MORAL LAW. We come now to consider the Moral Law, which is proclaimed by the higher sentiments and intellect acting harmoniously, and holding the an- imal propensities in subjection. In surveying the moral and religious codes of different nations, and the moral and religious opinions of different philosophers, every reflecting mind must have been struck with their diversity. Phrenology, by de- monstrating the differences of combination in their faculties, enables us to account for these va- rieties of sentiment. The code of morality fram- ed by a legislator, in whom Destructiveness, Se- cretiveness, Acquisitiveness, and Self-esteem were large, and Conscientiousness, Benevolence, and Veneration small, would be very different from one instituted by another lawgiver, in whom this combination was reversed. In like manner, a sys- tem of religion, founded by an individual, in whom Destructiveness, Wonder, alid Cautiousness were very large, and Veneration, Benevolence, and Conscientiousness deficient, would present views of the Supreme Being widely dissimilar to those which would be promulgated by a person in whom the last three faculties and intellect decid- edly predominated. Phrenology shews, that the particular code of morality and religion, which is most completely in harmony with the whole facul- INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 201 ties of the individual, will necessarily appear to him to be the best, while he refers only to the dic- tates of his individual mind, as the standard of right and ivrong. But if we are able to show, that the whole scheme of external creation is ar- ranged in harmony with certain principles, in preference to others, so that enjoyment flows upon the individual from without, when his conduct is in conformity with them, and that evil overtakes him when he departs from them, we shall then obviously prove, fhat the former is the morality and religion established by the Creator ; and that individual men, who support different codes, must necessarily be deluded by imperfections in their own minds. That constitution of mind, also, may be pronounced to be the best, which harmonizes most completely with the morality and religion established by the Creator's arrangements. In this view, morality becomes a science, and depart- ures from its dictates may be demonstrated as practical follies, injurious to the real interest and happiness of the individual, just as errors in logic are capable of refutation to the understanding* Before we can be in a condition to perceive this, it is obvious that we must know, first, The nature of man, physical, animal, moral, and intellectual ; secondly, The relations of the different parts of that nature to each other ; and, thirdly, The rela- tionship of the whole to God and external objects* The present Essay is an attempt, (a very feeble and imperfect one indeed,) to arrive, by the aid of 202 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM phrenology, at a demonstration of morality as a science. The interests dealt with in the investiga- tion are so elevating, and the effort itself is so delightful, that the attempt carries its own re- ward, however unsuccessful in its results. Assuming, then, that, among the faculties of the mind, the higher sentiments and intellect hold the natural supremacy, I shall endeavour to shew, that obedience to the dictates of these powers is re- warded with pleasing emotions in the mental fa- culties themselves, and with the most beneficial external consequences ; whereas disobedience is followed by deprivation of these emotions, by painful feelings within the mind, and great exter- nal evil. First. Obedience is attended by pleasing emo- tions in the faculties. It is scarcely necessary to dwell on the circumstance, that every propensity, sentiment, and intellectual faculty, when gratified in harmony with all the rest, is a fountain of plea- sure. How many exquisite thrills of joy arise from Philoprogenitiveness, Adhesiveness, Acquisi- tiveness, Constructiveness, Love of Approbation, and Self-esteem, when gratified in accordance with the moral sentiments; who that has ever poured forth the aspirations of Hope, Ideality, Wonder, and Veneration, directed to an object in whom Intellect and Conscientiousness also rejoic- ed, has not experienced the deep delight of such an exercise ? Or, who is a stranger to the grate- ful pleasures attending an active Benevolence ? # INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 203 Turning to the intellect, again, what pleasures are afforded by the scenery of nature, by painting, poetry, and music, to those who possess the com- bination of faculties related to these studies ? And how rich a feast does not philosophy yield to those who possess high reflecting organs, combin- ed with Concentrativeness and Conscientiousness ? The reader is requested, therefore, to keep steadi- ly in view, that these exquisite rewards are attach- ed by the Creator to the active exercise of our faculties, in accordance with the moral law ; and that one punishment, clear, obvious, and undeni- able, inflicted on those who neglect or infringe the law, is deprivation of these pleasures. This is a consideration very little attended to ; be- cause mankind, in general, live in such habitual neglect of the moral law, that they have, to a very partial extent, experienced its rewards, and do* not know the enjoyment they are deprived of by its infringement. Before its full measure can be judged of, the mind must be instructed in its own constitution, in that of external objects, and in the relationship established between it and them, and between it and the Creator. Until a tolera- bly distinct perception of these truths is obtain- ed, the faculties cannot enjoy repose, nor act in full vigour or harmony : while, for example, our forefathers regarded the marsh fevers, to which they were subjected, from deficient draining of their fields, and the outrages on person and pro- perty, attendant on the wars waged by the En- 204 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM * glish against the Scots, or by one feudal lord against another, even on their own soil, not as pun- ishments for particular infringements of the organ- ic and moral laws, to be removed by obedience to these laws, but as inscrutable dispensations of God's providence, which it behoved them meekly to endure, but not to avert, — so long as such no- tions were entertained, the full enjoyment which the moral and intellectual faculties were fairly calculated by the Creator to afford, could not be experienced. Benevolence would pine in dissat- isfaction ; Veneration would flag in its devotions, and Conscientiousness would suggest endless sur- mises of disorder and injustice in a scheme of creation, under which such evils occurred, and were left without a remedy ; the full tide of moral, religious, and intellectual enjoyment could not possibly flow, until views, more in accordance with the constitution and desires of the moral fa- culties were obtained. The same evil afflicts mankind still to a prodigious extent. How is it possible for the Hindoo, Mussulman, Chinese, or the native American, while they continue to wor- ship deities, whose qualities outrage Benevo- lence, Veneration, and Conscientiousness, — and remain in profound ignorance of almost all the Creator's natural institutions, in consequence of infringing which they suffer punishment without ceasing, to form even a conception of the gratifi- cations which the moral and intellectual nature of man is calculated to enjoy, when exercised in INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 205 harmony with the Creator's real character and in- stitutions ? This operation of the moral law is not the less real, because many do not recognize it. Sight is not a less excellent gift to those who see, because some men born blind have no conception of the extent of pleasure and advan- tage from which the want of it cuts them off. The qualities manifested by the Creator may be inferred from the works of creation ; but it is obvious, that, to arrive at the soundest views, we would require to know his institutions thoroughly. To a grossly ignorant people, who suffer hardly from transgression of his laws, the Deity will ap- pear infinitely more severe and mysterious than to an enlightened nation who know them, avoid the penalties of infringement, and trace the principles of his government through many parts of his works. The character of the Divine Being, un- der the natural system, will thus go on rising in exact proportion as his works shall be understood. The low and miserable conceptions of God form- ed by the vulgar Greeks and Romans, were the reflections of their own ignorance of natural, moral, and political science. The discovery and improvement of phrenology must necessarily have a great effect on natural religion. Before phre- nology was known, the moral and intellectual con- stitution of man was unascertained ; — in conse- quence, the relations of external nature towards it could not be competently judged of ; and, while these were involved in obscurity, many of the 18 206 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM ways of Providence must have appeared mysteri- ous and severe, which in themselves are quite the reverse. Again, as bodily suffering and mental perplexity would bear a proportion to this igno- rance, the character of God would appear to the natural eye in that condition, much more unfavor- able than it will do after these clouds of darkness shall have passed away. Some persons, in their great concernment about a future life, are liable to overlook the practical direction of the mind in the present. When we consider the nature and objects of the mental faculties, we perceive that a great number of them have the most obvious and undeniable refer- ence to this life; for example, Amativeness, Philo- progenitiveness, Combativeness, Destructiveness, Acquisitiveness, Secretiveness, Cautiousness, Self- esteem, and Love of Approbation, with Size, Form, Color, Weight, Tune, Wit, and probably other faculties, stand in such evident relationship to this particular world, with its moral and physical arrangements, that if they were not capable of legitimate application here, it would be difficult to assign a reason for their being bestowed on us. We possess also Benevolence, Veneration, Hope, Ideality, Wonder, Conscientiousness, and Reflect- ing Intellect, all of which appear to be particu- larly adapted to a higher sphere. But the im- portant consideration is, that here on earth these two sets of faculties are combined ; and on the same principle that led Sir Isaac Newton to in- INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 207 fer the combustibility of the diamond, I am dis- posed to expect that the external world, when its constitution and relations shall be sufficiently un- derstood, will be found to be in harmony with all our faculties, and of course that the character of the Deity, as unfolded by the works of creation, will more and more gratify our moral and intel- lectual powers, in proportion as knowledge advan- ces. The structure of the eye is admirably adapt- ed to the laws of light; that of the ear to the laws of sound ; that of the muscles to the laws of gravi- tation ; and it would be strange if our mental con- stitution was not as wisely adapted to the general order of the external world. This principle, then, is universal, and admits of no exception, That inactivity and want of power, in every faculty, is attended with deprivation of the pleasures attendant on its vivacious exercise. He who is so deficient in Tune that he cannot dis- tinguish melody, is cut off from a vast source of gratification enjoyed by him who possesses that organ vigorous and highly cultivated; and the same principle holds in the case of every other organ and faculty. Criminals and profligates of every description, therefore, from the very con stitution of human nature, are excluded from great enjoyments attending virtue ; and this is the first natural punishment to which they are inevita- bly liable. Persons also, who are ignorant of the constitutions of their own minds, and the relations between external objects, not only suffer many di- 208 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM rect evils on this account; but, through the con- sequent inactivity of their faculties, are besides, deprived of many exalted enjoyments. The works of creation, and the character of the Deity, are the legitimate objects of our highest powers; and hence he who is blind to their qualities loses near- ly the whole benefit of his moral and intellectual existence. If there is any one to whom these gratifications are unknown, or appear trivial, he must either, to a very considerable degree, be still under the dominion of the animal propensities, or his views of the Creator's character and institu- tions, must not be in harmony with the natural dictates of the moral sentiments and intellect. But, in the second place, as the world is arrang- ed on the principle of the supremacy of the mor- al sentiments and intellect, observance of the moral law is attended with external advantages, and infringement of it with positive evil conse- quences; and, from this constitution, arises the second natural punishment of misconduct. Let us trace the advantages of obedience. — In the domestic circle; if we preserve habitually Benevolence, Conscientiousness, Veneration, and Intellect supreme, it is quite undeniable, that we shall raise the moral and intellectual faculties of children, servants, and assistants, to love us, and to yield us willing service, obedience, and aid. Our commands will then be reasonable, mild, and easily executed, and the commerce will be that of love. With our equals, again, in society, what INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 209 would we not give for a friend in whom we were perfectly convinced of the supremacy of the sen- timents ; what love, confidence, and delight, would we not repose in him ? To a merchant, physician, lawyer, magistrate, or an individual in any public employment, how invaluable would be the habitu- al supremacy of the sentiments ? The Creator has given different talents to different individuals, and limited our powers, so that we execute any work best by confining our attention to one de- partment of labor, — an arrangement which amounts to a direct institution of separate trades and pro- fessions. Under the natural laws, then, the man- ufacturer may pursue his calling with the entire approbation of all the moral sentiments, for he is dedicating his talents to supply the wants of his fellow men ; and how much more successful will he not be, if his every wish is accompanied by the desire to act benevolently and honestly towards those who are to consume and pay for the products of his labor? He cannot gratify his Acquisitive- ness half so successfully by any other method. The same remark applies to the merchant, the lawyer, and physician. The lawyer and physician, whose whole spirits breathe a disinterested desire to consult, as a paramount object, the best inter- ests of their clients and patients, not only obtain the direct reward of gratifying their own mora faculties, which is no slight enjoyment, but they reap a positive gratification to their Self-esteem and Love of Approbation, in a high and well- 18* 210 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM founded reputation, and to their Acquisitiveness, in increasing emolument, not grudgingly paid, but willingly offered, from minds that feel the worth of the services bestowed. There are three conditions required by the mo- ral and intellectual law, which must all be ob- served to ensure its rewards ; 1st. The department of industry selected must be really useful to hu- man beings : Benevolence demands this ; 2dly. The quantum of labor bestowed must bear a just proportion to the natural demand for the commo- dity produced : Intellect requires this ; and, 3dly. In our social connexions, we must imperatively at- tend to the organic law, that different individuals possess different developements of the brain, and in consequence different natural talents and dis- positions, and we must rely on each only to the extent warranted by his natural endowment. If, then, an individual has received, at birth, a sound organic constitution, and favorably devel- oped brain, and if he live in accordance with the physical, the organic, the moral, and intellectual laws, it appears to me that, in the constitution of the world, he has received an assurance from the Creator, of provision for his animal wants, and a high enjoyment in the legitimate exercise of his various mental powers. I have already observed, that, before we can obey the Creator's institutions, we must know them, and that the science which teaches the phy- sical laws is natural philosophy ; that the organic INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 211 laws belong to the department of anatomy and physiology ; and I now add, that it is the business of the political economist to unfold the kinds of industry that are really necessary to the welfare of mankind, and the degrees of labor that will meet with a just reward. The leading object of political economy, as a science, is to increase en- joyment, by directing the application of industry. To attain this end, however, it is obviously neces- sary that the nature of man, — the constitution of the physical world, — and the relations between these, should be known. Hitherto, the knowledge of the first of these elementary parts has been very deficient, and, in consequence, the whole super- structure has been weak and unproductive, in comparison of what it may become, when founded on a more perfect basis. Political economists have never dreamt, that the world is arranged on the principle of supremacy of the moral senti- ments and intellect; and, consequently, that, to render man happy, his leading pursuits must be such as will exercise and gratify these powers, and that his life will necessarily be miserable, if de- voted entirely to the production of wealth. They have proceeded on the notion, that the accumula- tion of wealth is the summum bonum ; but all his- tory teaches, that national happiness does not in- crease in proportion to national riches ; and un- til they shall perceive and teach, that intelligence and morality are the foundation of all lasting prosperity, they will never interest the great body 212 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM of mankind, nor give a valuable direction to their efforts. If the views contained in the present Essay be sound, it will become a leading object with future masters in that science, to demonstrate the neces- sity of civilized man limiting his physical, and in- creasing his moral and intellectual occupations, as the only means of saving himself from cease- less punishment under the natural laws. The idea of men, in general, being taught nat- ural philosophy, anatomy, and physiology, politi- cal economy, and the other sciences that expound the natural laws, has been sneered at, as utterly absurd and ridiculous. But I would ask, in what occupations are human beings so urgently engag- ed, that they have no leisure to bestow on the study of the Creator's laws ? A course of natu- ral philosophy would occupy sixty or seventy hours in the delivery ; a course of anatomy and physiology the same ; and a course of phrenology can be delivered pretty fully in forty hours ! These, twice or thrice repeated, would serve to initiate the student so that he could afterwards advance in the same paths, by the aid of observa- tion and books. Is life, then, so brief, and are our hours so urgently occupied by higher and more important duties, that we cannot afford those pit- tances of time to learn the laws that regulate our existence ! No. The only difficulty is in obtain- ing the desire for the knowledge ; in seeing the necessity and advantage of it, and then time will INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 213 not be wanting. No idea can be more preposter- ous, than that of human beings having no time to study and obey the natural institutions. These laws punish so severely, when neglected, that they cause the offender to lose tenfold more time in un- dergoing his chastisement, than would be requi- site to obey them. A gentleman extensively en- gaged in business, whose nervous and digestive systems have been impaired by neglect of the or- ganic laws, was desired to walk in the open air at least one hour a-day ; to repose from all exertion, bodily and mental, for one full hour after break- fast, and another full hour after dinner, because the brain cannot expend its energy in thinking and in aiding digestion at the same time ; and to practise moderation in diet ; which last he regu- larly observed ; but he laughed at the very idea of his having three hours a-day to spare for atten- tion to his health. The reply was, that the or- ganic laws admit of no exception, and that he must either obey them, or take the consequences ; but that the time lost by the punishment would be double or treble that requisite for obedience ; and, accordingly, the fact was so. Instead of his attending an appointment, it is quite usual for him to send a note, perhaps, at two in the afternoon, in these terms : — { I was so distressed with head- ache last night, that I never closed my eyes, and to-day I am still incapable of being out of bed.' On other occasions, he is out of bed, but apolo- gises for incapacity to attend to business, on ac- 214 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM count of an intolerable pain in the region of the stomach. In short, if the hours lost in these pain- ful sufferings were added together, and distribut- ed over the days when he is able for duty, he would find them far outnumber those which would suffice for obedience to the organic laws, and with this difference in the results ; by neg- lect he loses both his hours and his enjoyment ; whereas, by obedience, he would be rewarded by aptitude for business, and a pleasing conscious- ness of existence. We shall understand the operation of the moral and intellectual laws, however, more completely, by attending to the evils which arise from neglect of them. As to Individuals. At present, the almost universal persuasion of civilized man, is, that hap- piness consists in the possession of wealth, power, and external splendor ; objects related to the ani- mal faculties and intellect much more than to the moral sentiments. In consequence, each individ- ual sets out in the pursuit of these as the chief business of his life ; and, in the ardor of the chase, he recognizes no limitations on the means which he may employ, except those imposed by the municipal law. He does not perceive or ac- knowledge the existence of natural laws, deter- mining not only the sources of his happiness, but the steps by which it may be attained. From this