liMlttofUM llliiiHlyiiia . (till; '^fiii^f'' - C ^ '^^'^^X/ 9 r % •^ i c+- REESE yBRARY \ or THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. Rfceh^.... i^OLj^^^ rS8 4^ Accessions No..26y.E.3. Shelf No... ^S^^i^ -A^i—^ CO Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/discoursesessaysOOshedrich DISCOURSES AND ESSAYS. BY WILLIAM G. T. SHEDD m. OF THE Ul TIVER kilFOH^^ ANDOVER: WARREN F. DRAPER. BOSTON: GOULD AND LINCOLN. NEW YORK: JOHN WILEY. PUILADELPUIA: 8MITU, ENGLISU & CO. 1862. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1862, by WARREN F. DRAPER. In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts, ■TKRZOTTPBD A K B PRINTED BT W. F. DRAPKK, ANDOVER. ADVERTISEMENT TO THE SECOND EDITION. These Discourses and Essays were collected in a volume in 1856, and have met with an encouraging reception, considering the metaphysical character of most of them. On issuing a new edition, the author has availed himself of the opportunity to make some corrections, and to add an Essay upon the Doctrine of Atonement, which he has frequently been urged to republish. That the volume may contribute to the spread of just views in philosophy and theology, is the sincere desire of the writer. Andover, Mabcii 27, 1861. (3) CONTENTS. PAGE. THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES, 7 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, AND ITS RELA- TION TO CULTURE, 53 THE CHARACTERISTICS, AND IMPORTANCE, OF A NATU- RAL RHETORIC, 88 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF THE HISTORIC SPIRIT, 113 THE RELATION OF LANGUAGE, AND STYLE, TO THOUGHT, l81 THE DOCTRINE OF ORIGINAL SIN, 218 THE DOCTRINE OF ATONEMENT, 272 1* (5) " There is one department of knowledge, wWeh like an ample palace contains within itself mansions for every other knowledge ; which deep- ens and extends the interest of every other, gives it new charms and additional purpose ; the study of which, rightly and liberally pursued, is beyond any other entertaining, beyond all others tends at once to tranquillize and enliven, to keep the mind elevated and steadfast, the heart humble and tender : it is biblical theology -^ the philosophy of reli- gion, and the religion of philosophy." — Coleridge. (6) V^ OF THE ^ THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, OE THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. A DISCOURSE DELIVERED BEFORE THE LITERARY SOCIETIES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT, AUGUST 5, 1845. Gentlemen of the Societies : The subject to which I invite your attention is : The method^ and influence^ of Theological Studies. Theology more than any other science, suffers from false views of its scope and contents. In the opinion of • many, it is supposed to have little or no connection with other sciences, and to exert but a very small and unim- portant influence upon other departments of human knowledge. Its contents are supposed to be summed up in the truths of natural theology. It is thought to be that isolated and lifeless science which looks merely at the natural attributes of God and man, and which con- sequently brings to view no higher relations, and no deeper knowledge, than those of mere nature. Of course, for such minds theology must be a very unimportant and simple science, treating merely of those superficial qual- ities which do not reach into the depths of God and man, and of those merely secondary and temporal relation- (7) 8 THE METHOD, AXD INFLUENCE, ships that rest upon them. Said a member of the Direc- tory appointed by France during its Revolution to re- model Christianity, " I want a simple religion : one with a couple of doctrines." Theology, as understood by many, is the science of the French Director's religion. But such is not the scope, or the character, of that " sacred and inspired divinity " which Lord Bacon as- serts to be " the sabbath and port of men's labors and peregrinations." Nature ; the natural attributes of God and man, and the natural laws and relations of creation ; forms but a minor and insignificant part of its subject matter. This lower region of being is but the suburb. The metropolis and royal seat of theology is the svper- natural world ; a region full of moral being, sustaining most profound and solemn relations to reason and law. Before proceeding, then, to speak of the true method of theological study, and of its great and noble influ- ences, it will be needful to discuss more at large the real spirit and character of the science itself; and for this somewhat abstract discussion, I bespeak your forbearing and patient attention. It is needed in order to a clear ap- prehension of the enlarging and elevating influence of the science. Far am I from recommending to the educated man, the pursuit of those seemingly religious studies which never carry him out of the sphere of natural the- ology, and which cannot awaken enthusiasm of feehng or produce profundity of thought. I am pleading for those really theological studies, which by means of their supernatural element and character give nerve to the in- tellect and life to the heart. Theology is the science of the supernatural. That we may obtain a clear knowledge of its essential character, let us for a moment consider the distinction between the natural and the supernatural. OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 9 That which makes these different from each other in kind, so that the line which divides them divides the universe into two distinct worlds, is this fact: — the natural has no religious element in it, while the super- natural is entirely composed of this element. There is and there can be in mere nature nothing religious. There is and there can be in that which is supernatural nothing that is not religious.* When we have said this, we have given the essential difference between the nat- ural and supernatural. The common notion that by the natural is meant the material and visible, and by the supernatural, the imma- terial and invisible, is false. Nature may be as invisible and immaterial as is spirit. Who ever saw or ever will see the natural forces of gravitation, electricity, and mag- netism ? Who ever saw or ever will see that natural principle of life, of which all outward and material na- ture is but the manifestation ? Back of this world of nature which we apprehend by the five senses, there is an invisible world w^hich is nature still ; which is not su- pernatural ; neither the object of supernatural science nor of supernatural interests, because there is no moral ele- ment in it. When we have stripped the world of its materiality, and have dissolved all that is visible into unseen forces and vital laws, we have not reached any higher region than that of nature. We have not yet entered the supernatural and religious world. He who worships the vital principle or adores the force of gi-avity; nay, he who has no higher emotions than those of the natural religionist, which are called forth by the beauty ♦Religion is from rellgo: — natural laws have no religious, or binding force, and in the sphere of nature there can be no such things as duty, guilt, or praiseworthiness. 10 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, and glory of visible nature, or by the cloudy and mystic awfulness of invisible nature, is as really an idolater, as is the most debased heathen who bows down before a visible and material idol. And that system of thought which never rises into the world of moral or supernatural reality, is as truly material (whatever may be its profes- sions to the contrary), as is the most open and avowed materialism. It seems like stating truisms to make such statements as these ; and yet some of the most seductive and far-reach- ing errors in philosophy and theology have arisen from the non-recognition, or the denial, of any thing highei than invisible nature. Ideal Pantheism, a system receiv- ed by minds of a really profound order, and which boast* of its spirituality, results from the error in question. Hence, although it admits of, and produces, a mystic adoration and a vague dreamy awe, it is utterly incom- patible with really spiritual feeling and truly moral emotion. But the reality, and nature, of the distinction between the natural and supernatural, is still more clearly seen by a contemplation of the Divine attributes ; partly be- cause at this point the distinction itself is more marked and plain, and partly because from this point the vital errors in theological and philosophical science take their start. Although, at first sight, it may appear bold and irrev- erent, yet a thorough investigation will show that it re- sults in the only true fear and adoration of God, to say that his natural attributes considered by themselves are of no importance at all for a moral being. Taken by themselves, they have no religious quality, and therefore, as such, cannot be the ground of theological science or religious feeling. Considered apart from his supernatural OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 11 attributes, what meaning have the omnipresence, the omnipotence, and even the adaptive intelligence, of the Deity, for me as a religious being ? Of what interest, is the possessor of these merely natural attributes, to me as a rational and moral being, until I know the supernat- ural character and person which reside in them, and make them the vehicle of their operations ? I may see the ex- hibitions of Infinite Power in the heavens above me, and on the earth around me ; I may detect the work of an Infinite Intelligence in this world of matchless design and order ; but what are these isolated quafities to me as one who possesses moral reason and sustains supernatural relations ? Let that Infinite Power thunder and flash through the skies, and let that Infinite Intelligence clothe the world in beauty and glory; these merely natural attributes are nothing to me, in a religious point of view, until I know who wields them, and what supernatural and holy attributes make them their bearer and agent. Then will I fear spiritually, and then will I adore morally. This fundamental distinction between the natural and the supernatural is of vital importance to theological sci- ence. If not clearly seen and rigidly recognized in the- ology, this science comes to be nothing more than an investigation of the natural attributes of the Deity, and treats merely of those relations of man to the Creator, which the vilest reptile that crawls has in common with him. For if we set aside the supernatural attributes of God, man sustains only the same relations to him that the brute does. He, in common with the brutes that per- ish, is the creature of the Divine Power, and in common with them is sustained by the Divine Intelligence ; that attribute which causes merely natural wants to be sup- .plied by their correlative objects. The mere superven- tion of consciousness will make no difference between 12 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, mail and brute in relation to the Deity, unless conscious- ness bring with it the knowledge of his higher snpernat- tiral attributes. If we set aside his relations to the Wis- dom, Holiness, Justice and Mercy of God, we find man on a level with brute existence in all respects. He comes into being, reaches his maturity, declines, and dies, as they do, by the operation of the natural attributes of the Creator manifesting themselves in natural laws, and this is all that can be said of him in reference to his Maker. The more we contemplate the Divine Being, the more clearly do we see that his supernatural are his constitut- ing attributes ; the very Divinity of the Deity. If they are denied, the Creator is immediately confounded with the creature ; for his natural attributes, without his moral ones, become the soul of the world, its blind, though unerring principle of life. Or if they are misapprehend- ed, and the difference between the two classes is sup- posed to be only one of degree, and consequently that there is no essential distinction between nature and spirit, fatal errors will inevitably be the result. There will be no sharply and firmly drawn line between the natural and spiritual worlds, natural and spiritual laws, and natural and spiritual relationships. A mere natural- ism must run through theology, philosophy, science, lit- erature and art, depriving each and all of them of their noblest characteristics. The reality and importance of this distinction be- tween the natural and the supernatural, are to be seen in a less abstract and more interesting manner in the ac- tual life of men. Man is by creation a religious being ; and even in his religion we discover his proneness to deny or misapprehend the distinction in question. The religion of the natural man is strictly natural religion. It OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. , 13 refers solely to the natural attributes of God. There is no man who is not pleasurably affected by the manifes- tation of the Power and intelligent Design of the Deity, as seen in the natural world ; and all men who have not been taught experimentally, that there are higher attri- butes than these, and a higher religion than this, are con- tent with such religion. " As is the earthy, such are they that are earthy." They are strictly natural men, and seek that in God which corresponds to their character. The spirit, or the supernatural part of man, has not yet been renewed and vivified by a supernatural influence, and therefore there is no search after the spiritual attri- butes of God. The moment that the supernatural dawns upon such men, and the moral attributes of God appear in their awful and solemn relations to law, guilt, and atonement, they are troubled ; and unless mercifully prevented, descend into the low regions of nature, to escape from a light and a purity which they cannot endure. It will be evident even from this brief discussion that the distinction between the natural and the supernatural is a valid and fundamental one ; that the natural world is essentially different from the supernatural, and that theology, as the science of the supernatural, possesses a scope, contents, and influence, as vast and solemn as the field of its inquiry. And think for a moment what this field is ! It is not the earth we tread upon, nor the heavens that are bent over it, all beautiful and glorious as they are. It is not that unseen world of living forces and active laws which lies under the visible universe, giving it existence and causing its manifold motions and changes. This is in- deed a deeply mysterious realm, and is a step nearer the Eternal than all that we see with the eye or touch with 2 14 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, the hand is ; but it is not the proper home of theological inquiry. Above the kingdoms of visible and invisible nature, there is a world which is the residence of a personal God, with supernatural attributes, and the seat of spiritual ideas, laws, and relations. It is, to use the language of Plato, " that super-heavenly place which no one of the poets has hitherto worthily sung, or ever will," where right- eousness itself, true wisdom and knowledge, are to be seen in their very essence.* This is the proper field of theological inquiry, and as the mind ranges through it, it comes in sight of all that invests man's spirit with infi- nite responsibilities, and renders human existence one of awful interest. But what is the proper method of theological studies ? If what has been said relative to the two great king- doms into which the universe is divided, be true, it is plain that theological studies must commence in that supernatural w^orld whose realities form its subject mat- ter, and that the true method is to descend from spirit to nature, in our investigations. The contrary process has been in vogue for the last century and a half, and the saying "from nature we ascend to nature's God," has come to be received as an axiom in theological science. If this assertion means anything, it means that by a careful observation of all that we can apprehend by the five senses, in space, we shall obtain a correct and full knowledge of God. The spirit of the assertion is this : Nature is first in the order of investigation, because its teachings are more surely correct, and its proofs are * Pbaedrus. Opera viii. p. 30. See the whole of the beautiful descrip- tion of this iirepovpai/ios rSiros : a passage vivid 1}' reminding of 1 Cor. iL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 15 more to be relied on, than those of the supernatural. Let us test it by rigidly applying it to the investigation of the being and character of God. What is there in nature which teaches, or proves, the existence of the Holiness of God ; or his Justice ; or his Mercy ? What is there in the world in which we live as beings of nature and sense, which necessarily compels us to assume the personality of God ? It is true that we are taught by all that exists in " the mighty world of eye and ear," that there are power and adaptive intelligence somewhere^ but whether they are seated in a self-conscious and personal being, or are only the eternal procession of a blind and unconscious life, we cannot know anything that nature teaches. You see a movement in the natural world: say the growth of a plant or the blowing of a flower. What does that natural movement teach (considered simply by itself, and with no reference to a higher knowledge from another source,) and what have you a right to infer from it ? Simply this : that there is a merely natural power adequate to its production ; but whether that power has any connefction with the moral character of a spiritual person^ you cannot know from anything you see in the natural phenomenon. Now extend this through infinite space, and will the closest examination of all the physical movements occurring in this vast do- main, taken by itself, lead up to a personal and holy God ? What is there in the law of gravity which has the least tendency to lead to the recognition of the law of holiness ? Is there any similarity between the two in kind ? What can the motions of the sun and stars, the unvarying return of the seasons, the bu-th, growth, and death, of animated existence, taken by themselves, teach regarding the supernatural attributes of God ? Take away from man the knowledge of God which is Id THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, contained in the human spirit and in the written word, and leave him to find his way up to a personal and spir- itual Deity by the light of nature alone; and he will grope in eternal darkness, if for no other reason, because he cannot even get the idea of such a Being. For the truth is, that between the two kingdoms of nature and spirit a great gulf is fixed, and the passage from one to the other is not by degrees, but by a leap ; and this leap is not up, but down. There is one theory which assumes that the universe is but the development of one only substance ; and if this is a correct theory, then it is true that we can " ascend from nature up to nature's God." For all is continuous development, with no chasm interv^ening, and the height may consequently be reached from the bottom by a patient ascent. There is another and the true theory, which rejects this doc- trine of development, and substitutes in its place that of creation, whereby nature is not an emanation, but springs forth into existence for the first time, at the fiat of the Creator, who is now distinct from the work of his hands. Nature is now, in a certain sense, separate from God, and instead of being able to prove his moral existence, or to manifest his supernatural and constituting attri- butes, requires a previous knowledge of the Creator, from another source, in order to its own true apprehen- sion.* Now the true method of obtaining a correct knowledge of an object, is to follow the method of its origin, and therefore true theological science follows the footsteps of * Whether the absolute is the ground or the cause is the question which has ever divided philosophers. That it is the (/round but not the cause is the assertion of Naturalism ; that it is the cause and not the ground is the assertion of Theism. Jacobi. Von den Goit. Dingen. Werke. iii. 404, to- gether with the references. OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 17 • God. It starts with the assumption of his existence, and the knowledge of his character derived from a higher source than that of mere nature, that it may find in the works of his hands the illustration of his aheady known attributes, and the manifestation of his already be- heved being. True theology descends from God to nature, and rectifies and interprets all that it finds in this complicated and perplexing domain, by what it knows of its Maker from other and higher sources. Take away from the human spirit that knowledge of the moral attributes of God which it has from its consti- tution, and from revelation, and compel it to deduce the character of the Supreme Being from what it sees in the natural world, and will it not inevitably become skeptical ? As the thoughtful heathen looked abroad over a world of pain and death, was he not forced reso- lutely to reject the natural inference to be drawn from this sight, and to cling with desperate faith to the dictum of a voice speaking from another quarter, saying : " see what thou mayest in nature apparently to the contrary, He is Just ; He is Holy ; He is Good." This false method of theological study proceeds from a belief common to man, resulting partly from his cor- ruption and partly from his present existence in a world offense. It is the common belief of man that reality in the strictest sense of the term is to be predicated of ma- terial things, and in his ordinary thought and feeling, that which is spiritual is unreal. The solid earth which the " swain treads upon with his clouted shoon " has sub- stantial existence, and its material objects are real, but if we watch the common human feeUng regarding such objects as the soul and God, we detect (not necessarily a known and determined infidelity, but) an inabiUty to make them as real and substantial as the . sun in the 2* 18 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, ~ m heavens, or the earth under foot. Lord Bacon in de- scribing the idols of the tribe ; the false notions which are inherent in human nature ; says, that " man's sense is falsely asserted to be the standard of things." * It is, however, under the influence of the notion that it is, that man goes to the investigation of truth, and espe- cially of theological truth. Every thing is determined by a material standard, and established from the position of materialism. It is assumed that nature is more real than spirit ; that its instructions and evidences are more to be relied on than those of spirit ; and that from it, as from the only sure foothold for investigation, we are to make hurried and timid excursions into that dim undis- covered realm of the supernatural which is airy and un- real, and filled with airy and unreal objects. This is a low and mean idol, and if the inquirer after spiritual truth bows down to it he shall never enter the holy of holies. Spirit is more real than matter, for God is a spirit. Supernatural laws and relations are more real than those of nature, for they shall exist when na- ture, even to its elements, shall be melted with fervent heat. Why then should we, as did the pagan mythology, make earth and the earth-born Atlas support the old ev- erlasting heavens? They are self-supported and em- bosom and illumine all things else. Why should we attempt to rest spiritual science upon natmal science ; the eternal upon the temporal ; the absolute upon the empirical ; the certain upon the uncertain ? Is all that is invisible unreal, and must a thing become the object of the five senses, before we can be certain of its reality ? Not to go out of the natural world ; by what in this do- ^ * Novum Organum, Aph. 41. ^^ OF THB ^^ OF THEOLOGICAL STUImBI IT 1 Y « XV 991 * • main are we most vividly, impressed witi^^^€>^eption of reality, and how is the notion of power awakened ? Not by anything we see with the eye or touch with the hand, but by the knowledge of that unseen force and law which causes the motions of the heavens, and makes the " crystal spheres ring out their silver chimes." Not by an examination of the phenomena of the mineral, vege- table, and animal kingdoms, but by the idea of that one vast invisible life manifesting itself in them. Even here, upon a thoughtful reflection, that which is unseen shows itself to be the true reality. And to go up higher into the sphere of human existence : where is the substantial reality of man's being ? In that path which, in the ' an- guage of Job, " no fowl knoweth, and which the vulture's eye hath not seen." In that unseen world where human thought ranges, where human feelings swell into a vast- ness not to be contained by the great globe itself, and where human affections soar away into eternity. No ! reality in the high sense of the term belongs to the invis- ible, and in the very highest sense, to the invisible thinga of the supernatural world. There is more of reality in the feeblest finite spirit than in all the material universe, for it will survive " the wreck of matter and the crash of worlds." The supernatural is a firmer foundation upon which to establish science than is the natural ; its data are more certain, and its testimony mogre sure than those of nature. None but an open ear, it is true, can hear the voices and the dicta that come from this highest world, but he who has once heard never again doubts regarding them. He cannot doubt, if he would. He has heard the tones, and they will continue to sound through his soul, with louder and louder reverberations, through its whole immortality. Perhaps it will be objected that, granting spiritual 20 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, things to be the true realities, yet the mind cannot see them except through a medium, and cannot be certain of their existence except by means of deductions from a palpable and tangible reality like that of the material world. But is it so ? Does the spirit need a medium through which to behold the idea and law of Right, for example ; and must it build up a series of conclusions based upon deductions drawn from the world of sense, before it can be certain that there is any such reality ? — Does not the human spirit see the idea of Right as directly and plainly as the material eye sees the sun at high noon ; and when it sees it, is it not as certain of its existence as we are of that of the sun ? If man does not see this spiritual entity, this supernatural idea, directly and without a medium, he will never see it, and if it does not of itself convey the evidence of its reality, it can be drawm from no other quarter. The same may be said of all spiritual entities what- ever ; of all the objects of the supernatural world. The rational spirit may and must behold them by direct intui- tion in their own pure white light. It has the organ for doing this. Not more certainly is the material eye designed for the vision of the sun, than the rational spirit is designed for the visioir of God. The former is ex- pressly constructed to behold matter, and the latter is just as expressly constructed to behold spirit. Nor let it be supposed that the term " behold " is used literally in reference to the act of the material eye, and merely metaphorically in reference to the act of the spirit. The term is no more the exclusive property of one organ than of the other. Or if it is to belong to one exclusively let us rather appropriate it to that organ which sees eternal distinctions. If the term " sight " is ever metaphorical, OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 21 surely it is not so when applied to the vision of immuta- ble truths and everlasting realities. Man, both by nature and by the circumstances in which he is placed, finds it difficult thus to contemplate abstract ideal truth, and when it eludes his imperfect vision he charges the difficulty upon the truth and not upon himself. But for all this the ideal is real, and man is capable of this abstract vision. Upon his ability to free himself from the disturbing influences of sense, to be independent of the physical senses in the investigation of spiritual things, and to see them in their own light by their correlative organ, depends his true knowledge of the supernatural. It is on this ground that Plato asserts it to be the true mark of a philosophic mind to desire to die, because the mind is thereby withdrawn from the dis- traction of sense, and in the spiritual world beholds the Beautiful, the True, and the Good, in their essence. — Hence with great force he represents those spirits which have not been entirely freed from the crass and sensuous nature of the body, as being afraid of the purely spiritual world and its supernatural objects, and as returning into the world of matter to wander as ghosts among tombs and graves, loving thehr old material dwelling more than the spirit-land.* The knowledge which comes from a direct vision of spiritual objects is sure, and needs no evidence of its truth from a lower domain. He who has once in spirit obtained a distinct sight of such realities as the Good, the Beautiful, the True, and their contraries, will never again be in doubt of their existence, or as to their natures. These are entities which once seen compel an everlast- ing belief. These are objects * Phaedon, Opera I. pp. 115. 1 16, 139. 22 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, ***** that wake To perish never ; Which neither listlessness nor mad endeavor, Nor man nor boy, Nor all that is at enmity with joy, Can utterly abolish or destroy. The true method then of theological studies is to com- mence in and with the supernatural and to work outward and downward to the natural. The theologian must study his own spirit by the aid of the written word. He will ever find the two in perfect harmony and mutually confirming each other. The supernatural doctrines of theology must be seen in their own light ; must bring their own evidence with them, and theology must be a self-supported science. Whatever may be said in opposition to this method by those who magnify natural theology to the injury of spiritual religion, it has always been the method of in- quiry employed by the profoundest and most accurate theologians. Augustine lived at a period when natural science was but little cultivated and advanced, but even if he had possessed all the physical knowledge of the present day, that inward experience with its throes, agonies, and joys, so vividly portrayed in his " Confes- sions," would still have kept his eye turned inward. The power of Luther and Calvin lies in their realizing views of supernatural objects seen by their own light; and nothing but an absolutely abstract and direct beholding of supernatural realities could have produced the calm assurance and profound theology of that loftiest of human spirits, John Howe. But what has been the result of the contrary method ? Have not those who (fommenced with the study of natural theology, and who made this the foundation of their inquiries into the nature and mutual relations of OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 2J God and man, always remained on the spot where they first stationed themselves ? Did they, by logically fol- lowing their assumed method, ever rise above the sphere of merely natural religion into that of supernatural, and obtain just views either of the Infinite Spirit as personal and therefore tri-une ; or of the Finite Spirit as free, re- sponsible and guilty? Bid they ever acquire rational views of holy and just law ; of law as strictly snpernatU' ral ; and so of its relations to guilt and expiation ? An undue study of natural science inevitably leads to WTong theological opinions. Unless it be pursued in the light which spirit casts upon nature, the student will misapprehend both nature and spirit. Who can doubt that if Priestley had devoted less time to the phenomena of the natural world, and far more to those of the super- natural ; less attention to physical, laws as seen in the operations of acids and alkahes, and far more attention to the operation of a spiritual law as revealed in a guilty conscience ; he would have l§ft a theology far more nearly conformed to the word of God and the structure of the human spirit. I have been thus particular in speaking of the super- natural element in theological studies, for the purpose of showing where their power lies, and whence their influ- ence comes. I turn now to consider the influence of these studies as they have been characterized, upon edu- cation and the educated class in the state. Genuine education is immediately concerned with the essence of the mind itself, and its power and work appear in the very substance of the understanding. It starts into exercise deeper powers than the memory, and it does more for the mind than merely to fill it. It enters rather into its constituent and controlling principles; rouses and develops them, and thus establishes a basis for the 24 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, mind's perpetual motion and progress. Whether there be much or little acquired information is of small import- ance, comparatively, if the mind has that which is the secret of mental superiority ; the power of originating knowledge upon a given subject for itself, and can fall back upon its own native energies for information. That process whereby a mind acquires the ability to fasten itself with absorbing intensity upon any legitimate object of human inquiry, and to originate profound thought and clear conceptions regarding it, is education. The truth of this assertion will be apparent if we bear in mind that knowledge, in the high sense of the term, is not the remembrance of facts, but the intuition of prin- ciples. Facts are that through which principles manifest themselves, and by which they are illustrated, but to take them for the essence of knowledge is to mistake the body for the soul. The true knowledge of nature, art, philosophy, and religion, is an insight into their constitu- ent principles, of which facts and phenomena are but the raiment ; the " white and glistering " raiment in which the essence is transfigured and through which it shines. Now, principles are entities that do not exist either in space or time. They cannot be apprehended by any organ of sense, and therefore they are not in space. — They cannot in a literal sense be said to be old or new. Principles are eternal and therefore they are not in time. Where then are they? In the intellectual world: — a world that is not measured by space or limited by periods of time, but which has, nevertheless, as real an existence as this globe. In the world of mind, all those principles which constitute knowledge are to be sought ^ for. They lie in the structure of mind, and therefore the development of the mind is but the discovery of princi- ples, and education is the origination of substantial OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 25 knowledge out of the very being who is to be educat- ed.* Thus, by this brief examination of the true nature of knowledge, do we come round in a full circle to the spot w^hence we started, and see that he alone is in the pro- oess of true education who is continually looking within, and by the gradual evolution of his own mind is continu- ally unfolding those principles of knowledge that lie imbedded in it. Such an one may not have amassed great erudition, but he possesses a working intellect which, unencumbered by amassed materials, overflows all the more freely with original principles. We feel that such a mind is educated, for its products, are alive and communicate life. From a living impulse it origin- ates a knowledge, regarding any particular subject to which it directs itself, that commends itself to us as truth, by its congeniality and affinity with our own mind, and by its kindling influence upon it. Accustomed, from the domination of a mental philos- ophy which rejects tne doctrine of innate ideas, to con- sider learning as something carried into the mind instead of something drawn out of it, it sounds strangely to speak of originatirtg knowledge. But who are the really learned statesmen, philosophers, and divines ? Not those who merely commit to memory the results of past inquiry, but those in whom after deep reflection the principles of government, philosophy, and religion, rise into sight, with the freshness, inspiration, and splendor, of a new dis- covery. In asserting however that learning is the product of the mind itself, I mean that it is relatively so. ♦ This is Plato's meaning when he asserts that learning is recollection : — the reminding of the human spirit of those great principles which are bom with it, and which constitute its rationality. — Phsedou Opera I. p. 125, ct seq. Cudworth's Im. Mor. Book iii, Chap. 3. 3 26 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, It is not asserted that every truly learned mind discovers absolutely new principles, and consequently that the future is to bring to light a great amount of knowledge unknown to the past. Far from it. The sum of human knowledge, with the exception of that part relating to the domain of natural science, is undoubtedly complete, and we are not to expect the discovery of any new fun- damental principles in the sphere of the supernatural. — But it is asserted with confidence that these old principles must be discovered afresh for himself by every one who would be truly educated. " He who has been born," says an eloquent writer, " has been a first man, and has had the world lying around him as fresh and fair as it lay before the eyes of Adam himself." In like manner, he who has been created a rational spirit, has a world of rational principles encircling him, which is as new and undiscovered for him as it was for the first man. In the hemisphere of his own self-reflection and self-conscious- ness, the sun must rise for the first time, and the stars must send down their very freshest influences, their very first and purest gleam. For education, in the eminent sense of the term, is dynamic and not atomic. It does not lie in the mind in the form of congregated atoms, but of living, salient, energies. It is not therefore poured in from without, but springs up from within. The power of pure thought is education. Indeed the more we consider the nature of mental education, the more clearly do we see that it con- sists in the power of pure, practical reflection ; the ability so to absorb the mind that it shall sink down into itself, until it reaches those ultimate principles, bedded in its essence, by which facts and all acquired and remembered information are illuminated and vivified. It cannot be that he who remembers the most, is the most thoroughly OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 27 educated man, or that the age which is in possession of the greatest amount of books and recorded information, is the most learned. No ! learning is the product of a powerful mind, which, by self-reflection and absorption in pure, practical thought, goes down into those depths of the intellectual world, where, as in the world of matter, the gems and gold, the seeds, and germs, and roots, are to be found. It is related that Socrates could remain a whole day utterly lost in profound reflection.* This was the education in that age of no books, to which, through his scholar Plato, himself educated in the same way, is owing a system of philosophy, substantial with the very essence of learning; a system which for insight into ultimate principles is at the head of all human knowledge. Such being the nature of education, it is evident that theological studies are better fitted than any others, to educe a rational mind. For they bring it into imme- diate communication with those supernatural realities and truths which are appropriate to it, and which possess a strong power of development. There is in the human mind a vast amount of latent energy forming the basis for an endless progress, and this will lie latent and dor- mant unless the forces of the supernatural world evolve it. The world of nature unfolds merely the superficies of man, leaving the hidden depths of his being unstirred, and only when the windows of heaven are opened are the fountains of this great deep broken up. For proof of this assertion, consider the influence which the theolo- gical doctrine of the soul's immortality exerts upon the spirit. When man realizes that he is immortal he is supernaturally roused. Depths are revealed in his being which he did not dream of, down into which he looks with solemn awe, and energies which had hitherto slum- * Convivium. Platonis Opera vii. p. 278. 28 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, bered from his creation are now set into a play at which he stands aghast. Never do the tides of that shoreless ocean, the human soul, heave and swell as they do when it feels w^hat the scripture calls " the power of an endless life." The same remark holds true of all properly theo- logical doctrines. An unequalled developing influence rains down from this great constellation. And the intellect as well as the heart of man feels the influence. Hence that period in a man's life which is marked by a realizing and practical apprehension of the doctrines of spiritual religion is also marked by a great increase of intellectual power. A manlier and more sub- stantial cultivation begins, because the being has become conscious of his high origin and the awfulness of his destiny, and a stronger play of intellectual power is evoked, because the stream of supernatural influence flows through the whole man, and both head and heart feel its vivification. The value of theological studies, in an intellectual point of view, does not consist so much in the amount of information as in the amount of energy imparted by them. The doctrines of theology, like the solar centres, are comparatively few in number, and while the demand they make upon the memory is small, the demand they make upon the power of reflection is infinite and unending. For this reason, theological studies are in the highest degree fitted to originate and carry on a true education. There is an invigorating vir- tue in them which sti-engthens while it unfolds the mental powers, and therefore the more absorbing the intensity with which the mind dwells upon them, the more it is endued with power. This truth is very plainly written in literary history. If we would see that period when the mind of a nation was most full of original power, we must contemplate OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 29 its theological age. We ever find that the national intel- lect is most energetically educed in that period When the attention of educated men is directed with great earnest- ness to theological studies, while that period which is characterized by a false study, of a general neglect, of them, is one of very shallow education. Compare the education of the English mind during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, with its education in the eigh- teenth. The great difference between the two, is owing to the serious and profound reflection upon strictly theo- logical subjects that prevailed in the first period, and to the absence of such reflection in the second. The former was a theological age in the strict sense of the term ; a period when the educated class felt very powerfully the vigor proceeding from purely supernatural themes. The latter was a period when, through the influence of a sys- tem of philosophy which teaches that every thing must be learned through the five senses, a mere naturalism took the place of supernaturalism, and when, as a matter of course, the mind of the literary class was not the sub- ject of those developing and energizing influences which proceed only from supernatural truths. Again, that we may still more clearly see the vigorous character imparted to education by purely theological studies, let us consider two individuals who stand at the head of two different classes of literary men, and afford two different specimens of intellectual culture : — Lord Chancellor Bacon and Lord Chancellor Brougham. The education of Bacon is the result, in no small degree, of the influence of the truths of supernatural science. There was no naturalism in the age of Bacon ; there was none in his culture ; and there is none in his writings. He lived at a period when the English mind was stirred very deeply by religious doctrines, and when 3* 30 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, the truths of the supernatural world were very absorbing topics o^ thought and discussion, not only for divines, but for statesmen. We of this enhghtened nineteenth century, are in the habit of calling those centuries (;f reformation, dark, in comparison with our own ; but with all the darkness on some subjects, it may be fearlessly asserted that since the first two centuries of the history of Christianity, there has never been a period when so large a portion of the race have been so deeply and anx- iously interested in the truths pertaining to another world, as in those two centuries of reformation ; the sixteenth and seventeenth. With all the lack of modern improvements and civilization, there was everywhere a firm belief in the supernatural, and a sacred reverence for religion. Even the very keenness and acrimony of the theological disputations of that period prove that men believed, as they do not in an indifferent age, that reli- gious doctrines are matters of vital interest. Bacon lived in this age ; in its first years, and felt the first and freshest influences of the great awakening. His intellect felt them, and hence its masculine development and vigor. The products of his intellect felt them, and hence the solid substance, strong sinew, and warm blood, of which they are made. The education of Brougham has been obtained in a very different age from that of Bacon : an age when the faith and interest which the learned class once felt in the realities of another world, have transferred themselves to the realities of this. It has also been the result, in no small degree, of the belief and the study of the half-truths of natural theology. While then the recorded learning of Bacon bears the stamp of originality, is drenched and saturated with the choicest intellectual spirit and energy, makes an e^och in literary history, and OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 31 sends forth through all time an enlivening power, the recorded learning of Brougham is destitute of fresh life, being the result of a diligent acquisition, and not of pro- found contemplation, gives ofFlittle invigorating influence, and cannot form a marked period in the history of lite- rature. Thus far we have considered the developing and ener- gizing influence of theological studies ; but if we should stop here, we should be very far from discovering their full worth. There is a merely speculative development and energy of the mind which is heaven-wide from genu- ine education, and really prevents growth in true knowlr- edge. There have ever been, and, so long as man shall continue to be a fallen spirit, there ever will be, two kinds of thought. The one speculative, and hollow ; the other practical and substantial. The one wasting itself upon the factitious products of its own energy ; the other expending itself upon those great realities which are veritable, and have an existence independent of the finite mind. The natural tendency of the intellect, when not actuated by a rational and holy will, is to produce purely speculative thought, and in this direction do we see all intellect going which does not feel the influence of moral and spiritual truth. The speculative reason is a wonder- ful mechanism, and if kept within its proper domain, and applied to its correlative objects, is an important instru- ment in thQ attainment pf truth and culture, but if suffered to pass over its appointed limits, and to occupy itself with the investigation of subjects to which it is not adapted, it brings in error rapidly and ad infinitum, pre- venting the true progress and repose of the spirit. There is no end to the manufactures of the speculative faculty, or to the productive energy of its life, when once the pro- '^2 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, cess of speculation is begun. N^^y, it is the express doctrine of Fichte (the most intensely and purely specu- lative intellect the world has yet seen) that the finite mind having the principle of its own movement within itself, by working in accordance with its own indwelling laws, is able to create, and actually does create the grea universe itself! The history of philosophy disclose much of such speculative thought, and hence the dissat- isfaction of philosophy with what it has hitherto done, and its striving after a substantial and genuine knowl- edge. Man as a moral being cannot be content with these hollow speculations, for spirit as well as nature abhors a vacuum. Thought must be filled up with sub- stantial verity, and knowledge must become practical, in order to the repose and true education of the mind. Yet notwithstajiding the unsatisfying nature of specu- lative thinking, an intellectual life and enthusiasm are generated by it which invest it with a charming facina- tion for the mind that is led on by a merely speculative interest. What though the thinker is bewildered and lost in the mazes of speculation ; he is bewildered and lost in wonderful regions, the astounding nature of whose objects represses, for a time, the feelings of doubt and dissatisfaction. He is like the pilgrim lost in " the gorgeous East," who is delightedly lost amid the luxuri- ant entanglements and wild enchantments of the oriental jungle, in this exciting world of speculation, the ener- gies of the intellect are in full action, the thirst and curiosily for knowledge are keen, and under the impulse of these the thinker says with Jacobi ; " though I know the insufficiency of my philosophizing, still I can only philosophize right on." * * Jacobi, quoted by Tholuck. Vermischte Schriften. ii. 427 ; and see a similar remark by Kant, Kritik derreinen Yernunft. p. 196. The philoso- OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 33 It is possible to evoke intellectual energy so posverfully and habitually that the action shall become organic, and the intellect shall be instinctively busy with the ])roduc- tion and reproduction of speculations ; and though the thinker gets no repose of soul by it, yet he is so much under the power of the intellectual appetite that he will not cease to gratify it. There is no more mournful chap- ter in the history of literary men than that which records their unending speculative struggles ; their efforts to find peace of mind and true education in the application of merely speculative energy to the solution of the great problems of moral existence. The process of speculation continually becomes more and more impeded, as at every advance still more mysterious problems come into sight, not soluble by this method ; the over-tasked intellect at length gives out, and its gifted possessor falls into the abyss of unbelief like an archangel. It is not enough therefore that the latent power of the mind is developed merely ; it must be developed by some substantial objects, and it must be expended upon some veritable realities. In other words, the thought of man must be called forth by the ideas and principles of the supernatural world, and the mind of man must find repose and education in moral truth. pher, (says Chalybaus in the conclusion of his lecture upon Jacobi, Vorles- UDgen p. 77.) as well as the poet, can say of himself: — Ich hake diesen Drang vergebens auf, Der 'J'ag und Nacht in meinem Busen wechselt, Wenn ich nicht sinnen oder dit-hten soil, So ist das Leben mir kein Leben melu! Verbiete du dem Seidenwunn, zu spinncn — Wenn er sich sclion dem Tode naher spiunt, Das kiistlichste Geweb' entwickelt er Aus seinem Innersten, und laszt nicht ab Bis er in seinen Sarg sich eingeschlossen. 34 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, The reader of Plato is struck with the earnestness with which this truly philosophic and educated mind insists upon knowing that which really is, as the end of philoso- phy. It matters not how consecutive and consistent with itself a system of thought may be, if it has no cor- respondent in the world of being, and does not find a confirmation in the world of absolute reality. The form may be distinct, and the proportions symmetrical, but the thing is spectral and unsubstantial, and though it be dignified with the name of philosophy, it is nevertheless a pure figment. Though not the product of the fancy but of a far higher faculty, a merely speculative philo- sophical system is but a product ; a creation of the brain, to which there is, objectively, nothing correspondent. As an instance of such philosophizing, take the system of Spinoza. No one can deny that as a merely speculative unity, it is perfect, and perfectly satisfies the wants of that part of the human understanding which looks for nothing but a theoretical whole. All its parts are in most perfect harmony with each other, and with the whole. This system is conceived and executed in a most systematic spirit, and if man had no moral reason which seeks for something more than a merely specula- tive unity, it would be for him the true theory of the universe. But why is it not, and why cannot the hu- man mind be content with it ? Because a rational spirit cannot rest in it. There is in this system, great and architectural as it is, no repose or home for a moral being, and therefore it is not truth ; for absolute truth is infallibly known by the absolute and everlasting satisfac- tion it affords to the moral spirit. Another great aim of education, therefore, is the calm repose of the mind ; its settlement in indisputable truth. This can proceed only from the study of the purely spir- OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 35 itual truths of theology, because such is their nature that there can be no real dispute regarding them, whereas merely speculative dogmas are susceptible of, and awak- en, an endless ratiocination. There has always been, for example, even among thoughtful men a keen dispute re- garding some points in the mode of the Divine existence, but none at all regarding the Divine character. The doctrine of the subsistence of creatipn in the creator has ever awakened honest disputations among sincere dis- putants, but the doctrine that God is holy has never been doubted by a conscientious thinker. This holds true of all speculative and practical doctrines. Within the sphere of theory and speculation there is room for endless wanderings, and no foundation upon which the spirit can stand still and firm. Within the sphere of practice and morality there need be no doubt nor error, and the sincere mind, by a direct vision of the truths of this practical domain of knowledge, may enter at once and forever into rest. The influence of purely theological studies, in produc- ing an education that ministers repose and harmony to the mind, is great and valuable. The intellectual energy is not awakened by abstractions, nor is it expended upon them, but upon those supernatural realities which are the appropriate objects of a rational contemplation, and which completely satisfy the wants of an immortal being. For that which imparts substantiality to thought, is religion, and all reflection which dges not in the end refer to the moral and supernatural relations of man, is worthless. Though a fallen spirit, man still bears about with him the great idea of his origin and destiny. This allows him no real peace or satisfaction but in religious truth, and there are moments, consequently, in the life of the edu- cated man, when he feels with deep despondency the 86 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, need of the purer culture, and the more satisfactory re- flection, of better studies. If any, short of strictly theo- logical studies, can give repose of mind, they would have given it to the poet Goethe. Yet that mind, singu- larly symmetrical and singularly calm by nature, af- ter ranging for half a century through all regions save that strictly supernatural world of which we have spok- en, and after obtaining what of culture and intellectual satisfaction is to be found short of spiritual truths ; that mind, so richly and variously gifted, at the close of its existence on earth confessed that it had never experi- enced a moment of genuine repose. The German poet is not the only one whose educa- tion did not contribute to repose and peace of mind. The literary life has not hitherto been calm and satisfied. From all times, and from all classes of educated minds, there comes the mournful confession that " he that in- creaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow," and that all learning which does not go beyond the consciousness of the natural man and have for its object the Good, the True, and the Divine, cannot satisfy the demands of man's ideal state. From Philosophy, from Poetry, and from Art, is heard the acknowledgment that there is no repose for the rational spirit but in moral truth. The testimony that the whole creation gi'oaneth and travail- eth in pain, together, is as loud and convincing from the domain of letters, as it is from the cursed and thistle- bearing ground. From the immortal longing and dis- satisfaction of Plato, down to the wild and passionate restlessness of Byron and Shelley, the evidence is deci- sive that a spiritual and religious element must enter ^ into the education of man in order to inward harmony and rest. Time forbids gi longer discussion of this psirt of the OP THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 37 subject. It may be said as a result of the whole, that a thorough study of theology as the science of the super- natural, results in a profundity and harmony of educa- tion which can be obtained in no other way, and if the culture which cornes from poetry and fine literature gen- erally be also mingled with it, a truly beautiful as well as profound education will be the result of the alchemy. I turn now to consider the influence of theological studies upon Literature. And let me again remind you that I am speaking of purely theological studies, as they have been defined. There is an influence proceeding from so-called theological studies, which deprives litera- ture of its depth, power, beauty, and glory ; the quasi religious influence of naturalism, of which the poetry of Pope, the philosophy of Locke, the divinity of Priestley, and the morality of Paley, are the legitimate and neces- sary results. The fact strikes us in the outset, that the noblest and loftiest literature has always appeared in those periods of a nation's existence, when its literary men were most under the influence of theological science. Whether we look at Pagan or Christian literature, we find this asser- tion verified. The mythology and theology of Greece exerted their greatest influence upon' Homer, the three dramatists, and Plato ; and these are the great names in Grecian literature. If Cicero is ever vigorous and origi- nal he is in his ethical and theological writings. The beautiful flower of Italian literature is the " unfathom- able song" of the religious Dante. The beauty and strength of English -literature are the fruit of those two pre-eminently theological centuries: — the sixteenth and seventeenth. The originality and life which for the last century has given German literature the superiority over other literatures of this period, must be referred mainly to 4 38 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, the tendency of the German mind toward theological truth. And judging a priori^ we should conclude that such would be the fact. We might safely expect that the human mind would produce its most perfect results, when most under the influences that come from its birth-place. We might know beforehand, that truth and beauty would flow most freely into the creations of man's mind, when he himself is in most intimate communication with that world where these qualities have their eternal fountain. 1. The first and best fruit of the influence of the- ology upon literature is profundity. This characteristic of the best literature of a nation is immediately noticed by the scholar, so that its decrease or absence is, for him, the chief sign of deterioration. In that glorious age of a nation when the solemn spirit of religion informs every- thing ; when, compared with after ages, the nation seems to be very near the supernatural world in feeling and sentiment ; when prophet, poet, and priest, are syno- nymes ; then arises its most profound literature. By a profound literatiire, is meant one that addresses itself to the most profound faculties of the human soul. The so-called poUte literature, is the lightest and most unessential product of the human mind. It is the work of the inferior part of the understanding, deriving little life or vigor from its deepest powers, and having no im- mediate connection with its highest cultivation. It occupies the attention of man in his youthful days, afibrding an ample field in which the fancy may rove and revel, and starting some of the superficial life of the intellect ; but in the mature and meditative part of his existence, when the great questions relating to his origin and destiny are raised, he leaves these gay and pleasant studies for that more profound literature which comes home to deeper faculties and wants. OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 39 A survey of literature generally, at once shows that, but a very small portion of it is worthy to be called pro- found. How very little of the vast amount which has been composed by the literary class, addresses itself to the primitive faculties of the human soul ! The greater part merely stimulates curiosity, exercises the fancy, and perhaps loads the memory. Another portion externally polishes and adorns the mind. It is only a very small portion, which by speaking to the Reason and the ra- tional and creative Imagination, and rousing into full play of life those profound powers, ministers .strength, true beauty, and true culture to the soul. Consider for a moment the character of the English literature of the present day. I do not now refer to the dregs and off-scourings which are doing so much to de- bauch the English mind, but to the bloom and flower. And I ask if it does anything more for the scholar than to externally adorn and embellish his education ? Has it the power to educate ? Does it have a strong tendency to develop a historical, a philosophical, a poetical, or ar- tistic capability if it lie in the student ? Must not a more profound literature be called upon to do this, and must not the scholar who would truly develop what is in him, go back to- the study of Homer and Plato ; of Dante ; of Shakspeare, Bacon, and Milton ? If he con- tents himself with the study of the best current litera- ture, will he do anything more than produce a refine- ment destitute of life ; a culture without vigor ; and will he himself in his best estate be anything more than an intellectual voluptuary, utterly impotent and without vivifying influence upon letters ? There is then a profound portion of literature speaking to the deeper part of man, from which he is to derive a profound literary cultivation. A brief examination will 40 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, ^show that its chief characteristics arise from its being impregnated by theology ; not necessarily by the formal doctrines of theology, but by its finer essence and spirit. Theology, it has been said, is the science of the supernat- ural and therefore of the strictly mysterious. The idea of God, which constitutes and animates the science, is a true mystery. But that which is truly mysterious is truly profound, and deepens everything coming under its influence. Indeed mystery, in the philosophical sense of the term, is the author of all great qualities. Sublim- ity, Profundity, Grandeur, Magnificence, Beauty, can- not exist without it. Like night, it induces a high and solemn mood, and is the parent and nurse of profound and noble thought. That literature which is pervaded by it, becomes deep-toned, and speaks with emphasis to the deeper powers of man. Even when there is but an imperfect permeation by this influence ; when mystery is not fully apprehended, and the mind is not completely under its power ; even when the Poet feels " What he can ne'er express, yet cannot all conceal," there is a noble inspiration in his lines, which, with all its vagueness, deepens the feelings and elevates the con- ceptions. It is related of Fichte, that in very early child- hood he would stand motionless for hours, gazing into the distant ether.* As such he is a symbol of the soul which is but imperfectly possessed by that mystery which surrounds every rational being. Those vague yearn- ings and obscure stirrings of the boy's spirit, as with strained eye he strove to penetrate the dark depths of infinite space, typify the workings of that soul which in only an imperfect degree partakes of this " vision and * Fichte'sLebcn.I. 7. OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 41 faculty divine." And as those motions in this youthful spirit awaken interest in the observer, betokening as they do no common mood and tendency, ^o even the vague and shadowy musings of the mind which is but feebly under the influence of mystery : — a Novalis, or a Shelley, — are not without their interest and elevation. But when a genius appears in the history of a nation's literature, who sees the great import and feels the full power of those true mysteries which are the subject mat- ter of theological science, then creations appear which exert an inspiring influence upon aU after ages, and by their profundity and power betoken that they are com- posed of no volatile essence, and produced by no super- ficial mental energy. They are not to be comprehended or admired at a glance, it is true, and therefore are not the favorites of the falsely educated class, but ever remain the peculiar property and delight of that inner circle of literary men in whom culture reaches its height of excellence. It may appear strange to attribute the noblest charac- teristics of literature to the mysteries of theology, but a philosophical study of literature convincingly shows that from this dark unsightly root grows "the bright con- summate flower." It is the spirit of this solemn and dark domain, which, by connecting literature with the moral and mysterious world, and by giving it a direct or indirect reference to the deepest and most serious relations of the human spirit, renders it profound, and raises it infinitely above the mass of common light liter- ature. 2. This same influence of theology imparts that earn- est and lofty purpose which resides in the best literature. The chief reason why the largest portion of the produc- tions of the literary class contributes nothing to true cul- 4* 42 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, tivation, and is destitute of the highest excellence, is the fact that it is not animated by a purpose. The poet composes a poem with no specific and lofty inten- tion in his eye, but merely to give vent to a series of per- sonal states and feelings. He writes for his own relief and gratification, not realizing, as Milton did, that " po- etic abilities, wheresoever they be found, are the inspired gift of God, rarely bestowed ; and are of power beside the office of a pulpit^ to imbreed and cherish in a great peo- ple the seeds of virtue and public civility," and should be used for this noble purpose. The literary man gen- erally, does not even dream that he is obligated to work with a good and elevated object in his eye, but is exempt from the universal law of creation, which obli- gates every finite spirit to live and labor for truth and God. But sin always takes vengeance, and all literature which is purposeless, and does not breathe an earnest spirit, is destitute of the highest excellence. It will want the solemnity, the enthusiasm, the glow, the grandeur, and the depth, which proceeds only from a lofty and serious intention in the mind of the author. And this purpose can dwell only in the mind which is haunted by the higher ideas and truths of supernaturalism. It is in vain for the literary man to seek his inspiration in the earthly, or the intellectual, world. He must derive it from the heaven of heavens. Both in heathen and in Christian literature, we find the noblest productions to be but the embodiment of a purpose ; and the purpose is always intimately connect- ed with the moral world. The Iliad proposes to exhibit the battle of heaven and earth, of gods and men, united in defence of the rights of injured hospitality. This proposition pervades the poem, and greatly contributes OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 43 to invest it with the highest attribiites of literature. The Grecian drama is serious and awful with the spirit of law and vengeance. Its high motive^ is to teach all those solemn and fearful truths regarding justice and injustice which constitute the law written on the heart, and are the substance of the universally accusing and condemn- ing conscience of man. Pagan though the Greek drama be, yet when we consider the loftiness and fixedness of its intention to bring before the mind all that it can know of the supernatural short of revelation, we hesitate not to say that it is immeasurably ahead of much of so-called Christian literature, in its doctrine and influence, as well as in its literary characteristics. As the scholar con- templates the elevated moral character running through this portion of Grecian literature, and contrasts it with much of that which is called Christian in distinction from heathen, he is led to take up that indignant exclamation of Wordsworth uttered in another connection, * * # * # * I'd rather be A Pagan, suckled in a creed outworn. Of all literary men who have written since the promulgation of the Christian religion, Milton seems to have most strongly felt the influences of theology, and he more than all others was animated and strengthened by a high moral aim. In his literary works he distinctly and intentionally has in view the advancement of truth and the glory of God. These were " his matins duly, and his even-song." And to this noble purpose, as much as to his magnificent intellectual powers, are owing the profundity, loftiness, grandeur, truth, and beauty, which, in the literary heavens make his works like his soul, " a star that dwells apart." "We live in an age when theology has become entirely 44 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, dissevered from literature, and when supernatural sci- ence forms no part of the studies of the cultivated class. There was a period when literary men devoted the best of their time to the high themes of religion, and when literature took a deep hue and tincture from theol- ogy. There was a period when such a man as Bacon wrote theological tracts and indited most solemn and earnest prayers ; when such a man as Raleigh composed devotional hymns ; when such a man as Spenser sung of the virtues and the vices ; when such a man as Shaks- peare expended the best .of his poetic and dramatic power in exhibiting the working of the moral passions ; and when such a man as Milton made the fall of the hu- man soul the " great argument " of poetry. There was a time when literature was in a very great degree im- pregnated by theology. But that time has gone by, and the productions of later ages show, by their ephemeral and inefficient character, that they have not that truly spiritual element which makes literature ever fresh and invigorating. Whatever may be the embellishment, the charm, and the fascination, of modern literature, for the student in certain stages of his growth, it does not per- manently rouse and enliven like the old. It may sat- isfy the wants of the educated man for a time, but there does come a period in the history of every mind that is truly progressive in its character, when it will not satisfy, and the student must " provide a manlier diet." The mind when in the process of true unfolding cannot be ultimately cheated. Wants, which in the first stages of its development were dormant, while more shallow crav- ings were being met by a weak aliment, eventually make themselves felt, and send the subject of them after more substantial food. The favorite authors of the earlier pe- riods of education are thrown aside as the taste becomes OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 45 more severe, the sympathies more refined, and profounder feelings are awakened; the circle diminishes, until the scholar finally rests content with those few writers in every literature, who speak to the deeper spirit, because full of the vigor and power of the higher world. The student while in the enjoyment of it may not dis- tinctly know whence comes the charm and abiding spell of the older literature ; but let him transfer himself into periods of national existence when faith in the super- natural had become unbelief, and when literary men had lost the solemn and earnest spirit of their predecessors, and he will know that religion is the life of literature, as it is of all things else. He will discover that the absence of an enlarging and elevating influence in letters, is to be attributed to the absence of that theological element with which the human mind, notwithstanding the corrup- tion of the human spirit, has a quick and deep aflinity. I have thus, gentlemen of the societies, spoken of the true method of Theological Studies, and of their great and noble influences upon education and literature. If I have spoken with more of a theological tone than is usually heard upon a literary festival like the present occasion, I might excuse myself by simply saying, in the language o^ Bacon, that every man is a debtor to his profession. But I confess to a most sincere and earnest desire of awakening in the minds of those who are soon to become a part of the educated class of the land, an interest and love for that noblest and most neglected of the sciences : — theology. This science has come to be the study of one profession alone, and of one that unhappily includes but a very small portion of the edu- cated class. And yet in the depth and breadth of its relations, as well as in the importance of its matter, it is the science of the sciences. God is the God of every 46 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, man, and the science which treats of Him and his ways deeply concerns every man, and especially every one who in any degree is raised above the common level, by the opportunity and effort to cultivate himself. It is a great error to suppose that theological studies should be the exclusive pursuit of the clergy, and that the remainder of the literary class in the state should feel none of the enlargement and elevation of soul arising from them. — When the idea of a perfect commonwealth shall be fully realized — if it ever shall be on earth — theology will be the light and life of all the culture and knowledge con- tained in it. Its invigorating and purifying energy will be diffused through the whole class of literary men, and through them will be felt to the uttermost extremities of the body politic. All other sciences will be illuminated and vivified by it, and will then reach that point of per- fection which has ever been in the eye of their most genial and profound votaries. For a knowledge of the aims of the most gifted and enthusiastic students of science, discovers the need of the influence of theology, in order to the perfection of science, as well as of letters. That which makes Burke one of the few great names in political science, is the solemn and awful view he had of law as strictly supernatural in its essence ; of law, in his own language, as " prior to all our devices, and prior to all our contrivances, paramount to all our ideas, and all our sensations, antecedent to our very existence, by which we are knit and connected in the eternal frame of the universe, out of which we cannot stir." * It was his high aim therefore to render political science religious in its character, and to found govern- ment upon a sacrej and reverential sentiment towards law, in the .breasts of the governed. Politics in his eye, * Speech in the impeachment of Hastings. Works, iii, p. 327. OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 47 and government in his view, are essentially different from the same things, as viewed by that large class of political men who do not appear to dream, even, that there is a supernatural world, or that there are supernat- ural sanctions and supports to government. But the speculative views regarding politics advanced by Burke will never be practically realized among the nations, until the influence of the high themes of spiritual theology is felt among them, and political science will not be a perfect scheme, until constructed in the light and by the aid of theological doctrine. The sanction, the sacredness, the authority, and the binding power, of law, as the foundation of government and political science, for which Burke plead so eloquently, come from the supernatural world, and are not apprehensible except in the light of that science which treats of that world. The fine visions and lofty aspirations of Burke, relative to government and political science, depend therefore upon the practical and theoretical influence of theology for their full realiza- tion. Let me briefly refer to another instance, in which we see that the high aims of a most profound and genial student will be attained only under the influence of the science of the supernatural. It has been the high endeavor of Schelling to spiritualize natural science ; to strip nature of its hard forms, and by piercing beneath the material, to behold it as immaterial ideas, laws, and forces.