moral and intellectual blindness, merchants and manufacturers, in numberless instances, hasten to INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 215 be rich beyond the course of nature ; that is to say, they engage in enterprises far exceeding the extent of their capital, or capacity ; they place their property in the hands of debtors, whose nat- ural talents and morality are so low, that they ought never to have been trusted with a shilling ; they send their goods to sea without insuring them, or leave them uninsured in their own warehouses ; they ask pecuniary accommodation from other merchants, to enable them to carry on their un- due speculations, and become security for them in return, and both fall in consequence of blindly following Acquisitiveness to extremities ; or they live in splendor and extravagance, far beyond the extent of the natural return of their capital and talents. In every one of these instances, the calamity is obviously the consequence of infringe- ment of the moral and intellectual law. The law- yer, medical practitioner, or probationer in the church, who is disappointed in his reward, will be found erroneously to have placed himself in a pro- fession, for which his natural talents and dispo- sitions did not fit him, or to have pursued his vocation under the guidance chiefly of the lower propensities, preferring selfishness to honorable re- gard for the interests of his employers. Want of success in these professions, appears to me to be owing, in a high degree, to three causes ; first, The brain being too small, or constitutionally lym- phatic, so that the mind does not act with suffi- cient energy to make an impression ; secondly, 216 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM some particular organs indispensably requisite to success, being very deficient, as Language, or Causality, in a lawyer, the first rendering him in- capable of ready utterance, and the second desti- tute of that intuitive sagacity, which sees at a glance the bearing of the facts and principles founded on by his adversary, so as to estimate the just inferences that follow, and to point them out. A lawyer, who is weak in this power, ap- pears to his client like a pilot who does not know the shoals and the rocks. His deficiency is per- ceived whenever difficulty presents itself, and he is pronounced unsafe to take charge of great in- terests ; he is then passed by, and suffers the re- sponsibility of an erroneous choice of profession ; or, thirdly, Predominance of the animal and self- ish faculties. The client and the patient discrim- inate instinctively between the cold, pithless, but pretending manner of Acquisitiveness and Love of Approbation, and the unpretending, genuine warmth of Benevolence, Veneration, and Consci- entiousness ; and they discover very speedily that the intellect inspired by the latter sees more clear- ly, and manages more successfully, their interests, than when animated only by the former ; the vic- tim of selfishness either never rises, or sinks, wondering why his merits are neglected. In all these instances, the failure of the mer- chant, and the bad success of the lawyer, &c. are the consequences of having infringed the natural laws; so that the evil they suffer is the punish INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 217 ment for having failed in a great duty, not only to society, but to themselves. The greatest difficulties, however, present them- selves, in tracing the operation of the moral and intellectual laws, in the wide field of social life. An individual may be made to comprehend how, if he commits an error, he should suffer a partic- ular punishment ; but when calamity overtakes whole classes of the community, each person ab- solves himself from all share of the blame, and regards himself as simply the victim of a general but insc/utable visitation. Let us, then, examine briefly the Social Law. In regarding the human faculties, we perceive that numberless gratifications spring from the so- cial state. The muscles of a single individual could not rear the habitations,- build the ships, forge the anchors, construct the machinery, or, in short, produce the countless enjoyments that everywhere surround us, in consequence of men being constituted, so as instinctively to combine their powers and skill, to obtain a common end. Here, then, are prodigious advantages resulting directly from the social law ; but, in the next place, social intercourse is the means of affording direct gratification to a variety of our mental fac- ulties. If we live in solitude, the propensities of Amativeness, Philoprogenitiveness, Adhesiveness, Love of Approbation, the sentiments of Benevo- lence, Veneration, Conscientiousness, Wonder, Language, and the reflecting faculties, would be 19 218 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* deprived, some of them absolutely, and others of them nearly, of all opportunities of gratification. The social law, then, is the source of the highest delights of our nature, and its institution indicates the greatest benevolence and wisdom towards us, in the Creator. Still, however, this law does not suspend or sub- vert the laws instituted for man as an individual. If we imagine an individual to go to sea for his own gratification in a ship, the natural laws re- quire that his intellectual faculties shall be in- structed in navigation, also in the nature of the coasts and seas which he traverses ; that he shall know and avoid the shoals, currents, and eddies ; that he shall trim his canvass in proportion to the gaje ; and that his animal faculties shall be so much under subjection to his moral sentiments, that he shall not abandon himself to drunkenness, sloth, or any animal indulgence, when the natu- ral laws require him to be watchful at his duty. If he obey the natural laws, he will be safe as an individual ; and if he disobey them he will be drowned, f Now, if a crew and passengers de- sire to avail themselves of the social law, that is, to combine their powers and activity under one leader or chief, by doing which they may sail in a large ship, have ample stores of provisions, divide their labour, enjoy each other's society, * I waive at present the question of storms, which he could not foresee, as these fall under the head of ignorance of natural laws, which may be subsequently discovered. INFRIGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 219 &c. ; and if at the same time they fulfil the moral and intellectual laws, by placing, in the situation of captain, an individual fully qualified for that duty, they will enjoy the reward in sailing safely, and in comfort; if they disregard these laws, and place an individual in charge of the ship, whose intellectual faculties are weak, whose animal pro- pensities are strong, whose moral sentiments are in abeyance, and who, in consequence, habitually neglects the natural law r s, then they will suffer the penalty in being wrecked. I know it will be objected that the crew and passengers do not appoint the captain ; but, in every case, except impressment in the British na- vy, they may go in, or stay out, of a particular ship, as they discover the captain to possess the natural qualities or not. This, at present, I am aware, ninetynine individuals out of the hundred never inquire iftto ; but so do ninetynine out of the hundred neglect many of the other natural laws, and suffer the penalty, because their moral and intellectual faculties have never yet been instructed in their existence and effects, or train- ed to observe and obey them. But they have the power from nature of obeying them, if properly taught and trained ; and, besides, I give this merely as an illustration of the mode of operation of the social law\ Another example may be given. By employ- ing servants, the labors of life are rendered less burdensome to the master ; but he must employ 220 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM individuals who know the moral law, and who possess the desire to act under.it ;■ otherwise, as a punishment for neglecting this requisite, he may be robbed, cheated, or murdered in bed. Phre- nology presents the means of observing this law, in a degree quite unattainable without it, by the facility which it affords of discovering 'the natural talents and dispositions of individuals. By entering into copartnerships, merchants, and other persons in business, may extend their employment, and gain advantages beyond those they could reap, if labouring as individuals. But, by the natural law, each must take care that his partner knows, and is inclined to obey, the moral and intellectual law, as the only condition on which the Creator will permit him securely to reap the advantages of the social compact. If a partner in China is deficient in intellect and mo- ral sentiments, another in London may be utterly ruined. It is said that this is the innocent suf- fering for or along with the guilty ; but it is not so. It is an example of a person seeking to ob- tain the advantages of the social law, without conceiving himself bound to obey the conditions required by it ; the first of which is, that those individuals, of whose services he avails himself, shall observe the moral and intellectual laws. Let us now advert to the calamities which over- take whole classes of men, or communities, under the social law, trace their origin, and see how far they are attributable to infringement of the Crea- tor's laws. INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 221 If I am right in representing the whole facul- ties of man as intended by the Creator to be gra- tified, and the moral sentiments and intellect, as the higher and directing powers, with which all natural institutions are in harmony ; it follows, that if large communities of men, in their systema- tic conduct, habitually seek the gratification of the inferior propensities, and allow either no part, or too small and inadequate a part, of their time to the regular employment of the higher powers, they will act in direct opposition to the natural institutions ; and will, of course, suffer the pu- nishment in sorrow and disappointment. Now, to confine ourselves to our own country, it is cer- tain that, until within these few years, the labour- ing population of Britain were not taught that it was any part of their duty, as rational creatures, to restrain their propensities, so as not to multi- ply their numbers beyond the demand for their labors, and the supply of food for their offspring; and up to the present hour this most obvious and important doctrine is not admitted by one in a thousand, and not acted upon as a practical prin- ciple by one in ten thousand of those whose hap- piness or misery depends on observance of it. The doctrine of Malthus, that ' population can- not go on perpetually increasing, without pres- sing on the limits of the means of subsistence, and that a check of some kind or other must, sooner or latter, be opposed to it,' just amounts to this, — that the means of subsistence are not sus- 19* 222 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* 1 ceptible of such rapid and unlimited increase as population, and in consequence that the Ama- tive propensity must be restrained by reason ? otherwise it will be checked by misery. This principle is in accordance with the views of hu- man nature maintained in this Essay, and applies to all the faculties ; thus Philoprogenitivenes, when indulged in opposition to reason, leads to spoil- ing children, which is, followed directly by mis- ery both to them and their parents. Acquisitive- ness, when uncontrolled by reason, leads to ava- rice or theft, and these again carry suffering in their train. But so far from attending to such view's, the lives of the inhabitants of Britain generally are devoted to the acquisition of wealth, of power and distinction, or of animal pleasure ; in other words, the great object of the labouring classes, is to live and gratify the inferior propensities ; of the mercantile and manufacturing population, to grat- ify Acquisitiveness and Self-esteem ; of the more intelligent class of gentlemen, to gratify Self-es- teem and Love of Approbation, in political, lite- rary, or philosophical eminence ; and of another portion, to gratify Love of Approbation, by su- premacy in fashion ; and these gratifications are sought by means not in accordance with the dic- tates of the higher sentiments, but by the joint aid of the intellect. and propensities. If the su- premacy of moral sentiment and intellect be the natural law, then, as often observed, every circum- INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 223 stance connected with human life must be in har- mony with it; that is to say, first, After rational restraint on population, and with the proper use of machinery, such moderate labor as will leave ample time for the systematic exercise of the higher powers, will suffice to provide for human wants ; and, secondly, If this exercise be neg- lected, and the time which ought to be dedicated to it be employed in labor to gratify the propen- sities, direct evil will ensue ; and this according- ly appears to me to be exactly the result. By means of machinery, and the aids derived from science, the ground can be cultivated, and every imaginable necessary and luxury produced in ample abundance, by a moderate expenditure of labor by any population not in itself supera- bundant. If men were to stop whenever they had reached this point, and dedicate the residue of each day to moral and intellectual pursuits, the consequence would be, ready and steady because not overstocked, markets. Labor, pursued till it provided abundance, but not redundant super- fluity, would meet with a certain and just reward : and would yield also, a vast increase of happi- ness ; for no joy equals that which springs from the moral sentiments and intellect excited by the contemplation, pursuit, and observance, of the Creator's institutions. Further, morality would be improved ; for men being happy, would cease to be vicious ; and, lastly, There would be im- provement in the organic, moral, and intellectual 224 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* capabilities of the race; for the active moral and intellectual organs in the parents would increase the volume of these in their offspring; so that each generation would start not only with greater stores of acquired knowledge than their predeces- sors possessed, but with higher natural capabili- ties of turning these to account. Before merchants and manufacturers can be expected to act in this manner, a great change must be effected in their sentiments and perceptions ; but so was a striking revolution effected in their ideas and practices of the tenantry west of Edin- burgh, when they removed the stagnant pools be- tween each ridge of land, and banished ague from their district. If any reader will compare the state of Scotland during the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries, correctly ^nd spiritedly represented in Sir Walter Scott's Tales of a Grandfather, with its present condition, in regard to knowledge, morality, religion, and the compar- ative ascendancy of the rational over the animal part of our nature, he will perceive so great an improvement in later times, that the commence- ment of the millennium itself, in five or six hun- dred years hence, would scarce be a greater ad- vance beyond the present, than the present is over the past. If the laws of the Creator be really what are here represented, and if they were once taught as elementary truths to every class of the community, and the sentiment of Veneration call- ed in to enforce obedience to them, a set of new INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 225 motives and principles would be brought into play, calculated to accelerate the change ; especially if it were seen, what, in the next place, I proceed to shew, that the consequences of neglecting these laws are the most serious visitations of suffering that can well be imagined. The labouring popu- lation of Britain is taxed with exertion for ten, twelve, and some even fourteen hours a day, ex- hausting their muscular and nervous energy, so as utterly to incapacitate them, and leaving, besides, no leisure, for moral and intellectual pursuits. The consequence of this is, that all markets are overstocked with produce ; prices first fall ruin- ously low 5 the operatives are then thrown idle $ and left in destitution of the necessaries of life, until the surplus produce of their formerly exces- sive labors, and perhaps something more, are con- sumed ; after this takes place, prices rise too high in consequence of the supply falling rather below the demand ; the laborers resume their toil, on their former system of excessive exertion ; they again overstock the market, and again are thrown idle, and suffer dreadful misery. In 1825-6-7 we witnessed this operation of the natural laws : large bodies of starving and unem- ployed laborers were then supported on charity. How many hours did they not stand idle, and how much of excessive toil would not these hours have relieved, if distributed over the periods when they were overworked ? The results of that excessive exertion were seen in the form of untenanted 226 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM** houses, of shapeless piles of goods decaying in warehouses, in short, in every form in which mis- applied industry could go to ruin. These obser- vations are strikingly illustrated by the following official report, copied from the public newspa- pers : * State of the Unemployed Operatives, resident in Edinburgh, who are supplied with work by a Committee, constituted for that pur- pose, according to a list made up on Wednesday, the 14th March, 1827. * The number of unemployed operatives who have been remitted by the Committee for work, up to the 14th of March, are 1481 6 And the number of cases they have rejected, after having been particularly investigated, for being bad characters, .giving in falao etatomcnts, or being only a short time OUt of work, &c. &c. are ------- 446 Making together, - 1927 4 Besides those, several hundreds have been rejected by the Com- mittee, as, from the applicants' own statement, they were not con- sidered as cases entitled to receive relief, and were not, therefore, remitted for investigation. ' The wages allowed is 5s. per week, with a peck of meal to those who have families. Some youths are only allowed 3s. of wages. * The particular occupations of those sent to work are as follows : — 242 masons, 634 laborers, 66 joiners, 19 plasterers, 76 sawyers, 19 slaters, 45 smiths, 40 painters, 36 tailors, 55 shoemakers, 20 garden- ers, 229 various trades. Total 1481. 5 Edinburgh is not a manufacturing city, and if so much misery existed in it in proportion to its population, what must have been the condition of Glasgow, Manchester, and other manufacturing towns ?* * In the Appendix, No, IV, several interesting documents are giyen, in further elucidation of these principles. INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 227 Here, then, the Creator's laws shew themselves paramount, even when men set themselves system- atically to infringe them. He intended the hu- man race, under the moral law, not to pursue Ac- quisitiveness excessively, but to labor only a cer- tain and a moderate portion of their lives ; and although they do their utmost to defeat this inten- tion, they cannot succeed ; they are constrained to remain idle as many days and hours, while their surplus produce is consuming, as would have serv- ed for the due exercise of their moral and intel- lectual faculties and the preservation of their health, if they had dedicated them regularly to these ends from day to day, as time passed over their heads. But their punishment proceeds : the extreme exhaustion of nervous and muscular ener- gy, with the absence of all moral and intellectual excitement, create the excessive craving for the stimulus of ardent spirits which distinguishes the labouring population of the present age ; this calls into predominant activity the organs of the Ani- mal Propensities, these descend to the children by the law already explained ; increased crime, and a deteriorating population, are the results ; and a moral and intellectual incapacity for arresting the evils, becomes greater with the lapse of every generation. According to the principles of the present Es- say, what are called by commercial men < times of prosperity,' are seasons of the greatest infringe- ment of the natural laws, and precursors of great 22S CALAMITIES ARISING FROM calamities. Times are not reckoned prosper- ous, unless all the industrious population is em- ployed during the whole day, hours of eating and sleeping only excepted, in the production ofivealth. This is a dedication of their whole lives to the service of the propensities, and must necessarily terminate in punishment, if the world is constitut- ed on the principle of supremacy of the higher powers. This truth has already been illustrated more than once in the history of commerce. The fol- lowing is a recent example. By the combination laws, workmen were pun- ishable for uniting to obtain a rise of wages, when an extraordinary demand occured for their labor. These laws being obviously unjust, were at length repealed. In summer and autumn 1825, however, commercial men conceived themselves to have reached the highest point of prosperity, and the demand for labor was unlimited. The operatives availed themselves of the opportunity to better their condition, formed extensive combinations; and, because their demands were not complied with, struck work, and continued idle for months in succession. The master manufacturers clam- ored against the new law, and complained that the country would be ruined, if combinations were not again declared illegal, and suppressed by force. According to the principles of this Es- say, the just law must from the first have been the most beneficial for all parties affected by it; and INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 229 the result amply confirmed this idea. Subsequent events proved that the extraordinary demand for laborers in 1825 was entirely factitious, fostered by an overwhelming issue of bank paper, much of which ultimately turned out to be worthless ; in short, that, during the combinations, the master manufacturers were engaged in an extensive sys- tem of speculative over-production, and that the combinations of the workmen presented a natu- ral check to this erroneous proceeding. The ruin that overtook the masters in 1826 arose from their having accumulated, under the influence of un- bridled Acquisitiveness, vast stores of commodi- ties which were not required by society ; and to have compelled the laborers, by force, to manu- facture more at. their bidding, would obviously have been to aggravate the evil. It is a well known fact, accordingly, that those masters whose operatives most resolutely refused to work, and who, on this account, clamored loudest against the law, were the greatest gainers in the end. Their stocks of goods were sold off at high pri- ces during the speculative period ; and when the revulsion came, instead of being ruined by the fall of property, they were prepared, with their capitals at command, to avail themselves of the depreciation, to make new and highly profitable investments. Here again, therefore, we perceive the law of justice vindicating itself, and benefit- ing by its operation even those individuals who blindly denounced it as injurious to their interests. 