* This is not only a beautiful, but it is the true, idea of nature and natural science. Schelling however has failed to realize it in a perfect manner. However great may be his merit in infusing life into this domain * System des transcend. Idealismus, p. 5. For a full exhibition of this method of nataral science, see Carus's Physiologic, Erster Theil. 48 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, of knowledge, and in overthrowing the mechanical view of nature,' he has not constructed his system so as to maintain a pure theism, and therefore when viewed in connection with the true system of the universe, with which every individual science must harmonize, its falsity, in the great whole of knowledge, is apparent. And the imperfeclion of this system is owing, first, to the absence of a sharp and firm line of distinction between the natu- ral and the supernatural, and secondly, to the want of that protection from pantheism, which a truly profound philosopher can find only in the purely supernatural doc- trines of theology. It is not true then that the theologian by profession is alone concerned with theology. He who would obtain correct views in political or natural science, as well as he who would be a mind of power and depth in the sphere of literature; in short, tlie student generally; has a vital interest in the truths of supernatural science. — And it is tliis conviction, gentlemen, which I would fix and deepen in your minds. Your attention might have been directed to some more popular theme ; to some one of the aspects of polite literature, present or hoped for; but I preferred to direct your thoughts to a range of neglected but noble studies, confident that if any per- manent interest should be thereby awakened in your minds towards them, a substantial benefit would be con- ferred upon you. I would then, not with the feigned earnestness which too generally characterizes appeals upon such an occasion as the present, but with all the solemn earnestness of the Sabbath, urge you to the seri- ous pursuit of theological studies. It matters not, which may be the particular field in which you are to labor as educated men ; the influence of these studies is elevating OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. 49 and enlarging in any field, and upon all the public pro- fessions. If the Law is to be the special object of your future study, your idea of human law will be purified and corrected by your study of the divine law, and the genejal spirit and bearing of your practice will be elevated by those high studies which, more than any othe^, generate high principles of action. Should you enter the arena of Political life, the influ- ence of these studies will be most salutary. In this sphere, a man at the present day needs a double portion of pure and lofty principle, and should anxiously place himself under the most select influences. If the serious political spirit of Washington, and Jay, and Madison, is ever again to actuate our politics, it will be only through the return of that reverence for law, as flowing from a higher reality than the naturally corrupt will of man, and that faith in government as having its ground and sanc- tions in the supernatural and religious world, which characterized them. If politics is ever to -cease to be a game, and is ever again to be considered as one of the solemn interests pertaining to human existence, it will be only when our young men enter this field undei the influence of studies, and a discipline, that purge away low and sordid views, and induce a serious integrity and a self-sacrificing patriotism.. If then you would sustain a relation to the government of your country, honorable to yourselves, and beneficial to it, imbue your minds and baptize your views and opinions with the theological spirit. Then you will be a statesman in the old and best sense of the word ; not a mere oflice holder or seeker of office; but one in whom the great idea of the state resides and fives, and who by its indweUing power is fui/ 5 50 THE METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, of the patriotic sentiment, and inspired by the noble spirit of allegiance to government and country.* Finally, if you are to be one of the ministers and in- terpreters of Nature, or one who devotes himself to the cultivation of Fine Letters, the influence of these stud- ies will be great and valuable. In the light of the super- natural, )^u will best interpret nature, and under the power of theology, you will be best enabled to contribute a profound and lofty addition to literature. No one who watches the signs of the times, and especially the rapid and dangerous change now going on in the public sentiment of our country relative to the foundations of religion, government, and society, can help feeling that under Providence, very much is depend- ing upon the principles and spirit which the educated young men take out with them into active life. Bacon, long ago, said that the principles of the young men of a nation decided its destiny, and the course of human events since his day has verified his assertion. It is cer- tainly true in its fullest sense of this nation and ita young men. Unless an upbuilding and establishing in- fluence proceeds from the educated class, the disorganiz- ing elements which are already in a furious fermentation in society will eventually dissolve all that is solid and fixed in it ; and unless this class feel some stronger and purer influence than that of this world ; unless it feels the power of the objects and principles of the other world ; it will hasten rather than counteract the coming dissolution. Merely human culture, and merely natural * Das Wort Staatsmann ist hier in dem Sinn des antiken voXiriKhs genommen, und es soil dabei weniger daran gedacht werden, dasz einer etwas bestiinmtes im Staat zu verrichten hat, was volligzufallig ist, als dasz einer vorzugsweise in der Idee des Staats lebt. Schleiermacher. Reden. p. 28. or THB OF THEOLOGICAL S: science, cannot educe that moral weigm cultivated class, without which the state cannot long hold together. These must come from the general influ- ence of theological science upon the minds of the edu- cated ; from the infusion into culture of that reverence for God, and that purifying insight into supernatural truth, without which culture becomes skeptical and shal- low, powerless for good and all-powerful for evil. In closing, permit me to remind you that you need the influence of these studies personally, without reference to your relations to the world at large. You need them in order to attain the true end of your own existence. How- ever sedulously you may cultivate yourselves in other respects, you will not be cultivated for eternity, without the study and vital knowledge of theology. It has been foreign to the main drift of my discourse, and to the occasion, to speak of that deepest, that saving, knowl- edge of supernatural religion which proceeds from being taught by the Eternal Spirit. I have spoken only of the general and common influence of the doctrines of purely supernatural, in distinction from those of merely natural, theology. They have a great power in themselves, apart from their special vivification by the Divine Spirit, This is worthy of being sought after, and to this I have urged you. But if you would feel the full power of the- ology ; if you would secure the freest, fairest, and holiest development of your spirits ; if you would accomphsh the very u1;most of which you are capable, for your country and for man, in the sphere in which you shall be called to labor ; if you would secure a strength which you will soon find you need in the struggle into which you are about to enter : — the struggle with the real world, and the still fiercer struggle with your real selves ; then Btudy theology experimentally. The discipline to which 52 METHOD, AND INFLUENCE, OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES. • you have been subjected in the course of your training in this University, so far as human influence can do so, leads and urges you in this direction ; for it is the plan and work of one of those elect and superior spirits (few and rare in our earthly race) who have an instinctive and irresistible tendency to the Supernatural.* This has been the tendency of your training, and if you will only surrender yourselves to this tendency, heightened and made effectual by special divine influences, as it will be for every scholar who seeks them with a solemn spirit, you will fully realize the idea of a perfect education. * The allusion is to the late President Marsh. THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. A DISCOURSE DELIVERED BEFORE THE LITERARY SOCIETIES OF AMHERST COLLEGE, AUGUST 13, 1851. Gentlemen of the Literary Societies : — Coming as I do in the most beautiful season of the year, into the midst of some of the most beautiful scenery on the continent, and from the midst of scenery differ- ently but equally beautiful ; coming in mid-summer into the valley of the River from the valley of the Lake ; you will not be surprised that my subject has connections with the environment in which I wrote and in which I speak. Surrounded, both while thinking and while giving utter- ance to my thoughts, by Beauty ; composing and speak- ing in the midst of a material nature saturated and suffused with this element ; it will not appear forced or unnatural if I find in it, the theme of our reflections at this hour. It is not my purpose however to surrender myself, or to lead others to surrender themselves, to the extreme influence and impression of this quality, and to fall into a vague and rhapsodic train of thought or feeling. On the contrary my aim will be purely and perhaps intensely practical, and I hope with the aid of your own after- s' (53) 54 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, thought to make the particular aspect of the general subject of Aesthetics^ that will be exhibited, contribute to scholarship, culture, and character. The specific theme then, to which I would invite your attention, is : The true theory and relative position of the Beautiful^ with reference more particularly to culture and to character. In investigating this subject, I think we shall find it one for the times, and the class of men addresiged. If I am not mistaken we shall find, in a false theory of Beauty, and, as a consequence, in the false position which it holds as a source and instrument of culture, the root of some of the radical defects, and false tendencies, of the educated class. For if this class need any one thing more than another, it is a rational, sober, and severe, estimate of the essential nature of the Beauti- ful, and especially of the relation which it sustains to the True and the Good. In our age there is danger that culture will go the way that Grecian and Roman culture went, and from the same cause ; an undue cultivation of the aesthetic nature, to the neglect of the intellectual and moral. There is always danger lest the most influ- ential class in society, the literary and cultivated portion, form and shape themselves by Beauty more than by Truth, by Art more than by Philosophy and Religion. If we accept the Platonic classification, all things in the universe arrange themselves under these three terms ^. the Beautiful, the True, and the Good. These three ideas cover and include all that can possibly come before the human mind as a worthy object of thought and action. On them, as a foundation, the human mind has built up its most permanent and grandest structures, and with them, in some one or other of their manifold aspects the human mind is constantly occupied. The idea of the Good lies' at the bottom of all religion, and of all AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 55 inquiries connected with this chief concern of man. The idea of the True lies at the bottom of all science, and of the scientific tendency in individuals and nations. The idea of the Beautiful underlies all those products and agencies of the human soul that address the imagination ; all art, and all literature in the stricter signification of the term, as the antithesis of science. This classification, the work of the most philosophic brain of antiquity, at once so simple and so comprehensive, may therefore well stand as the condensation and epitome of all thought, and the key to all the varieties in human culture and national character. But what is the order in which these ideas stand ? — Which is first and which is last in importance ? Which is most necessary and absolute in its nature ? Which is the substance, and which is the accident ? The answer to these questions, the theory upon this point, according as it shall be, is either vital or fatal. It will determine the whole style and character of human culture, both individual and national. If Beauty is placed first, in speculation and in life, and Truth and Goodness are regarded as subordinate, a corresponding style of educa- tion will follow. If the True and the Good are recog- nized as the substance, and the Beautiful as the property and shadow, another and entirely difi'erent style will result. Here, therefore, the inquirer stands at the point of divergence between the two principal species of civili- zation and culture of which human history is made up ; that of luxury, enervation, decline, and fall, on the one hand, and that of severity, strength, growth, and gran- deur, on the other. At this point, also, he stands upon the line which divides the lower from the higher forms of literature ; the lower from the higher products of art itself; the more shallow and erroneous, from the more 56 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, profound and correct, systems of philosophy and religion. Here is the summit-level and ridge whence the streams flow due east and due west, never to mingle in a common ocean. For if history teaches anything, it teaches that according as a nation and a national mind starts from the one or the other of these ideas, as a point of depar ture and as the guiding thought in its career, will be its style of development. The true theory of Beauty subordinates it to the True and the Good. Any estimate of it, that sets it above- these two eternal and necessary ideas, is both incorrect and unphilosophical. The closer we think, and the nearer we get to the essence of these three conceptions, the more clearly shall we perceive that while Truth and Goodness appear more and more absolute and necessary, Beauty, in comparison with them, appears more and more relative and contingent. The human mind can never, in its own thinking, annihilate the True and the Good, i. e. it cannot conceive of their non-existence. It cannot abstract them from the Divine nature and from the created universe, and have anything substantial left. — These must be. * * * * ifMe.se fail, The pillared firmament is rottenness And earth's hase built on stubble. But not so with Beauty. The mind can abstract it from the nature of God, and if Truth and Goodness still remain, there is still something august, something awe- inspiring, something sublime, left. The mind can think it away from the universe of God, but if that universe is still filled with the manifestations of wisdom and excel- lence, it is still worthy of its architect. It is indeed true that Beauty has a real and immanent existence,both in the AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 57 being of God and in creation ; but the point we are urging is, that it is there as subordinate to these moral elements, and these higher ideas. It is indeed true that from eternity to eternity Beauty is a quality in the nature of the First Perfect and the First Fair, and from this foun- tain has welled up and pom-ed over into the whole creation of God like sunset into the hemisphere, but it has been, only as the accompaniment and adornment of higher and more august qualities. The Beautiful is not, as some teach, either the True or the Good ; neither is it more absolute and perfect than these. These are the substance, the eternal essence, and it, in relation to them, is the acci- dent. The Beautiful indeed inheres in the True and the Good, and it forever accompanies them, even as light, according to the fine saying of Plato, is the shadow of God ; but it is not therefore to be regarded as the highest of all ideas, or as the crowning element in the universe. For where does Beauty reside ? Where is its seat ? Always in the form, as distinguished from the substance. When the human soul swells with the feeling, it is impressed not by the truth and substantial reality of an object, but by something that in comparison with this is secondary and accidental. When, for example, the sense for Beauty is completely filled and deluged by a sun-set or a sun-rise, the essential meaning of this scene is not necessarily in the soul. That which this scene is for Science, its truth for the pure intellect, is most cer- tainly n(^t in the mind ; for the poetic vision and the scientific vision are contraries. And that which it is for Religion may be, and too often is, alien to the soul ; for this feeling for the Beauty that is in the sun-rise, is by no means identical with the feeling for the Goodness that is there. In every 'instance it is the form and not the substance, it is the beauty and not the truth, that 58 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, addresses the aesthetic nature, while in every instance it is the substance and not the form, it is the true and not the beautiful, that addresses the intellectual and moral natures. And why should it not be so ? If, as we have seen, the Beautiful is a subordinate quality ; if it is only the glittering garment of the universe ; to what part of man's nature should it appeal, but to that luxury rather than necessity of the human soul, the aesthetic sense. And so it is. Over against that Beauty which the Creator has poured with Javish, I had almost said indifferent, hand, over his creation, he has set a portion of man's na- ture, whose function it is to drink it in, and as He never intended that this mere decoration of his works should engross the soul to the exclusion of the wisdom and goodness displayed in them, so He never intended that the sense for the Beautiful should absorb and destroy the sense for the True and the Good. We shall see still more clearly the correctness of this theory of the Beautiful, by considering for a moment the nature and influence of that department which is based upon this idea, viz : Fine Art. The aim and end of Art is fine form, and nothing but fine form. I do not forget that in every work of Art there is a truth at the bottom, and that the power of a painting or a statue is dependent upon the meaning everywhere present in it. Still this significant thought at the base, this intellectual expression in the product, is not that which constitutes it a work of Art. It is the beauty of this thought, the fine form of this idea, which is the end of Art, and which renders its products different from those of Science. For if Art were merely and purely an expression of truth, how would it differ from Science, and why would not every subject that had meaning in it be a fit one for the artist ? AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 59 Art, it is true, has a significance, and it is high and ideal in proportion to the depth and fulness of the idea it em- bodies, yet it differs from Science and Religion by em- ploying both the True and the Good as means only. Its own sole end is Beauty, to which it subordinates all else. It embodies Truth and Virtue only that it may exhibit the beauty in them, and addresses the intellect and heart only that it may reach the imagination. After all its connection with the substance. Art is still formal. And this is no disparagement to it. It is no undervalu- ation to draw sharp lines about a department of human effort, and strip off what does not essentially belong to it. Fine Art has its own proper and important vocation, and Science and Religion have theirs, and each is honored by being strictly defined, and rigorously confined to its own aim, end, and limits. Now such being the nature of Fine Art, considered as a department of human effort ahd an instrument to be employed in educating the human mind, what must be its influence if left to itself ; if unbalanced and uncom- pleted by other departments ? "What style of culture wiU the idea of the Beautiful originate in the individual and national mind, when severed from the ideas of the- True and the Good ? The answer to this question is to be found in history. One of the great historical races, in the plan of Providence, received its training and develop- ment under the excessive and exorbitant influence of Beauty, and for a moment I invite your attention to an examination of the results. The Greek mind was eminently aesthetic, and the Greek nature was controlled by a too strong and intense tendency to the Beautiful. * If the human mind is truth- ful and solemn anywhere, it is so within the sphere of re- ligion ; but we may say of the Greek, as was said of one 60 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, of the most genial of modern errorists by one o? the most profound of modern thinkers, that he was more in love with the beauty of religion than its truth. The Greek religion was the worship of Beauty, and the whole life of the people ; private and public, literary and political ; was formed by this idea to an" extent and thoroughness never witnessed before or since. But the Greek mind, with all the charm and influence it has exerted upon the modern mind, and will continue to exert till the last syl- lable of recorded time, had one great and radical defect. The True and the Holy did not interest it sufficiently. These ideas did not mould it and form it from the cen- tre. Hence the Greek nature was not a deep and sol- emn one. It never felt, unless we except the heroic period in its history ; a period that is hardly historic ; the influence of that which is higher than Beauty, and which has an affinity with a more profound part of the human constitution than the aesthetic sense. The truth is, that as the intellectual and moral nature of man is his highest endowment, so the True and the Good, as the highest ideas, are its proper correspondent. When, therefore, as in the case of the Greek, a relatively in- ► ferior portion of the soul became superior, and a relatively inferior idea became ultimate and engrossing, it was not possible that the highest development of human nature should take place, or the highest style of culture should be originated. The influence which the Greek mind has exerted upon the modern world, great as it has been, and beneficial as it has been, has nevertheless not been of the absolutely highest order, unless we set the aesthetic above the intellectual and moral, Art before Science and Religion, and the culture springing from the form above that springing from the substance. Far be it from me, on such an occasion and before AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 61 such an audience, to undervalue classical education. I have not the slightest sympathy with that Jacobinism in literature, which would throw aside the study of the an- cient classics and shut out the modern mind from the beauty, and symmetry, and cultivating influence, of Greek and Roman letters. Still it should be remembered that no single literature can do everything for the human intellect. On the contrary, each and every literature that is historic has one particular function to" perform. In the education of the modern mind, classical literature has its own peculiar office to discharge, and this is, to in- fuse that beauty and symmetry which it possesses in so high degree into modern thought ; to furnish a fine Form for the modern Idea. For it must not for a moment be supposed that the modern min^ is to go back to the ancient for the substance of literature. The Chris- tian world cannot go back into the Pagan world in search for the True and the Good, but it ever must go back there for the Beautiful. For the sphere of knowing, and consequently of reflection and feeling, in which the ancient mind moved, was narrow and contracted, com- pared with the " ijafinite and sea-like arena " on which the modern careers. Not that minds may not be found irf the ancient world of equal depth, grasp, and power, with any that have adorned modern literature, but the materials on which they were compelled to labor fell far short of that which is the subject of modern effort, in depth, richness, and compass. The range of thought and feeling, in which the ancient mind moved, in respect to the great subjects pertaining to man's origin and des- tiny, was "cabined, cribbed and confined," compared with that vast expanse in which it is the privilege of fhe modern to think and feel. The Christian Revela- tion, while it imparted more determinateness and signifi- 6 62 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, cance to those doctrines of natural religion upon which Plato and Aristotle had reflected with such truthfulness and profundity, at the same time lodged in the mind of the modern world an amount of new truth, that widened infinitely the field of human vision, and the scope of hu- man reflection. We have but to compare Homer, Aes- chylus, and Virgil, with Dante, Shakspeare, and Milton, to see how immensely the range of the human mind was augmented by a Divine Revelation. In these latter instances, it moves in a region large enough for it, and feels the influence of those "truths deep as the centre " with which it is connected by origin and des- tiny ; while in the former instances, though the vague yearnings, and obscure anticipations, and unsatisfied longings, evidence the •heaven-born nature of the human spirit, yet they serve only to reveal still more clearly the helplessness of its bondage, and the closeness of its con- finement to this " bank and shoal of time." * But although the Christian Religion so widened the sphere of human thought and feeling, and so deepened and spirituaUzed the processes of the human mind, and so enriched it in the material for literature, it indirectly diminished its artistic ability, and rendered it less able to embody its conceptions. This very opulence in the ma- terial, and this very elevation of the theme, embarrassed the mind. For in proportion to the richness and intrin- sic excellence of the thought, does the difficulty increase, • Hence that nndcrtone of melancholy in the more serious portions of classical literature, (as the Histories of Tacitus, and the Morals of Plu- tarch) unrelieved by any notes of hope or triumph struck out by the knowl- edge, and the prospect, of the final consummation. The gloom of Dante Is far different from the gloom of Aeschylus; for while, like his, it springs from the consciousness of the life-long conflict between good and evil, it is illumined by the knowledge of the final issue. In the case of the Pagan, the gloom U made thicker by the total ignorance of the great hereafter. / AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 63 of putting it into a form worthy of it. The problem of Art, in every instance, is to attain an exact correspond- ence between the matter and the form ; to embody the idea in just the right amount of material, so that the idea shall not overflow and drown the form, nor the form overlay and crush the idea. Hence, among other quali- ties, "the cleanness^ the nicenesSj of a successful work of Art. But this problem, it is plain, becomes more diffi- cult, in proportion as the idea, or guiding thought, is more profound or significant in its nature. For by rea- son of its depth and expanse it becomes vastly more comprehensive and pregnant, and less capable of being brought within the limitation of Art, within the bounds of a form. The nearer the subject-matter approaches the infinite ; the more vast and unlimited the idea in the mind ; the greater the difficulty of exhibiting it in the finite shapings of Art. Now the ancient mind had these advantages. In the first place the material, the truth, upon which it labored, was far more wieldy and compassable than that which is presented to the modern mind, and in the second place it was (especially in the instance of the Greek) a much more artistic mind, in and of itself. The result, consequently, was a far closer correspondence between the substance and the form, and hence a much more successful solution of the problem of Fine Art, than has ever been attained by any other people. The modern mind therefore, the Christian world, while it cannot go back into the Pagan world for the substance of literature, for the True and the Good, must ever go back there for the form, for the Beautiful. And it was precisely because the European mind, in the fifteenth century, felt the need of this aesthetic element in culture, which it was conscious of not possessing, that it betook 64 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, itself to classical literature. At that period, when the human mind was waking up from the dormancy of the middle ages, and was beginning to feel the fresh im- pulses of the Christian Religion, it was filled, to overflow- ing, with ideas and principles, thoughts and feelings. Its powers and energies were being almost preternaturally roused by this influx of new truth, the natural tendency of which is to stir the human soul, preconformed as it is to its influence, to its inmost centre. But this season of mental fermentation was no time for serene contem- plation, and beautiful construction. The whole materiel for a new literature was originated ; but originated in a mind agitated to its lowest depths by the energy and force that was pouring through it, and which for this very reason was not master of itself, or of the material with which it was laboring. Form ; rounded, symmetri- cal, finished. Form; was needed for this Matter, and hence the modern betook himself to the study of that lit- erature preeminent above all others for its artistic per- fection. The study of the serene and beautiful models in which Grecian thought embodied itself, tamed the wildly-working mind of the Goth, and imparted to it that calm, artistic, formative, power by which the intel- lectual chaos was to become cosmos.* ♦ It is indeed true, that in the higher forms of Greek literature there is a remarkable depth and seriousness of sentiment which seems to militate Against the position taken. Here the Beautiful is more in the back-ground, and the True mainly in the foreground. But it should be remembered that the real nature and tendency of the Greek appears far more in the lighter forms of the literature, and especially in that wilderness of works of Art that covered all Greece, than in the deep toned poetry of Homer and Aeschylus, or the profound sentiment of Plato and Tliucydides. This por- tion of Greek literature derived its tone and matter from that elder period ; that heroic age; when the national mind was impressed, as tiie elder mind always has been, more by the essential than the formal, more by Truth than by Beauty. AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 65 But if the literature of the Greeks is predominantly aesthetic, and performs this aesthetic function in the sys- tem of modern education, the national character was still more so. The student of Grecian history, especially of the internal history of the Greeks, is struck with the disparity between the national character and the na- tional literature; between the products of the Greek mind, or rather of a few choice Greek minds, and the Greek himself. The more the student becomes acquaint- ed with that extremely imaginative and extremely tasteful, but too lively and too volatile, race of men, the more does he wonder that so much depth and truth of senti- ment should be found in the literature that sprang up among them ; the more does he wonder that the native bent and tendency of the national mind did not overrule, and suppress, all these higher elements. It is only on the supposition that the great men of Greece were above their race, and breathed in a more solemn and medita- tive atmosphere than that sunny air in which the Athe- nian populace lived, that he can account for the remark- able difference between the profound, severe, and moral, spirit of the Greek tragedy, and the fickle, gay, and alto- gether trifling, temper of the Ionic race. Whatever this excessive tendency to the Beautiful may have wrought out of the Greeks, in some respects, it is certain that it contributed to the enervation and de- struction of all strong character in the nation. That Ionic race, instead of following indulgently and extrava- gantly, as they did, their native bias, ought to have sub- jected it to the most severe education and restraint. Those two other ideas which dawned in such solemnity and power upon the intellect of their greatest philoso- pher, ought to have rained down influence upon them. Those more serious and awe-inspiring objects of reflection, 6* 66 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, the True and the Good, ought to have dawned upon the popular mind in a clearer light and with a more overcom- ing power. How different, so far as all the grand and heroic elements of national character are concerned, were the Greeks of that golden age of ancient Art, the age of Pericles, from the Romans of the days of Numa ! We grant that there is but little outward beauty, in that naked and austere period in Roman history, but there is to be found in that character^ as it comes down to us in the legends of Livy and has been reconstructed in the pages of Niebuhr, the strongest, and soundest, and grandest, and sublimest, nationality in the Pagan world. And this was owing to the fact that the early Roman was intellectual and moral, rather than aesthetic. I am speaking, it will be remembered, of a Pagan character, and my remarks must be taken in a comparative sense. Bearing this in mind, we may say that the strength and grandeur of the national character of the first Romans, sprang from the fact that it was moulded and shaped main- ly by the ideas of Truth and Virtue. The aesthetic nature was repressed, and, if you please, almost entirely suppress- ed, but the intellect and the moral sense were developed all the more. Hence those high qualities in their na- tional character ; courage, energy, firmness, probity, pat- riotism, reverence for the gods and the oath ; qualities that were hardly more visible in the ancient, than they are in the modern, Greek. And this brings us to the more distinct consideration of what we suppose to be the influence of Fine Art, when it becomes the leading department of eflbrt, and the chief instrument and end of culture, for the individ- ual or the nation. The effect of the Beautiful upon the human soul, when unmixed, uncounteracted, and exorbi- tant, is enervation. And this, from the very nature of AND THE RELATION TO CULTURE. 