20 230 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* A practical faith in the doctrine that the world is arranged by the Creator, in harmony with the moral sentiments and intellect, would be of un- speakable advantage both to rulers and subjects ; for they would then be able to pursue with great- er confidence the course dictated by moral recti- tude, convinced that the result would prove benefi- cial, even although, when they took the first step, they could not distinctly perceive by what means. In the whole system of education and treat- ment of the labouring population, the laws of the Creator, such as I have now endeavoured to ex- pound them, are neglected, and their moral and intellectual cultivation is scarcely known. The Schools of Art, and ' the Library of Useful Knowl- edge,' are laudable attempts at a better order of things ; and I hail with joy their increase ; but they too much exclude the science of human na- ture, and, in consequence, will long remain com- paratively barren. From indications which al- ready appear, however, I think it probable that the labouring classes will ere long recognise Phre- nology, and the natural laws, as deeply interesting to themselves; and whenever their minds shall be opened to rational views of their own constitution as men, and their condition as members of society, I venture to predict that they will devote them- selves to improvement, with a zeal and earnest- ness that in a few generations will change the as- pect of their class. INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 231 The consequences of the present system of de- parting from the moral law, on the middle orders of the community, are in accordance with its ef- fects on the lower. Uncertain gains, continual fluctuations in fortune, absence of all reliance on moral and intellectual principles in their pursuits, a gambling spirit, an insatiable appetite for wealth, alternately extravagant joys of excessive prospe- rity and bitter miseries of disappointed ambition, render the whole lives of merchants vanity and vexation of spirit. Nothing is more essential to human happiness than fixed principles of action, on which we can rely for our present safety and future welfare ; and the Creator's laws, when seen and followed, afford this support and delight to our faculties in the highest degree. It is one, not of the least, of the punishments that overtake the middling classes for neglect of these laws, that they do not, as a permanent condition of mind, feel secure and internally at peace with them- selves. When the excitement of business has subsided, vacuity and craving are felt within. These proceed from the moral and intellectual fa- culties calling aloud for exercise ; but, through ignorance of their own nature, fashionable amuse- ments, or intoxicating liquors, are resorted to, and, with these, a vain attempt is made to fill up the void of life. I know that this class ardently desires a change that would remove the miseries described, and will zealously cooperate in the diffusing of knowledge, by which means alone it can be introduced. 232 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM * The responsibility which overtakes the higher classes is equally obvious. If they do not engage in some active pursuit, so as to give scope to their energies, they suffer the evils of ennui, morbid ir- ritability, and excessive relaxation of the func- tions of mind and body, which carry in their train more suffering than is entailed even on the opera- tives by excessive labor. If they pursue ambition in the senate or the field, or in literature or philo- sophy, their real success is in exact proportion to the approach which they make to observance of the supremacy of the sentiments and intellect, Franklin, Washington, and Bolivar, may be con- trasted with Sheridan and Bonaparte, as illustra- tions. Sheridan and Napoleon did not, system- atically, pursue objects sanctioned by the higher sentiments and intellect, as the end of their exer- tions ; and no person, who is a judge of human emotions, can read their lives, and consider what must have passed within their minds, without coming to the conclusion, that, even in their most brilliant moments of external prosperity, the can- ker was gnawing within, and that there was no moral relish of the present, or reliance on the fu- ture ; but a mingled tumult of inferior propensi- ties and intellect, carrying with it an habitual feeling of unsatisfied desires. Let us now consider the effect of the moral law on national prosperity. INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 233 If the Creator has constituted the world in har- mony with the dictates of the higher sentiments, the highest prosperity of each particular nation should be thoroughly compatible with that of eve- ry other; that is to say, England, by sedulously cultivating her own soil, pursuing her own cour- ses of industry, founding her internal institutions and her external relations on the principles of Benevolence, Veneration, and Justice, which im- ply abstinence from wars of aggression, from con- quest, and from all selfish designs of commercial monopoly, would be in the highest condition of prosperity and enjoyment that nature would admit of; and every step that she deviated from these principles, would carry an inevitable punishment along with it. The same statement might be made relative to France and every other nation. According to this principle, also, the Creator should have conferred on each nation some pecu- liar advantages of soil, climate, situation, or ge- nius, which would enable it to carry on amicable intercourse with its fellow states, in a beneficial exchange of the products peculiar to each ; so that the higher one rose in morality, intelligence, and riches, it ought to become so much the more estimable and valuable as a neighbour to all the surrounding states. This is so obviously the real constitution of nature, that proof of it is super- fluous. England, however, as a nation, has set this law at absolute defiance. She has led the way in tak- 20* 234 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* 1 ing the propensities as her guides, in founding her laws and Institutions on them, and in following them out in her practical conduct. England in- vented restrictions on trade, and carried them to the greatest height ; she conquered colonies, and ruled them in the full spirit of selfishness* she encouraged lotteries and fostered the slave trade,, carried paper money and th,e most avaricious spi- rit of manufacturing and speculating in commerce to their highest pitch : defended corruption in Parliament, distributed churches and seats on the bench of justice, on principles purely selfish ; all in direct opposition to the supremacy of the moral law. If the world had been created in harmony with predominance of the animal faculties, Eng- land should have been a most felicitous nation ; but as the reverse is the case, we should expect a severe national responsibility to flow from these departures from the divine institutions ; and griev- ous accordingly has been, and, I fear, will be, the punishment. The principle which regulates national respon- sibility is, that the precise combination of faculties which leads to the national transgression, carries in its train the punishment. Nations are under the moral and intellectual law, as well as individ- uals. A carter who half starves his horse, and unmercifully beats it, to supply, by the stimulus of pain, the vigour that nature intended to flow from abundance of food, may be supposed to prac- tise this barbarity with impunity in this world, if INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 235 he evade the eye of Mr Martin, and that of the police ; but this is not the case. The hand of Providence reaches him by a direct punishment : He fails in his object, for blows cannot supply the vigour which, by the constitution of the horse, flows only from sufficiency of wholesome food. In his conduct, he manifests an excessive Combative- ness and Destructiveness, with deficient Benevo- lence, Veneration, Justice, and Intellect, and he cannot reverse this character, by merely averting his eyes and his hand from the horse. He carries these dispositions into the bosom of his family, and into the company of his associates, and a va- riety of evil consequences ensue. The delights that spring from active moral sentiments and in- tellectual powers, are necessarily unknown to him ; and the difference between these pleasures, and the sensations attendant on his moral and in- tellectual condition, are as great as between the external splendour of a king and the naked pov- erty of a beggar. It is true that he has never felt the enjoyment, and does not know the extent of his loss ; but still the difference exists ; we see it, and know that, as a direct consequence of this state of mind, he is excluded from a very great and exalted pleasure. Further; his active animal faculties rouse the Combativeness, Destructive- ness, Self-esteem, Secretiveness, and Cautious- ness, of his wife, children, and associates, against him, and they inflict on him animal punishment. He, no doubt, goes on to eat, drink, blaspheme, 236 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM and abuse his horse, day after day, apparently as if Providence approved of his conduct ; but he neither feels, nor can any one who attends to his condition believe him to feel, happy ; he is unea- sy, discontented, and disliked, — all which sensa- tions are his punishment, and it is fairly owing to his own grossness and ignorance that he does not connect it with his offence. Let us apply these remarks to nations. England, for instance, under the impulses of an excessively strong Acquisitive- ness, Self-esteem, and Destructiveness, for a long time protected the slave trade. Now, according to the law which I am explaining, during the pe- riods of greatest sin in this respect, the same combination of faculties ought to be found work- ing most vigorously in her other institutions, and producing punishment for that offence. There ought to be found in these periods a general spir- it of domineering and rapacity in her public men, rendering them little mindful of the welfare of the people ; injustice and harshness in her taxations and public laws ; and a spirit of aggression and hostility towards other nations, provoking retalia- tion of her insults. And, accordingly, I have been informed, as a matter of fact, that, while these measures of injustice were publicly patron- ised by the government, its servants vied with each other in injustice towards it, and that its subjects dedicated their talents and enterprise towards cor- rupting its officers, and cheating it of its due. Every trader who was liable to excise or custom INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 237 duties, evaded the one-half of them, and felt no disgrace in doing so. A gentleman, who was subject to the excise laws fifty years ago, describ- ed to me the condition of his trade at that time. The excise officers, he said, regarded it as an un- derstood matter, that at least one-half of the goods manufactured were to be smuggled without being charged'with duty ; but then, said he, ' they made us pay a moral and pecuniary penalty that was at once galling and debasing. We required to ask them to our table at all meals, and place them at the head of it in our holiday parties ; when they fell into debt, we were obliged to help them out of it ; when they moved from one house to another, our servants and carts were in requisi- tion to perform this office ; and, by way of keep- ing up discipline upon us, and also to make a show of duty, they chose every now and then to step in and detect us in a fraud, and get us fined ; if we submitted quietly, they told us that they would make us amends, by winking at another fraud ; and generally did so ; but if our indigna- tion rendered passive obedience impossible, and we spoke our mind of their character and con- duct, they enforced the law on us, while they re- laxed it on our neighbours ; and these being riv- als in trade, undersold us in the market, carried away our customers, and ruined our business. Nor did the bondage end here. We could not smug- gle without the aid of our servants ; and as they could, on occasion of any offence given to them- 23S CALAMITIES ARISING FROM* 1 selves, carry information to the head quarters of excise, we were slaves to them also, and were obliged tamely to submit to a degree of drunken- ness and insolence, that appears to me now per- fectly intolerable. Further ; this evasion and op- pression did us no good ; for all the trade were alike, and we just sold our goods so much cheap- er the more duty we evaded ; so that our individ- ual success did not depend upon superior skill and superior morality, in making an excellent article at a moderate price, but upon superior capacity for fraud, meanness, sycophancy, and every possi- ble baseness. Our lives were anything but envia- ble. Conscience, although greatly blunted by practices that were universal, and viewed as ine- vitable, still whispered that they were wrong ; our sentiments of self-respect very frequently revolted at the insults to which we were exposed, and there was a constant feeling of insecurity from the great extent to which we were dependent upon wretches whom we internally despised. When the government took a higher tone, and more principle and greater strictness in the collection of the duties were enforced, we thought ourselves ruined ; but the reverse has been the case. The duties, no doubt, are now excessively burdensome from their amount ; but that is their least evil. If it was possible to collect them from every tra- der with perfect equality, our independence would be complete, and our competition would be confin- ed to superiority in morality and skill. Matters INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 239 are much nearer this point now than they were fifty years ago ; but still they would admit of con- siderable improvement.' The same individual mentioned, that, in his youth, now seventy years ago, the civil liberty of the people of Scotland was held by a weak tenure. He knew instances of soldiers being sent, in times of war, to the farm-houses, to carry off, by force, young men for the army ; and as this was against the law, they were accused of some imaginary offence, such as a trespass, or an assault, which was proved by false witnesses, and the magistrate, perfectly aware of the farce, and its object, threatened the victim with transportation to the colonies, as a felon, if he would not enlist ; which he, of course, unprotected and overwhelmed by power and injus- tice, was compelled to consent to. If the same minute representation were given of other departments of private life, during the time of the greatest immoralities on the part of the government, we would find that this paltering with conscience and character in the national proceedings, tended to keep down the morality of the people, and fostered in them a rapacious and gambling spirit, to which many of the evils that have since overtaken us have owed their origin. But we may take a more extensive view of the subject of national responsibility. In the American war England desired to gra- tify her Acquisitiveness and Self-esteem, in oppo- sition to Benevolence and Justice, at the expense 240 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM of the transatlantic colonies. This roused the animal resentment of the latter, and the lower faculties of the two nations came into collision ; that is to say, they made war on each other ; Eng- land to support a dominion in direct hostility to the principles which regulate the moral govern- ment of the world, in the expectation of becom- ing rich and powerful by success in that enter- prise ; the Americans, to assert the supremacy of the higher sentiments, and to become free and independent. According to the principles which I am now unfolding, the greatest misfortune that could have befallen England would have been success, and the greatest advantage, failure in her attempt; and the result is now acknowledged to be in exact accordance with these views. If England had subdued the colonies in the Ameri- can war, every one must see to what an extent her Self-esteem, Acquisitiveness and Destructive- ness would have been let loose upon them; this, in the first place, would have roused their animal faculties, and led them to give her all the annoy- ance in their power, and the fleets and armies requisite to repress this spirit would have far counterbalanced, in expense, all the profits she could have wrung out of the colonists, by extor- tion and oppression. In the second place, the very exercise of these animal faculties by her- self, in opposition to the moral sentiments, would have rendered her government at home an exact parallel of that of the carter in his own family. INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 241 The same malevolent principles would have over- flowed on her own subjects, the government would have felt uneasy, the people rebellious, discontented, and unhappy, and the moral law would have been amply vindicated by the suffer- ing which would have everywhere abounded. The consequences of her failure have been ex- actly the reverse. America has sprung up into a great and moral nation, and actually contrib- utes ten times more to the wealth of Britain, standing as she now does, in her natural relation to this country, than she ever could have done, as a discontented and oppressed colony. This advantage is reaped without any loss, anxiety, or expense ; it flows from the divine institutions, and both nations profit by and rejoice under it. The moral and intellectual rivalry of America, instead of prolonging the predominance of the propensities in Britain, tends strongly to excite the moral sentiments in her people and govern- ment ; and every day that we live, we are reap- ing the benefits of this improvement in wiser institutions, deliverance from endless abuses, and a higher and purer spirit pervading every depart- ment of the executive administration of the coun- try. Britain, however, did not escape the penalty of her attempt at the infringement of the moral laws. The pages of her history, during the American war, are dark With suffering and gloom, and at this day we groan under the debt and difficulties then partly incurred. 21 242 CALAMITIES ARISING FKOM^ If the world be constituted on the principles of the supremacy of the moral sentiments and intel- lect, the method of one nation seeking riches and power, by conquering, devastating, or obstruct- ing the prosperity of other states, must be essen- tially futile. Being in opposition to the moral constitution of creation, it must occasion misery while in progress, and can lead to no result except the impoverishment and mortification of the people who pursue it. The national debt of Britain has been contracted chiefly in wars, orig- inating in commercial jealousy and thirst of con- quest ; in short, under the suggestions of Com- bativeness, Destructiveness, Acquisitiveness, and Self-esteem. Did not our ancestors, therefore, impede their own prosperity and happiness, by engaging in these contests ? and have any conse- quences of them reached us, except the burden of paying nearly, thirty millions of taxes anually, as the price of the gratification of their propensi- ties ? Would a statesman, who believed in the doctrine of this Essay, have recommended these wars as essential to national prosperity ? If the twentieth part of the sums had been spent in objects recognised by the moral sentiments, for example, in instituting seminaries of education, penitentiaries, making roads, canals, public gran- aries, &c. &c. how different would have been the present condition of the country ! After the American followed the French revo- lutionary war. Opinions are at present more di- INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 243 vided upon this subject ; but my view of it, offered with the greatest deference, is the following. When the French Revolution broke out, the do- mestic institutions of England were, to a consid- erable extent, founded and administered on prin- ciples in opposition to the supremacy of the sen- timents. A clamor was raised by the nation for reform of abuses. If my leading principle is sound, every departure from the moral law in na- tions, as well as in individuals, carries its punish- ment with it from the first hour of its commence- ment, till its final cessation ; and if Britain's institutions were then, to any extent, corrupt and defective, she could not too speedily have aban- doned them, and adopted purer and loftier ar- rangements. Her government, however, clung to the suggestions of the propensities, and resisted every innovation. To divert the national mind from causing a revolution at home, they embarked in a war abroad ; and, for a period of twentythree years, let loose the propensities on France with headlong fury, and a fearful perseverance. France, no doubt, threatened the different nations of Eu- rope with the most violent interference with their governments; a menace wholly unjustifiable, and that called for resistance. But the rulers of that country were preparing their own destruction, in exact proportion to their departures from the moral law ; and a statesman, who knew and had confidence in the constitution of the world, as now explained, could have listened to the storm 244 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM in complete composure, prepared to repel actual aggression, and left the exploding of French in- fatuation to the Ruler of the Universe, in unhesi- tating reliance on the efficacy of his laws. But England preferred a war of aggression. If this conduct was in accordance with the sentiments, we should now, like America, be reaping the re- ward of our obedience to the moral law, and plenty and rejoicing should flow down our streets like a stream. But mark the contrast. This island exhibits the spectacle of millions of men, toiled to the extremity of human endurance, for a pittance scarcely sufficient to sustain life; weav- ers labouring for fourteen or sixteen hours a day for eightpence, and frequently unable to procure work, even on these terms ; other artisans exhaust- ed almost to death by laborious drudgery, who, if better recompensed, seek compensation and en- joyment in the grossest sensual debauchery, drunkenness, and gluttony ; master-traders and manufacturers anxiously labouring for wealth, now gay in the fond hope that all their expectations w r ill be realised, then sunk in deep despair by the breath of ruin having passed over them; land- holders and tenants now reaping unmeasured re- turns from their properties, then pining in penury, amidst an overflow of every species of produce; the government cramped by an overwhelming debt and the prevalence of ignorance and selfish- ness on every side, so that it is impossible for it to follow with a bold step the most obvious dictates INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 245 of reason and justice, owing to the countless prejudices and imaginary interests which every- where obstruct the path of improvement. This resembles much more punishment for transgres- sion, than reward for obedience to the divine in- stitutions. If every man in Britain will turn his attention inwards, and reckon the pangs of disappointment which he has felt at the subversion of his own most darling schemes, by unexpected turns of public events, or the deep inroads on his happi- ness which such calamities, overtaking his dear- est relations and friends, have occasioned to him; the numberless little enjoyments in domestic life, which he is forced to deny himself, by the taxa- tion with which they are loaded ; the obstructions to the fair exercise of his industry and talents pre- sented by stamps, licences, excise laws, custom- house duties et hoc genus omne; he will discover the extent of responsibility attached by the Crea- tor to national transgressions. From my own ob- servation, I would say, that the miseries inflicted upon individuals and families, by fiscal prosecu- tions, founded on excise laws, stamp laws, post- office laws, &c. all originating in the necessity of providing for the national debt, are equal to those arising from some of the most extensive natural calamities. It is true, that few persons are prose- cuted without having offended ; but the evil con- sists in presenting men with enormous temptations to infringe mere financial regulations not always 21* 246 ' CALAMITIES ARISING FROM * in accordance with natural morality, and then in- flicting ruinous penalties for transgression. Men have hitherto expected the punishment of their offences in the thunderbolt, or the yawning earth- quake; and believed, that because the sea did not swollow them up, or the mountain fall upon them and crush them to atoms, Heaven was taking no cognizance of their sins; while, in point of fact, an omnipotent, an all-just, and an all-wise God, had arranged before they erred, an ample retribution in the very consequences of their transgressions. It is by looking to the principles. in the mind, from which transgressions flow, and attending to their whole operations and results, that we discover the real theory of the divine government. When men shall be instructed in the laws of creation, they will discriminate more accurately than heretofore between natural and factitious evils, and becomes less tolerant of the latter. * The Spaniards, under the influence of Acqui- sitiveness, Self-esteem, Love of Approbation, and a blind Veneration, conquered South America, in- flicted upon its wretched inhabitants the most atrocious cruelties, and continued to weigh, for three hundred years, like a moral incubus, upon that quarter of the globe. The responsibility now shews itself. By the laws of the Creator, nations require to obey the moral law to be happy ; that is, to cultivate the arts of peace, to be industri- ous, upright, intelligent, pious, and humane. The INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 247 reward of such conduct is individual happiness, and national greatness and glory. There shall then be none to make them afraid. The Span- iards disobeyed all these laws in the conquest of ilmerica, they looked to rapine and foreign gold, and not to industry, for wealth ; this fostered ava- rice and pride in the government, baseness in the nobles, indolence, ignorance, and mental depravi- ty in the people ; led them to imagine happiness to consist, not in the exercise of the moral and intellectual powers, but in the gratification of all the inferior feelings to the outrage of the higher. Intellectual cultivation was utterly neglected, the sentiments ran astray into the regions of bigotry and superstition, and the propensities acquired a fearful ascendancy. These causes made them the prey of internal discord and foreign invaders ; and Spain, at this moment, suffers an awful respon- sibility.* * Cowper recognises these principles of divine government as to nations, and has embodied them in the following powerful verses : The hand that slew till it could slay no more, Was glued to the sword-hilt with Indian gore. Their prince, as justly seated on his throne As vain imperial Philip on his own, Tricked out of all his royalty by art, That stript him bare, and broke his honest heart, Died by the sentence of a shaven priest, For scorning what they taught him to detest. How dark the veil, that intercepts the blaze Of Heaven's mysterious purposes and ways ; God stood not, though he seemed to stand aloof ; And at this hour the conqueror feels the proof : 243 CALAMITIES ARISING FROM •> In surveying the present aspect of Europe, we perceive astonishing improvements achieved in physical science. How much is implied in the mere names of the steam-engine, power-looms, rail-roads, steam-boats, canals, and gas-lights ; and yet of how much misery are several of these inventions at present the direct sources, in conse- quence of being almost exclusively dedicated to the gratification of the propensities. The lead- ing purpose to which the steam-engine in almost all its forms of application is devoted, is the ac- cumulation of wealth, or the gratification of Ac- The wreath he won drew down an instant curse, The fretting plague is in the public purse, The cankered spoil corrodes the pining state, Starved by that indolence their minds create. Oh ! could their ancient Incas rise again, How would they take up Israel's taunting strain ! Art thou too fallen, Iberia ? Do we see The robber and the murd'rer weak as we ? Thou that has wasted Earth, and dared despise Alike the wrath and mercy of the skies, Thy pomp is in the grave, thy glory laid Low in the pits thine avarice has made. We come with joy from our eternal rest, To see th' oppressor in his turn oppressed. Art thou the god, the thunder of whose hand Rolled over all our desolated land, Shook principalities and kingdoms down, And made the mountains tremble at his frown ? The sword shall light upon thy boasted powers, And waste them, as the sword has wasted ours. 'T is thus Omnipotence his law fulfils, And Vengeance executes what Justice wills. Cowper's Poems. — Charity, p. 156. INFRINGEMENT OF THE MORAL LAW. 249 quisitiveness and Self-esteem ; and few have pro- posed, by its means, to lessen the hours of toil to the lower orders of society, so as to afford them opportunity and leisure for the cultivation of their moral and intellectual faculties, and thereby to enable them to render a more perfect obedience to the Creator's institutions. Physical has far outstripped moral science ; and., it appears to me, that, unless the lights of Phrenology open the eyes of mankind to the real constitution of the world, and at length induce them to modify their conduct, in harmony with the laws of the Creator, their future physical discoveries will tend only to deepen their wretchedness. Intellect, acting as the ministering servant of the propensities, will lead them only further astray. The science of man's whole nature, animal, moral, and intellectu- al, was never more required to guide him than at present, when he seems to wield a giant's power, but in the application of it to display the ignorant selfishness, wilfulness, and absurdity of an over- grown child. History has not yielded, and can- not yield, half her fruits, until mankind shall be possessed of a true theory of their own nature. SECT. IV. MORAL ADVANTAGES OF PUNISHMENT. After the intellect and moral sentiments have been brought to recognise the principles of the Divine administration, so much wisdom, benevo- lence, and justice, are discernible in the natural 250 MORAL ADVANTAGES OF PUNISHMENT. laws, that our whole nature is meliorated in un- dergoing the punishments annexed to them. Pun- ishment endured by one individual also serves to warn others against transgression. These facts afford another proof that a grand object of the arrangement of creation is the improvement of the moral and intellectual nature of man? So strikingly conspicuous, indeed, is the meliorating influence of suffering, that many persons have supposed this to be the primary object for which it is sent ; a notion which, with great deference, appears to me to be unfounded in principle, and dangerous in practice. If evils and misfortunes are mere mercies of Providence, it follows that a headache consequent on a debauch, is not intend- ed to prevent a repetition of drunkenness, so much as to prepare the debauchee for ' the invisible world ;' and that shipwreck in a crazy vessel is not designed to render the merchant more cautious, but to lead him to heaven. It is however undeniable, that in innumerable instances pain and sorrow are the direct conse- quences of our own misconduct ; at the same time it is obviously benevolent in the Deity to ren- der it beneficial directly as a warning against fu- ture transgression, and indirectly as a means of purifying the mind ; nevertheless, if we shall ima- gine that in some instances it is dispensed as a di- rect punishment for particular transgressions, and in others, only on account of sin in general, and with the view of meliorating the spirit of the MORAL ADVANTAGES OF PUNISHMENT. 251 sufferer, we shall ascribe inconsistency to the Cre- ator, and expose ourselves to the danger of attri- buting our own afflictions to his favor, and those of others, to his wrath ; thus fostering in our minds self-conceit and uncharitableness. Indivi- duals who entertain the belief that bad health, worldly ruin, and sinister accidents, befalling them, are not punishments for infringement of the laws of nature, but particular manifestations of the love of the Creator towards themselves, make slight inquiry into the natural causes of their mis- eries, and bestow few efforts to remove them. In consequence, the chastisements endured by them, neither correct their own conduct, nor deter oth- ers from committing similar transgressions. Some religious sects, who espouse these notions, literal- ly act upon them, and refuse to inoculate with the cow-pox to escape contagion, or take other means of avoiding natural calamities. Regarding these as dispensations of Providence, sent to prepare them for a future world, they conceive that the more of them the better. Further ; these ideas, besides being repugnant to the common sense of mankind, are at variance with the principle that the world is arranged so as to favor virtue and discountenance vice ; because favouring virtue means obviously that the favoured virtuous will positively enjoy more happiness, and, negatively, suffer fewer misfortunes than the vicious. The view, then, now advocated, appears less exception- able, viz. that punishment serves a double purpose, 252 MORAL ADVANTAGES OF PUNISHMENT. directly to warn us against transgression ; and in- directly, when rightly apprehended, to subdue our lower propensities, and purify and vivify our moral and intellectual powers. Bishop Butler coincides in this interpretation of natural calamities. ' Now,' says he, ' in the present state, all which we enjoy, and a great PART OF WHAT WE SUFFER, is put in OUT power.* For pleasure and pain are the consequences of our actions ; and we are endued by the Author of our nature with capacities of foreseeing these conse- quences.' ' I know not that we have any one kind or degree of enjoyment, but by the means of our own actions. And, by prudence and care, we may, for the most part, pass our days in tolerable ease and quiet ; or, on the contrary, we may, by rashness, ungoverned passion, wilfulness, or even by negligence, make ourselves as miserable as ever toe please. And many do please to make them- selves extremely miserable ; i. e. they do what they knew beforehand will render them so. They follow those ways, the fruit of which they knew, by instruction, example, experience, will be dis- grace, and poverty, and sickness, and untimely death. This every one observes to be the gene- ral course of things ; though it is to be allowed, we cannot find by experience, that all our suffer- ings are owing to our own follies.' — Analogy, p. 40. In accordance with this last remark, I have v 5 * These words are printed in Italics in the original. MORAL ADVANTAGES OF PUNISHMENT. 253 treated of hereditary diseases ; and evils result- ing from convulsions of physical nature may be added to the same class. It has been objected that physical punishments, such as the breaking of an arm by a fall, are often so disproportionally severe, that the Creator must have had some other and more important object in view in appointing them, than to serve as mere motives to physical observance ; and that that object must be to influence the mind of the suf- ferer, and to draw his attention to concerns of higher import. In answer, I remark, that the human body is liable to destruction by severe injuries ; and that the degree of suffering, in general, bears a just proportion to the danger connected with the transgression. Thus, a slight surfeit is attended only with headach or general uneasiness, because it does not endanger life ; a fall on any muscular part of the body is followed either with no pain, or only a slight indisposition, for the reason that it is not seriously injurious to life ; but when a leg or arm is broken, the pain is intensely severe, be- cause the bones of these limbs stand high in the scale of utility to man. The human body is so framed that it may fall nine times, and suffer little damage, but the tenth time a limb may be broken, which will entail a painful chastisement. By this arrangement the mind is kept alive to danger to such an extent, as to ensure general safety, while at the same time it is not overwhelmed with terror 22 254 ON THE MORAL ADVANTAGES OF PUNISHMENT. by punishments too severe and too frequently re- peated. In particular states of the body, a slight wound may be followed by inflammation and death ; but these are not the results simply of the wound, but the consequences of a previous de- rangement of health, occasioned by departures from the organic laws. On the whole, therefore, no adequate reason appears for regarding the consequences of physi- cal accidents in any other light than as direct punishments for infringement of the natural laws, and indirectly as a means of accomplishing moral and religious improvement. 255 CHAPTER IV. ON THE COMBINED OPERATION OF THE NATURAL LAWS. Having now unfolded several of the natural laws, and their effects, and having also attempted to shew that each is inflexible and independent in itself, and requires absolute obedience, so that a man who shall neglect the physical law will suffer the physical punishment, although he may be very attentive to the moral law ; that one who infringes the organic law will suffer organic punishment, although he may obey the physical law ; and that a person who violates the moral law will suffer the moral punishment, although he should observe the other two ; I proceed to show the mutual relationship between these laws, and to adduce some instances of their joint operation. The great fires in Edinburgh, in November, 1 824, when the Parliament Square and a part of the High Street were consumed, will serve as one example. That calamity may be viewed in the following light: — The Creator constituted the countries of England and Scotland, and the Eng- lish and Scottish nations, with such qualities and relationships, that the individuals of both king- doms would be most happy in acting towards each 256 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION** other, and pursuing their separate vocations, un- der the supremacy of the moral sentiments. We have lived to see this practised, and to reap the rewards of it. But the ancestors of the two na- tions did not believe in this constitution of the world, and they preferred acting on the principles of the propensities ; that is to say, they waged furious wars, and committed wasting devastations, on each other's properties and lives. This w r as clearly a violent infringement of the moral law ; and it is obvious from history that the two nations were equally ferocious, and delighted reciprocally in each other's calamities. One effect of it was to render personal safety an object of paramount importance. The hill on which the Old Town of Edinburgh is built, was naturally surrounded by marshes, and presented a perpendicular front, to the west, capable of being crowned with a castle. It was appropriated with avidity, and the metrop- olis of Scotland founded there, obviously and un- deniably under the inspiration purely of the animal faculties. It was fenced round, and ram- parts built to exclude the fierce warriors who then inhabited the south of the Tweed, and also to protect the inhabitants from the feudal banditti who infested their own soil. The space within the walls, however, was limited and narrow ; the attractions to the spot were numerous, and to make the most of it, our ancestors erected the enormous masses of high, confused, and crowded buildings which now compose the High Street of OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 257 this city, and the wynds, or alleys, on its two sides. These abodes, moreover, were construct- ed, to a great extent, of timber, for not only the joists and floors, but the partitions between the rooms, were of massive wood. Our ancestors did all this in the perfect knowledge of the physical law, that wood ignited by fire is not only con- sumed itself, but envelopes in inevitable destruc- tion every combustible object within its influence. Further ; their successors, even when the necessity had ceased, persevered in the original error, and in the perfect knowledge that every year added to the age of such fabrics increased their liability to burn, they allowed them to be occupied not only as shops filled with paper, spirits, and other high- ly combustible materials, but introduced gas- lights, and let off the upper floors for brothels, introducing thereby into the heart of this maga- zine of conflagration, the most reckless and im- moral of mankind. The consummation was the tremendous fires of November, 1824, the one ori- ginating in a whiskey-cellar, and the other in a garret brothel, which consumed the whole Par- liament Square and a part of the High Street, de- stroying property to the extent of many thousands of pounds, and spreading misery and ruin over a considerable portion of the population of Edin- burgh. Wonder, consternation, and awe were forcibly excited at the vastness of this calamity ; and in the sermons that were preached, and the dissertations that were written upon it, much was 22* 258 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION "* said of the inscrutable ways of Providence, that sent such visitations upon the people, enveloping the innocent and the guilty in one common sen- tence of destruction. According to the exposition of the ways of Pro- vidence which I have ventured to give, there was nothing wonderful, nothing vengeful, nothing ar- bitrary, in the whole occurrence. The surprising thing was, that it did not take place generations before. The necessity for these fabrics originated in gross violation of the moral law ; they were constructed in high contempt of the physical law ; and, latterly, the moral law was set at defiance, by placing in them inhabitants abandoned to the worst habits of recklessness and intoxication. The Creator had bestowed on men faculties to perceive all this, and to avoid it, whenever they chose to exert them ; and the destruction that ensued was the punishment of following the propensities, in preference to the dictates of intellect and morali- ty. The object of the destruction, as a natural event, was to lead men to avoid repetition of the offences : but the principles of the divine govern- ment are not yet comprehended ; Acquisitiveness whispers that more money may be made of houses consisting of five or six floors, under one roof, than of only two ; and erections, the very coun- terparts of the former, are now rearing their heads on the spot where the others stood, and, sooner or later, they also will be overtaken by the natural laws, which never slumber or sleep. OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 259 The true method of arriving at a sound view of calamities of every kind, is to direct our atten- tion, in the first instance, to the law of nature, from the operation of which they have originated ; then to find out the uses and advantages of that law, when observed ; and to discover whether the evils under consideration have arisen from violation of it. In the present instance, we ought never to lose sight of the fact, that the houses in question stood erect, and the furniture in safety, by the very same law of gravitation which made them topple to the foundation when it was infringed ; that mankind enjoy all the benefits which result from the combustibility of timber as fuel, by the very same law which renders it a devouring ele- ment, when unduly ignited ; that, by the same moral law, which, when infringed, leads to the necessity of ramparts, fortifications, crowded lanes, and extravagantly high houses, we enjoy, now that we observe it better, that security of proper- ty and life which distinguishes modern Scotland from ancient Caledonia. This instance affords a striking illustration of the manner in which the physical and organic laws are constituted in harmony with, and in subserviency to, the moral law. We see clearly that the leading cause of the construction of such erections as the houses of the Old Town of Edin- burgh (with the deprivation of free air, and lia- bility to combustion that attend them), arose from the excessive predominance of Combative- 260 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION** ness, Destructiveness, Self-esteem and Acquisi- tiveness, in our ancestors ; and although the ancient personages who erected these monuments of animal supremacy, had no conception that, in doing so, they were laying the foundations of a severe punishment on themselves and their pos- terity; yet, when we compare the comforts and advantages that would have accompanied dwell- ings constructed under the inspiration of Benevo- lence, Ideality, and enlightened Intellect, with