6'!' the element itself. "We have seen that it cannot be placed upon an equality with the other two elements that enter into the constitution of the universe. It cannot be regarded as so substantial and so necessary in its nature, as the True and the Holy. It is only the property and decoration of that which is essential and absolute. It is only the form. It consequently does not address the highest faculties of the human soul, and if it did, could not waken or generate power in them. When, therefore, it is made to do the work of the higher ideas ; when it is compelled to go beyond its own proper sphere, the aesthet- ic nature, and to furnish aliment for the intellectual and moral nature ; it is set at a work it can never do. The intellect and moral sense demand their own appropriate objects ; they require their correlatives, the True and the Good ; they cry out for the substance and cannot be sat- isfied with the form, however beautiful. When there- fore Beauty is selected as the great idea, by which the individual or national mind is to be moulded, the result is of necessity mental enervation. The human intellect cannot, any more than the human heart, be content with mere form. Like the heart, it cries out, in its own way, for the living God ; for Truth and Goodness, the most essential qualities in the Divine nature ; for Wisdom and Virtue, the most essential elements in the moral universe He has made. And what is there in the very process of Art itself, when it is isolated from the other and higher departments of human effort, that goes to render man more intellectual ? The very vocation of Art is to sen- sualize ; using the term technically and in no bad sense. Its processes, so far as they are merely artistic, are not spiritualizing, but the contrary. The vocation of Art is to bring down an idea of the human mind ; a purely in- tellectual, purely immaterial, entity ; into the sphere of 68 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, sense, and there materialize it into colors, and lines, and outlines, and proportions, for the sense. The very, call- ing of Art, as a department of effort, is to render sensu- ous the spiritual. And the fact that it does this, in the case of all high Art, in an ideal manner ; that in the gen- uine product, the idea shines out everywhere through the beautiful form ; does not conflict with the position. If, therefore, in a general way and for the purpose of char- acterizing the departments, we may say that in Science and Religion the mental process is spiritualizing, we may affirm that in Art the process is sensualizing. If in the analysis and synthesis of the True and the Good, the mind passes through an increasingly intellectual process, in the embodiment of the merely Beautiful, it passes through an exactly opposite one. If Philosophy and Re- ligion tend to render the mind more intellectual, Fine Art tends to render it more material and sensuous by fixing the eye on the form. Now such an influence as this upon the human mind and character, if unbalanced and uncounteracted, is enervating. There may be, and generally has been, great outward refinement and a most luxurious ele- gance thrown over the culture that originates under such influences, but it is too generally at the expense of strength and virtue and heroism of character. However high the aims of the individual or the nation may have been in the outset, history shows too plainly, that the nerve was soon relaxed and the mind slackened all away, at first, into a too luxurious, and finally, into a voluptu- ous culture. When the Artist, by the very theory and metaphysical nature of his vocation, is compelled to keep his eye on Beauty, on Fine Form, on the sensuously Agreeable, lie must be a strong and virtuous nature that is not mastered by his calling. If he can preserve an AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 69 austere tone ; if he can even keep himself up on the high ground of an abstract and ideal Art, and not sink into a too ornate and licentious style ; we may be certain that there was great moral stamina at bottom. But speculation aside, let us appeal to history again. What does the story of Art in modern times teach in relation to the position that the unmixed, unbalanced, effect of the Beautiful, is mental enervation ? The most wonderful age of Art was that of Leo X. The long slumber of the aesthetic nature of man, during the bar- barism and warfare of those five centuries between the dismemberment of the Roman empire and the establish- ment of the principal nations and nationalities of modern Europe, was broken by an outburst of Beauty and Beauti- ful Art, as sudden, rapid, and powerful, as the bloom and blossom of spring in the arctic zone. Such a multitude of artists and such an opulence of artistic talent, will probably never be witnessed again in one age or nation. But did a grand, did even a respectable, national charac- ter spring into existence along with this bloom of Art, this shower of Beauty ? We know that there were other influences at work, and among others a religious system whose very nature it is to carnalize and stifle all that is distinctively spiritual in the human soul ; but no one can study the history of the period, without being convinced that this excessive and all-absorbing tendency of the general mind of Italy towards Beauty and Fine Art, con- tributed greatly to the general enervation of soul. Most certainly it did not work counter to it. Read the me- moirs of a man like Benvenuto Cellini ; an inferior man it is true, but an artist and reflecting the general features of his time ; and see how utterly unfit both the individual and national culture of that period was for any lofty, high-minded, truly historic, achievement. The solemn 70 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, truths of Religion, and the lofty truths of Philosophy, exerted little or no influence upon that group of Italian artists, so drunken with Beauty. They possessed little of that intellectual severity which enters into every great character; little of that strung muscle and hard nerve which should support the intellect as well as the will. — And therefore it is that we cannot ^id in the Italian his- tory of those ages, any more than in the Italian character of the present day, any of that high emprise and grand achievement which crowds the history of the Teutonic races, less art-loving, but more intellectual and moral. — These races and their descendants have sometimes been charged with a destitution of the aesthetic sense, and the inferiority of their Art, compared with that of Italy, has been cited as proof of their inferiority as a race of men ; but it is enough to say in reply, that these Goths, educa- ting themselves mainly by the ideas of the True and the Good, have given origin to all the literatures, philosophies, and systems of government and religion, that constitute the crowning glory of the modern world. The Italian intellect was enfeebled and exhausted by that unnatural birth of Beauty upon Beauty. Ever since the fourteenth century, it has been wandering about in that world of fine forms, Uke Spenser's knight in the Bower of Bliss, until all power of intellect is gone. Every truly great and grand character, be it individual or national, is more or less a severe one ; a character which, comparatively, is more intellectual and moral, than aesthetic* This position merits a moment's examin- ♦ According to the etymologry of the old Grnmmarians, favored by T)oe- derlein, the severe im the ititen»ehj true. Docderlein i. 76, prseferendum cen- •ei^vett. Gramm. ccntentiam qua severus counationem habeat cum verus • ♦ ♦ ita ut se, ex more Or. a priv., intensivara vim contineat. — FacdolaWs Lexicon in loc. AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 71 ation. And in the first place, look into political history and see what traits lie at the bottom of all the best periods in national development. Out of what type of mind and style of life has the venerable, the heroic^ age always sprung ? Are men enervate or are they austere, are they aesthetic or are they intellectual and moral in culture, during that period when the national virtue is formed and the historic renown of the people is acquired ? The heroic age of Greece, as it comes down to us in the Homeric poems, was a period of simplicity and strict- ness. The Greeks of that early time were intellectual men, moral men, compared with the Greeks of the days of Alcibiades. Turn to the pages of Athenasus, and get a view of the in-door life and every-day character of a still later period in Grecian history, and then turn to the corresponding picture of the heroic period contained in the Odyssey, mark the difference in the impression made upon you by each representation, and^know from your own feelings, that all that is strong, and heroic, and simple, and grand, in national character springs from a severe mind and a predominantly moral culture, and all that is feeble, and supine, and inefficient, and despicable, in national character, springs from a luxurious mind and a predominantly aesthetic culture. And how stands the case with Rome ? Which is the venerable period in her history ? Is it to be sought for in the luxurious and (so far as Rome ever had it) the aesthetic civilization of the empire, or in the intellectual and moral civilization of the monarchy and republic? All the strength and grandeur of the Roman character and of the Roman nationality lies back of the third Punic war. Nay, if Rome had been conquered by Carthage, and had gone out of political existence, its real glory, its 72 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, proper historic renown, would have been greater than it is. If in the idea called up by the word Rome, there were wanting, there could be eliminated, the physical corruption and the luxurious but merely outward refine- ment of the empire, and there were left only the severe virtue, the sublime endurance, and the moral grandeur, of the monarchy and republic, the idea would be more sublime in history and more impressive in contemplation. And whence originated that Sabine element, that tough core, that hard kernel, in the Roman character, that lay at the centre and kept Rome up, during her long agony of intestine and external conflict? It had its origin among the mountains, amid the great features of nature, and it was purified by the privation and hardship of a severe life in the forests of central Italy, on that spine of the Ausonian peninsula, until it became as sound, sweet, and hard, as the chestnuts of the Appenines upon which it was fed. Intellectual and moral elements, and not an aesthetic element, were the hardy root of all the political power and prosperity of Rome. There is no need, even if there were time, to cite- instances corroborating the view presented, from modern political history. The Puritanism of Old England and of New England will readily suggest itself, to every one, as the one eminently severe national character, with which the power and glory of the English and Anglo- American races, and the highest hopes of the modern world, are vitally connected. It will be sufficient to say, that the more profound is our acquaintance with political history, the more clearly shall we see that all that is powerful, and permanent, and impressive, in the nations, nationalities, and governments of the world, sprang directly or indirectly from a nature in which the aesthetic was subordinate to the intellectual AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. ^ 73 and moral, and for which the True and the Good were more supreme ideas than the Beautiful. Furthermore, the position taken holds true in the sphere of literature also. The great works in every instance are the productions of a severe strength; of " the Herculeses and not the Adonises of literatute," to use a phrase of Bacon. When the aesthetical prevails over the intellectual and moral, the prime qualities, the depth, the originality, and the power, die out of letters, and the mediocrity that ensues is but poorly concealed by the elegance and polish thrown,*over it. Even when there is much genius^and much originality, an excess of Art, a too deep suffusion of Beauty, a too fine flush of color, is often the cause of a radical defect. Suppose that the poetry of Spenser had more of that passion in it which Milton mentions as the third of the three main qualities of poetry ; suppose (without however wishing to deny the great excellence of the Fairy Queen in regard to intellectual and moral elements) that the proportion of the aesthetic had been somewhat less, would it not have been more powerful and higher poetry? Suppose that the mind and the culture of Wieland and Goethe had been vastly more under the influence of Truth, and vastly less under that of Beauty; that the substance instead of the form, had been the mould in which these men were moulded and fitted as intellectual workmen ; might not the first have come nearer to our Spenser, and might not the latter have produced some works that would perhaps begin to justify his ardent but ignorant admirers in placing him in the same class with Shaks- peare and Milton ; a position to which, as it is, he has not the slightest claim ? As a crowning and conclusive proof of the correctness of the view presented, I will refer you to only one mind. 7 74 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, I refer you to John Milton, one of those two minds which tower high above all others in the sphere of modern lite- rature. If there ever was a man in whom the aesthetic was in complete subjection to the intellectual and moral, without being in the least suppressed or mutilated by them, that man was Milton. If there ever was a human intellect so entirely master of itself, of such a severe type, that all its processes seem to have been the pure issue of discipline and law, it was the intellect of Milton. In contemplating the grandeur of the products of his mind, we are apt to lose sight of his mind itself, and of his intellectual character. If we rightly consider it, the dis- cipline to which he subjected himself, and the austere style of intellect and of Art in Which it resulted, are as worthy of the reverence and admiration of the scholar as the Paradise Lost. We have unfortunately no minute and detailed account of his every-day life, but from all that we do know, and from aU that 'we can infer from the lofty, colossal, culture and character in which he comes down to us, it is safe to say that Milton must have subjected his inteUect to a restraint, and rigid deal- ing with its luxurious tendencies, as strict as that to which Simon Stylites or St. Francis of Assisi subjected their bodies. We can trace the process, the defecating purifying process, that went on in his intellect, through his entire productions. The longer he lived and the more he composed, the severer became his taste, and the more grandly and serenely beautiful became his works. It is true that the theory of Art, and of culture, opposed to that which we are recommending, may complain of the occasional absence of Beauty, and may charge as a fault an undue nakedness and austerity of form. But one thing is certain and must be granted by the candid critic, that whenever the element of Beauty is found in AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 75 IMilton, it is found in absolute purity. That severe refining process, that test of light and of fire, to which all his materials were subjected, left no residuum that was not perfectly pure. And therefore it is, that throughout universal literature, a more absolute Beauty and a more delicate aerial grace, are not to be found than - appear in the Comus and the fourth book of Paradise Lost. But we are not anxious on this point of Beauty, especially in connection with the name of Milton. Sub- limity is a higher quality, and so are Strength and Gran- deur ; and if Beauty does not come in the train., and as the mere ornament, of these, it is not worth while to seek it by itself and for its own sake. And much will be gained when education, and culture, and authorship, shall dare to take this high stand which Milton took ; shall dare to pass by Beauty, in the start, and to aim at higher ■ elements and severer qualities, in the train, and as the ornament of which, a real Beauty and an absolute Grace shall follow of themselves. Returning then to the intellectual character of Milton, let me advise you to study that character until you ^e that the strict, and philosophically severe, theory of the Beautiful and of Art lies under the whole of it. Milton had no affinities for excessive sensuous Beauty. He was no voluptuary in any sense. So far as the sense was concerned he was abstemious as an ascetic, and so far as the soul was concerned he knew no such thing as luxury. He devoted himself to poetry, an Art which, glorious as it is, yet has tendencies that need counteraction, which tempts to Arcadian and indulgent views of human life and human character, and which, as literary history shows, has too often been the medium through which dreamy and uncontrolled natures have communicated themselves to the world. But as a poet, he constructed 76 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, with all the severity of Science and all the purity of Religion. The poetic Art, as it appears in Milton, is spiritual and spiritualizing.* If this element of severity is entirely wanting in a man ; if he is entirely destitute of austerity ; if his nature is wholly and merely aesthetic, constantly melting and dissolving in an atmosphere of Beauty; whatever else may be attributed to him, strength and grandeur cannot be. We do not deny that there is a sort of interest in such natures, but we deny that it is of the highest sort. If a "man is born with a beautiful soul, and it is his ten- dency (to use a Shaksperean phrase) " to wallow in the lily beds;" to revel in luxurious sensations, be they wakened by material or immaterial Beauty ; unless he subject his mind to the training of higher ideas, and of a higher department than that of Fine Art, his career will end in the total enervation of his being. This tendency ought in every instance to be disciplined. The individ- ual in whom it exists, ought to superinduce upon it a strictness and austerity that will check its luxuriance, and bring it within the limits of a severer and therefore purer taste. The least injurious and safest form which an undue aesthetic tendency can take on, is a quick sense for the Beautiful in nature. But even here, an unbalanced, uneducated, tendency is enervating. That dreamy mood of young poets, that dissolving of the soul in " the light of setting suns, " must be educated and sobered by a severe discipline of the head and heart, or no poetry will * We may say of Milton, in reference to the severe ideal character of his Art, as Fuseli has said of the same feature in Michael Angelo; "he is the salt of Art." He saves it from its inherent tendency to corruption, by a larger infusion of intellectual and moral elements, than exists in the average prodactioDS of the department. AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 77 be produced that will go down through all ages. It is not so much a deep tendency as a transient mood of the soul, and needs the infusion of intellectual and moral elements, in order that it may becom^ " the vision and faculty divine." Turn to a great collection, like Chal- mers' British Poets, and observe how large a portion of this mass of poetry is destitute of the power of produ- cing a permanent impression upon the human imagina- tion ; how little out of this great bulk is selected to be read by the successive generations of English students ; how small a portion of it, compared with the whole amount, is profoundly and genuinely poetic ; and at the same time notice how very much of it was evidently composed under the influence which the Beautiful in nature exerts upon an undisciplined, and uneducated, aesthetic sense, and you will have the strongest possible proof of the enervating, enfeebling, influence of this . quality when isolated from the intellectual and moral. — The mind needed a severer culture, and a discipline wrought out for it by higher ideas, that could use and elaborate these obscure feelings, these dim dreams, this blind sense, for the purposes of a higher and more genuine Art. It is often said, we know, that science is" the death of poetry ; that the study of the Kantean philosophy injured the poetry of Schiller, and the study of all philo- sophies the poetry of Coleridge ; that the charm, and the glow, and the flush, and the fulness, and the luxuri- ance, and the gorgeousness, were all destroyed by the acid and blight of science. But we do not believe this. These poets might have written more had their imagina- tion not been passed through these severe processes of the intellect, they might have been more fluent, but that they would have written more that will have a lasting poetic interest remains to be seen. Their Art is all the 7* 78 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, higher, for the check and restraint imposed upon their poetic nature. And who will not say, to take a plain example, that if the young soul of Keats could have been corded with a stronger muscle, and overshaded with a severer tone of feeling and sentiment ; that if a more mascuUne culture could have been married with that genuinely feminine soul ; a higher poetry and a still purer Beauty would have been the offspring of this hymeneal union ? * And this brings us to the more positive side of the subject. Thus far we have spoken in a negative way of what the Beautiful is not, and of what it cannot do for the human soul and human culture. We now affirm that only on the theory which subordinates Beauty to Truth can the highest style of Beauty itself be originated, and that only when the department of Aesthetics is sub- ordinate to those of Philosophy and Religion, does a genuinely beautiful culture, either individual or national, spring into existence. Without this check and subor- dination, the aesthetic quality will destroy itself by becoming excessive. The more staple elements that must enter into and substantiate it, will all evaporate ; as if the warm organic flesh should all turn into the fine flush of the complexion ; as if the air and the light and the foHage and the waters, all the material, all the solidity^ of a beautiful landscape, should vanish away into mere crimson and vermilion. For, as we have already observed, true Beauty in a work of Art, is conditioned upon the presence in it of some intelHgible idea. There must be some truth and some expression, in order to the existence of the pure quaUty itself. Beauty cannot stand alone. There must be a meaning underneath of which ♦ If the school of Tennyson needs any one thing, it is an austerer culture. AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 79 it is the clothing. There must be an intellectual concep- tion within the product, to which it can cling for sup- port, and from which it derives all its growing, lasting, highest, charm for a cultivated taste. Hence it is, that as we go up the scale, Beauty actually becomes more ideal, more and more intellectual and moral. It under- goes a refining process, as it rises in grade. Whereby the sensuous element, so predominant in the lower products of Art^ is volatilized. There is more appeal to the soul and less to the sense, as we go up from the more florid and showy schools of painting, e. g., to the more severe and spiritual. The same is true of the Beautiful in na- ture. As we ascend from the inferior to the higher veg- etation, we find not only a more delicate organization, but a more delicate Beauty. The gaudy and coarse col- oring gives place to more exquisite hues, in proportion as mind ; in proportion as the presiding intelligence of the Creator ; comes more palpably into view. In the words of Milton, all things are * * more refined, more spirituous, and pure, As nearer to Him placed, or nearer tending, Till body up to spirit work. ****** So from the root Springs lighter the green stalk ; from thence the leaves More aery ; last the bright consummate flower Spirits odorous breathes ; flowers and their fruit, Man's nourishment, by gradual scale sublimed To vital spirits aspire, to animal, To intellectual.* AncT all things grow more highly beautiful as we keep pace with this upward step in nature, until we pass over into the distinctively spiritual sphere, and reach the * Par. Lost. v. 475. 80 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, crown and completion of all Beauty ; the beauty of char- acter, or the "beauty of holiness." Observe that all along this limitless line we find a growing severity ; that is, an increase of the intellectual or moral element. Sen- suous beauty is displaced, or rather absorbed and trans- figured, by intellectual beauty ; the ideas of the True and the Good more and more assert their supremacy, by em- ploying the Beautiful as the mere medium through which they become visible, 6ven as light, after traversing the illimitable fields of ether without either color or form, on coming into an atmosphere, into a medium, thickens in- to a solid blue vault. A reference to the actual history of Fine Art will also verify the position here taken. As matter of fact, we find this spiritualizing process ; this advance of the sub- stance and this retreat of the form ; going on in every school of Art that grew more purely and highly beautiful, and in the soul of every artist who went up the scale of artists. That school which did not grow more ideal, invariably grew more sensuous and less beautiful, and that artist who did not by study and discipline become more severe and studied in style, invariably sunk down into the lower grade. All the works of Art that go down through succeeding ages with an ever-growing beauty as well as an ever-towering sublimity ; all the great models and master-pieces; owe their origin to a most severe taste and a most spiritual idea. The study of the great models in every department of Art, be it painting, or sculpture, or poetry, will convince any one that the im- agination, the artist's faculty, when originating its great- est works imposes restraints upon itself; in reality is severe with itself. If the artist allows his imagination to revel amid all the possible forms that will throng, and press, through this wonderfully luxuriant and productive AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 81 power ; if he suffers it to waste its energy in an idle play with its thick-coming fancies ; if, in short, he does not preserve it a rational imagination, and regulate it by the deeper element and severer principle inherent in it, his productions will necessarily be in the lower style. It is for this reason that the artist betakes himself to study. He would break up this revelry of a lawless, uneducated, imagination. He would set limits to a vague and aim- less energy. He would wield a productive talent that lies lower down ; that works more calmly and grandly ; more according to reason and a profounder Art. The educating process, in the case of the artist, is intended to repress a cloying luxuriance and to superinduce a beau- tiful austerity ; to substitute an ideal for a material beau- ty. Hence we see that the artist, as he grows in power and high excellence, grows in strictness of theory and severity of taste. His products are marked by a graver beauty, and the presence of a purer ideal, as he goes up the scale of artists. As an example, we may cite the instance of Michael Angelo. For grandeur, sublimity, and power of perma- nent impression, he confessedly stands at the head of his Art, and although in regard to beauty, Raphael may dis- pute the palm with him, and by some may be thought his superior, yet no one can deny that (as in the case of Mil- ton) whenever this element does appear in " the mighty Tuscan," it is of the most absolute and perfect species.* * Winckelmann, looking from his pointof view, which was that of classic Art merely, has expressed a disparaging opinion in regard to Angelo, so far as the Beautiful is concerned, and seems to have laid the foundation for the superficial and too general opinion, that in respect to this quality he was by nature greatly inferior to llaphael. But the ahle editors of his works justly call attention to the fact, that Winckelmann is wrong in judging of modern Art in this servile way, and allude to a scarce and but little known poem of Angelo's, in which a most delicate and feminine appreciation of beauty 82 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, Yet all his productions are characterized by an austere manner. The form is always subservient, and perhaps sometimes somewhat sacrificed, to the idea. And, at any rate, the man himself, compared with the Italian artists generally, compared with Raphael especially, was a spiritual man both in culture and character. We con- fess that we look with a veneration bordering upon awe upon that grand nature, severe, abstract, and ideal, in an age that was totally sensuous in head and heart, and in a profession whose most seductive and dangerous ten- dency is to soften and enervate. By the force of a strong heroic character, as well as a hard and persevering study both of Art and of Nature, he counteracted that ten- dency to a sensuous and a sensualizing beauty, which we have noticed as the bane of Art, and in that nerve- less age, so destitute of lofty virtue and stern heroism, stands out Hke the Memnon's head on the dead level of is apparent. " In this poem," say they, " the great Michael Angelo reveals ^ himself in a manner that appears striking and wonderful to such as have known him only from his paintings and statues. Heartfelt admiration for beauty, love too deep to be disclosed to its object, a gentle touching sadness wakened by the sense of an existence that cannot satisfy an infinite affec- tion, and a melancholy longing, growing out of this, for dissolution and freedom from the bonds of earth, form the ground-tone of this warmlv-glow- ing poem, in which Angelo gives an expression of the feminine element in his great and mighty nature, that is all the more lovely from the fact that the masculine principle is the prevailing and predominant one in his works of Art." — Witickelmann^s Werke von Mei/er unci Schulze, iv. 43, and Anmerk. p. 262. Consonant with this are the following remarks of Lanzi. " We may here observe that when Michael Angelo was so inclined, he could obtain distinc- tion for those endowments in which others excelled. It is a vulgar error to suppose that he had no idea of grace and beauty ; the Eve of the Sistine Chapel turns to thank her Maker, on her creation, with an attitude so fine and lovely, that it would do honor to Raphael " History of Paintimj, {Roscoe's Trans.) i. 176. . AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 83 the Nile, grand and lonely, yet with " elysian beauty and melancholy grace." And, in this connection, I cannot refrain from calling your attention to that greatest of American artists, who is at once a proof and illustration of the truth of the gen- ial theory advanced. No man will suspect Allston of an underestimate of the Beautiful. In the whole cata- logue of ancient and modern artists, there is not to be found a single one in whose mind this element existed in more unmixed and absolute purity : — beauty * * * chaste as the icicle That's cui'ded by the frost from purest snow, And hangs on Dian's temple. But this spirituality was the fruit not only of a pure nature, but of a high theory. He recognized and felt the supremacy of the True and the Good, over the Beautiful. The reader of his lectures on Art, is struck with the re- ligious carefulness with which he insists upon the supe- rior claims of Truth over those of mere Art, and the earnestness with which he seeks to elevate and spiritual- ize the profession which he honored and loved, by making it the organ and proclamation of Truth and Holiness. By this, we think the fact can be explained that he pro- duced so little, compared with the exhaustless fertility of the Italian artists. His ideal was so high ; the Beautiful was so spiritually beautiful for him ; that color and form failed to embody his conceptions. His uniform refusal to attempt the representation of Christ ; a far too com- mon attempt in Italian A^t ; undoubtedly rested upon this fact. It was not because his intensely spiritual mind had a less adequate idea of the Divine-Man, than that which floated before the Catholic imagination, but 84 THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, because there beamed upon his ethereal vision, a form of such high and awful beauty as could not be put upon a material canvas. It was because he saw so much that he did so little. But, Gentlemen, there is a still more practical and im- portant side to this whole subject. The department of Art sustains a relation to the growth and developme?!t of the human mind, and human society. Like all other departments of human effort, it should therefore be sub- servient to the great moral end of human existence, and if there were no other alternative, it would be better that the aesthetic nature, and the whole department of Art, and the whole wide realm of the Beautiful, should be annihilated, than that they should continue to exist at the expense of the intellectual and moral, of the True and the Good. We are not at all driven to the alterna- tive, if there be truth in the general theory that has been presented, but if we were, we acknowledge boldly that we would side with the Puritan iconoclast and dash into atoms the Apollo Belvidere itself. Rather than that the department of Art should annihilate Philosophy and Re- ligion ; rather than that an enervate beauty should eat out manly strength and severe virtue from character ; rather than that a sensualizing process should be intro- duced into the very heart of society, though it were as beautiful as an opium dream ; we would see the element struck out of existence, and man and the universe be left as bald and bare as granite. We honor therefore, that trait in our ancestors, (so often charged upon them as a radical defect in nature, and so often tacitly admitted as such even by some of their descendants), which made them afraid of Fine Art ; afraid of music and painting and sculpture and poetry. They dreaded the form, but had no dread of the substance, and therefore were the most AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 85 philosophic of men. They dreaded the material, but had no dread of the ideal, and therefore were the most intel- lectual of men. They dreaded the sensuous, but had no dread of the spiritual, and therefore were the most reli- gious of men. The Puritan nature owed but little, comparatively speaking, to aesthetic culture. It was not drawn upon and drawn out, as some natures have been, by Literature and Art, for in the plan of Providence its mission was active rather than contemplative ; but we do not hesitate to say, that the contents and genius were there, and that even on the side of the imagination, that nature, had it been unfolded in this direction, would have left a school and a style of Art, using the term in its widest acceptation, second to none. And as it is, we see its legitimate tendency and influence in the poetry of Milton. The Miltonic style of Art is essentially the Puritan Art ; beautiful only as it is severe and grand ; the Beautiful superinduced upon the True and the Holy. Gentlemen : — In the opening of my discourse, I alluded to the fact, that the style of civilization and culture peculiar to the individual or the nation, is determined by the theory, which is consciously or unconsciously assumed, of the nature and relative position of the Beautiful : and at the close of it, I would call your attention to it agaiik My aim is not iconoclastic. My aim, in all that I have said, has been, not to destroy or in the least to disparage the department of Aesthetics, but to establish and recommend a high and strict and philosophic theory of it, for the pur- pose of putting it in its right place in the encyclopaedia, and thus of promoting its own true growth, and what is of still more importance, the growth of the human mind. Called upon to address scholars, I desire to do something • 8 bo THE TRUE NATURE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, that will contribute to high-toned culture, high-toned thinking, and high-toned character. And I know of no better way, on such an occasion as the present, than to bring out distinctly before the youthful and recipient student, a philosophic, severe, and lofty, theory in regard to that whole department of Art, so fascinating to the young mind and so liable to be employed to excess by it. Depend upon it. Gentlemen, the older you grow and the riper scholars you become, the more severe will be your tastes and the more austere will be your literary sympa- thies. You will come to see more and more clearly, that neither music, nor painting, nor sculpture, nor architecture, nor poetry, can properly be made the main instrument of human development; that the human intellect and heart demand ultimately a "manlier diet;" that you must become powerful minds and powerful men, mainly through the culture that comes from Science and Reli- gion. You will never, indeed, lose your relish for the Beautiful ; on the contrary, you will have a keener and a nicer sense for it, and for all that is based upon it ; but you will find a declining interest in its lower forms. — Schools of Poetry and of Art that once pleased you, will become insipid, and perhaps offensive, to your severer taste, your more purged eye, your more rational imagina- tion. There will be fewer and fewer works in the aes- thetic* sphere that will throw a spell and work a charm, while the deep and central truths of Philosophy and Religion will draw, ever draw, your whole being to them- selves, as the moon draws the sea. And in this way, you will be fitted to do the proper work of educated men in the midst of society. I have alluded to the downward movement, the uniform decay, of the ancient civilizations. History teaches one plain and mournful lesson ; that man cannot safely be left to AND ITS RELATION TO CULTURE. 