the contaminating, debasing, and dangerous ef- fects of their workmanship, we perceive most clearly that they actually were the instruments of chastising their own transgressions, and of trans mitting that chastisement to their posterity, so long as the animal supremacy shall be prolonged. Another example may be given. Men, by uniting under one leader, may, in vir- tue of the social law, acquire prodigious advanta- ges to themselves, which singly they could not obtain ; and I stated, that the condition under which the benefits of that law were permitted, was, that the leader should know and obey the natural laws that were conducive to success ; if he neglected these, then the same principle which gave the social body the benefit of his observing them, involved them in the punishment of his infringement ; and that this was just, because, under the natural law, the leader must necessari- ly be chosen by the social body, and they were responsible for not attending to his natural quali- OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 261 ties. Some illustrations of the consequences of neglect of this law may be stated, in which the mixed operation of the physical and moral laws will appear. During the French war, a squadron of English men-of-war was sent to the Baltic with military stores, and, in returning home up Channel, they were beset, for two or three days, by a thick fog. It was about the middle of December, and no cor- rect information was possessed of their exact sit- uation. Some of the commanders proposed ly- ing-to all night, and proceeding only during day, to avoid running ashore unawares. The commo- dore was exceedingly attached to his wife and fa- mily, and stated his determination to pass Christ- mas with them in England, if possible, and order- ed the ships to sail straight on their voyage. The very same night they all struck on a sand- bank off the coast of Holland; two ships of the line were dashed to pieces, and every soul on board perished. The third ship drew less watei, was forced over the bank by the waves was stand- ed on the beach, the crew saved, but led to a captivity of many years' duration. Now, these vessels were destroyed under the physical law ; but this calamity owed its origin to the predomi- nance of the animal over the moral and intellec- tual faculties in the commodore. The gratifica- tion which he sought to obtain was individual and selfish; and, if his Benevolence, Veneration, Conscientiousness, and Intellect, had been asi 262 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION* alert and carried as forcibly home to his mind the operation of the physical laws, and the wel- fare of the men under his charge ; nay, if these faculties had been sufficiently alive to see the dan- ger to which he exposed his own life, and the hap- piness of his own wife and children, — he never could have followed the precipitate course which consigned himself, and so many brave men, to a watery grave, within a few hours after his resolu- tion was formed. Very lately the Ogle Castle East Indiaman was offered a pilot coming up Channel, but the cap- tain refused assistance, professing his own skill to be sufficient. In a few hours the ship ran aground on a sand-bank, and every human being perished in the waves. This also arose from the physical law, but the unfavourable operation of it sprung from Self-esteem, pretending to know- ledge which the intellect did not possess ; and, as it is only by the latter that obedience can be yielded to the physical laws, the destruction of the ship was indirectly the consequence of in- fringement of the moral and intellectual laws. An old sailor, whom I lately met on the Queens- ferry passage, told me, that he had been nearly fifty years at sea, and once was in a fifty gun ship in the West Indies. The captain, he said, was a ' fine man ;' he knew the climate, and foresaw a hurricane coming, by its natural signs ; and, on one occasion, in particular, he struck the top- masts, lowered the yards, lashed the guns, made OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 263 each man supply himself with food for thirty-six hours, and scarcely was this done when the hurri- cane came ; the ship lay for four hours on her beam-ends in the water ; but all was prepared ; the men were kept in vigour during the storm, and fit for every exertion ; the ship at last righted, suffered little damage, and proceeded on her voy- age. The fleet which she convoyed was dispers- ed, and a great number of the ships foundered. Here we see the supremacy of the moral and in- tellectual faculties, and discover to what a surpris- ing extent they present a guarantee, even against the fury of the physical elements in their highest state of agitation. One of the most instructive illustrations of the connexion between the different natural laws is presented in Captain Lyon's brief narrative of an unsuccessful attempt to reach Repulse Bay, in his Majesty's ship Griper, in the year 1824. Captain Lyon mentions, that he sailed in the Griper on 13th June, 1824, in company with his Majesty's surveying vessel Snap, as a store-tender. The Griper was 180 tons burden, and ' drew 16 feet 1 inch abaft, and 15 feet 10 inches forward.' — p. 2. On the 26th, he ' was sorry to observe that the Griper, from her great depth and sharp- ness forward, pitched very deeply.' — p. 3. ' She sailed so ill, that ' in a stiff breeze and with stud- ding-sails set, he was unable to get above four knots an hour out of her, and she was twice whirl- ed round in an eddy in the Pentland Frith, from 264 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION-. which she could not escape. 5 — p. 6. On the 3d July, ' being now fairly at sea, I caused the Snap to take us in tow, which I had declined doing as we passed up the east coast of England, although our little companion had much difficulty in keep- ing under sufficiently low sail for us, and by noon we had passed the Stack Back. 5 < The Snap was of the greatest assistance, the Griper frequently towing at the rate of five knots, in cases where she would not have gone three. 5 — p. 10. ' On the forenoon of the 16th, the Snap came and took us in tow ; but at noon on the 17th, strong breezes and a heavy swell obliged us again to cast off. We scudded while able, but our depth on the wa- ter caused us to ship so many heavy seas, that I most reluctantly brought to under storm stay-sails. This was rendered exceeding mortifying, by ob- serving that our companion was perfectly dry, and not affected by the sea. 5 — p. 13. ' When our stores were all on board, we found our narrow decks completely crowded by them. The gang- ways, forecastle, and abaft the mizen-mast, were filled with casks, hawsers, whale-lines, and stream- cables, while on our straitened lower decks we were obliged to place casks and other stores, in every part but that allotted to the ship 5 s compa- ny^ mess-tables ; and even my cabin had a quan- tity of things stowed away in it. 5 — p. 21. 'It may be proper to mention, that the Fury and He- cla, which were enabled to stow three years 5 pro- visions, were each exactly double the size of the OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 265 Griper, and the Griper carried two years' and a- half's provisions.' — pp. 22, 23. Arrived in the Polar Seas, they were visited by a storm, of which Captain Lyon gives the follow- ing description : — ' We soon, however, came to fifteen fathoms, and I kept right away, but had then only ten ; when, being unable to see far around us, and observing, from the whiteness of the water, that we were on a bank, I rounded to at 7 a. m., and tried to bring up with the starboard anchor, and seventy fathoms chain, but the stiff breeze and heavy sea caused this to part in half an hour, and we again made sail to the north east- ward ; but finding we came suddenly to seven fathoms, and that the ship could not possibly work out again, as she would not face the sea, or keep steerage-way on her, I most reluctantly brought her up with three bowers and a stream in succes- sion, yet not before we had shoaled to five and a- half. This was between 8 and 9 a. m., the ship pitching bows under, and a tremendous sea run- ning. At noon, the starboard-bower anchor part- ed, but the others held. ' As there was every reason to fear the falling of the tide, which we knew to be from twelve to fifteen feet on this coast, and in that case the to- tal destruction of the ship, I caused the longboat to be hoisted out, and with the four smaller ones to be stored to a certain extent, with arms and pro- visions. The officers drew lots for their respec- tive boats, and the ship's company were stationed 23 266 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION to them. The longboat having been filled full of stores, which could not be put below, it became requisite to throw them overboard, as there was no room for them on our very small and crowded decks, over which heavy seas were constantly sweeping. In making these preparations for tak- ing to the boats, it was evident to all, that the longboat was the only one that had the slightest chance of living under the lee of the ship, should she be wrecked, but every officer and man drew his lot with the greatest composure, though two of our boats would have swamped the instant they were lowered. Yet, such was the noble feeling of those around me, that it was evident, that, had I ordered the boats in question to be manned, their crews would have entered them without a mur- mur. In the afternoon, on the weather clearing a little, we discovered a low beach all around astern of us, on which the surf was running to an awful height, and it appeared evident that no human powers could save us. At 3 p. m. the tide had fallen to twentytwo feet, (only six feet more than we drew,) and the ship, having been lifted by a tremendous sea, struck with great violence the length of her keel. This we naturally conceived was the forerunner of her total wreck, and we stood in readiness to take the boats, and endea- v6ur to hang under her lee. She continued to strike with sufficient force to have burst any less fortified vessel, at intervals of a few minutes, whenever an unusual heavy sea passed us. And, OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 267 as the water was so shallow, these might almost be called breakers rather than waves, for each in passing burst with great force over our gangways, and as every sea ' topped,' our decks were contin- ually, and frequently deeply, flooded. All hands took a little refreshment, for some had scarcely been below for twentyfour hours, and I had not been in bed for three nights. Although few, or none of us, had any idea that we should survive the gale, we did not think that our comforts should be entirely neglected, and an order was therefore given to the men to put on their best and warmest clothing, to enable them to support life as long as possible. Every man, therefore, brought his bag on deck, and dressed himself; and in the fine athletic forms which stood before me, I did not see one muscle quiver, nor the slightest sign of alarm. The officers each secured some useful instrument about them, for the purposes of observation, al- though it was acknowledged by all that not the slightest hope remained. And now that every thing in our power had been done, I called all hands aft, and to a merciful God offered prayers for our preservation. I thanked every one for their excellent conduct, and cautioned them, as we should, in all probability, soon appear before our Maker, to enter his presence as men resigned to their fate. We then all sat down in groups, and, sheltered from the wash of the sea, by whatever we could find, many of us endeavoured to obtain a little sleep. Never, perhaps, was witnessed a finer 268 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION ** scene than on the deck of my little ship, when all the hope of life had left us. Noble as the char- acter of the British sailor is always allowed to be in cases of danger ; yet I did not believe it to be possible, that, amongst fortyone persons, not one repining word should have been uttered. The officers sat about, wherever they could find a shel- ter from the sea, and the men lay down conversing with each other with the most perfect calmness. Each was at peace with his neighbour and all the world, and I am firmly persuaded that the resigna- tion which was then shown to the will of the Al- mighty, was the means of obtaining his mercy. At about 6 p. m., the rudder, which had already re- ceived some very heavy blows, rose, and broke up the after-lockers, and this was the last severe shock that the ship received. We found by the well that she made no water, and by dark she struck no more. God was merciful to us, and the tide, almost miraculously fell no lower. At dark heavy rain fell, but was borne in patience, for it beat down the gale, and brought with it a light air from the northward. At 9 p. m., the water had deepened to five fathoms. The ship kept off the ground all night, and our exhausted crew obtain- ed some broken rest.' — p. 76. In humble gratitude for his deliverence, he call- ed the place ' The Bay of God's mercy,' and ' of- fered up thanks and praises to God, for the mercy he had shewn to us.' OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 269 On 12th September, they had another gale of wind, with cutting showers of sleet, and a heavy sea. 'At such a time as this,' says Captain Lton, 6 we had fresh cause to deplore the extreme dullness of the Griper's sailing ; for though almost any other vessel would have worked off this lea-shore, we made little or no progress on a wind, but re- mained actually pitching, forecastle under, with scarcely steerage-way, to preserve which I was ultimately obliged to keep her nearly two points off the wind.'— p. 98. Another storm overtook them, which is describ- ed as follows: — 'Never shall I forget the dreari- ness of this most anxious night. Our ship pitch- ed at such a rate that it was not possible to stand, even below ; while on deck we were unable to move, without holding by ropes, which were stretched from side to side. The drift snow flew in such sharp heavy flakes, that we could not look to windward, and it froze on deck to above a foot in depth. The sea made incessant breaches quite fore and aft the ship, and the temporary warmth it gave while it washed over us, was most painful- ly checked, by its almost immediately freezing on our clothes. To these discomforts were added, the horrible uncertainty as to whether the cables would hold until daylight, and the conviction also, that if they failed us, we should instantly be dash- ed to pieces; the wind blowing directly to the quarter in which we knew the shore must lie. Again, should they continue to hold us, we feared, 23* 270 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION by the ship's complaining so much forward, that the bitts would be torn up, or that she would set- tle down at her anchors, overpowered by some of the tremendous seas which burst over her. At dawn on the 13th, thirty minutes after four a. m., we found that the. best bower cable had parted; and, as the gale now blew with terrific violence from the north, there was little reason to expect that the other anchors would hold long ; or, if they did, we pitched so deeply, and lifted so great a body of to at er each time, that it was feared the windlass and forecastle would be torn up, or she must go down at her anchors ; although the ports were knocked out, and a considerable portion of the bulwark cut away, she could scarcely discharge one sea before shipping another, and the decks were frequently flooded to an alarming depth. 6 At six a. m., all further doubts on this particu- lar account were at an end ; for, having received two overwhelming seas, both the other cables went at the same moment, and we were left help- less, without anchors, or any means of saving ourselves, should the shore, as we had every rea- son to expect, be close astern. And here, again, I had the happiness of witnessing the same gen- eral tranquillity as was shewn on the 1st of Sep- tember. There was no outcry that the cables were gone ; but my friend Mr Manico, with Mr Carr the gunner, came aft as soon as they recov- ered their legs, and, in the lowest whisper, in- formed me that the cables had all parted. The OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 271 ship, in trending to the wind, lay quite down on her broadside, and as it then became evident that nothing held her, and that she was quite helpless, each man instinctively took his station ; while the seamen at the leads, having secured themselves as well as was in their power, repeated their soundings, on w T hich our preservation depended, with as much composure as if we had been enter- ing a friendly port. Here, again, that Almighty power, which had before so mercifully preserved us, granted us his protection.' — p. 100. Nothing can be more interesting and moving than this narrative ; it displays a great predomi- nance of the moral sentiments and intellect, but sadly unenlightened as to the natural laws. I quoted, in Captain Lyon's own words, his descrip- tion of the Griper, loaded to such excess that she drew sixteen feet water ; that she was incapable of sailing ; that she was whirled round in an eddy in the Pentland Frith ; that seas broke over her that did not wet the deck of the little Snap, not half her size. Captain Lyon knew all this ; and also the roughness of the climate to which he was steering ; and, with these outrages of the phy- sical law staring him in the face, he proceeded on his voyage, without addressing, so far as we per- ceive, one remonstrance to the Lords of the Ad- miralty on the subject of this infringement of eve- ry principle of common prudence. My opinion is, that Captain Lyon was not blind to the errors committed in his equipment, or to their probable 272 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION consequences ; but that his powerful sentiment of Veneration, combined with Cautiousness and Love of Approbation, (misdirected in this instance), de- prived him of courage to complain to the Admi- ralty, through fear of giving offence : or that, if he did complain, they have prevented him from stating the fact in his narrative. To the tempes- tuous north he sailed ; and his greatest dangers were clearly referable to the very infringements of the physical laws which he describes. When the tide ebbed, his ship reached to within six feet of the bottom, and, in the hollow of every wave, struck with great violence : but she was loaded at least four feet too deeply, by his own account; so that, if he had done his own duty, she would have had four feet of additional water, or ten feet in all, between her and the bottom, even in the hollow of the wave, — a matter of the very last importance, in such a critical condition. Indeed, with four feet more water, she would not have struck. Be- sides, if less loaded, she would have struck less violently. Again, when pressed upon a lea shore, her incapability of sailing was a most obvious cause of danger : in short, if Providence is to be regarded as the cause of these calamities, there is no impropriety which man can commit, which may not, on the same principles, be charged against the Creator. But the moral law again shines forth in delight- ful splendour, in the conduct of Captain Lyon and his crew, when in the most forlorn condition. Pie- OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 273 ty, resignation, and manly resolution, then animat- ed them to the noblest efforts. On the principle, that the power of accommodating the conduct to the natural laws, depends on the activity of the sentiments and intellect, and that the more numer- ous the faculties that are excited, the greater is the energy communicated to the whole system, I would say, that, while Captain Lyon's sufferings were, in a great degree, brought on by his in- fringements of the physical laws, his escape was, in a great measure, promoted by his obedience to the moral law ; and that Providence, in the whole occurrences, proceeded on the broad and general principle, which sends advantage uniformly as the reward of obedience, and evil as the punishment of infringement, of every particular law of crea- tion. That storms and tempests have been instituted for some benevolent end, may, perhaps, be ac- knowledged, when their causes and effects are fully known, which at present is not the case. But, even amidst all our ignorance of these, it is surprising how small a portion of evil they would occasion, if men obeyed the laws which are actu- ally ascertained. How many ships perish from being sent to sea in an old worn out condition, and ill equipped, through mere Acquisitiveness; and how many more, from captains and crews being chosen who are greatly deficient in knowl- edge, intelligence, and morality, in consequence of which they infringe the physical laws. We 274 ON THE COMBINED OPERATION ought to look to all these matters, before com- plaining of storms as natural institutions. The last example of the mixed operation of the natural laws which I shall notice, is that which followed from the mercantile distresses of 1825-6. I have traced the origin of that visitation to ex- cessive activity of Acquisitiveness, and a general ascendancy of the animal and selfish faculties over the moral and intellectual powers. The punish- ments of these offences were manifold. The ex- cesses infringed the moral law, and the chastise- ment for this was deprivation of the tranquil, steady enjoyment that flows only from the senti- ments, with severe suffering in the ruin of fortune and blasting of hope. These disappointments produced mental anguish and depression ; which occasioned unhealthy action in the brain. The action of the brain being disturbed, a morbid nervous influence was transmitted to the whole corporeal system; bodily disease was superadded to mental sorrow, and, in some instances, the un- happy sufferers committed suicide to escape from these aggravated evils. Under the organic law, the children produced in this period of mental depression, bodily distress, and organic derange- ment, will inherit weak bodies, with feeble and irritable minds, a hereditary chastisement of their father's transgressions. In the instances now given, we discover the va- rious laws acting in perfect harmony, and in sub- ordination to the moral and intellectual. If our OF THE NATURAL LAWS. 275 ancestors had not forsaken the supremacy of the moral sentiments, such fabrics as the houses in the Old Town of Edinburgh never would have been built ; and if the modern proprietors had returned to that law, and kept profligate and drunken in- habitants out of them, the conflagration might still have been avoided. In the case of the ships, we saw, that wherever intellect and sentiment had been relaxed, and animal motives permitted to assume the supremacy, evil had speedily followed ; and that where the higher powers were called forth, safety had been obtained. And, finally, in the case of the merchants and manufacturers, we traced their calamities directly to placing Acqui- sitiveness and Ambition above Intellect and Sen- timent. Formidable and appalling, then, as these pun- ishments are, yet, when we attend to the laws under which they occur, and perceive that the ob- ject and legitimate operation of every one of them, when observed, is to produce happiness to man ; and that the punishments have the sole object in view of forcing him back to this enjoyment, we cannot, under the supremacy of the sentiments and intellect, fail to bow in humility before them, as at once wise, just, and beneficent. 