87 his luxurious tendencies, be they of the sense or the soul. There must be austerity somewhere. There must be a strong head and a sound heart somewhere. And where ought we to look for these but in the educated class ? In whom, if not in these, ought we to find that theory of education, that style of culture, and that tone of intellect, which will right up society when it is sinking down into luxury, or hold it where it is if it is already upright and austere ? Educated men, amid the currents and in the general drift of society, ought to discharge the function of a warp and anchor. They, of all men, ought to be characterized by strength. And especially do our own age and country need this style of culture. Exposed as the national mind is to a luxurious civilization ; as imminently exposed as Nineveh or Rome ever were ; the Beautiful is by no means the main idea by which it should be educated and moulded. • As in the Prome- theus, none but the demi-gods Strength and Force can chain the Titan. Our task, gentlemen, as men of cul- ture, and as men who are to determine the prevailing type of culture, is both in theory and practice .to subject the Form to the Substance ; to bring the Beautiful under the problem of the True and the Good. Our task, as descendants of an austere ancestry, as partakers in a severe nationality, is to retain the strict, heroic, intellec- tual, and religious, spirit of the Puritan and the Pilgrim, in these forms of an advancing civilization. In order to this ; in order that the sensuously and luxuriously Beauti- ful may not be too much for us ; strength and reserve are needed in the cultivated classes. They must be reticent and, like the sculptor, chisel and re-chisel, until they cut off and cut down to a simple and severe beauty, in. Art and in Literature, in Religion and in Life. THE CHARACTERISTICS, AND IMPORTANCE, OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. AN INAUGURAL DISCOURSE DELIVERED IN AUBURN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, JUNE 16, 1852. There is no greater or more striking contrast, than exists between a thing that is alive, and a thing that is dead ; between a product of nature, and a prodiict of mechanism ; between a thing which has a principle within it, and a " thing of shreds and patches." The human mind notices this contrast between the various objects that come before it, the quicker and the more sharply, because it is itself a living thing, and because its own operations are unifying, organizing, and vivify- ing, in their nature. "We sometimes speak of the mech- anism of the human understanding, and of a mechaniz- ing process as going on within it. But this language is metaphorical, and employed to denote the uniformity and certainty of intellectual processes, rather than their real nature. Man is a living soul, and there is no action anywhere, or in anything, that is more truly and purely vital, more entirely diverse from and hostile to the mechanical and the dead, than the genuine action of the human mind. Hence it is, that the mind notices this contrary quality and characteristic in an object with thff (88) IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 89 I rapidity of instinct, and starts back from it with a sort of organic recoil. Life detects death, and shrinks from death, instantaneously. Nature abhors art and artifice, as decidedly as, according to the old philosophy, it abhors a vacuum. This distinction between the natural and the artificial, furnishes a clue to the difference which runs through all the productions of man, and reveals the secret of their excellence or then* defects. How often and how sponta- neously do we sum up our whole admiration of a work by saying, " it is natural," and our whole dislike by the words, " it is artificial ? " The naturalness and life-like- ness in the one case, are the spring of all that has pleased us ; the formality and artifice in the other, are the source of all that has repelled or disgusted us. Even when we go no further in our criticism, this general statement of conformity or oppugnancy to nature, seems to be a suffi- cient criticism. And with good reason. For, if a pro- duction has nature, has life in it, it has real and perma- nent excellence. It has the germ and root of all excellences. And if it has not nature or life in it ; if it is a mechanical, or an artificial, or a formal thing; it has the elements of all defects and all faults in it. It will be noticed here, that we have used the term Art in its more common and bad sense, of contrariety to Nature, and not in that technical and best signification of the word; which implies the oneness and unison of the two. For, tryie Art, Fine Art, has Nature in it, and the genuine artist, be he painter, or poet, or orator, is one who paints, or sings, or speaks, with a natural freedom and freshness. Hence it is, that we are impressed by the great productions of Fine Art, in the same way that we are by the works of Nature. A painting, warm from the easel of Claude Lorraine, appeals to what is alive in us, 8* 90 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND in the same genial way that a vernal landscape does. — . An oration from a clear brain, a beating heart, and a glowing lip, produces effects analogous'to those of light, jand fire, and the electric currents. In this way, a mys- terious union is found to exist between outward nature, and that inward nature in the soul of man which we call genius ; and in this way we see that there is no essential difference between Nature and Art* But in the other and more common sense of the term Art ; and the sense in which we shall employ it at this time ; there is no such mystic union and unison between it and Nature. It is its very contrary ; so much so, that the one kills and, expels the other ; so much so, that, as we have said, the one affords a universal test of the fault- iness, and the other of the excellence, of the productions of the human mind, in all departments of effort. For the Natural is the true, while the Artificial is the false. Truth is the inmost essence of that principle by which a production of the human mind is so organized and vital- ized, as to make a fresh and powerful impression. — Whenever in any department of effort, the human mind has reached verity, and is able to give a simple and sin- cere expression to it, we find the product full of nature, full of life, full of freshness, full of impression. This, * Nature's own work it seemed, (nature taught art.) Paradise Regained, ii. 295. All nature is but art unknown to thee. • Popb. Nature is the art of God. Sir Thomas Browne. There is a nature in all artificial things, and again, an artifice in all com- pounded natural tilings. Cudworth. The art of seeing nature is in i^lity the great object of the studies of the artist. Sir Joshua Reynolds. . Art may, in troth, be called the human world. Allston. For a pliilosophic statement of this theory see Kant's Urtheilskraft H 45» 46, and SchcUing's discourse upon the relation of Art to Nature. IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 91 and this ultimately, is the plain secret of the charm in every work of genius and of power. In every instance, the influence which sways the observer, or the hearer, or the reader, is the influence of the veritable reality, of the real and the simple truth. The Artificial, on the con- trary, is the false. Examine any formal production what- ever, and we shall be brought back in the end to a pretence, to a falsehood. The mind of the author is not filled with the truth, and yet he pretends to an utterance of the truth. Its working is not genial and spontaneous like that of nature, and yet he must give out that it is. From the beginning to the end of the process, therefore, an artificial production is essentially untrue, unreal, and hence unnatural. We have thus briefly directed attention to this very common distinction between the Natural and the Artifi- cial, and to the ground of it, for the purpose of introdu- cing the general topic upon which we propose to speak on this occasion : which is, TJie Characteristics and importance of a Natural Rhe- toric^ with special reference to the vmrk of the Preacher. There is no branch of knowledge so liable to an artifi- cial method, as that of Rhetoric. Strictly defined, it is, indeed, as Milton calls it, an instrumental art, and hence, from its very nature, its appropriate subject-matter is the form of a discourse. While Philosophy, and History, and Theology, are properly occupied with the substance of human composition^ with truth itself and thought itself ; to Rhetoric is left the humbler task of putting this material into a form suited to it. Hence, it is evident, that by the very nature and definition of Rhetoric, this department of knowledge and of discipline is liable to formalism and artificiaUty. While the mind is carried 92 , THE CHARACTERISTICS AND by the solid, material, branches of education, further and further into the very substance of truth itself; while His- tory, and Philosophy, and Theology, by their very struc- ture and contents, tend to deepen and strengthen the mental processes ; Rhetoric, in common with the whole department of Fine Art, seems to induce superficiality and formaUty. And when a bad tendency seems to receive aid from a legitimate department of human knowledge, it is no wonder that it should gain ground until it convert the whole department into its own nature. Hence, as matter of fact, there is no branch of knowledge, no part of a general system of education, so much infec- ted, in all ages, with the merely formal, the merely hollow, the merely artificial, and the totally lifeless, as Rhetoric. The epigram which Ausonius wrote under the portrait of the Rhetorician Rufus, might, with too much truth, be applied to the Rhetorician generally : Ipse rhetor, est imago imaginis.* yhe need, therefore, of a Rhetoric that educates like nature, and not artificially; a Rhetoric that organizes and vitalizes the material that is made over to it for pur- poses of form ; is apparent at first glance. Without such a method of expression, the influence of the solid branches of education themselves is neutralized. However full of fresh and original thought the mind may be, if it has been trained up to a mode of presenting it, that is in its own nature artificial and destructive of life, the freshness and originality will all disappear in the process of impart- ing it to another mind. A Rh^ric that is conformed to nature and to truth, is needed, therefore, in order that the department itself may be co-ordinate with those higher departments of knowledge in which the foundation of * Ausonii Epig. li. IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 93 mental education is laid. "Without such a concurrence with the material branches of education, such a merely- formal and instrumental branch as that of Rhetoric, is useless, and worse than useless. For it only diverts the mind from the thought to the expression, without any gain to the latter, and to the positive detriment of the former. 1. Rhetoric, therefore, can be a truly educating and influential department, only in proportion as it is organ- izing in its fundamental character. In order to this, it must be grounded first of all in logic, or the laws of thinking, and so become not a mere collection of rules for the structure and decoration of single sentences, but a habit and process of the human mind. The Rhetori- cian must make his first sacrifice to the austerer muses. In an emblematic series by one . of the early Florentine engravers. Rhetoric is represented by a female figure of dignified and commanding deportment, with a helmet surmounted by a regal crown on her head, and a naked sword in her right hand. And so it should be. Soft- ness, and grace, and beauty, must be supported by strength and prowess ; the golden and jewelled crown must be defended by the iron helmet, and the steel sword. A rhetorical mind, therefore, in the best and proper sense of the term, is at bottom a constructive mind ; a mind capable of methodizing and organizing its acquisitions and reflections into forms of symmetry, and strength, and in a greater or less degree of beauty. It is a mind which, in the effort to express^itself, begins from within and works outward, and whose product is, for this reason, characterized by the unity and thorough compactness of a product of Nature. Such, for example, was the mind of Demosthenes, and such a product is the Oration for the Crown. The oratorical power of this great master is 94 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND primarily a constructive talent ; an ability to methodize and combine. Take away this deeply-running and rig- orous force by which the various parts of the discourse, the w^hole materiel of the plan and division, are compel- led and compacted together, and this orator falls into the same class with the Gorgiases and the false Rhetoricians of all ages. Take away the organization of the Ora- tion for the Crown, and a style and diction a hundred fold more briQiant and gorgeous than that which now clothes it, would not save it from the fate of the false Rhetoric of all ages. Such again, for example, was the mind of the Apostle Paul, and such was the character of his Rhetoric. Those short epistles, which like godliness are profitable for all things, and ought to be as closely studied by the sermon- izer as they are by the theologian, are as jointed and linked in their parts as the human frame itself, and as continuous in the flow of their trains of thought as the cur- rent of a river. The mind of this great first preacher to the Gentiles, this great first sermonizer to cultivated and scep- tical Paganism, was also an organizing mind. How na- turally does Christian doctrine, as it comes forth from this intellect whose native characteristics were not de- stroyed, but only heightened and purified, by inspira- tion — how naturally and inevitably does Christian truth take on forms that are fitly joined together, and com- pacted by that which every joint supplieth ; statements that are at once logic and rhetoric, and satisfy both the reason and the feelings. For does not the profoundest theologian study the Epistle to the Romans to find ultimate and absolute statements in sacred science, and does not the most unlettered Christian read and pray over this same epistle, that his devotions may be kindled and his heart made better ? Does not, to use the illustration IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 95 of the Christian Father, does not the lamb find a ford- ing place and the elephant a swimming place in this mighty unremitting stream ? This thoroughness in the elaboration of the principal ideas of a discourse, and this closeness in compacting them into the unity of a plan, is, therefore, a prime qual- ity in eloquence, and it is that which connects Rhetoric with all the other departments of human knowledge, or rather makes it the organ by and through which these find a full and noble expression. For, contemplated from this point of view, what is the orator but a man of culture who is able to tell in round and full tones what he knows ; and what is oratory but the art whereby the acquisitions and reflections of the general human mind are communicated to the present and the future. We cannot, therefore, taking this view of the nature of Rhet- oric as essentially organizing in its character, separate it from the higher departments of History, or Philosophy, or Theology, but must regard it as co-ordinate and con- current with them. The rhetorical process is to go on in education, along with these other processes of acquisi- tion and information and reflection, so that the final result shall be a mind not only disciplined inwardly but manifested outwardly to other minds ; so that there shall be not only an intellect full of thought, and a heart beat- ing with feeling, and an imagination glowing with im- agery, but a living expression of them all, in forms of unity and simplicity and beauty and grandeur. In this way Rhetoric really becomes, what it was once claimed to be, the very crown and completion of all culture, and the rhetorical discipline, the last accomplishment in the process of education, when the man becomes prepared to take the stand on the orator's bema before his fellow 96 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND men, and dares to attempt a transfer of his consciousness into them. 2. The second characteristic of a natural Rhetoric is the amplifying power. If Rhetoric should stop with the mere organizing of thought, it might be difficult to distinguish it from logic. But this constructive talent in the Rhetorician, is accompanied by another ability which is more purely oratorical. We mean the ability to dwell amply upon an idea until it has unfolded all its folds, and lays off richly in broad full view. We mean the ability to melt the hard solid ore with so tho- rough and glowing a heat, that it will run and spread like water. We mean the ability to enlarge and illus- trate upon a condensed and cubic idea, until its contents spread out into a wide expanse for the career of the im- agination and the play of the feelings. This union of an organizing with an amplifying power, may be said to be the whole of Rhetoric. He who should combine both in perfect proportions, would be the ideal orator of Cicero. For while the former pow- er presents truth in its clear and connected form for the understanding, the latter transmutes it into its imagina- tive and impassioned forms, and the product of these two powers, when they are blended in one living energy, is Eloquence. For Eloquence, according to the best definition that has yet been given, is the union of Philo- sophy and Poetry in order to a practical end.* When, therefore, the logical organization is clothed upon with the imaginative and impassioned amplification, there arises " a combination and a form indeed ; " a mental pro- duct adapted more than all others to move and influence the human mind. * Theremin's Rhetoric, Book i. Chapters iii., iv. IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 97 But we shall see still more clearly into the essential characteristics of a Natural Rhetoric, by passing, as we now do, after this brief analysis, to the second part of our discourse, which proposes to treat of the worth and importance of such a Rhetoric to the preacher. 1. And in the first place, a natural as distinguished from an artificial Rhetoric, is of the highest worth to the preacher because it i^ fruitful. The preacher is one who, from the nature of his call- ing, is obliged to originate a certain amount of thought within a limited period of time, which is constantly and uniformly recurring. One day in every seven, as regu- larly as the motion of the globe brings it around, he is compelled to address his fellow men upon the very highest themes, in a manner and to an extent that will secure their attention and interest. No profession, consequent- ly, makes such a steady and unintermittent draught up- on the resources of the mind as the clerical, and no man so much needs the aid of a fertile and fruitful method of discoursing as the Christian preacher. Besides this great amount of thinking and composition that is required of him, he is moreover shut up to a comparatively small number of topics, and cannot derive that assistance from variety of subjects, and novelty in circumstances, which the secular orator avails himself of so readily. The truths of Christianity are few ^nd simple, and though they are richer and more inexhaustible than all others, they furnish little that is novel or striking. The power that is in them to interest and move men, must be educed from their simple and solid substance, anjd not from their great number or variety. The preacher may, it is true, be able to maintain a sort of interest in his hearers by the biographical, or geographical, or archaeological, or historical, or literary, accompaniments of the Scriptures, 9 98 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND but his permanent influence and power over them as a preacher must come from his ability to develop clearly, profoundly, and freshly, a few simple and unadorned doctrines. Far be it from me to undervalue the impor- tance of that training and study, by which we are intro- duced into that elder and oriental world in which the Bible had its origin, and with whose scenery, manners and customs, and modes of living and thinking, it will be connected to the end of time. No student of the Scriptures, and especially no sacred orator, can make himself too much at home in the gorgeous East ; too familiar with that Hebrew spirit which colors like blood the whole Bible, New Testament as well as Old Testa- ment. But at the same time he should remember that all this knowledge is only a means to an end ; that he cannot as a preacher of the Word, rely upon this as the last source whence he is to derive subject matter for his thinking and discourse year after year, but must by it all be carried down to deeper and more perennial fountains, to the few infinite facts and the few infinite truths of Christianity. The need, therefore, of a Rhetorical method that is in its own nature fertile and fruitful, is plain. And what other ability can succeed but that organizing and ampli- fying power, which we have seen to be the substance of the Rhetoric of Nature as the contrary of Art. Through the former of these, the preacher's mind is led into the inmost structure and fabric of the individual doctrine, and so of the whole Christian system ; and through the latter he is enabled to unroll and display the endless richness of the contents. It is safe to say, that a mind which has once acquired this natural method of develop- ing and presenting Christian truth, cannot be exhausted. No matter how much drain may be made upon it, no IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 99 matter how often it may be called upon to preach the "things new and old," it cannot be made dry. The more it is drawn from, the more salient and bulging is the fulness with which it wells up and pours over. For this organic method is the key and the clue. He who is master of it, he with whom it has become a mental hab- it and process, will find the treasures of wisdom and knowledge in the Scriptures opening readily and richly to him. He will find his mind habitually in the vein. 2. And this brings us to a second characteristic of a Natural Rhetoric, whereby it is of the greatest worth to the preacher, viz., that it is a genial and 'invigorating method. All the discipline of the human mind ought to minister to its enjoyment and its strength. That is a false method of discipline, by which the human mind is made to work by an ungenial efibrt, much more by spasms and convulsively. It was made to work like na- ture itself, calmly, continuously, strongly, and happily. When, therefore, we find a system of training, resulting in a labored, anxious, intermittent, and irksome, activity, we may be sure that something is wrong in it. The fruits of all modes of discipline that conform to the na- ture of the human mind and the nature of truth, are free- dom, boldness, continuity, and pleasure, of execution. In this connection weakness and tedium are faults ; sick- ness is sin. But the mental method for tvhich we are pleading, while making the most severe and constant draft upon the mental faculties, at the same time braces them and inspires them with power. The mind of the orator, in this slow organization and continuous amplification of the materials with which it is laboring, is itself affected by a reflex action. That truth, that divine truth, which the preacher is endeavoring to throw out, that it may 100 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND renovate and edify the soul of a fellow being, at the same time strikes in, and invigorates his own mind, and swells his own heart with joy. This feature, this genial vigor, in what we have styled a Natural Rhetoric, acquires additional importance when we recur to the fact that has already been mentioned, viz., that inasmuch as Rhetoric is a formal or instrumen- tal department, its influence is liable to become, and too often has become, debilitating to the human mind. When this branch of discipline becomes artificial and mechanical in its character, by being severed too much from those profounder, and more solid, departments of human knowledge from whose root and fatness it must derive all its nourishment and circulating juices ; when Rhetoric degenerates into a mere collection of rules for the structure of sentences and the finish of diction ; no studies or training will do more to diminish the resources of the mind, and to benumb and kill the vitality of the soul, than the Rhetorical. The eye is kept upon the form merely, and no mind, individual or national, was ever made strong or fertile by the contemplation of mere form. The mind under such a tutorage works by rote, instead of from an inward influence and an organic law. In reality, its action is a surface-action, which only irri- tates and tires out its powers. Perhaps the strongest ob- jections that have been advanced against a Rhetorical course of instruction, find their support and force here. Men complain of the dryness, and the want of geniality, of a professed Rhetorician. The common mind is not satisfied with his studious artifice, and his measured movements, but craves something more ; it craves a ro- bust and hearty utterance, a hale and lifesome method. Notice that it is not positively displeased with this pre- cision and finish of the Rhetorician, but only with the IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 101 lack of a genial impulse under it. It is its sins of omis- sion that have brought Rhetoric into disrepute. But when the training, under consideration, results in a genial and invigorating process, by which the profound- est thinking and the best feeling of the soul are discharg- ed to the utmost, and yet the mind feels the more buoy- ant for it, and the stronger for it, all such objections van- ish. There is, we are confident, there is a method of disciplining the mind in the direction of Rhetoric, and for the purposes of form and style, that does not in the least diminish the vigor and the healthiness of its natural processes. If there is not, then the department should be annihilated. If there can be no Rhetorical training in the schools, but such as is destructive of the freshness, and originality, and geniality, of native impulses and native utterances, then it were far better to leave the mind to its unpruned and tangled luxuriance ; to let it wander at its own sweet will, and bear with its tedious windings and its endless eddies. Here and there, at least, there would be an onward movement, and the in- spiration of a forward motion. But it is not so. For, says Shakspeare : — There is an Art which * * * shares With great creating Nature. There is a close and elaborate discipline which is in har- mony with the poetry, and the feeling, and the eloquence, of the human soul, and which, therefore, may be employ- ed to evoke and express it. There is a Rhetoric which, when it has been wrought into the mind, and has be- come a spontaneous method and an instinctive habit with it, does not in the least impair the elasticity and vigor of nature, because in the phrase of the same great 9* 102 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND poet and master of form from whom we have just quoted, " It is an Art that Nature makes, or rather an Art which itself is Nature." Such a Rhetoric may, indeed, be defined to be an Art, or discipline, which enables man to be natural ; an Art that simply develops the genuine and hearty qualities of the man himself, of the mind itself. — For the purpose of all discipline in this direction, is not to impose upon the mind a style of thought and expres- sion unnatural and alien to it, but simply to aid the mind to be itself, and to show itself out in the most genuine and sincere manner. The Rhetorical Art is to join on upon the nature and constitution of the individual man, so that what is given by creation, and what is acquired by culture, shall be homogeneous, mutually aiding and aided, reciprocally influencing and influenced. And let not this mental veracity, this truthfulness to a man's individuality and mental structure, be thought to be an easy acquisition. It is really the last and highest accom- plishment. It is a very difficult thing for a discourser to be himself, genuinely and without afiectation. It is a still more difficult thing for an orator, a man who has come out before a listening and criticising auditory, to be himself; genuinely, fearlessly and without mannerism, communicating himself to his auditors precisely as he really is. A simple and natural style, says Pascal, always strikes us with a sort of surprise ; for while we are on the lookout for an author, we find a man, while we are expect- ing a formal art, we find a throbbing heart. This is really the highest grade of culture, and the point toward which it should always aim, viz : to bring Nature out by means of art ; and Rhetorical discipline, instead of leav- ing the pupil ten-fold more formal and artificial than it found him, ought to send him out among men, the most IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 103 artless, the most hearty, and the most genuine, man of them all. Now of what untold worth is such a mental method and habit to the preacher of the Word ! On this method, literally and without a metaphor, the more he works the stronger he becomes, the more he toils the happier he is. He finds the invention and composition of discourse a means of self-culture and of self-enjoyment. He finds that that labor to which he has devoted his life, and to which, perhaps, in the outset, he went with something of a hireling's feeling, is no irksome task, but the source of the noblest and most buoyant happiness. That steady unintermittent drain upon his thought and his feeling, which he feared would soon exsiccate his brain and leave his heart dry as powder, he finds is only an outlet for the ever accumulating waters ! This invigorating and genial influence of the Rhetori- cal method now under consideration, furthermore, is of special worth in the present state of the world. There never was a time when the general mind was so impa- tient of dulness as now. He who addresses audiences at the present day must be vigorous and invigorating, or he is nothing. Hence the temptation, which is too often yielded to by the sacred orator, to leave the legitimate field of Christian discourse and to range in that border land which skirts it, or perhaps to pass into a region of thought that is really profane and secular. The preacher feels the need of saying something fresh, vigorous, and genial, and not being able to discourse in this style upon the old and standing themes of the Bible, he endeavors to christianize those secular and temporal themes with which the general mind is already too intensely occupied, that he may find in them subjects for entertaining, and, as he thinks, original discourse. But this course on the 104 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND part of the Christian minister, must always end in the decline of spiritual religion, both in his own heart and in that of the Church. Nothing, in the long run, is truly- edifying to the Christian man or the Christian Church, that is not really feligious. Nothing can renovate and sanctify the earthly mind, but that which is in its own nature spiritual and supernatural. Not that which resembles Christian truth, or which may be modified or affected by Christian truth, can convict of sin and con- vert to God, but only the substantial and real Christian truth itself. Nothing but material fire can be relied upon as a central sun, as a radiating centre. The Christian preacher is thus shut up to the old and uniform system of Christianity in an age when, more than in any other, men are seeking for some new thing ; when they are seeking and demanding stimulation, invig- oration, animation, and impression. His only true course, therefore, is to find the new in the old ; to become so penetrated with the spirit of Christianity, that he shall breathe it out from his own mind and heart, upon his congregation, in as fresh and fiery a tongue of flame as that which rested upon the disciples on the day of Pen- tecost ; to enter so thoroughly into the genius and spirit of the Christian system, that it shall exhibit itself, through him, with an originality and newness kindred to that of its first inspired preachers, and precisely like that which characterizes the sermonizing of the Augustines and the Bernards, the Luthers and the Calvins, the Leigh tons, the Howes, and the Edwardses, of the Churqh. What renders the sermons of these men so vivific and so invig- orating to those who study them, and to the audiences who heard them ? Not the variety or striking character of the topics, but the thoroughness with which the truth was conceived and elaborated in their minds. Not an IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 105 artificial Rhetoric, polishing and garnishing the outside of a subject in which the inind has no interest, and into the interior of which it has not penetrated ; but an organ- izing Rhetoric, whereby the sermon shot up out of the great Christian system, like a bud out of the side of a great trunk or a great limb, part and particle of the great whole ; an amplifying Rhetoric whereby the sermon was the mere evolution of an involution, the swelKng, burst- ing, leafing out, blossoming, and fructuation, of this bud. 3. And this brings us, in the third place, to the worth of this Rhetorical method to the preacher, because it is closely connected with his theological training and disci- pline. It is plain, from what has been said, that eloquent preaching cannot originate without profound theological knowledge. The eloquent preacher is simply the thorough theologian who has now gone out of his study, and up into ihe pulpit. In other words, eloquence in this as well as in every other instance is founded in knowledge. Cicero says that Socrates was wont to say that all men are eloquent enough on subjects whereon they have knowledge ; * a saying which re-appears in the common and homely rule for eloquence, " Have something to say, and then say it." Hence a Rhetorical training which does not sustain intimate relations to the general culture and discipline of the pupil, is worthless. At no point does an artificial ' Rhetoric betray itself so quickly and so certainly as here. We feel that it has nO intercommunication with the character and acquisitions of the individual. It is a foreign method, which he has adopted by a volition, and * De Oratore, i. 14. 