276 CONCLUSION. The question has frequently been asked, What is the practical use of Phrenology, even supposing it to be true ? A few observations will enable us to answer this inquiry ; and, at the same time, to present a brief summary of the doctrine of the preceding Essay. Prior to the age of Galileo, the earth and sun presented to the eye phenomena exactly similar to those which they now exhibit ; but their mo- tions appeared in a very different light to the un- derstanding. Before the age of Newton, the revolutions of the planets were known as matter of fact ; b.ut the understanding was ignorant of the principle of their motions. Previous to the dawn of modern chemistry, many of the qualities of physical substances were ascertained by observation, but their ultimate principles and relations were not understood. Knowledge may be rendered beneficial in two ways, — either by rendering the substance disco- vered directly subservient to human enjoyment; or, where this is impossible, by modifying human conduct in harmony with its qualities. While knowledge of any department of nature remains CONCLUSION. 277 imperfect and empirical, the unknown qualities of the objects belonging to it, may render our efforts either to apply or to accord with those which are known, altogether abortive. Hence it is only after ultimate principles have been discovered, their relations ascertained, and this knowledge has been systematised, that science can attain its full character of utility. The merits of Galileo and Newton consist in having rendered this ser- vice to astronomy. * Before the appearance of Drs Gall and Spurz- heim, mankind were practically acquainted with the feelings and intellectual operations of their own minds ; and anatomists knew the appearances of the brain. But the science of Mind was very much in the same state as that of the heavenly bodies prior to Galileo and Newton. This re- mark is borne out by the following considerations : First. No unanimity prevailed among philoso- phers concerning the elementary feelings and intellectual powers of man. Individuals, defi- cient in Conscientiousness, for instance, denied that the sentiment of justice was a primitive men- tal quality of mind. Others, deficient in Venera- tion, asserted that man was not naturally prone to worship, and ascribed religion to the invention of priests. Secondly. The extent to which the primitive faculties differ in relative strength, was matter of dispute, or of vague conjecture ; and there was no agreement whether many actual attainments 24 278 CONCLUSION. were the gifts of nature, or the results of mere cultivation. Thirdly. Different modes of the same feeling were often mistaken for different feelings ; and modes of action of all the intellectual faculties were mistaken for faculties themselves. Fourthly. The brain, confessedly the most im- portant organ of the body, and that with which the nerves of the senses, of motion, and of feel- ing directly communicate, had no ascertained func- tions. Mankind were ignorant of its uses, and of its influence on the mental faculties. They indeed still dispute that its different parts are the organs of different mental powers, and that the vigour of manifestation bears a proportion, ceteris paribus^ to the size of the organ. If, in physics, imperfect and empirical know- ledge renders the unknown qualities of bodies lia- ble to frustrate the efforts of man to apply or to accommodate his conduct to their known qualities ; and if only a complete and systematic exhibition of ultimate principles, and their relations, can confer on science its full character of utility, — the same doctrine applies with equal or greater force to the philosophy of man. For example, Politics embrace forms of government, and the relations between different states. All govern- ment is designed to combine the efforts of indi- viduals, and to regulate their conduct when unit- ed. To arrive at the best means of accomplish- ing this end, systematic knowledge of the nature CONCLUSION. 279 of man seems highly important. A despotism, for example, may restrain some abuses of the lower propensities, but it assuredly impedes the exercise of reflection, and others of the highest and noblest powers. A form of government can be suited to the nature of man only when it is calculated to permit the legitimate use, and to restrain the abuses, of all his mental feelings and capacities ; and how can such a government be devised, while these principles, with their spheres of action, and external relations, are imperfectly ascertained. Again ; all relations between different states must also be in accordance with the nature of man, to prove permanently beneficial; and the question recurs, How are these to be framed while that nature is matter of conjecture ? Napoleon dis- believed in a sentiment of justice as an innate quality of mind ; and, in his relations with other states, relied on fear and interest as the grand motives of conduct : but that sentiment existed ; and, combined with other faculties which he out- raged, prompted Europe to hurl him from his throne. If Napoleon had comprehended the prin- ciples of human nature, and their relations, as forcibly and clearly as the principles of mathema- tics, in which he excelled, his understanding would have greatly modified his conduct, and Europe would have escaped prodigious calamities. Legislation, civil and criminal, is intended to regulate and direct the human faculties in their efforts at gratification 5 and, to be useful, laws 280 CONCLUSION. must accord with the constitution of these facul- ties. But how can salutary laws be enacted, while the subject to be governed, or human nature, is not accurately understood ? The inconsistency and intricacy of the laws even in enlightened na- tions, have afforded themes for the satirist in every age ; and how could the case be otherwise ? Le- gislators provided rules for directing the qualities of human nature, which they conceived themselves to know ; but either error in their conceptions, or the effects of other qualities unknown or unat- tended to, defeated their intentions. The law, for example, punishing heresy with burning, was addressed by our ancestors to Cautiousness, Self-love, and other inferior feelings ; but Intel- lect, Veneration, Conscientiousness, and Firmness, were omitted in their estimate of human princi- ples of action ; and these set their law at defi- ance. There are many laws still in the statute book,, equally at variance with the nature of man. Education is intended to enlighten the intel- lect and moral sentiments, and train them to vi- gour. But how can this be successfully accom- plished, when the faculties and sentiments them- selves, the laws to which they are subjected, and their relations to external objects, are unascer- tained. Accordingly, the theories and practices observed in education are innumerable and contra- dictory, which could not happen if men knew the constitution of the object which they were train- ing. CONCLUSION. 281 Morals and Religion, also, cannot assume a systematic and demonstrable character, until the elementary qualities of mind, and their relations shall be ascertained. It is presumable that the Deity, in creating the moral powers and the external world, really adapt- ed the one to the other ; so that individuals and nations, in pursuing morality, must, in every in- stance, be promoting their best interests, and, in departing from it, must be sacrificing them to pas- sion or to illusory notions of advantage. But, un- til the nature of man, and the relationship between it and the external world, shall be scientifically ascertained, and systematically expounded, it will be impossible to support morality by the powerful demonstration of interest, as here supposed, coin- ciding with it. The tendency in most men to view expediency as not always coincident with justice, affords a striking proof of the limited knowledge of the constitution of man and the ex- ternal world still prevalent in society. The diversities of doctrine in religion also obvi- ously owe their origin to ignorance of the primi- tive faculties and their relations. The faculties differ in relative strength in different individuals, and each person is most alive to objects and views connected with the powers predominant in him- self. Hence, in reading the Scriptures, one is convinced that they establish Calvanism ; anoth- er, possessing a different combination of faculties, discovers in them Lutheranism; and a third is satis- 24* 282 CONCLUSION. fiedthatSocinianism is the only true interpretation. These individuals have, in general, no distinct conception that the views which strike them most forcibly, appear in a different light to minds dif- ferently constituted. A correct interpretation of revelation must harmonize with the dictates of the moral sentiments and intellect, holding the animal propensities in subordination. It may legitimate- ly go beyond what they, unaided, could reach ; but it cannot contradict them ; because this would be setting the revelation of the bible in opposition to the inherent dictates of the faculties constitut- ed by the Creator, which cannot be admitted ; as the Deity is too powerful and wise to be incon- sistent. But mankind will never be induced to bow to such interpretations, while each takes his individual mind as a standard of human nature in general, and conceives that his own impressions are synonymous with absolute truth. The estab- lishment of Jhe nature of man, therefore, on a sci- entific basis, and in a systematic form, must aid the cause both of morality and religion. The professions, pursuits, amusements, and hours of exertion of individuals, ought also to bear reference to their physical and mental con- stitution ; but hitherto no guiding principle has been possessed to regulate practice in these im- portant particulars, — another evidence that the science of man has been unknown. But we require only to attend to the scenes daily presenting themselves in society, to obtain CONCLUSION. 283 irresistible demonstration of the consequences re- sulting from the want of a true theory of human nature, and its relations. Every preceptor in schools, every professor in colleges, every author, editor, and pamphleteer, every member of Par- liament, counsellor and judge, has a set of notions of his own, which in his mind hold the place of a system of the philosophy of man ; and although he may not have methodised his ideas, or even ac- knowledged them to himself as a theory, yet they constitute a standard to him by which he practi- cally judges of all questions in morals, politics, and religion ; he advocates whatever views co- incide with them, and condemns all that differ from them, with as unhesitating dogmatism as the most pertinacious theorist on earth. Each also despises the notions of his fellows, in so far as they differ from his own. In short, the human faculties too generally operate simply as instincts, exhibiting all the confliction and uncertainty of mere feeling, unenlightened by perception of their own nature and objects. Hence public measures in general, whether relating to education, religion, trade, manufactures, the poor, criminal law, or to any other of the dearest interests of society, instead of being treated as branches of one general sys- tem of economy, and adjusted each on scientific principles in harmony with all the rest, are sup- ported or opposed on narrow and empirical grounds, and often call forth displays of ignorance, prejudice, selfishness, intolerance, and bigotry, 284 CONCLUSION. that greatly obstruct the progress of improvement. Indeed, unanimity, even among sensible and vir- tuous men, will be impossible, so long as no stand- ard of mental philosophy is admitted to guide in- dividual feelings and perceptions. But the state of things now described could not exist if educa- tion embraced a true system of human nature and its relations. If, then, phrenology be true, it will, when ma- tured, supply the deficiencies now pointed out. But, here, another question naturally presents itself, How are the views now expounded, suppos- ing them to contain some portion of truth, to be rendered practical ? In answer I remark, that the institutions and manners of society indicate the state of mind of the influential classes at the time when they prevail. The trial and burning of old women as Witches, point out clearly the predomi- nance of Destructiveness and Wonder over Intel- lect and Benevolence, in those who were guilty of such cruel absurdities. ' The practices of wager of battle, and ordeal by fire and water, indicate Com- bativeness, Destructiveness, and Veneration, to have been in great activity in those who permitted them, combined with much intellectual ignorance of the natural constitution of the world. In like manner, the enormous sums willingly expended in war, and the small sums grudgingly paid for pub- lic improvements ; the intense energy displayed in the pursuit of wealth ; and the general apathy evinced in the search after knowledge and virtue, CONCLUSION. 285 unequivocally proclaim activity of Combativeness, Destructiveness, Acquisitiveness, Self-esteem, and Love of Approbation ; with comparatively mode- rate vivacity of Benevolence and Intellect, in the present generation. Before, therefore, the prac- tices of mankind can be altered, the state of their minds must be changed. No practical error can be greater than that of establishing institutions greatly in advance of the mental condition of the people. The rational method is first to instruct the intellect, then to interest the sentiments, and, last of all, to form arrangements in harmony with, and resting on, these as their basis. The views developed in the preceding chapters, if founded in nature, may be expected to lead, ul- timately, to considerable changes in many of the customs and pursuits of society ; but to accomplish this effect, the principles themselves must first be ascertained to be true ; then they must be sedu- lously taught ; and when the public mind has been thoroughly prepared, then only ought important practical alterations to be proposed. It appears to me that a long series of years will be necessary to bring even civilized nations into a condition systematically to obey the natural laws. The preceding chapters may be regarded, in one sense, as an introduction to an Essay on Edu- cation. If the views unfolded in them be in gen- eral sound, it will follow that education has scarce- ly yet commenced. If the Creator has bestowed on the body, on the mind, and on external nature. 286 CONCLUSION. determinate constitutions, and arranged these so as to act on each other, and to produce happiness or misery to man, according to certain definite prin- ciples, and if this action goes on invariably, inflexi- bly, and irresistibly, whether men attend to it or not, it is obvious that the very basis of useful knowledge must consist in an acquaintance with these natural arrangements; and that education will be valuable in the exact degree in which it communicates such information, and trains the faculties to act upon it. Reading, writing, and accounts, which make up the instruction enjoyed by the lower orders, are merely means of acquiring knowledge, but do not constitute it. Greek, Latin, and mathematics, which are added in the educa- tion of the middle classes, are still only means pf obtaining information ; so that, with the excep- tion of the few who pursue physical science, so- ciety dedicates very little attention to the study of the natural laws. In following out the views now discussed, therefore, each individual, according as he becomes acquainted with the natural laws, ought to obey them, and to communicate his ex- perience of their operations to others ; avoiding at the same time all attempts at subverting, by vio- lence, established institutions, or outraging public sentiment by intemperate discussions. The doc- trine now unfolded, if true, authorises us to pre^ dicate that the most successful method of meliorate ing the condition of mankind, will be that which appeals most directly to their moral sentiments anc( CONCLUSION. 287 intellect ; and, I may add from experience and ob- servation, that, in proportion as any individual be- comes acquainted with the real constitution of the human mind, will his conviction of the efficacy of this method increase. The next step ought to be to teach those laws to the young. * Their minds, not being pre-oecu- pied by prejudices, will recognise them as conge nial to their constitution ; the first generation that has embraced them from infancy will proceed to modify the institutions of society into accordance with their dictates ; and in the course of ages they may at length be acknowledged as practically use- ful. All true theories have ultimately been adopt- ed and influenced practice ; and I see no reason to fear that the present will prove an exception. The failure of all previous systems is the natural con- sequence of their being unfounded ; if this one shall resemble them, it will deserve, and assuredly will meet with, a similar fate. A perception of the importance of the natural laws will lead to their observance, and this will be attended with an im- proved developement of brain, thereby increasing the desire and capacity for obedience. Finally. If it be true that the Natural Laws must be obeyed as a preliminary condition to hap- piness in this world, and if virtue and happiness be inseparably allied, the religious instructers of mankind may probably discover in the general and * Some observations on Education will be found in the Phreno - logical Journal, vol. iv, p. 407. 288 CONCLUSION. prevalent ignorance of these laws, one reason of the limited success which has hitherto attended their own efforts at improving the condition of mankind; and they may perhaps perceive it to be not incon- sistent with their sacred office, to instruct men in the natural institutions of the Creator, in addition to his revealed will, and to recommend obedience to both. They exercise so vast an influence over the best members of society, that their countenance may hasten, or their opposition retard, by a cen- tury, the practical adoption of the natural laws 3 as guides of human conduct. APPENDIX. Note I. NATURAL LAWS. — Text, p. 1. In the text it is mentioned, that many philosophers have treated of the Laws of Nature. The following are examples : Mr Stewart says, ' To examine the economy of nature in the phenomena of the lower animals, and to compare their in- stincts with the physical circumstances of their external situ- ation, forms one of the finest speculations of Natural History; and yet it is a speculation to which the attention of the natu- ral historian has seldom been directed. Not only Buffon, but Ray and Derham, have passed it over slightly; nor, in- deed, do I know of any one who has made it the object of a particular consideration but Lord Kames, in a short Appendix to one of his Sketches.' — Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, vol. iii. p. 368. Mr Stewart also uses the following words: — ' Number- less examples shew that Nature has done no more for man than was necessary for his preservation, leaving him to make many acquisitions for himself, which she has imparted imme diately to the brutes. 'My own idea is, as I have said on a different occasion, that both instinct and experience are here concerned, and that the share which belongs to each in producing the result, can be ascertained by an appeal to facts alone.' — Vol. iii. ch. 338. Montesquieu introduces his Spirit of Laws by the follow- ing observations : — * Laws, in their most general signification, are the necessary relations derived from the nature of things. In this sense, all beings have their laws; the Deity has his 25 290 APPENDIX. NATURAL LAWS. > laws ; the material world its laws ; the intelligences superior to man have their laws ; the beasts their laws ; man his laws. ' Those who assert that a blind fatality produced the various effects we behold in this world, are guilty of a very great absur- dity : for can anything be -more absurd than to pretend that a blind fatality could be productive of intelligent beings ? 1 There is, then, a primitive reason; and laws are the rela- tions which subsist between it and different beings, and the re- lations of these beings among themselves. 'God is related to the universe as creator and preserver; the laws by which he has created all things are those by which he preserves them. He acts according to these rules, because he knows them : he knows them because he has made them ; and he made them because they are relative to his wisdom and power, &c. c Man, as a physical being, is, like other bodies, governed by invariable laws? — Spirit of Laws, b. i.. c. i. Justice Blackstone observes, that 'Law, in its most gen- eral and comprehensive sense, signifies a rule of action ; and is applied indiscriminately to all kinds of action, whether ani- mate or inanimate, rational or irrational. Thus we say, the laws of motion, of gravitation, of optics, or mechanics, as well as the laws of nature and of nations. Thus, when the Su- preme Being formed the universe, and created matter out of nothing, he impressed certain principles upon that matter, from which it can never depart, and without which it would cease to be. When he put that matter into motion, he established certain laws of motion, to which all moveable bodies must con- form.' — ' If we farther advance from mere inactive matter to vegetable and animal life, we shall find them still gov- erned by laws ; more numerous, indeed, but equally fixed and invariable. The whole progress of plants, from the seed to the root, and from thence to the seed again ; — the method of animal nutrition, digestion, secretion, and all other branches of vital economy ; — are not left to chance, or the will of the creature itself, but are performed in a wondrous involuntary manner, and guided by unerring rules laid down by the great APPENDIX. NATURAL LAWS. 291 Creator. This, then, is the general signification of law, a rule of action dictated by some superior being ; and in those crea- tures that have neither power to think, nor the will, such laws must be invariably obeyed, so long as the creature itself sub- sists; for its existence depends on that obedience.' — Black- stone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, vol i. sect. 2. ' The word law? says Mr Erskine, i is frequently made use of, both by divines and philosophers, in a large acceptation, to express the settled method of God's providence, by which he preserves the order of the material world in such a man- ner, that nothing in it may deviate from that uniform course which he has appointed for it. And as brute matter is merely passive, without the least degree of choice upon its part, these laws are inviolably observed in the material creation, every part of which continues to act, immutably, according to the rules that were from the begining prescribed to it by infinite ivisdom. Thus philosophers have given the appellation of law to that motion which incessantly pervades and agitates the universe, and is ever changing the form and substance of things, dissolv- ing some, and raising others, as from their ashes, to fill up the void : Yet so, that amidst all the fluctations by which partic- ular things are affected, the universe is still preserved without diminution. Thus also they speak of the laws of fluids, of gravitation, &c. and the word is used, in this sense, in several passages of the sacred wiitings ; in the book of Job, and in Proverbs viii. 29, where God is said to have given his law to the seas that they should not pass his commandment.'- — Ers- kine's Institutes of the Law of Scotland, book i. tit. i. sect. 1 . Discussions about the Laws of Nature, rather than inquiries into them, were common in France, during the Revolution and, having become associated, in imagination, with the crimes and horrors of that period, they continue to be regarded, by some individuals, as inconsistent with religion and morality. A coincidence between the views maintained in the preceding Essay, and a passage in Volney, has been pointed out to me as an objection to the whole doctrine. Volney's words are the following: — 'It is a law of nature, that water flows from 292 APPENDIX. NATURAL LAWS. an upper to a lower situation ; that it seeks its level : that it is heavier than air ; that all bodies tend towards the earth ; that flame rises towards the sky ; that it destroys the organization of vegetables and animals ; that air is essential to the life of certain animals ; that, in certain cases, water suffocates and kills them ; that certain juices of plants, and certain minerals, attack their organs, and destroy their life ; — and the same of a variety of facts. c Now, since these facts, and many similar ones, are constant,, regular, and immutable, they become so many real and positive commands, to which man is bound to conform, under the express penalty of punishment attached to their infraction, or well- being connected with their observance. So that if a man were to pretend to see clearly in the dark, or is regardless of the progress of the seasons, or the action of the elements; if he pretends to exist under water, without drowning ; to han- dle fire without burning himself; to deprive himself of air without suffocating; or to drink poison without destroying himself; he receives, for each infraction of the law of nature, a corporal punishment proportioned to his transgression. If, On the contrary, he observes these laws, and founds his prac- tice on the precise and regular relation which they bear to> him, he preserves his existence, and renders it as happy as it is capable of being rendered ; and since all these laws, con- sidered in relation to the human species, have in view only one common end, that of their preservation and their happiness ; whence it has been agreed to assemble together the different ideas, and express them by a single word, and call them col- lectively by the name of the " Law of Nature." ' — Volney's Law of Nature, 3d edit. pp. 21, 24. I feel no embarrassment by this coincidence ; but remark, first, That various authors, quoted in the text and in this note, advocated the importance of the laws of nature, long before the French Revolution was heard of; secondly, That the ex- istence of the laws of nature is as obvious to the understand- ing, as the existence of the external world, and of the human mind and body themselves to the senses; thirdly, That these APPENDIX. NATURAL LAWS. 293 laws, being inherent in creation, must have proceeded from the Deity ; fourthly, That if the Deity is powerful, just, and be- nevolent, they must harmonize with the constitution of man ; and, lastly, That if the laws of nature have been instituted by the Deity, and been framed in wise, benevolent, and just relationship to the human constitution, they must at all times form the highest and most important subjects of human inves- tigation, and remain altogether unaffected by the errors, fol- lies, and crimes of those who endeavour to expound them ; just as religion continues holy, venerable, and uncontaminated, notwithstanding of the hypocrisy, wickedness, and inconsisten- cy of individuals professing themselves her interpreters and friends. That the views of the natural laws themselves, advocated in this Essay, are diametrically opposite to the practical con- duct of the French revolutionary ruffians, requires no demon- stration. My fundamental principle is, that man can enjoy happiness on earth only by placing his habitual conduct under the supremacy of the moral sentiments, and intellect, and that this is the law of his nature. No doctrine can be more oppos- ed than this to fraud, robbery, blasphemy, and murder. It may be urged, that all past speculations about the laws of nature have proved more imposing than useful ; and that while the laws themselves afford materials for elevated declamation on the part of philosophers, they form no secure guides even to the learned, and much less to the illiterate, in practical con- duct. In answer, I would respectfully repeat what has frequent- ly been urged in the text, that, before we can discover the laws of nature, applicable to man, we must know, first, The consti- tution of man himself ; secondly, The constitution of external nature ; and, thirdly, We must compare the two. But, previ- ous to the discovery of Phrenology, the mental constitution of man was a matter of vague conjecture, and endless debate ; and the connexion between his mental powers and his organ- ized system, was involved in the deepest obscurity. The brain, the most important organ of the body, had no ascertain- ed functions. Before the introduction of this science, there- 25* 294 APPENDIX. ORGANIC LAWS. •> fore, inen were rather impressed with the unspeakable impor- tance of a knowledge of the laws of nature, than acquainted with the laws themselves; and even the knowledge of the external world actually possessed, could not, in many instan- ces, be rendered available, on account of its relationship to the qualities of man being unascertained, and unascertainable, so long as these qualities themselves were unknown. Note II. organic laws. — Text, p. 108. It is a very common error, not only among philosophers, but among practical men, to imagine that the feelings of the mind are communicated to it through .the medium of the intellect ; and, in particular, that if no indelicate objects reach the eyes, or expressions penetrate the ears, perfect purity will necessa- rily reign within the soul ; and, carrying this mistake into practice, they are prone to object to all discussion of the sub- jects treated of under the ' Organic Laws,' in works designed for general use. But their principle of reasoning is falla- cious, and the practical result has been highly detrimental to society. The feelings have existence and activity distinct from the intellect ; they spur it on to obtain their own gratifi- cation ; and it may become either their slave or guide, accor- ding as it is enlightened concerning their constitution and objects, and the laws of nature to which they are subjected. The most profound philosophers have inculcated this doc- trine ; and, by phrenological observation, it is demonstrably established. The organs of the feelings are distinct from those of the intellectual faculties ; they are larger ; and, as each faculty, cceteris paribus, acts with a power proportionate to the size of its organ, the feelings are obviously the active or impelling powers. The cerebellum, or organ of Amative- APPENDIX. ORGANIC LAWS. 295 ness, is the largest of the whole mental organs ; and, being* endowed with natural activity, it fills the mind spontaneously with emotions and suggestions which may be directed, con- trolled, and resisted, in outward manifestation, by intellect and moral sentiment, but which cannot be prevented from arising, nor eradicated after they exist. The whole question, therefore, resolves itself into this, Whether it is most benefi- cial to enlighten and direct that feeling, or (under the influ- ence of an error in philosophy, and false delicacy founded on it), to permit it to riot in all the fierceness of a blind animal instinct, withdrawn from the eye of reason, but not thereby de- prived of its vehemence and importunity. The former course appears to me to be the only one consistent with season and morality ; and I have adopted it in reliance on the good sense of my readers, that they will at once discriminate between practi- cal instruction concerning this feeling, addressed to the intellect, and lascivious representations addressed to the mere propensi- ty itself ; with the latter of which the enemies of all improve- ment may attempt to confound my observations. Every function of the mind and body is instituted by the Creator ; all may be abused ; and it is impossible regularly to avoid abuse of them, except by being instructed in their nature, ob- jects, and relations. This instruction ought to be addressed exclusively to the intellect ; and, when it is so, it is science of the most beneficial description. The propriety, nay necessi- ty, of acting on this principle, becomes more and more appar- ent, when it is considered that the discussions of the text suggest only intellectual ideas to individuals in whom the feeling in question is naturally weak, and that such minds perceive no indelicacy in knowledge which is calculated to be useful ; while, on the other hand, persons in whom the feeling is naturally strong, are precisely those who stand in need of direction, and to whom, of all others, instruction is the most necessary. Fortified by these observation, T venture to record some additional facts communicated by persons on whose accuracy reliance may be placed. 296 APPENDIX.— ORGANIC LAWS. •> A gentleman, who has paid much attention to the rearing of horses, informed me, that the male race-horse, when excit- ed, but not exhausted, by running, has been found by experi- ence, to be in the most favourable condition for transmitting swiftness and vivacity to his offspring. Another gentleman stated, that he was himself present when the pale gray color of a male horse was objected to ; that the groom thereupon presented before the eyes of the male another female from the stable, of a very particular, but pleasing, variety of col- ors, asserting, that the latter would determine the complex- ion of the offspring ; and that in point of fact it did so. The experiment was tried in the case of a second female, and the result was so completely the same, that the two young horses, in point of color, could scarcely be distinguished, although their spots were extremely uncommon. The account of La- ban and the peeled rods laid before the cattle to produce spot- ted calves, is an example of the same kind. Portal mentions the hereditary descent of blindness and deafness. His words are : ' Morgagni has seen three sisters dumb " oVorigine." Other authors also cite examples, and I have seen like cases myself.' In a note, he adds, ' I have seen three children out of four of the same family blind from birth by amaurosis, or gutta szrzna? — Portal, Memoires sur Plusieurs Maladies, tome iii. p. 193. Paris, 1808. In the Quarterly Journal of Agriculture, No. I., there are several valuable articles illustrative of the Organic Laws in the inferior animals. I select the following examples : ' Every one knows that the hen of any bird will lay eggs although no male be permitted to come near her ; and that those eggs are only wanting in the vital principle which the impregnation of the male conveys to them. Here, then, we see the female able to make an egg, with yolk and white, shell and every part, just as it ought to be, so that we might, at the first glance, suppose that here, at all events, the fe- male has the greatest influence. But see the change which the male produces. Put a Bantam cock to a large sized hen and she will instantly lay a small egg ; the chick will be short, APPENDIX. ORGANIC LAWS. 297 in the leg, have feathers to the foot, ancTput on the appearance of the cock ; so that it is a frequent complaint where Bantams are kept, that they make the hens lay small eggs, and spoil the breed. Reverse the case ; put a large dunghill cock to Bantam hens, and instantly they will lay larger eggs, and the chicks will be good-sized birds, and the Bantam will have nearly disappeared. Here, then, are a number of facts known to every one, or at least open to be known by every one, clear- ly proving the influence of the male in some animals ; and as I hold it to be an axiom that nature never acts by contraries, never outrages the law clearly fixed in one species, by adopt- ing the opposite course in another, — therefore, as in the case of an equilateral triangle on the length of one side being given we can with certainty demonstrate that of the remaining ; so, having found these laws to exist in one race of animals, we are entitled to assume that every species is subjected to the self- same rules, — the whole bearing, in fact, the same relation to each other as the radii of a circle.' 1 A Method of obtaining a greater number of One Sex, at the option of the Proprietor, in the Breeding of Live Stock. — Ex- tracted from the Quarterly Journal of Agriculture, No. I. p. 63. ' In the Annales de l'Agriculture Franchise, vols. 37 and 38, some very interesting experiments are recorded, which have lately been made in France, on the Breeding of Live Stock. M. Charles Girou de Buzareingues proposed, at. a meeting of the Agricultural Society of Severac, on the 3d of July, 1826, to divide a flock of sheep into two equal parts, so that a greater number of males or females, at the choice of the proprietor, should be produced from each of them. Two of the members of the Society offered their flocks to become the subjects of his experiments, and the results have now been communicated, which are in accordance with the author'^ expectations, 298 APPENDIX. ORGANIC LAWS. 8 The first experiment was conducted in the following man- ner : He recommended very young rams to be put to the flock of ewes, from which the proprietor wished the greater number of females in their offspring ; and also, that, during the season when the rams were with the ewes, they should have more abundant pasture than the other ; while, to the flock from which the proprietor wished to obtain male lambs chiefly, he recommended him to put strong and vigorous rams four or five years old. The following tabular view contains the result of this experiment. Flock for Female Lambs. Flock for Male Lambs. Age of the Mothers. Sex of the Lambs, Age of the Mothers. Sex of the Lambs. Two years. Three years, Four years, Males. Females. . 14 26 . 16 29 . 5 21 Two years, Three years. Four years, Males. . 7 . 15 . 33 Total, .... 35 76 Five years and older, 18 8 Total, .... 53 84 N, B.— There were three twin births in this flock. Two rams served it, one fifteen months, the other nearly two years old. Total, .... 55 Five years and older, 25 Total, .... 80 Females. 3 14 14 31 24 55 N, B, — There were no twin births in this flock. Two strong rams, one four, the other five years old, served it. * The second experiment is thus related by the author : ^During the summer of 1826, M. Cournuejouls kept, upon a very dry pasture, belonging to the village of Bez, a flock of 106 ewes, of which 84 belonged to himself, and 22 to his shepherds. Towards the end of October, he divided his flock into two sections, of 42 heads each, the one composed of the strongest ewes, from four to five years old ; the other of the weakest beasts under four or above five years old. The first was destined to produce a greater number of females than the second, After it was marked with pitch in my presence! u*> APPENDIX. ORGANIC LAWS. 299 it was taken to much better pasture behind Panouse, where it was delivered to four male lambs, about six months old, and of good promise. The second remained upon the pasture of Bez, and was served by two strong rams, more than three years old. ' The ewes belonging to the shepherds, which I shall con- sider as forming a third section, and which are in general stronger and better fed than those of the master, because their owners are not always particular in preventing them from trespassing on the cultivated lands, which are not inclosed, were mixed with those of the second flock. The result was, that the Males. Females. First Section gave, .15 25 The Second, 26 14 The Third, 10 12 In the First Section there were Two Twin Births, 4 In the Second and Third there were also Two, 3 1 ' Besides these very decisive experiments, M. Girou relates some others, made with horses and cattle, in which his suc- cess in producing a greater number of one sex rather than an- other also appears. The general law, as far as we are able to detect it, seems to be, that, when animals are in good con- dition, plentifully supplied with food, and kept from breeding as fast as they might do, they are most likely to produce fe- males. Or, in other words, when a race of animals is in cir- cumstances favourable for its increase, nature produces the greatest number of that sex which, in animals that do not pair, is most efficient for increasing the numbers of the race : But, if they are in a bad climate, or on stinted pasture, or, if they have already given birth to a numerous offspring, then nature, setting limits to the increase of the race, produces more males than females. Yet, perhaps, it may be premature to attempt to deduce any law from experiments which have not yet been sufficiently extended. M. Girou is disposed to ascribe much of the effect to the age of the ram, independent of the con- dition of the ewe.' 300 APPENDIX. DEATH. * Note III. death. — Text, p. 183. The decreasing Mortality of England is strikingly support- ed by the following extract from the Scotsman of 16th April 1828. It is well known that this paper is edited by Mr Charles Maclaren, a gentleman whose extensive information, and scrupulous regard to accuracy and truth, stamp the highest value on his statements of fact : and whose profound and com- prehensive intellect warrants a well-grounded reliance on his philosophical conclusions. 6 Diminished Mortality in England. The diminution of the annual mortality in England amidst an alleged increase of crime, misery, and pauperism, is an extraordinary and start- ling fact, which merits a more careful investigation than it has received. We have not time to go deeply into the subject : but we shall offer a remark or two on the question, how the ap- parent annual mortality is affected by the introduction of the cow-pox, and the stationary or progressive state of the popula- tion. In 1780, according to Mr Rickman, the annual deaths were 1 in 40, or one-fortieth part of the population died every year ; in 1821, the proportion was 1 in 58. It follows, that, out of any given number of persons, 1000 or 10,000, scarcely more than two deaths take place now for three that took place in 1780, or the mortality has diminished 45 per cent. The pa- rochial registers of burials in England, from which this state- ment is derived, are known to be incorrect, but as they con- tinue to be kept without alteration in the same way, the errors of one year, are justly conceived to balance those of another, and they thus afford comparative results upon which consider- able reliance may be placed. ' A community is made up of persons of many various ages, among whom the law of mortality is very different. Thus, ac- cording to the Swedish tables, the deaths among children from the moment of birth up to 10 years of age, are 1 in 22 APPENDIX.— -DEATH. 301 per annum ; from 10 to 20, the deaths are only 1 in 185. Among the old again, mortality is of course great. From 70 to 80, the deaths are 1 in 9 ; from 80 to 90, they are 1 in 4. Now, a community like that of New York or Ohio, where marriages are made early and the births are numerous, necessarily con- tains a large proportion of young persons, among whom the proportional mortality is low, and a small proportion of the old who die off rapidly. A community in which the births are nu-' merous, is like a regiment receiving a vast number of a young and healthy recruits, and in which, of course, as a whole, the annual deaths will be few compared with those in another re* giment chiefly filled with veterans, though among the persons at any particular age, such as 20, 40, or 50, the mortality will be as great in the one regiment as the other. It may thus happen, that the annual mortality among 1000 persons in Ohio, may be considerably less than in France, while the Expectation of Life, or the chance which an individual has to reach to a certain age, may be no greater in the former country than in the latter ; and hence we see that a diminution in the rate of mortality is not a certain proof of an increase in the value of life, or an improvement in the condition of the people. * But the effect produced by an increased number of births is less than might be imagined, owing to the very great mor- tality among infants in the first year of their age. Not hav- ing time for the calculations necessary to get at the precise re- sult, which are pretty complex, we avail ourselves of some statements given by Mr Milne in hi3 work on Annuities. Taking the Swedish tables as a basis, and supposing the law of mortality to remain the same for each period of life, he has compared the proportional number of deaths in a population which is stationary, and in one which increases 15 per cent, in 20 years. The result is, that when the mortality in the sta- tionary society is one in 36.13, that in the progressive society is one in 37.33, a difference equal to 3J per cent. Now, the population of England and Wales increased 34.3 per cent, in the 20 years ending in 1821, but in the interval from 1811 to 26 302 APPENDIX. DEATH. ** 1821, the rate was equivalent to 39J per cent, upon 20 years ; and the apparent diminution of mortality arising from this cir- cumstance must of course have been about 84 per cent. We are assuming, however, that the population was absolutely sta- tionary at 180, which was not the case. According to Mr Milne (p. 437,) the average annual increase in the five years ending 1784, was 1 in 155 ; in the ten years ending 182], ac- cording to the census, it was 1 in 60. Deducting, then, the proportional part corresponding to the former, which is 3i, there remains 5 J. If Mr Milne's tables, therefore, are cor- rect, we may infer that the progressive state of the population causes a diminution of 5i per cent, in the annual mortality — a diminution which is only apparent, because it arises entirely from the great proportion of births, and is not accompanied with any real increase in the value of human life. ' A much greater change — not apparent but real— was pro- duced by the introduction of the vaccination in 1798. It was computed, that, in 1795, when the population of the British Isles was 15,000,000, the deaths produced by the small-pox amounted to 36,000, or nearly 11 per cent, of the whole annu- al mortality. (See article Vaccination in the Supplement to Encyclopedia Britannica, p. 713.) Now, since not more than one case in 330 terminates fatally under the cow-pox system, ' either directly by the primary infection, or from the other dis- ease supervening : the whole of the young persons destroyed by the small-pox might be considered as saved were vaccina- tion universal, and always properly performed. This is not precisely the case, but one or one and a-half per cent, will cover the deficiencies ; and we may therefore conclude, that vaccination has diminished the annual mortality fully nine per cent After we had arrived at this conclusion by the process described, we found it confirmed by the authority of Mr Milne, who estimates in a note to one of his tables, that the mortality of 1 in 40, would be diminished to 1 in 43 — 5, by exterminat- ing the small-pox. Now, this is almost precisely 9 per cent. 4 We stated, that the diminution of the annual mortality be- tween 1780 and 1821 was 45 per cent., according to Mr Rick- APPENDIX. DEATH. 303 man. If we deduct from this 9 per cent, for the effect of vac- cination, and 5 per cent, as only apparent, resulting from the increasing proportion of births — 31 per cent, remains, which, we apprehend, can only be accounted for by an improvement in the habits, morals, and physical condition of the people. Inde- pendently, then, of the two causes alluded to, the value of hu- man life since 1780, has increased in a ratio which would di- minish the annual mortality from 1 in 40 to 1 in 52A, — a fact which is indisputably of great importance, and worth volumes of declamation in illustrating the true situation of the labour- ing classes. We have founded our conclusion on data deriv- ed entirely from English returns ; but there is no doubt that it applies equally to Scotland. It is consoling to find, from this very unexceptionable species of evidence, that though there is much privation and suffering in the country, the situa- tion of the people has been, on the whole, progressively im- proving during the last forty years. But how much greater would the advance have been, had they been less taxed, and better treated ? and how much room is there still for future melioration, by spreading instruction, amending our laws, lessening the temptations to crime, and improving the means of correction and reform ? In the mean time, it ought to be some encouragement to philanthropy to learn, that it has not to struggle against invincible obstacles, and that even when the prospect was least cheering to the eye, its efforts were si- lently benefitting society.' It has been mentioned to me, that the late Dr Monro, in his anatomical lectures, stated, that, as far as he could observe, the human body, as a machine, was perfect, — that it bore with- in itself no marks by which we could possibly predicate its de- cay, — that it was apparently calculated to go on forever, — and that we learned only by experience that it would not do so ; and some persons have conceived this to be an authority against the doctrine maintained in Ghap. III. Sect. 2., that death is apparently inherent in organization. In answer, I beg to ob serve, that if we were to look at the sun only for one moment 304 APPENDIX.— DEATH. ** of time, say at noon, no circumstance, in its appearance, would indicate that it had ever risen, or that it would ever set ; but, if we had traced its progress from the horizon to the meridi- an, and down again till the long shadows of evening prevail- ed, we should have ample grounds for inferring, that, if the same causes that had produced these changes continued to operate, it would undoubtedly at length disappear. In the same way, if we were to confine our observations on the hu- man body to a mere point of time, it is certain that, from the appearances of that moment, we could not infer that it had grown up, by gradual increase, or that it would decay ; but this is the case only, because our faculties are not fitted to pen- etrate into the essential nature and dependencies of things. Any man, who had seen the body decrease in old age, could, without hesitation, predicate, that, if the same causes which had produced that effect went on operating, dissolution would at last inevitably occur ; and if his Causality were well devel- oped, he would not hesitate to say that a cause of the decrease and dissolution must exist, although he could not tell by exam- ining the body what it was. By analysing alcohol, rfo person could predicate, independently of experience, that it would produce intoxication; and, nevertheless, there must be a cause in the constitution of the alcohol, in that of the body, and in the relationship between them, why it produces this effect. The notion, therefore, of Dr Monro, does not prove that death is not an essential law of organization, but only that the hu- man faculties are not able, by dissection, to discover that the cause of it is inherent in the bodily constitution itself. It does not follow, however, that this inference may not be legitimate- ly drawn from phenomena collected from the whole period of corporeal existence. APPENDIX. MORAL LAWS. 305 Note IV. INFRINGEMENT OP THE MORAL LAWS. Text, p. 231. The deterioration of the operative classes of Britain which I attribute to excessive labor, joined with great alternations of high and low wages, and occasionally with absolute idle- ness and want, is illustrated by the following extracts : — 1 Unemployed Weavers in Lanarkshire. On Satur- day last, a meeting of weavers' delegates from the various districts in this neighbourhood, was held in the usual place. The object of the meeting was to receive from the several districts an account of the number of weavers out of employ- ment, which statement it was intended to lay before the Lord Provost and Magistrates. The following are the returns giv- en in : — Anderston contains 708 looms, of which 386 are idle. Baillieston-toll contains 150 looms, of these 98 are empty. The district of North Bridgeton contains, in whole, between 400 and 500 looms. The returns are only from about one- half of this district, which contains 150 empty looms. For the centre and south districts of Bridgeton, the accounts are in- complete. In the former 180, and in the latter 60, empty looms were taken up. In Charleston there are 132 idle. In Cow- caddens, of 300 looms, 120 are idle. In Clyde, Bell, and To- bago Streets, of about 500 looms, there are 74 idle ; and 100 working webs which cannot average 8d. a-day. In Drygate, there are 105 idle ; in Drygate-toll 73 ; in Duke Street 18. In Gorbals, containing 365 looms, there are 223 idle. In Ha- vannah, out of 130 looms, there are 48 idle. In the district of Keppoch-hill, of 70 weavers, there are 20 idle. The dis- trict of King Street is divided into ten wards ; returns are only given in from four, which contain 70 empty looms. In Pollockshaws, containing about 800 looms, there are 216 idle. In Rutherglen there are 167 idle. In Springbank, of 141 weavers, there are 58 unemployed ; and in Strathbungo, con- 26* 306 APPENDIX. MORAL LAWS. ^ taining 104 looms, there are 28 idle, 25 of whom are married men. Parkhead, Camlachie, and some other extensive dis- tricts, have not yet given in their returns. The delegates, before separating, appointed a general meeting to be held in the Green this day, to decide upon an address to the Magis- trates, requesting them to endeavour to procure employment for the idle hands.' — Glasgow Chronicle, Tuesday, March, 1826. ' Sheep Trade. The late commercial crisis, like a death- blow, has paralysed the whole activity of the country, and left scarcely a single branch of its' trade and industry unscath- ed. It was at first fondly hoped that the storm would pass without such remote districts as our own having much reason to complain of its visitation ; but nothing, as the present in- stance proves, is more certain than that the distresses of the commercial, must also in all cases be more or less felt by the agricultural classes of the community. The demand for wool has now so far ceased as to operate most injuriously upon the price of sheep, which cannot presently be sold but at a very considerable loss to the farmer. In the latter part, or " back season," as it is called, of 1824, black- faced ewes — their exam- ple applies equally to the other kinds — were bought in for wintering at from 8s. to 12s. a-head ; and, in the spring of 1825, immediately before lambing-time, these were disposed of in the English markets at so great a profit, that every farmer who could at all enter into the speculation, bought up at the end of the ensuing harvest, as much of that description of stock as his quantity of keep would reasonably permit. The number of sheep over those of the preceding year, which were bought up for this purpose, may be judged of from the fact, that the highest inlay price of 1824 was the lowest of 1825 — the rate for the latter year being, for black-faced ewes, from J 2s. to 18s. But the present crisis came, — the manufac- turers of England were obliged to retrench at meals in the ar- ticle of mutton, — the demand on the part of the butchers con- sequently ceased ; and now those sheep which were purehas- APPENDIX. MORAL LAWS. 307 ed at so extravagant a rate, are necessarily sold, upon an av- erage, at a loss of 2s. a-head upon the inlay price, without at all estimating the expense of keep. We know one extensive moorland farmer, who calculates upon losing two hundred pounds in the present year from this cause alone, besides a vast loss which he must also sustain in consequence of the re- duced price of wool. This cessation of demand in England was unfortunately not fully ascertained until several droves of lambing ewes had been dispatched to that quarter ; and the embarrassment of those who are placed in this predicament is the more afflicting, as their knowledge has been acquired too late to allow of their availing themselves of the House of Muir, and other northern markets.' — Dumfries Courier, March, 1826. 1 Details upon the Subject of Weavers' Wages, from the last Report of Emigration extracted from the Scotsman Newspaper, of 10th November, 1827. < Joseph Foster, a weaver, and one of the deputies of an emigration society in Glasgow, states that the labor is all paid by the piece ; the hours of working are various, some- times eighteen or nineteen out of twentyfour, and even all night once or twice a- week ; and that the wages made by such labor, after deducting the necessary expenses, will not amount to more than from 4s. 6d. to 7s. per week, some kinds of work paying better than others. When he commenced working as a weaver, from 1800 to 1805, the same amount of labor that now yields 4s. 6d. or 5s. would have yielded 20s. There are about 11,000 hand-looms going in Glasgow and its suburbs, some of which are worked by boys and girls, and he estimates the average net earnings of each hand-weaver at 5s. 6d. The principal subsistence of the weavers is oatmeal and potatoes, with occasionally some salt herring. ' Major Thomas Moodie, who had made careful inquiries in- to the state of the poor at Manchester, states, that the calico and other light plain work at Bolton and Blackburn, yields the 308 APPENDIX. MORAL LAWS. weaver from 4s. to 5s. per week, by fourteen hours of daily labor. In the power-loom work, one man attends two looms, and earns from 7s. 6d. to 14s. per week, according to the fine- ness of the work. He understood that during the last ten years, weavers' wages had fallen on an average about 15s. per week. 'Mr Thomas Hunton, manufacturer, Carlisle, states, that there are in Carlisle and its neighbourhood about 5500 fami- lies, or from 18,000 to 20,000 persons dependent on weaving. They are all hand-weavers, and are now in a very depressed state, in consequence of the increase of power-loom and fac- tory weaving* in Manchester and elsewhere. Taking fifteen of his men, he finds that five of them, who are employed on the best work, had earned 5s. 6d. per week for the preceeding month, deducting the necessary expenses of loom-rent, can- dles, tackling, &c. ; the next five, who are upon work of the second quality, earned 3s. lid.; and the third five earned 3s. 7Jd. per week. They work from fourteen to sixteen hours a-day, and live chiefly on potatoes, butter-milk, and herrings. ' Mr W. H. Hyett, Secretary to the Charity Committee in London, gives a detailed statement, to shew, that, in the Hun- dred of Blackburn, comprising a population of 150,000 persons, 90,000 were out of employment in 1826! In April last, when he gave his evidence before the Committee, these persons had generally found work again, but at very low wages. They were labouring from twelve to fourteen hours a-day, and gaining from 4s. to 5s. 6d. per week.' 6 Poor Rates, 2Sth March, 1828. — A document of great importance, though of a description by no means cheering, has been presented to the House of Commons, — the annual Abstract of the Returns of the Poor Rates levied and expend- ed, with comparisons, shewing their increase or diminution. * In what is called factory- weaving, an improved species of hand- loom is employed, in which the dressing and preparation of the web is effected by machinery, and the weaver merely sits and drives the shuttle. APPENDIX.— MORAL LAWS. 309 The accounts shew the expenditure of the year ended 25th March, 1827, compared with the previous year. The total sum levied in all the counties of England and Wales, in the last year, was £7,489,694 ; the sum expended for the relief of the poor, £6^179,877. The increase in that year through- out the whole of England and Wales, is nine per cent. ; nine per cent, in one year on the whole sum expended. It is true that this is in part to be accounted for by the temporary dis- tress of the manufacturing districts. (In Lancaster, the in- crease was fortyseven, in the West Riding of York, thirtyone per cent.) ; but we are sorry to find, that in only three counties of England was there any the most trifling diminution. In Berks two, Hampshire five, Suffolk four per cent. The poor rates in England, therefore, amount to nearly double the whole landed rental of Scotland.' 1 Extract from the Lord- Advocates Speech in the House of Com- mons, Wth March, 1828, on the additional Circuit Court of Glasgow, 1 The Lord- Advocate, in rising to move for leave to bring in a bill to "authorize an additional Court of Justiciary to be held at Glasgow, and to facilitate criminal trial in Scot- land," said he did not anticipate any opposition to the mo- tion. A great deal had been said of the progress of crime in this country, but he was sorry to say crime in Scotland had kept pace with that increase. A return had been made of the number of criminal commitments in each year, so far back as the year 1805. In that year the number of criminal commitments for all Scotland amounted only to 85. In 1809 it had risen to between 200 and 300; in 1819-20, it had in- creased to 400 ; and by the last return, it appeared, that, in 1827, 661 persons had been committed for trial. He was in- clined to think, that the great increase of crime, particularly in the west of Scotland, was attributable, in no small degree, to the number of Irish who daily and weekly arrived there. He did not mean to say that the Irish themselves were in the habit of committing more crime than their neighbours ; 310 APPENDIX. MORAL LAWS. -> but he was of opinion, that their numbers tended to reduce the price of labor, and that an increase of crime was the consequence. Another cause was the great disregard mani- fested by parents for the moral education of their children. Formerly the people of Scotland were remarkable for the paternal care which they took of their offspring. That had ceased in many instances to be the case. Not only were parents found who did not pay attention to the welfare of their children, but who were actually parties to their criminal pursuits, and participated in the fruits of their unlawful pro- ceedings. When crime was thus on the increase, it was necessary to take measures for its speedy punishment. The great city of Glasgow, which contained 150,000 inhabitants, and to which his proposed measure was meant chiefly to ap- ply, stood greatly in need of some additional jurisdiction. This would appear evident, when it was considered that the court which met there for the trial of capital offences, had also to act in the districts of Renfrew, Lanark, and Dumbar- ton. In 1812, the whole number of criminals tried in Glas- gow was only 31 ; in 1820, it was 83 ; in 1823, it was 85 ; and in 1827, 211. — The learned lord concluded by moving for leave to bring in a bill to authorize an additional circuit court of justiciary to be held at Glasgow, and to facilitate criminal trial in Scotland.' THE END. June, 1829. CARTER h HENDEE Will publish this month, STORY'S PLEADINGS, Oliver's Edition, 1 vol. royal 8vo. This work was originally collected and arranged by Judge Story, with occasional annotations by him on the various subjects which occur in the course of it, and is referred to with approbation in several places in Dane's large Abridgement of American Law. In this second edition, he has revised his former notes and has furnished some other new materials. The rest of the work, as it now appears, jta added by the present editor, Benjamin L. Oliver, Jr. (the author of Practical Conveyancing, and the new American Prece- dents), and consists of an Introduction to the whole work, containing a summary of the law of pleading in general; as also a concise introduction to the appropriate pleadings used in each paiticular form of action ; and copious notes on the more important pleas ; &c. These additions, amounting in quantity to about. one hundred and fifty pages, are introduced, without much increasing the number of pages con- tained in the former edition, by merely enlarging the page, and altering the style of printing, and the appearance of the book is greatly improved by the alteration. They have also in press and will publish the first week in July, THOUGHTS ON DOMESTIC EDUCATION, the Result of Experience. By a Mother, Author of 'Always Happy,' ' Claudine,' 6 Hints on the Sources of happiness,' &c. Just published, AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, No. 38. Contents. — Pestalozzrs Principles and Methods of Instruction. — Degerando on Self Cultivation. — Historical Notice of M. de La Salle, and of the Foundation of the Brethren of the Christian Doctrine. — Education of the Female Sex. — Bacon's Philosophy.— Interrogatory Instruction. — Infant School in Baltimore. — Early Education. — Botany for Schools. — Intelligence. Boston Society for the diffusion of Use- ful Knowledge. — Essay on the Honey Bee. — Education in Greece. — JVotices. Works in the Department of Education, Books for Children. THE SCHOOL MAGAZINE, No. 1. Contents. — Manual for Elementary Schools. — JVotices. Exam- ples of Questions, calculated to excite and exercise the Minds of the Young, by Mrs Elizabeth Hamilton. — Essays on the Philosophy of Instruction, or the Nurture of Young Minds. — Elements of Geometry, with Practical Applications, for the Use of Schools. BUCKMINSTER'S SERMONS, now first published from the Author's manuscripts. GEBEL TEIR. NEW PUBLICATIONS. S THE GARLAND OF FLORA. In Eastern lands they talk in flowers, And tell in a garland their loves and cares, Each blossom that blooms in their garden bowers, On its leaves a mystic language bears. PercivaL 5 The book is admirably adapted for the purposes of a May present, and deserves a conspicuous place in the libraries of all who are fond of Floral pursuits.' — Boston Dai. Adv. 4 Like Flora's Dictionary, it gives the metaphorical meaning of every flower; interesting and various accounts of the ceremonies, festivals, &c. in which flowers have been used, are given. Those who take an interest in watching the various associations these beau- tiful productions have excited in gifted minds through all ages of the world, will be pleased with this genteel little volume, with its bright engraving, its white margin, its fair type, and its neat half binding of silk and delicate paper.' — Mass. Journal. 6 A work most happily calculated as a suitable and seasonable " gift for the fair." ' — Evening Bulletin. OURIKA, a Tale from the French. This is to be alone — this, this is solitude. — Byron. TO THE READER. The subjoined extract from the Memoirs of Madam de Genlis is all that need be said of the following tale. Cambridge, May 1, 1829. « The Dutches of Duras at length consented to the publication of her delightful tale, Ourika, which had before been printed only for the gratification of a small number of friends. I spoke of it in society with admiration, a work too strong for those who judge of a work only by the number of its pages, the theatrical strokes it con- tains, or the reputation of its author. But even these are compelled to praise Ourika, though, they content themselves with the epithet* pretty and beautiful; true, it contains much of grace and beauty, but it also contains comparisons ingenious and new, invention and talent.***** 6 There is true genius in the conception, and in the painting, which is traced in a manner equally charming and simple— a genius which could reside only in a mind of purity; and the developement is made with so much truth, that even those who may not perceive all its beauties, cannot fail to read it with deep interest.' CLEVELAND'S FIRST LESSONS IN LATIN, upon a new plan, comprising Abstract Rules, with a progressive series of prac- tical Exercises. JOHNSON'S DICTIONARY, improved by Todd, Abridged for the Use of Schools ; with the addition of Walker's Pronunciation, an Abstract of his Principles of English Pronunciation, with Ques- tions, a Vocabulary of Greek, Latin, and Scripture Proper Names, and an Appendix of Americanisms. -p/ . . ' +. •^ -^ 'K " I 1 A ' A' * ' v : " /% *N W •*-, ^ A fc ^ c° v O0 N \ 0: o5 ^ > a * , v- V ,0 0, 'O, ** A^' V * * ^ - A* O- S *> *3>** ^' % V n> S \ »> *!,. ,-cr k V "% ,* .«,*' - c O0 l «5 ^ *>' A* * \ v