106 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND not a spontaneous one which has sprung up out of his character and culture, and is in perfect sympathy with it. But the Rhetoric of nature has all the theological train- ing of the preacher back of it as its support, beneath it as its soil and nutriment. All that he has become by long years of study and reflection, goes to maintain him as a Rhetorician, so that his oratory is really the full and powerful display of what he is and has become by vigor- ous professional study. The Rhetoric is the man him- self. In this way, a showy and tawdry manner is inevitably avoided, as it always should be, by the preacher. It can- not be said of him, as it can be of too many, " He is a mere Rhetorician." For this professional study, this lofty and calm theological discipline, this solemn care of human souls, this sacred professional character, will all show themselves in his general style and manner, and preclude every thing ostentatious or gaudy, much more every thing scenic or theatrical. The form will corres- pond to the matter. The matter being the most solemn ■and most weighty truth of God, the form will be the most chastened, the most symmetrical, and the most commanding, manner of man. And in this way, again, the rhetorical training of the preacher will exert a reflex influence upon his theologi- cal training. A true sacred Rhetoric is a sort of practi- cal theology, and is so styled in some nomenclatures. It is a practical expansion and exhibition of a scientific system for the purpose of influencing the popular mind. When, therefore, it is well conceived and well handled, it exerts a reflex influence upon theological science itself, that is beneficial in the highest degree. It cannot, it is true, change the nature and substance of the truth, but it can bring it out into distinct consciousness. The effort IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 107 to popularize scientific knowledge, the endeavor to put logic into the form of rhetoric, imparts a clearness to con- ceptions, and a determination to opinions, that cannot be attained in the closet of the mere speculatist. Not until a man has endeavored to transfer his conceptions ; not until he has pushed his way through the confusion and misunderstandings of another man's mind, and has tried to lodge his views in it ; does he know the full significance and scope of even his own knowledge. But especially is this action and re-action between theology and sacred Rhetoric of the highest worth to the preacher, because it results in a due mingling of the the- oretic and the practical in his preaching. The desidera- tum in a sermon is such an exact proportion between doctrine and practice, such thorough fusion of these two elements, that the discourse at once instructs and impels ; and he who supplies this desideratum in his sermonizing, is a powerful, influential, and eloquent, preacher. He may lack many other minor things, but he has the main thing ; and in time these other minor things shall all be added unto him. In employing a Rhetoric that is at once organizing and amplifying in its nature and influ- ence, the theological discipline and culture of the preacher are kept constantly growing and vigorous. Every sermon that is composed on this method, sets the whole body of his acquisitions into motion, and, like a bucket continu- ally plunged down into a well and continually drawn up full and dripping, aerates a mass that would otherwise grow stagnant and putrid. 4. Fourthly and finally, the worth of a natural, as dis- tinguished from an artificial. Rhetoric, is seen in the fact that it is connected, most intimately, with the vital reli" gion of the man and the preacher. For no Rhetoric can 108 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND be organizing and vivifying, that is jiot itself organic and alive. Only that which has in itself a living principle, can communicate life. Only that which is itself vigor- ous, can invigorate. The inmost essential principle, therefore, of a Rhetoric that is to be employed in the ser- vice of religion, must be this very religion itself: deep, vital, piety in the soul of the sacred orator. Even the pagan Cato, and the pagan Quinctilian after him, made goodness, integrity and uprightness of character, the foundation of eloquence in a secular sphere, and for se- cular purposes. The orator, they said, is an upright man, first of all an upright man^ who understands speak- ing. How much more true then is it, that Christian character is the font and origin of all Christian elo- quence ; that the sacred orator is a holy man, first of all a holy man, who understands speaking. We shall not, surely, be suspected of wishing to un- dervalue or disparage a department to which we propose to consecrate our whole time and attention, and, there- fore, we may with the more boldness say, that we have always cheriohed a proper respect for that theory which has been more in vogue in some other denominations than in our own, that the preacher is to speak as the spirit moves him. There is a great and solid truth at the bottom of it, and though the theory unquestionably does not need to be held up very particularly before an uneducated ministry, we think there is comparatively lit- tle danger in reminding the educated man, the man who has been trained by the rules and maxims of a formal and systematic discipline, that the spring of all his pow- er, as a Christian preacher, is a living' spring-. It is well for the sacred orator, who has passed through a long col- legiate and professional training, and has been taught sermonizing as an art, to be reminded that the living IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. 109 principle, which is to render all this culture of use for purposes of practical impression, is vital godliness ; that he will be able to assimilate all this material of Christian eloquence, only in proportion as he is a devout and holy- man. Without this interior religious life in his soul, all his resources of intellect, of memory, and of imagination, will be unimpressive and ineffectual; the mere iron shields and gold ornaments that crush the powerless Tarpeia. For the first and indispensable thing in every instance is power. Given an inward and living- power, and a basis for motion, action, and impression, is given. In every instance we come back to this ultimate point. There is a theory among philosophers, that this hard, material world, over which we stumble, and against which we strike, is at bottom two forces or powers, held in equilibrium ; that when we get back to the real- ity of the hard and dull clod, upon which " the swain treads with clouted shoon," we find it to be just as im- material, just as mobile, just as nimble, and just as much a living energy, as the soul of man itself. Whether this be truth or not within the sphere of matter, one thing is certain, that within the sphere of mind we are brought back to forces, to fresh and living energies, in every in- stance in which the human soul makes an eloquent im- pression, or receives one. Examine an oration, secular or sacred, that actually moved the minds of men, a speech that obtained votes, or a sermon that, as we say, saved souls, and you find the ultimate cause of this elo- quence, so far as man is concerned, to be a vital power in the orator. The same amount of instruction might have been imparted, the same general style and diction might have been employed in both cases, but if that elo- quent power in the man had been wanting, there would 10 110 THE CHARACTERISTICS AND have been no actuation of the hearer, and consequently no eloquence. It is, therefore a great and crowning excellence of the Rhetorical method which we have been describing, that its lowest and longest roots strike down into the Chris- tian character itself. It does not propose or expect to render the preacher eloquent without personal religion. It tells him on the contrary, that although God is the creator and sovereign of the human soul, and can there- fore render the truth preached by an unregenerate man and in the most unfeeling irreligious manner, effectual to salvation, yet that the preacher .must expect to see men moved by his discourses, only in proportion as he is him- self a spiritually-minded, solemn, and devout man. Here is the power^ and here is its hiding place, so far as the finite agent is concerned. In that holy love of God and of the human soul, which Christianity enjoins and pro- duces ; in that religious affection of the soul which takes its origin in the soul's regeneration ; the preacher is to find the source of all his eloquence and impression as an orator, just as much as of his usefulness and happiness as a man and a Christian. Back to this last centre of all, do we trace all that is genuine, and powerful, and influential, in Pulpit Eloquence. But by this is not meant merely that the preacher must be a man of zealous and fervid emotions. There is a species of eloquence, which springs out of easily excited sensibilities, and which oftentimes produces a great sen- sation in audiences of peculiar characteristics, and in some particular moods. But this eloquence of the flesh and the blood, without the brain ; this eloquence of the animal, without the intellectual, spirits ; is very different from that deep-toned, that solemn, that-commanding elo- quence, which springs from the Ufe of God in the soul IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. Ill of man. We feel the difference, all men feel the differ- ence, between the impression made by an ardent but su- perficial emotion, and that made by a deep feeling ; by the sustained, equable, and strong, pulsation of religious affections, as distinguished from religious sensibilities. When a man of the latter stamp feels, we know that he feels upon good grounds and in reality; that this stir and movement of the affections is central and all-pervading in him ; that the eternal truth has taken hold of his emo- tive nature, moving the whole of it, as the trees of the wood are moved with the wind. It is this moral earnest- ness of a man who habitually feels that religion is the chief concern for mortals here below ; it is this profound consciousness of the perfections of God and of the worth of the human soul; which is the inmost principle of sacred eloquence, the vis vivida vitce of the sacred orator. ^ have thus, as briefly as possible, exhibited the princi- pal features of what is conceived to be a true method in rhetorical instruction and discipline ; not because they are new, or different from the views of the best Rhetoricians of all ages, but merely to indicate the gen- eral spirit in which I would hope, by the blessing of God, to conduct the department of instruction commit- ted to my care by the guardians of this Seminary. The department of Sacred Rhetoric and Pastoral Theology is one that, from the nature of the case, is not called upon to impart very much positive information. Its function is rather to induce an intellectual method, to form a mental habit, to communicate a general spirit to the fu- ture clergyman. It is, therefore, a department of grow- ing importance in this country, and in the present state of society and the Church. Perhaps the general tone and temper of the clerical profession was never a matter 112 THE IMPORTANCE OF A NATURAL RHETORIC. of more importance than now. The world, and this country especially, is guided more and more by the gen- eral tendencies of particular classes and professions. In politics, a party or class, that really has a tendency, and maintains it persistently for a length of time, is sure in the end to draw large masses after it. In reforms, a class that is pervaded by a distinctive spirit, which it sedulously preserves and maintains, is sure of a wide in- fluence, finally. In literature, or philosophy, or theology, a school that has a marked and determined character of its own, and keeps faith with it, will in the course of time be rewarded for its self-consistency by an increase in numbers and in power. In all these cases, and in all other cases, the steady, continuous stream of a general tendency sucks into its own volume all ^the float and drift, and carries it along with it. And the eye of the reflecting observer, a,«* it ranges over the ocean of Amer- ican society, can see these currents and tendencies, as plainly as the eye of the mariner sees the Gulf-stream. How important, then, is any position which makes the occupant to contribute to the formation of a general spirit and temper, in so influential a class of men as the clerical ! Well may such an one say. Who is sufficient for this thing ? For myself, I should shrink altogether from this toil, and this responsibility, did I not dare to hope that the providence of that Being, who is the sovereign controller of all tendencies and all movements in the universe, has led me hither. In his strength would I labor, and to Him would I reverently commend myself and this institution. THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. AN INAUGURAL DISCOURSE DELIVERED IN ANDOYER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, FEB. 15, 1854. The purpose of an Inaugural Discourse is, to give a correct and weighty impression of the importance of some particular department of knowledge. Provided the term be employed in the technical sense of Aristotle and Quinctilian, the Inaugural is a demonstrative oration, the aim of which is to justify the existence of a specific professorship, and to magnify the specific discipline which it imparts. It must, consequently, be the general object of the present discourse to praise the department, and recommend the study, of History. As we enter upon the field which opens out before us, we are bewildered by its immense expanse. The whole hemisphere overwhelms the eye. The riches of the sub- ject embarrass the discussion. For this science is the most comprehensive of all departments of human knowl- edge. In its unrestricted and broad signification, it in- cludes all other branches of human inquiry. Everything in existence has a history, though it may not have a phi- losophy, or a poetry ; and, therefore, history covers and 10* (113) 114 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF pervades and enfolds all things as the atmosphere does the globe. Its subject-matter is all that man has thought, felt, and done, and the line of Schiller is true even if taken in its literal sense : the final judgment is the his- tory of the world.* If it were desirable to bring the whole encyclopaedia of human knowledge under a single term, certainly history would be chosen ae the most comprehensive and elastic of all. And if we consider the mental qualifications re- quired for its production, the department whose nature and claims we are considering, still upholds its superi- ority, in regard to universality and comprehensiveness. The historic talent is inclusive of all other talents. The depth of the philosopher, the truthfulness and solemnity of the theologian, the dramatic and imaginative power of the poet, are all necessary to the perfect historian, and would be found in him, at their height of excellence, did such a being exist. For it has been truly said, that we shall sooner see a perfect philosophy, or a perfect poem, than a perfect history. We shall, therefore, best succeed in imparting unity to the discourse of an hour, and in making a single and, therefore, stronger impression, by restraining that career which the mind is tempted to make over the whole of this ocean-like arena, and confining our attention to a single theme. It will be our purpose, then, to speak. Firsts Of that peculiar spirit imparted to the mind of an educated man, by historical studies, which may be denominated the historic spirit ; and Secondly^ Of its influence upon the theologian. The historic spirit may be defined to be : the spirit of ♦ Resignation. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. J^ i^lil^ the race as distinguished from that of %e ^tidiyidu^l, and of all time as distinguished fi*om that of We here assume that the race is as much a~reality as ' the individual ; for this is not the time nor place, even if the ability were possessed, to reopen and reargue that great question which once divided the philosophic world into two grand divisions. We assume the reality of both ideas. We postulate the real and distinct, though undivided, being of the common humanity and the par- ticular individuality. We are unable, with the Nominal- ist, to regard the former as the mere generalization of the latter. The race is more than an aggregate of sepa- rate individualities. History is more than a collection of single biographies, as the national debt is more than the sum of individual liabilities. Side by side, in one and the same subject ; in every particular human person ; ex- ist the common humanity with its universal instincts and tendencies, and the individuality with its particular in- terests and feelings. The two often come into conflict with an earnestness, and at times in the epic of history with a terrible grandeur, that indicates that neither of them is an abstraction ; that both are solid with the sub- stance of an actual being, and throb with the pulses of an intense vitality. The difference between history and biography involves the distinct entity and reality of both the race and the individual. Biography is the account of the peculiari- ties of the single person disconnected from the species, 9nd is properly concerned only witli that which is char- acteristic of him as an isolated individual. But that which is national and philanthropic in his nature ; that which* is social and political in his conduct and career ; all that links him with his species and constitutes a part of the development of man on the globe ; all this is his- 116 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF torical and not biographic. Speaking generally in or- der to speak briefly, all that activity which springs up out of the pure individualism of the person, makes up the charm and entertainment of biography, and all that activity which originates in the humanity of the person furnishes the matter and the grandeur of history. History, then, is the story of the race. It is the exhi- bition of the common generic nature of man as this is manifested in that great series of individuals which is crowding on, one after another, like the waves of the sea, through the ages and generations of time. The historic muse omits and rejects everything in this march and movement of human beings that is peculiar to them as selfish units ; everything that has interest for the man, but none for mankind ; and inscribes upon her tablet only that which springs out of the common humanity, and hence has interest for all men and all time. History, therefore, is continuous in its nature. It is so because its subject-matter is a continuity. This common hutnan nature is in the process of continuous evolution, and the wounded snake drags its slow length along down the ages and generations. No single individual ; no single age or generation ; no single nationality, however rich and capacious ; shows the whole of man, and so puts a stop to human development. The time will, indeed, come, and the generation and the single man, will one day be, in whom the entire exhibition will close. The number of individuals in the human race is predetermined and fixed by Him who sees the end from the beginning. But until the end of the series comes, the development must go on continuously, and the history of it, must be con- tinuous also. It must be linked with all that has gone before ; it must be linked with all that is yet to come. As it requires the whole series of individuals, in order THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 117 to a complete manifestation of the species, so it requires the whole series of ages and periods, in order to an entire account of it. But while history is thus continuous in its nature, par- adoxical as it may appear, it is at the same time cmnplete in its spirit. Observe that we are speaking of the ab- stract and ideal character of the science ; of that quality by which it differs from other branches of knowledge. We are not speaking of any. one particular narrative that has actually been composed, or of all put together. History as actually written is not the account of a completed pro- cess, because, as we have just said, the development is still going on. Still, the tendency of the department is to a conclusion. History looks to a winding up. We may say of it, as Bacon says of unfulfilled prophecies : " though not fulfilled punctually and at once, it hath a springing and germinant accomplishment through many ages." It contains and defines general tendencies ; it in- timates, at every point of the line, a final consummation. The historical processes that have actually taken place, all point at, and join on upon, the future processes that are to be homogeneous with them. That very con- tinuity in the nature of this science, of which we have spoken, results in this completeness, or tendency to a conclusion, in its spirit. Like a growing plant, we know what it will come to, though the growth is not ended. For it is characteristic of an evolution, provided it is a genuine one, that seize it when you will, and observe it at any point you please, you virtually seize the whole ; you observe it all. Each particular section of a develop- ment, exhibits the qualities of the whole process, and the organic part contemplated by itself throbs with the gen- eral life. Hence it is that each particular history ; of a nation, or an age, or a form of government, or a school 118 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF of philosophy, or a Christian doctrine ; when conceived in the spirit of history, wears a finished aspect, and sounds a full and fundamental tone. And hence the proverb : man is the same in all ages, and history is the repetition of the same lessons. So universal and virtually complete in its spirit is this science, that a distinguished modern philosopher has as- serted that it may become a branch of a priori knowl- edge, and that it actually does become such in propor- tion as it becomes philosophic. Being the account, not of a dislocation, but of a development, and this of one race ; being the exhibition of the unfolding of one single idea of the Divine mind ; the history of the world, he contends, might be written beforehand by any mind that is master of the idea lying at the bottom of it. The whole course and career of the world, is predetermined by its plan, and supposing thi^ to be known, the histo- rian is more than " the prophet looking backward," as Schlegel calls him ; he is the literal prophet. He does not merely inferentially foretell, by looking back into the past, but he sees the whole past and future simultaneously present in the Divine idea of the world, of which by the hypothesis he is perfectly possessed. This philosopher believed in the possibility of such an absolutely perfect and a priori history, because he taught that the mind of man and the mind of God are one universal mind, and that the entire knowledge of the one may consequently be possessed by the other. While, however, the philosopher erred fatally in supposing that any being but God the Creator, can be thus perfectly possessed of the organic idea of the world, or that man can come into an approximate possession of it except as it is revealed to him by the Supreme mind, in providence and revelation, we must yet admit that the world is con- THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 119 structed according to such an idea or plan, and that for this reason, coherence, completeness, and universality, are the distinguishing characteristics of its development. While, therefore, we deny that history as actually written, or as it shall be, comes up to this absolute and metaphysical perfection, it would be folly to deny that it has made any approximation towards it, or that it will make still more. So far as the account has been com- posed under the guiding light of this divine idea, which is manifesting itself in the affairs of men ; so far, in other words, as it has been written in the light of providence and revelation ; it has been composed with truth, and depth, and power. Historians have been successful in gathering the lessons and solving the problems of their science in proportion as they have recognized a provi- dential plan in the career of the world, and have had some clear apprehension of it. The most successful par- ticular narratives seem to be parts of a greater whole. — They have an easy reference to general history ; evidently belong to it ; evidently were written in its comprehensive spirit and by its broad lights. So much does this science abhor a scattering, isolating, and fragmentary, method of treating the subject-matter belonging to it, that those histories which have been composed without any historic feeling; with no reference to the Divine plan and no connection with the universe ; are the most dry and life- less productions in literature. Disconnection, and the absence of a unifying principle, are more marked, and more painfully felt, in historical composition, than in any other species of literature. Even when the account is that of a brief period, or mere point, as it were, in univer- sal space, the mind demands that it be rounded and finished in itself; that it exhibit, in little, that same com- 120 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF plete and coherent process, which is going on more grandly, on the wider arena of the world at large. History, then, is the exhibition of the species. Its lessons may be relied upon as the conclusions to which the human race have come. In these historic lessons, the narrowness of individual and local opinions has been exchanged for the breadth and compass of public and common sentiments. The errors to which the single mind ; the isolated unit, as distinguished from the organic unity ; is exposed, are corrected by the sceptical and criti- cal processes of the general mind. What, for illustration, is its teaching in regard to the presence and relative proportions in a political constitu- tion of the two opposite elements, permanence and pro- gression? Will not the judgment, in -regard to this vexed question, that is formed on historic grounds, be, to say the least, safer and truer, than that formed upon the scanty experience of an individual man ? Will not the decision of one who has made up his mind after a thoughtful study of the ancient tyrannies and republics of Greece and Rome, of the republican states of Italy in the middle ages, of the politics of Europe since the for- mation pf its modern state-system, be nearer the real truth than that of a pledged and zealous partisan, on either side of the question ; than that of the ancient Cleon or Coriolanus ; than that of the modern Rousseau or Filmer ? And why will it be nearer the truth ? Not merely because these men were earnest and zealous. Ardor and zeal are well in their place. But because these minds were individual and local ; because they were not historic and general in views and opinions. Take another illustration from the department of phi- losophy. A great variety of theories have been projected respecting the nature and operations of the human mind, THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 121 SO that it becomes difficult for the bewildered inquirer to know which he shall adopt. But will he run the hazard of fundamental error, if he assumes that that theory is the truth, so far as truth has been reached in this domain, which he finds substantially present in the philosophic mind in all ages ? if he concludes that the historic phi- losophy is the true philosophy ? And will it be safe for the individual to set up in this department, or in the still higher one of religion, doctrines which have either never entered the human mind before, or, if they have, have been only transient residents ? The fact is, no one individual mind is capable of accomplishing, alone and by itself, what the race is des- tined to accomplish only in the slow revolution of its cycle of existence. It is not by the thought of -any one individual,, though he were as profound as Plato and as intuitive as Shakspeare, that truth is to obtain an exhaus- tive manifestation. The whole race is to try its power, and, in the end, or rather at every point in the endless career, is to acknowledge that the absolute is not yet fully known ; that ihe knowledge of man is still at an infinite distance from that of God. Much has been said, and still is, of the spirit of the age ; and extravagant expectations have been formed in regard to its insight into truth and its power of applying it for the progress of the species. But a single age is merely an individual of larger growth. There is always something particular, something local, something temporary, in every age, and we must not look here for the generic and universal any more than in the notions of the individual man. No age is historic, in and by itself. Like the individual, it only contributes its portion of investigation and opinion, to the sum total of material which . is to undergo the test, not of an age, but of the ages. 11 122 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF Considerations like these go to show, that there is in that which is properly historic, nothing partial, nothing defective, nothing one-sided. It is the individual which has these characteristics ; and only in proportion as the individual man becomes historic in his views, opinions and impressions ; only as his culture takes on this large and catholic spirit, does he become truly educated.- It is the sentiment of mankind at large, it is the opinion of the race, which is to be accepted as truth. When, therefore, the mind of the student, in the course of its education, is subjected to the full and legitimate influence of historical studies, it is subjected to a rectifying influence. The individual eye is purged, so that it sees through a crys- talline medium. That darkening, distorting matter, composing oftentimes the idiosyncracy rather than the individuality of the intellect, is drained off". Having thus briefly discussed the nature of the his- toric spirit by a reference to the abstract nature of the science itself, let us now seek to obtain a more concrete and lively knowledge of it, by looking at some of its actual influences upon the student. Let us specify some of the characteristics of the historical mind. I. In the first place, the historical mind is both reverent and vigilant. The study of all the past raises the intellect to a loftier eminence than that occupied by the student of the present; the man of the time. The vision of the latter is limited by his own narrow horizon, while that of the former goes round the globe. As a consequence, the historic mind is impressed with the vastness of truth. It knows that it is too vast to be all known by a single mind, or a single age ; too immense *to be taken in at a single glance, much less to be stated in a single proposition. Histori- cal studies have, moreover, made it aware of the fact that THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 123 truth is modified by passing through a variety of minds ; that each form taken by itself is imperfect, and that, in some instances at least, all forms put together do not constitute a perfect manifestation of the " daughter of time." The posture and bearing of such a mind, there- fore, towards all truth, be it human or divine, is at once reverent and vigilant. It is seriously impressed by the immensity of the field of knowledge, and at the same time is adventurous and enterprising in ranging over it. For it was when the human imagination was most impressed by the vastness of the globe, that the spirit of enterprise and adventure was most rife and successful. Before the minds of Columbus and De Gama, before the imagination of the Northmen and the early English navigators, space stretched away westward and south- ward like the spaces of astronomy, and was invested with the awfuluess and grandeur of the spaces of the Miltonic Pandaemonium. Yet this sense of space, this mysterious consciousness of a vaster world, was the very stimulation of the navigator; the direct cause of all modern geographical discovery. The merely individual mind, on the contrary, seeing but one form of truth, or, at most, but one form at a time, is apt to take this meagre exhibition for the full reality, and to suppose that it has reached the summit of knowledge. It is self-satis- fied and therefore irreverent. It is disposed to rest in present acquisitions and therefore is neither vigilant nor enterprising. 11. And this naturally suggests the second characteris- tic of the historical mind : its productiveness and origi- nality. Such a mind is open to truth. The first condition to the advancement of learning is fulfilled by it ; for it is the fine remark of Bacon, that the kingdom of science, 124 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF like the kingdom of heaven, is open only to the child ; only to the reverent, recipient, and docile, understanding. Perhaps nothing contributes more to hinder the progress of truth than self-satisfied ignorance of what the human mind has already achieved. The age that isolates itself from the rest of the race and settles down upon itself, will accomplish but little towards the development of man or of truth. The individual who neglects to make himself acquainted with the history of men and of opin- ions, though he may be an intense man within a very narrow circumference, will make no real advance and no new discoveries. Even the ardor and zealous energy, often exhibited by such a mind, and, we may say, char- acteristic of it, contribute rather to its growing ignorance, than its growing enlightenment. For it is the ardor of a mind exclusively occupied with its own peculiar notions. Its zeal is begotten by individual peculiarities, and expen- ded upon them. Having no humble sense of its own limited ability, in comparison with the vastness of truth, or even in comparison with the power of the universal human mind, it closes itself against the great world of the past, and, as a penalty for this, hears but few of the deeper tones of the "many voiced present." In the midst of colors it is blind ; in the midst of sounds it is deaf. That mind, on the contrary, which is imbued with the enterprising spirit of history, contributes to the progress of truth and knowledge among men, by entering into the great process of inquiry and discovery which the race as such has begun and is carrying on. It moves onward with fellow-miuds, in the line of a preceding advance, and consequently receives impulse from all the movement and momentum of the past. It joins on upon the truth which has actually been unfolded, and is thereby enabled THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 125 to make a positive and valuable addition to the existing knowledge of the human race. For the educated man, above all men, should see and constantly remember, that progress in the intellectual world, does not imply the discoYeryol truth, absolutely new; of truth of which the human mind never had even an intimation before, and which came into it by a mortal leap, abrupt and startling, without antecedents and with- out premonitions. This would be rather of the nature of a Divine revelation than of a human discovery. A revelation from God is different in kind from a discovery of the human reason. It comes down from another sphere, from another mind, than that of man ; and, although it is conformed to the wants of the human race, can by no means be regarded as a natural development out of it ; as a merely historical process, like the origina- tion of a new form of government, or a new school of philosophy. A discovery of the human mind, on the contrary, is to be regarded as the pure, spontaneous, pro- duct of the human mind ; as one fold in its unfolding. It follows, consequently, that progress in human knowl- edge, progress in the development of human reason, does not imply the origination of truth absolutely and in all respects unknown before. The human mind has pre- sentiments ; dim intimations ; which thicken all along the track of human history like the hazy belt of the galaxy among the clear, sparkling, mapped, stars. These presentiments are a species and a grade of knowledge. — They are not distinct and stated knowledge, it is true, but they are by no means blank ignorance. The nebulae are visible, though not yet resolved. Especially is this true in regard to the mind of the race ; the general and historic mind. How often, is the general mind restless and uneasy with the dim anticipation of the future dis- IV 126 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OP covery ? This unrest, with its involved longing, and its potential knowledge, comes to its height, it is true, in the mind of some one individual who is most in posses- sion of the spirit of his time, and who is selected by- Providence as the immediate instrument of the actual and stated discovery. But such an one is only the secondary cause of an effect, whose first cause lies lower down and more abroad. There were Reformers before the Reformation. Luther articulated himself upon a process that had already begun in the Christian church, and ministered to a want, and a very intelligent want too, that was already in existence. Columbus shared in the enterprising spirit of his time, and differed in degree, and not in kind, from the bold navigators among whom he was born and bred. That vision of the new world from the shores of old Spain ; that presentiment of the existence of another continent beyond the deep ; a pre- sentiment so strong as almost to justify the poetic extravagance of Schiller's sonnet,* in which he says, that the boding mind of the mariner would have created a continent, if there had been none in the trackless West to meet his anticipation ; that prophetic sentiment, Co- lumbus possessed, not as an isolated individual, but as a man who had grown up with his age and into his age ; whose teeming mind had been informed by the traditions of history, and whose active imagination had been fired by the strange narratives of anterior and contempora- neous navigation. Another proof of the position that the individual mind owes much of its inventiveness and originality to its ability to join on upon the invention and origination already in existence, is found in the fact, that some of * Columbus. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 127 the most marked discoveries ' in science have occurred simultaneously to different minds. The dispute between the adherents of Newtoflf and Leibnitz respecting prior- ity of discovery in the science of Fluxions, is hardly yet settled ; but the candid mind on either side will acknowl- edge that, be the mere matter of priority of detailed dis- covery and publication as it may, neither of these great minds was a servile plagiary. The Englishman, in re- gard to the German, thought alone and by himself; and the German, in regard to the Englishman, thought alone and by himself. But both thought in the light of past discoveries, and of all then existing mathematical knowl- edge. Both were under the laws and impulse of the general scientific mind, as that mind had manifested itself historically in preceding discoveries, and was now using them both as its organ of investigation and medium of distinct announced discovery. The dispute between the English and French chemists, respecting the comparative merits of Black and Lavoisier, is still kept up ; but here, too, candor must acknowledge that both were original investigators, and that an earlier death of either would not have prevented the discovery. Now in both of these»instances the minds of individ- uals had been set upon the trail of the new discovery by history ; by a knowledge of the then present state and wants of science. They had kept up with the develop- ment of science ; they knew what had actually been achieved ; they saw what was still needed. They felt the wants of science, and these felt wants were dim an- ticipations of the supply, and finally led to it. It was because Newton' and Leibnitz both labored in a historical line of direction, that they labored in the same line, and came to the same result, each of and by himself. For this historical basis for inquiry and discovery is common 128 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF to all. And as there is but one truth to be discovered, and but one high and royal road to it, it is not surpris- ing that often several minds should reach the goal sim- ultaneously. A striking instance of the productive power imparted to the individual mind by its taking the central position of history, is seen in the department of philosophy. In this department it is simply impossible, for the individ- ual thinker to make any advance unless he first make himself acquainted with what the human mind has al- ready accomplished in this sphere of investigation. With- out some adequate knowledge of the course which phi- losophic thought has already taken, the individual in- quirer in this oceanic region is all afloat. He does not even know where to begin, because he knows not where others have left off; and the system of such a philoso- pher, if it contain truth, is most commonly but the dry repetition of some previous system. Originality and true progress here, as elsewhere, are impossible without history. Only when the individual has made his mind historic by working his way into that great main current of philosophic thought, which may be traced from Py- thagoras to Plato and Aristotle, from Aristotle to the Schoolmen, and from the Schoolmen to Bacon and Kant, and moving onward with it up to the point where the next stage of true progress and normal development is to join on ; only when he has thus found the proper point of departure in the present state of the science, is he prepared to depart, and to move forward on the straight but limitless line of philosophic inquiry. It is for this reason that the speculative systems of Germany exhibit such productiveness and originality. Whatever opinion may be held respecting the correctness of the Germanic mind in this department, no one can deny its THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 129 fertility. The Teutonic philosopher first prepares for the appearance of his system, by a history of philosophy in the past, and then aims to make his own system the crown and completion of the entire historic process ; the last link of the long chain. It is true that, in every in- stance thus far in the movement of this philosophy, the intended last link has only served as the support of an- other and still other links, yet only in this way of historic preparation could such a productive method of philoso- phizing have been attained. Only from the position of history, even though it be falsely conceived, can the spec- ulative reason construct new and original systems. A good illustration of the defectiveness which must attach to a system of philosophy, when it is not conceiv- ed and constructed in the light of the history of philoso- phy, is &een in the so-called Scotch school. A candid mind must admit that the spirit and general aim of this system was sound and correct. It was a reaction against the sensual school, especially as that system- had been run out to its logical extreme in France. It recognized and made much of first truths, and that faculty of the mind which the ablest teacher of this school loosely de- nominated Common Sense, and still more loosely defin- ed, was unquestionably meant to be a power higher than that which "judges according to sense." But it was not an original system, in the sense of grasping with a stronger and more scientific grasp than had ever been done before, upon the standing problems of philosophy. It is true that it addressed itself to the solution of the old problems, in the main, in the right spirit and from a deep interest in the truth, but it did not go low enough down, and did not get near enough to the heart of the difficulty, to constitute it an original and powerful Bystem of speculation. Its greatest defect is the lack of 130 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF a scientific spirit, which is indicated in the fact that, although it has exerted a wide influence upon the popu- lar mind, it has exerted but Httle influence upon the phi- losophic mind, either of Great Britain or the Continent. And this defect is to be traced chiefly to the lack of an extensive and profound knowledge of the history of philosophic speculation. The individual mind, in this instance, attempted a refutation of the acute arguments of scepticism, without much knowledge of the previous developments of the sceptical understanding and the counter-statements of true philosophy. A comprehen- sive and reproductive study of the ancient Grecian philo- sophies, together with the more elaborate and profound of the modern systems, would *have been a preparatory discipline for the Scottish reason that would have armed it with a far more scientific and original power. Its aim, in the first place, would have been higher, because its sense of the difficulty to be overcome would have been far more just and adequate. With more knowledge of what the human intellect had already accomplished, both on the side of truth and of error, its reflection would have been more profound ; its point of view more cen- tral ; its distinctions and definitions more philosophical and scientific ; and its refutations more conclusive and unanswerable.* * This deficiency in scientific character, in the Scotch philosophy, is felt by its present and ab'est defender, Sir William Hamilton. More deeply imbued with the spirit of the department than either Reid or Stewart was, l)ecause of a wider and more thorough sciiolarship than either of them pos- sessed, he has been laboring to give it what it lacks. But it is more than doulMful whether any mind that denies the possibility of meta|ihysic-8 as dislin^uisiied fion) psychology, will be able to do much towards imparting a necesmry and scientific character either to philosophy generally, or to a system wliich is popular rather than philosophic, in its foundations and su- perstructure. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 131 ■ Thus we might examine all the departments of hu- man knowledge, singly by themselves, and we should find that, in regard to each of them, the individual mind is made at once recipient and original by the preparatory discipline of historical studies and the possession of the historic spirit. Even in the domain of Literature and Fine Art, the mind that keeps up with the progress of the nation or the race ; the mind that is able to go along with the great process of national or human development in this department ; is the original and originant mind. Although in Poetry and Fine Art, freshness and original- ity seem to depend more upon the impulse of individual genius and less upon the general movement of the na- tional or the universal fnind, yet here, too, it is a fact, that the founders of particular schools ; we mean schools of eminent and historic merit ; have been men of exten- sive study, and liberal, universal sympathies. The great masters of the several schools of Italian Art, were dili- gent students of the Antique, and had minds open to truth and nature in all the schools that preceded them. They, moreover, cherished a historic feeling%nd spirit, by a most intimate and general intercourse with each other. The earnest rivalry that prevailed, sprung up from a close study of each other's productions. The view which Cellini presents us of the relations of the Italian artists to each other, and of the general spirit that prevailed among them, shows that there was very little that was bigoted and individual in those minds so remarkable for originality and productiveness within their own sphere. A very fine and instructive illustration of the truth we are endeavoring to establish, is found in the department of literature in the poet Wordsworth. This man was a student He cultivated the poetic faculty within him as sedulously as Newton cultivated the scientific genius 132 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF wdthin him. He retired up into the mountains, when he had once determined to make poetry the aim of his lite- rary life, and by the thoughtful perusal of the English poets, as much as by his brooding contemplation of ex- ternal nature, enlarged and strengthened his poetic power. By familiarizing himself with the spirit and principle, the inward history^ of English poetry, he became largely imbued with the national spirit. And he was thorough in this course of study. He not only devoted himself to the works of the first English poets, the Chancers, Spen- sers, Shakspeares and Miltons; but he patiently studied the productions of the second class, so much neglected by Englishmen, the Draytons, the Daniels, and the Donnes. The works of these latter are not distinguished for passion in sentiment or beauty in form, but they are remarkable for that thoroughly English property, thought- ful sterling sense. Wordsworth was undoubtedly at- tracted to these poets, not merely because he believed, with that most philosophic of English critics who was his friend and contemporary, that good sense is the body of poetry, bilf because he saw that an acquaintance with them was necessary to a thorough knowledge of Eng- lish poetry considered as a historic process of develop- ment, as one phase of the English mind. For, although a poem like the Polyolbion of Drayton can by no means be put into the first class with the Faery Queen of Spenser, it yet contains more of the English temper, and exhibits more of the flesh and muscle of the native mind. These writers Wordsworth had patiently studied, as is indicated by that vein of strong sense which runs like a muscular cord through the more light and airy texture of his musings. It was because of this historical train- ing as a poet, that Wordsworth's poetry breathes a far loftier and ampler spirit than it would have done had it THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 133 been like that of Byron, for example, the product of an intense, but ignorant and narrow, individualism. And it was also because of this training, that Wordsworth, while preserving as original an individuality, certainly, as any writer of his time, acquired a mu^h more national and universal poetic spirit than any of his contemporaries, and was the most productive poet of his age. The result, then, of the discussion of the subject un- der this head is, that the individual mind acquires power of discernment and power of statement only by enter- ing into a process already going on ; into the great main movement of the common human mind. In no way can the educated man become genially recipient, and at the same time richly producftive, but by a profound study of the development which truth has already attained in the history of man and the world. III. The third characteristic of the historical mind is its union of moderation and enthusiasm. One of the most distinct and impressive teachings of history is, that not every opinion which springs up and has currency in a particular age, is true for all time. History records the rrse and great popularity, for a while, of ma- ny a theory which succeeding ages have consigned to oblivion, and which has exerted no permanent influence upon human progress. There always are, among the opinions and theories prevalent in any particular period, some, and perhaps many, that have not truth enough in them to preserve them. And yet these may be the very ones that seize upon the individual and local mind with most violence and most immediate effect. Because they are partial and narrow, they>for this reason grasp the popular mind more fiercely and violently. Were they broader and more universal in their character, their im- mediate influence might be less visible, because it would 12 134 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF extend over a far wider surface, and go down to a much lower depth. A blow upon a single point makes a deep dint, but displaces very few particles of matter, while a steady heavy pressure over the whole surface, changes the position of every atom, with but little superficial change. The proper posture, therefore, of the individual mind, and, especially, of the educated mind, towards the current opinions of the age in which he lives, is, that of modera- tion. The educated man should keep his mind equable, and, in some degree, aloof from passing views and theo- ries. He ought not to allow theories that have just come into existence to seize upon his understanding with all that assault and onset with which they take captive the uneducated, and, especially, the unhistoric mind. Of what use are the teachings of history if they do not serve to render the mind prudently distrustful in regard to new- born opinions, at the same time that they throw it wide open and fill it with a strong confidence towards all that has historically proved itself to be true ? Is it for the cultivated man, the man of broad and general views, to throw himself without reserve and with all his weight, into what, for aught he yet knows, may be only a cross- current and eddy, instead of the main stream of truth ? Now it is only by the possession of a historic spirit that the individual can keep himself sufficiently above the course of things about him, to enable him to judge correctly concerning them. Knowing what the human mind has already accomplished in a particular direction, in art or science, in philosophy or religion, he very soon sees whether the particular movement of the time in any one of these directions, will or will not coincide with' the preceding movement and be concurrent with it. He occupies a height, a vantage ground, by virtue of his THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 135 extensive historical knowledge, and he stands upon it, not with the tremor and fervor of a partisan, but with the calmness and insight of a judge. Suppose the activ- ity of an age, or of an individual, manifests itself in the production of a new theory in religion, of some new statement of Christian doctrine, the mind that is well versed in the history of the Christian church, and of Christian doctrine, will very quickly see whether the new joins on upon the old ; whether it is an advance in the line of progress or a deviation from it. And his attitude will be accordingly. He will not be led astray with the multitude or even with the age. Through all the fervor and zeal of the period, he will preserve a mod- erate and temperate tone of mind ; committing himself to current opinions no faster than he sees they will amalgamate with the truth which the human mind has already and confessedly discovered in past ages ; with historic truth. This moderation in adopting and maintaining current opinions is an infallible characteristic of a true scholar, of a ripe culture. And it is the fruit of that criticism and scepticism which is generated by historical study. For it is one of the effects of such studies to render the mind critical and sceptical ; not, indeed, in respect to truth that has stood the test of time, but to truth that has just made its appearance. It would be untrue to say that the study of history genders absolute doubt and unbelief in the mind ; that it tends generally and by its very nature to unsettle faith in the good and the true. This would be the case if there were no truth in the science ; if it were substantially the record of dissension and disagreement ; if, above the din and uproar of discordant voices, one clear and clarion-like voice did not make itself heard as the voice of universal history. We are all familiar with 136 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF the story told of Raleigh, who is said to have destroyed the unpublished half of his work, because of several persons who professed to describe an occurrence in the Tower Court, which he had also witnessed from his prison window, each gave a different version of it, and his own differed from theirs. But history is not thus uncertain and unreliable. It teaches but one lesson. It reveals but one truth. Down through the ages and generations it traces one straight line, and in this one line of direction lies truth, and out of it lies error. Its record of the successes and triumphs of truth certainly teaches a correct lesson, and its record of the successes and triumphs of error is but the dark background from which truth stands out in still more bold and impressive reality. Whatever may be the case with particular accounts by particular individuals, the main current of this science runs in one direction, and its great lesson is in favor of truth and righteousness. Not, then, towards well-tried and well-established truth, but towards apparent and newly-discovered truth, does history engender criticism and scepticism. The past is secure. That which has verified itself by the lapse of time, and the course of experiment, and the sifting of investigation, is commended as absolute and universal truth to the individual mind, q.y\^ history bids it to believe and doubt not. But that which is current merely ; that which in the novelty and youth of its existence is carrying all men away ; must stand trial, must be brought to test, as all its predecessors have been. Towards the opinions and theories of the present, so far as they vary from those of the past, the historical mind is inquisitive, and critical, and sceptical, not for the purpose, be it remembered, of proving them to be false, but with the generous hope of evincing them to be true. For the THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 137 scepticism of history is very different from scepticism in religion. The latter is always in some way biassed and interested. It springs out of a desire, conscious or uncon- scious, to overthrow that which the general mind has found to be true, and is resting in as truth. Scepticism in religion has always been in the minority ; at war with the received opinions of the race, and consequently with all that is historic. There never was an individual scep- tic, from Pyrrho to Strauss, who was not unhistorical ; who did not take his stand outside of the great travelled road of human opinion ; who did not try to disturb the human race in the possession of opinions that had come down from the beginning, besides having all the instincts of reason to corroborate them. But the scepticism of history has no desire to overthrow any opinion that has verified itself in the course of ages, and been organically assimilated, in the course of human development. All such opinion and all such truth constitutes the very sub- stance of the science itself ; its very vitality and charm for the human tnind; and, therefore, can never be the object of doubt or attack for genuine historic scepticism. On the contrary, these sifting and critical methods have no other end or aim but to make a real addition to the existing stock of well-ascertained truth, and to prevent any erroneous opinion or theory from going into this sum-total, and thus receiving the sterling stamp and endorsement. This criticism and scepticism is simply for self-protection. These sceptical and sifting processes are gone through with, to preserve an all-sided science pure from the individual, the local, and the temporary, and to keep it universal and absolute in its contents and spirit. Now it might seem at first glance, that this modera- tion of mind towards current opinions would preclude all 12* 138 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF earnestness and enthusiasm in the educated man ; thai the historic spirit must necessarily be cold and phlegma- tic. It might seem that it would be impossible for siich a mind to take an active and vigorous interest in the age in which it lived, and that it would be out of its element amid the stir and motion going on all around it. This is substantially the objection which the half-educat- ed disciple of the present brings against history and his- torical views and opinions. But this is a view that is false from defect ; from not containing the whole truth. It arises from not taking the full idea of the science into the mind. This idea, like all strictly so-called ideas, contains two opposite?, which, to the superficial glance, look like irreconcilable contraries, but to a deeper and more adequate intuition, are not only perfectly reconcilable, but are opposites in whose conciliation consists the vitality and fertility of the idea, and of the science founded upOn it. History, as we have seen, is both continuous and complete ; and continuity and completeness are opposite conceptions. — It is, in the first place, the record of a development that must unintermittently go on, and cannot cease, until the final consummation. And it is, in the second place, complete in its spirit, because at every point in the con- tinuous process there are indications of the consumma- tion ; tendencies to an ultimate end. No part of history is irrelative. Even when it is but the account of a par- ticular period, a small section of the great historic process, it exhibits this complete and universal spirit by clinging to what precedes and pointing to what succeeds ; by its large discourse of reason looking before and after. But the objector does not reconcile these opposites in his own mind ; he does not take this comprehensive and full view of the subject. "Whether he acknowledges it or not, THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 139 his view really is, that the many several ages of which history takes cognizance, have no inward connection with each other, nor any common tendency, and consequently that the whole entire past, in relation to the present, is a nonentity. It is gone, with all that it was and did, into " the dark backward and abysm " of time, and the present age, like every other, starts independent and alone upon its particular mission. His view of history is atomic. — On his theory, there is no such thing as either connected evolution or explanatory termination, in the course of the world. There is no human race, no common humanity, to be manifested in the millions of individuals, and the multitudes of ages and epochs. On this theory, there is and can be nothing in the past, in which the present has any vital interest; nothing in the past which has any authority for the present ; nothing in the past which con- stitutes the root of the present, and nothing in the present which constitutes the germ of the future. History, on this theory, has no principle ; no organization. It is a mere catalogue of events ; a mere list of occurrences. It is because the imperfectly educated disciple of the present, really takes this view, that he asserts that his- toric views and opinions are deadening in their influence upon the mind, and that the historic spirit is a lifeless spirit. If he believed in a living concatenation of events and a vital propagation of influences, he would not say that that which is truly historical, is virtually dead and buried. If he believed that no one age, any more than any one individual, contains the whole of human devel- opment within itself, but is only one fold of the great unfolding, he would suspect, at least, that there might be elements in the past so assimilated and wrought into the history of universal man that they are matters of living interest for every present age. If he believed that truth 140 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OP is reached only by the successive and consentaneous endeavors of many individual minds, each making use of all the labors of its predecessors, and each taking up the standing problem where its predecessors had dropped it ; if the too zealous disciple of the present believed that truth is thus reached only by the efforts of the race ; of the universal mind in distinction from the individual ; he would find life all along the line of human history ; he would see that in taking into his mind a historic view or opinion he was lodging there the highest intensity of mental life ; the very purest and densest reason of the race. Instead, therefore, of being cold, phlegmatical and life- less, the historical mind is really the only truly living and enthusiastic mind. It is the only mind that is in com- munication. It is the only mind that is not isolated. — And in the mental world, intercommunication is not more necessary to a vital process, and isolation or break- ing off is not more destructive of a vital process, than in the world of nature. That zeal, begotten by the narrow views of an individual, or a locality, or an age, which the unhistorical mind exhibits, is an altogether different thing from the enthusiasm of a spirit enlarged, educated, and liberalized, by an acquaintance with all ages and opin- ions. Enthusiasm springs out of the contemplation of a whole ; zeal from the examination of a part. And there is no surer test and sign of intellectual vitality than enthusiasm ; that deep and sustained interest which is grounded in the broad views and profound intuitions of history. But while the well-read student of history preserves a ' wise and cautious moderation, in the outset, towards current opinions, yet, because of this genial and enthusi- astic interest in the truth which the human mind has THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 141 actually and without dispute arrived at, he in the end comes to take all the interest in the views and theories of the present, which they really deserve. The historical mind does no ultimate injustice. So far and so fast as it finds that the new movement of the present age is a natural continuation of the unfinished development of the past, does he acknowledge it as a step in advance, and receives the new element into his mind and into his culture with all the enthusiasm and all the feeling with which he adopts the great historic systems of antiquity. In this way the historical mind is actually more truly alive and interested even in relation to the present, than the man of the present. It appreciates the real excel- lence of the time more intelligently and profoundly, and it certainly has a far more inspiriting view of the connec- tion of this excellence with the excellence that has pre- ceded it, and which is the root of it. How much more inspiring and enlivening is that vision which sees the progress of the present linked to that of all the past, and contr'buting to make up that long line of development extending through the whole career of the human species, than that vision which sees but one thing at a time, and does not even know that it has any living references, or any organic connections whatever ! As an exemplification of the preceding remarks, con- template for a moment the historian Niebuhr. His was a genuinely historical mind. He conceived and con- structed in Hie true spirit of history. He always viewed events in the light of the organization by which they were shaped and of which they were elementary parts. He saw by a native sagacity, in which respect he never had a superior, the idea lying at the bottom of a histori- cal process ; such, for example, as the separate founda- tion of the city of Rome ; the rise and formation of the 142 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF Roman population ; the growth and consolidation of the plebeians ; and built up his account of it, out of it and upon it. His written history thus corresponds with a fresh and vital correspondence with the actual history ;* with the living process itself. In this way he reproduced human life in his pages, and the student is carried along through the series with all the interest and charm of an actor in it. So sagacious was his intuition that, although two thousand years further off from them in time, he has unquestionably so reconstructed the very facts of the early history of Rome, as to bring them nearer the actual matter of fact, than they appear in the legendary pages of Livy. It was the habit of his mind, both by nature and by an acquisition as minute as it was vast, to look at human life as an indivisible process, and to connect together all the ages, empires, civilizations, and literatures, of the secular world by the bond of a common develop- ment ; thus organizing the immense amount of material contained in human history into a complete and symme- trical whole. But slow and sequacious as the movements of such an organizing and thoroughly historic mind were, and must be from the nature of the case, we do not hesitate to affirm that the historian Niebuhr was one of the most vividly alive ancl profoundly enthusiastic minds in all literary history. He was not spared to complete his great work as it lay in him to have done, and as he would have done, immense as it was, had h^ lived to the appointed age of man. He left it a fragment. He left it a Torso which no man can complete. But from that fragment has gushed, as from many living centres, all the life and'power not only of Roman history, but of his- tory generally, since his day. It gave an impulse to this whole department which it still continues to feel, besides THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 143 reproducing itself in particular schools and particular in- dividuals. It is the work which more than any other one production, shaped the opinions of the most vigorous and enthusiastic of English historians, the late Dr. Ar- nold. And that serious spirit which we find in the sci- ence itself since the days of Niebuhr, when compared with the moral indifference characterizing it before his day and to a great extent during his day, is to be traced to his reverent recognition of a personal Deity in history, and his deep belief in the freedom and accountability of man. But the man himself, as well as his works, was full of life, and he showed it nowhere more plainly than in his direct address to the minds of his pupils. " When he spoke," says one of them, " it always appeared as if the rapidity with which the thoughts occurred to him, ob- structed his power of communicating them in regular order or succession. Nearly all his sentences, therefore, were anacoluths ; for, before having finished one, he be- gan another, perpetually mixing up one thought with an- other, without producing any one in its complete form. This peculiarity was more particularly striking when he was laboring under any mental excitement, which occur- red the oftener, as, with his great sensitiveness, he felt that warmth of interest in treating of the history of past ages, which we are accustomed to witness only in dis- cussions on the political affairs of our own time and country." The writer, after speaking of the difficulty of following him, owing to his rapid, and it should be ad- ded, entirely extemporaneous delivery (for he spoke with- out a scrap of paper before him), remarks, that " notwith- standing this deficiency of Niebuhr as a lecturer, there was an indescribable charm in the manner in which he treated his subject ; the warmth of his feelings, the symr 144 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF pathy which he felt with the persons and things he was speaking of, his strong conviction of the truth of what he was saying, his earnestness, and, above all, the vivid- ness with which he conceived and described the charac- ters of the most prominent men, who were to him living realities, with souls, feelings and passions like ourselves, carried his hearers away, and produced effects which are usually the results only of the most powerful oratory.*" How different from all this is the impression which we receive from the mind of one who, notwithstanding his great defects, must yet thus far be regarded as the first of English historians ; from the mind of Gibbon. After a candid and full allowance of the ability of that mind and the great value of the History of the Decline and Fall of Rome, it must yet be said that it was not a vivid and vital mind, nor is its product. The autobiography of Gibbon, indeed, exhibits considerable native liveliness, but the perusal of his history does not even suggest the existence of such qualities as earnestness and enthusiasm. One is disposed to conclude from the picture which he gives of himself, that the historian had been endowed by his Maker with a more than average share of mental freshness and vitality, and most certainly if there had been in exercise enough of this quality ; enough of the vis vivida vitcc; to have vivified his immense well-selected and well-arranged material, he would have approximated near- er than he has to the ideal of historical composition. But there was not, and, therefore, it is, that, throughout the whole of this great work, there reigns, so far as the hu- man and moral interest of history is concerned, so far ds all its higher religious problems are concerned, an ut- ter sluggishness, apathy, and lifelessness ; an apathy and * Dr. Lconhard Schmitz. Preface to Vol. IV. of Niebulir's Rome. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 145 lifelessness as deep, unvarying, and monotonous, as if the foices of the period he described, the principles of decline and decay, had passed over into his own understanding and riiade it the theatre of their operations. We doubt whether there is another work in any literature whatever, possessing so many substantial excellences, and yet char- acterized by such a total destitution of glowing inspira- tion and earnest enthusiasm, as Ihe History of the De- cline and Fall of the Roman Empire. The explanation of this fact will corroborate the truth of the position, that the genuinely historic mind is the only truly living and enthusiastic mind. Though nominally a historian. Gibbon was really utterly unhistorical in his spirit. 'His religious scepticism, besides paralyzing what- ever natural vigor and earnestness of conception may have originally belonged to him, made it impossible for him to regard the processes of human life as so many parts of one grand plan of the world formed by one supreme presiding mind. History for him, consequently, had no organization and no moral significance. It was, therefore, strictly speak- ing, no history at all for him ; no course of development with a divine plan at the bottom of it and a divine pur- pose at the termination of it. It was neither continuous in its nature, nor complete in its spirit and tendency. Every- thing that occurred in the world at large, or among a particular people, was for his mind irreferent, discontinu- ous, and sporadic. Not only did he fail to connect the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire with the general history of the race, or even with the general history of Rome, by exhibiting it in its relation to its antecedents and consequents, but he failed even to detect the historic principle lying at the bottom of the particular period itself. The great moral and political causes of the decline and fsdl of the Roman empire, do 13 146 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF % not stand out in bold and striking relief from the im mense erudition and imposing rhetoric of that work. The reflecting reader, at the close of its perusal, feels the need of something more than a scenic representation of the period; something more than the pomp of a panora- ma ; in order to a knowledge of the deep ground of all this decUne and decay. He needs, in short, what Gibbon does not furnish, more of the philosophy of that organic decline, drawn from a profounder view of the nature of man and of human life, united with a deeper insight into the radical defect in the political constitution of the Koman empire; into that germ of corruption which came into existence immediately after the subjugation of the Italian tribes was completed, and in which the entire millennium of decline and decay lay coiled up. We have thus far discussed the nature of the historic spirit on general grounds. We have mentioned only those general characteristics which are matters of inter- est to every cultivated mind ; having reference chiefly to secular history and general education. We have now to speak of the importance of this spirit to the theologian, and must, therefore, discuss its more special nature, with a prevailing reference to Ecclesiastical History and Theo- logical Education. Before proceeding to the treatment of this part of the subject, it seems necessary to direct attention, for a mo- ment, to the distinguishing difference between Secular and Church history. Our Lord, in the most distinct manner, and repeatedly, affirms that His kingdom is not of this world. Through- out the Scriptures the church and the world are opposed to each other as direct contraries, mutually exclusive and expulsive of each other, so that " all that is in the world is not of the Father, but is of the world." There are, therefore, THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 147 two kingdoms, two courses of development, two histo- ries, in the universal history of man on the globe. There is the account of the natural and spontaneous develop- ment of human nature as left tg itself, guided only by the dictates of finite reason and impelled by the determi- nation of the free, but fallen, human will, and the im- pulses of human passion. And there is the history of that supernatural and gracious development of human nature which has been begun and carried forward by means of a revelation from the Divine Mind made effec- tual by the direct efficiency of the Divine Spirit. The fact of sin, and the fact of redemption, constitute the substance of that great historic process which is involv- ed in the origin, growth and final triumph of the Chris- tian church. Had there been no fall of man, there would have been but one stream of history. The spontaneou development of the human race would have been normal and perfect, and there would have been no such distinc- tion between the church and world as is recognized in Scripture. The race would not have been broken apart ; one portion being left to a merely human and entirely false development, and the other portion being renovated and started upon a spiritual and heavenward career by the electing love of God. But sin in this, as in all its aspects, is dissension and dismemberment. The original unity of the race, so far as a common religious character and a common blessed destiny are concerned^ is destroyed, and the two halves of one being, to borrow an illustra- tion from the Platonic myth, are now and forever sepa- rated. The original single stream of human history was parted in the garden of Eden, and became into two heads, which have flowed on, each in its own channel, and will continue to do so, forevermore. For, although the church is to encroach upon the world, in the future, 148 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF to an extent far surpassing anything that appears in the present and the past, we know, from the very best au- thority, that sin is to be an eternal fact in the universe of God, and as such . must have its own awful and isolated development ; its own awful and isolated history. In passing, therefore, from secular to church history, we pass from the domain of merely human and sinful, to that of truly divine and holy, agencies. The subject- matter becomes extraordinary. The basis of fact in the career of the church is supernatural in both senses of the word. From the expulsion from Eden down to the close of miracles in the apostolic age, a positively miraculous intervention of Divine power lies under the series of events ; momentarily withdrawn and momentarily reap- pearing, throughout the long line of Patriarchal, Jewish and Apostolic history ; the very intermittency of the ac- tion indicating, like an Icelandic Geyser, the reality and constant proximity of the power. And if we pass from external events to that inward change that was con- stantly brought about in human character by which the church was called out from the mass of men and made to live and grow in the midst of an ignorant or a culti- vated heathenism ; if we pass from the miraculous to the simply spiritual manifestation of the Divine agency as it is seen in the inward life of the church, we find that we are in a far higher sphere than that of secular history. There is now a positive intercommunication between the hu- man and the Divine mind, and the development which results constitutes a history far profounder, far purer and holier, far more encouraging and glorious, than that of the natural man and the secular world. It is upon the fact of this direct and supernatural com- munication of the Supreme mind to the human mind, and this direct agency of the Divine Spirit upon the hu- THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 149 man soul, that we would take our stand as the point of departure in the remainder of this discussion. In treat- ing of secular history, we have regarded the unaided rea- son of man as the source and origin of the development. We do not find in the history of the world, as the Scrip- tural antithesis of the church, any evidence of any spe- cial and direct intercommunication between man and God. We find only the ordinary workings of the hu- man mind and such products as are confessedly within its competence to originate. We can, indeed, se.e the hand of an overruling Providence throughout this realm, employed chiefly in restraining the wrath of man, but through the whole long course of development we see no signs or products of a supernatural and peculiar inter- ference of God in the affairs of men. Empires rise and fall ; arts and sciences bloom and decay ; the poet dreams his dream of the ideal, and the philosopher develops and tasks the utmost possibility of the finite reason ; and still, so far as its highest interests are concerned, the con- dition and history of the race remain substantially the same. It is not until a communication is established between the mind of man and the mind of God ; it is not until the Creator comes down by miracle and by revela- tion, by incarnation and by the Holy Ghost, that a new order of ages and a new species of history begins. The Scriptures, therefore, as the revelation of the Eternal Mind, take the place of human reason within the sphere of church history. The individual man sus- tains the same relation to the Bible, in the sacred historic process, that he does to natural reason in the secular. The theologian expects to find in the history of the church that same comprehensive and approximately exhaustive development and realization of Scripture truth, which the philosopher hopes to find of the finite 13* 150 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF reason in the secular history of the race. It follows, con- sequently, that all that has been said of the influence of historical studies upon the literary man, applies with full force, when the distinguishing difference between secular and sacred history has been taken into account, to the education and culture of the theologian. The same spirit will work with the same results in both depart- ments of knowledge, and the theologian, like the literary man, will become, in his own intellectual domain, both reverent and vigilant ; both recipient and original ; both deliberate and enthusiastic ; as his mind feels the influ- ences that come off" from the history of the Christian religion and the Christian church. Without, therefore, going again over the ground which we have travelled in the first part of the discourse, let us leave the general influences and characteristics of the historic spirit, and proceed to consider some of the most important of its specific influences within the depart- ment of theology and upon theological education. And, that we may not be embarrassed by the attempt to make use of all the materials that crowd in upon the mind on all sides, and from all parts, of this encyclopaedic subject, let us leave altogether untouched the external career of the church, and keep chiefly in view that most interest- ing and important branch of the department which is denominated Doctrinal Church History. I. In the first place, a historic spirit within the depart- ment of theology promotes Scripturality. We have already mentioned that the distinctive char- acter of church history arises from the special presence and agency of the Divine Mind in the world. Subtract that presence, and that agency, and nothing is left but the spontaneous development of the natural man ; noth- ing is left but secular history. Divine revelation, using THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 151 the term in its widest signification, to denote the entire communication of God to man in the economy of grace, is the principle and germ of church history. That shap- ing of human events, and that formation and moulding of human character, which has resulted from the coven- ant of redemption, is the substance of sacred history. The church is the concrete and realized plan of redemption ; and what is the plan of redemption but the sum-total of revelations which have been made to man by the Jehovah of the Old Testament and the Incarnate Word of the New, the infallible record of which is unchangeably fixed in the Scriptures? It follows, therefore, that the true and full history of the church of God on earth will be the Scriptures in the concrete. The plant is only the unfolded germ. There is, consequently, no surer way to fill systematic theology with a Scriptural substance than to subject it to the influence of historical studies. As the theologian passes the several ages of the church in review, and becomes acquainted with the results to which the general mind of the church has come in interpreting the Scrip- tures, he runs little hazard of error in regard to their real teaching and contents. As in the domain of secular his- tory we found that there was little danger of missing the true teachings of human reason, if we collect them from the continuous and self-defecating development of ages and epochs, so in the domain of sacred history we shall find that the real mind of the Spirit, the real teaching of Scripture, comes out plainer and clearer in the general growth and development of the Christian mind. Indeed we may regard church history, so far as it is mental and inward in its nature ; so far as it is the record of a mental inquiry into the nature of Clnristianity and the contents of the Bible ; as being as near to the infallibility of the 152 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF written revelation, as anything that is still imperfect and fallible can be. The church is not infallible and never can be ; but it is certainly not a very bold or dangerous affirmation to say that the church, the entire body of Christ, is wiser than any one of its members, and that the whole series of ages and generations of believers have penetrated more deeply into the substance of the Christian religion and have come nearer to an approxi- mate exhaustion of Scripture truth, than any single age or single believer has. So far, therefore, as a theological system contains his- torical elements, it is likely to contain Scriptural elements. So far as its statements of doctrine coincide with those of the creeds and symbols in which the wise, the learned, and the holy, of all ages have embodied the results of their continuous and self-correcting study of the Scrip- tures, so far it may be expected to coincide with the substance of inspiration itself. Again, there is no surer way to imbue the theologian himself with a Scriptural spirit than to subject his mind to the full influence of a course of study in the history of the Christian religion and church. This is one of the best means which the individual mind can employ to reach the true end of a theological education ; which is to get within the circle of inspired minds and see the truth exactly as they saw it. We believe, as the church has always believed, that the inspired writers were qualified and authorized to speak upon the subject of religion as no other human minds have been. They were the subjects of an illumination clearer and brighter than that of the purest Christian experience ; and of a revelation that put them in possession of truths that are absolutely beyond the ken of the wisest human mind. — Within that inspired circle, therefore, there was a body THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 153 of knowledge intrinsically inaccessible to the human mind ; beyond the reach of its subtlest investigation, or its purest self-development. If those supernaturally taught minds had been prevented from fixing their knowledge in a written form ; or if the written revelation had perished like the lost books of Livy; the human mind of the nineteenth century would have known no more upon moral and religious subjects, for substance, than the human mind of a Plato or Aristotle knew twenty-two centuries ago. For he must have an extravagant esti- mate of the inherent capacities of the finite mind, who supposes that the rolling round of two millenniums, or of ten, would have witnessed in any one individual case, a more central, or a more defecated, development of the pure rationality of mere man than was witnessed in Aristotle. And he must have a very ardent belief in the omnipotence of the finite, who supposes, that, without that communication of truth and of spirit ; of light and of life ; which God in Christ has made to the race, ages upon ages of merely spontaneous and secular history would have produced a more beautiful development of the human imagination than appears in the Grecian Art and Literature, or a more profound development of the human reason than appears in the Grecian Philosophy and the Grecian Ethics. The Scriptures have, accordingly, been the source of religious knowledge and progress for the Christian, as antithetic to the secular, mind, and will continue to be, until they are superseded by some other and fuller reve- lation in another mode of being than that of earth. It has, consequently, been the aim and endeavor of the church in all ages, to be Scriptural ; to work itself into the very heart of the written revelation ; to stand upon the very same point of view with the few inspired minds, 154 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OP and see objects precisely as they saw them. But this, though possible and a duty, is no easy task, as the whole history of Christian doctrines shows. Truth in the Scrip- tures is full and entire. The Scriptural idea is never defective, but contains all the elements. Hence its very perfection and completeness is an obstacle to its full apprehension. It is difficult for the human mind to take in the whole great thought. It is often exceedingly diffi- cult for the human mind oppressed, first, by the vastness and mystery of the revealed truth, and, secondly, by its own singular tendency to one-sided and imperfect per- ception, to gather the full idea from the artless and unsystematized contents of Scripture, and then state it in the imperfect language of man. The doctrine of the Trinity, for example, is fully revealed in the Bible. All the elements of that great mystery ; the whole truth res- pecting the real triune nature of God, may be found in that book. But the elements are uncombined and unexpanded, and hence one source of the heresies respect- ing this doctrine. Arius and Sabellius both appealed to Scripture. Neither of them took the position of the infidel. Each acknowledged the authority of the written word, and endeavored to support his position from it. — But in these instances the individual mind merely picked up Scriptural elements as they lie scattered upon the page and in the letter of Scripture, and, without com- bining them with others that lie just as plainly upon the very same pages, moulded them into a defective, and therefore erroneous, statement. Heresy is individual and not historic in its nature. Now it is the characteristic of the general mind of the church ; of the historic Christian mind ; that it reproduces in its intuition, and in its statement, the complex and complete Scriptural idea. So far as it has any intuition THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. ' 155 at all, it sees all the sides ; so far as it makes any state- ment at all, it brings into it all the fundamentals. By this is not meant that even the mind of the church has perfected the expansion of Scripture elements and made the fullest possible statement of the doctrine of the Trinity. There may, possibly, be a further exhaustion of the contents of revelation in this direction. There may, possibly, be a statement of this doctrine that will be yet fuller; still closer up to the Scriptural matter; than that one which the church has generally accepted since the date of the Councils of Nice and Constanti- nople. But there will never be a form of statement that will flatly contradict this form, or that will add any new fundamentals to it. All that is new and different must be in the way of expansion and not of addition ; in the way of development and not of denial. A closer study of the teachings of Scripture, and a deeper reflection upon them, may carry the theological mind further along on the line, but will give it no diagonal or retrograde movement. ' Now is it not perfectly plain that the close and thorough study of this continuous and self-correcting endeavor of the Christian church to enucleate the real meaning of Scripture ; an endeavor which has been put forth by the wisest, the most reverent, and the holiest, minds in its history, tasking their own powers to the utmost, and invoking and receiving Divine illumination, during the whole of the process ; an endeavor which has to a great extent formed and fixed the religious experi- ence of ages and generations, by its results embodied in the creeds and symbols of the church : a series of mental constructions, which, even if we contemplate only their human characteristics, their scientific coherence and sys- tematic compactness, are more than worthy to be placed 156 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF side by side with the best dialectics of the secular mind , is it not perfectly plain, we say, that the close and tho- rough study of such a strenuous endeavor, as this has been, to reach the inmost heart and fibre of Scripture, will tend irresistibly to render the theologian Scriptural in head and in heart ? May we not expect that sufch a student will be intensely Scriptural ? Will not this dis- tinct and thorough knowledge of revelation be so wrought into his mental texture that he will see and judge of everything through this medium ? Will he not have so thought in that same range and region in which his inspired teachers thought, that doubt and perplexity in regard to Divine revelation would be nearly as impossible for him, as for Isaiah while under the Divine afflatus, or for Paul when in the third heavens ? To borrow an illustration from the kindred science of Law : if it is the effect of the continued and thoughtful study of Law Reports and Political Constitutions and Commentaries upon Political Constitutions ; a body of literature which, as it originates out of the organic idea of law, breathes the purest spirit of the legal reason ; if it is the effect of such study to render the individual mind legal and judi- cial in its tone and temper, must it not be the effect of the study of that body of symbolic literature which has come slowly but consecutively into existence through the endeavor of the theological mind to reach a perfect understanding of Scripture, to render the individual mind Scriptural in its tone and temper? II. And this leads us to say, in the second place, that a historic spirit in the theologian, induces a correct esti- mate of Creeds and Systematic Theology. j One of the most interesting features in the present condition of the theological world is a revived interest in the department of church history. This interest has been THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 157 slowly increasing for the last half century, and promises to become a leading interest for some time to come. In Germany, in America, and in England, scholars and thinking men are turning their attention away, some- what, from the purely secular history of mankind, to that more solemn and momentous career which a part of the human family have been running for nearly six thousand years. They have become aware that the history of the church of God is a peculiar movement that has been silently going on in the heart of the race from the begin- ning of time, and which, while it has not by any means left the secular historic processes untouched and unaf- fected, has yet kept on in its own solitary and sublime line of direction. They are now disposed to look and see how and where * * the sacred river ran Through caverns measureless to man Down to the sunlit sea. But it would be an error to suppose that this interest has been awakened merely or mainly by the external his- tory of the Christian Church. " The battles, sieges, for- tunes it hath passed; "its conflicts wdth persecuting Pa- ganism, Mohammedanism, and Romanism ; its influence upon art, upon literature and science, upon society and government ; these are not the charm which is now drawing as by a spell the best thinking of Christendom towards church history. It is not the secular and worldly elements in this history into which the mind of the time most desires to look. The great march of profane his- tory brings to view a pomp and prodigality of such ele- ments that has already dulled and satiated the tired sen- sibilities. Thinking minds now desire to look into the distinctively supernatural elements in this historic pro- 14 158 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF cess ; to see if it really has, as it claims to have, a direct connection with the Creator of the race and the Author of the human mind. It is for this reason that the revivgd interest in this department of knowledge has shown it- self most powerfully and influentially in investigating the origin and nature of the doctrines of the church, as they are found speculatively in creeds and symbols, and prac- tically in the Christian consciousness. The mind of Germany, for example, after ranging over the whole field of cultivated heathenism, and sounding the lowest depths of the finite reason, in a vain search for that absolute truth in which alone the human soul can rest, has be- taken itself to the domain of Christian revelation and Christian history. Its interest in Greek and Roman cul- ture, in Mediaeval Art, and in its own speculative sys- tems, has given way to a deeper interest in the Christian religion ; in some instances with a clear perception, in others with a dim intimation, that, if the truth which the human mind needs, is not to be found here, the last re- source has failed ; and that then The pillared firmament is rottenness And earth's ba§e built on stubble. This revived interest in church history, therefore, is in reality a search after truth, rather than after a mere dra- matic scene or spectacle. The mind of the time is anx- ious to understand that revealed doctrinal system, which it now sees, has, from the beginning, been the " rock " on which the church of God has been founded, and the " quarry " out of which it has been built. Knowing this, it believes it will then have the key to the process. Knowing this, it believes it will know the w^hole secret ; the secret of that charmed life which has borne the church THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 159 of God through all the mutations and extinctions of sec- ular history, and that unearthly life which in all ?iges has secured to the believer a serene or an ecstatic passage into the unknown and dreadful future. Now this interest in a doctrinal system, which thus lies at the bottom of this general interest in church history, will be shared by the individual student. He, too, can- not stop with the scene, the spectacle, the drama. He, too, cannot stop with those characteristics which ecclesi- astical history has in common with secular, but will pass on to those which are distinctive and peculiar. For him, too, the history of a single mind, like that of Augustine or Anselm ; or of a single doctrine, like that of the Atonement or of the Trinity; will have a charm and fruitfulness not to be found in the entire rise of the worldly Papacy, or in centuries of merely external and earthly movement like the Crusades. The whole influ- ence of his studies in this direction will be spiritual and spiritualizing. But, without enlarging upon the general nature of the estimate which the historic spirit puts upon the internal as compared with the external history of the church, let us notice two particulars which fall under this head. 1. Notice, first, the interest awakened by historical studies in the creeds and symbols of the Christian church as containing' the Philosophy of Christianity. We have spoken of the symbolic literature of the Christian church as a growth out of Scripture soil ; as a fruitage full of the flavor and juices of its germ. A Christian creed is not the product of the individual, or the general, human mind evolving out of itself those truths of natural reason and natural religion which are connate and inborn. It is not the self-development of the human mind, but the development of Scripture matter. The 160 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF Christian mind, as we have seen, is occupied, from age to age, with an endeavor to fathom the depths of Divine revelation; to make the fullest possible expression and ex- pansion of all the truths that have been communicated from God to man. This endeavor necessarily assumes a scientific form. The practical explanation, illustration, and application, is going on continually in the popular repre- sentations of the pulpit and the sermon, but this cannot satisfy all the wants of the church. Simultaneously with this there is a constant effort to obtain a still more scien- tific apprehension of Scripture and make a still more full and self-consistent statement of its contents. The Chris- tian mind, as well as the secular, is scientific ; has a scien- tific feeling, and scientific wants. A creed is as necessary to a theologian, as a philosophical system is to the secu- lar student. It follows, therefore, that the philosophy, by which is meant the rationality, of the Christian religion, is to be found in these creeds and symbols. For reasonableness and self-consistence are qualities not to be carried into Christianity from without, as if they were not to be found in it, but to be brought out from within, because they belong to its intrinsic nature. The philosophy, that is, the rational necessity, of the Christian religion, is not an importation but an evolution. This religion is to be taken just as it is given in the Scriptures ; just as it re- appears in the close and systematic statement of the creeds ; and its intrinsic truth and reasonableness evinced by what it furnishes itself. For whoever shows the in- ward necessity and reasonableness of a Doctrine of Christianity does by the very act and fact show the har- mony of philosophy and religion. Whoever takes a doc- trine of Christianity and without anxiously troubling him- self with the tenets of this or that particular philosophical THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 161 system, derives out of the very elements of the doctrine and the very terms of the statement itself, a reasonableness that irresistibly commends itself to the spontaneous rea- son and instinctive judgment of universal man, by this very process demonstrates the inward, central, unity of faith and reason. Instead, therefore, of setting the two sciences over against each other and endeavoring, by modifications upon one or both sides, to bring about the adjustment, the theologian should take the Christian sys- tem precisely as it is given in Scripture, in all its com- prehension, depth, and strictness, and without being diverted by any side references to particular philosophi- cal schools, simply exhibit the intrinsic truthfulness, ra- tionality, and necessity, of the system. In this way he establishes the position, that philosophy and revelation are harmonious, in a manner that admits of no contra- diction. The greater necessarily includes the less. When the theologian has demonstrated the inward necessity of Christianity, out of its own self-sufficient and indepen- dent rationality, his demonstration is perfect. For rea- son cannot be contrary to reason. A rational -necessity anywhere, is a philosophical necessity everywhere. The correctness of this method of finding and estab- lishing the rationality of Christianity, is beginning to be acknowledged in that country where the conflict between reason and revelation has been hottest. It begins to be seen that the harmony between philosophy and Chris- tianity is not to be brought about, by first assuming that the infallibility is on the side of the human reason ; and that, too, as it appears in a single and particular philo- sophical system ; and then insisting that all the adjust- ment, conformity, and coalescence, shall be on the side of the Divine revelation. It begins to be seen that phi- losophy is in reality an abstract and universal term, 14* 162 THE NATURE, AND .'vFLCt.N'ji, Or which, by its very etymology, denotes, not that it has ^Iready attained and now possesses the truth, but that it is seeking for it.* It begins to be seen that both Aris- totle and Bacon were right in calling it an organon ; an instrument for getting at the truth, and neither the truth itself nor even its containing source.f It begins to be seen that philosophy is only another term for rationality, and that to exhibit the philosophy of a department, like religion, or history, or philosophy, or natural science, is simply to exhibit the real and reasonable truth that is in it. It begins to be seen, consequently, that each branch of knowledge, each subject of investigation, must be treat- ed genetically in order to be treated philosophically ; must be allowed to furnish its own matter, make its own statements, out of which, and not out of what may be carried over into it from some other quarter, its accept- ance or its rejection by the human mind should be de- termined. We are aware that the barrenness of those later systems of speculative philosophy, with which the German mind has been so intensely busied for the last fifty years, has been one great means of bringing it back to this moderate and true estimate of the nature and functions of philoso- phy; but this revived interest in the history of Christianity * The love of wisdom, implies a present seeking for it. t Kant, says William Humboldt, did not so much teach philosophy, as how to philosopliize. Correspondence with Schiller: Vorerinnerung. It is the greatest merit of Schleiermacher that he saw and asserted the independent and self subsistent position of Christian theology in relation to philosophical systems. If he had sought the sources of this theology more in the oljective revelation and less in the suljective Christian conscious- ness, he would have accomplished more than he has towards evincing the harmony of the two sciences, while his own system would have had more agreement than it now has with the general theology of the Christian thurch. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 163 and profounder study of its symbols, has also contribut- ed, greatly, to produce this disposition to let revealed religion stand or fall upon its own merits. For this ' study has disclosed the fact that it has philosophical and scientific merits of its own ; that, in the unsystematized statements and simple but prolific teachings of the Bible, there lies the substance of a system deeper and wider and loftier than the whole department of philosophy, and that this substance has actually been expanded and com bined by the historic mind of the church into a series of doctrines respecting the nature of God and man and the universe with their mutual relations, with which the cor- responding statements upon the same subjects, of the Greek Theism or the German Pantheism cannot com- pare for a moment. Probably nothing has done more to exhibit the Christian system in its true nature and pro- portions, and thereby to render it grand and venerable to the modern scientific mind, than this history of its origin and formation. As the scientific man studies the arti- cles of a creed, which one of the most naturally scientific minds of the race, aided by the wisdom of predecessors and contemporaries, derived from the written revelation ; as the rigorous and dialectic man follows Athanasius down into those depths of the Divine nature, which yawn like a gulf of darkness before the unaided human mind ; if he finds nothing to love and adore, he finds something to respect ; if he finds no food for his affections, he finds some matter for his thoughts. Here, too, is science. Here, too, is the profound intuition expressed in the clear but inadequate conception ; the most thorough unions, guarded against the slightest confusions ; analy- sis and synthesis ; opposite conceptions reconciled in their higher and original unities; in short, all the forms of science, filled up in this instance as in no other, with 164 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF the truth of eternal necessary fact and eternal necessary being. And this same kind of influence, only in much greater degree, is exerted by historical studies upon the mind of the theologian. As he becomes better acquainted with the history of Christian doctrines, he becomes more dis- posed to find his philosophy of human nature and of the Divine nature in them, rather than in human systems. As he studies the development of that great doctrine, the doctrine of sin, he becomes convinced, if he was not be- fore, that the powers, and capacities, and possible des- tiny, of the human soul, have received their most pro- found examination within the sphere of Christian theol- ogy. As he studies the history of that other great doc- trine, the doctrine of the atonement, he sees plainly that the ideas of law and justice and government, of guilt and punishment and expiation ; ideas that are the life and lifeblood of the Aristotelian ethics, the best and purest ethical system which the human reason was able to con- struct ; that these great parent ideas show truest, fullest, largest, and clearest, by far, within the consciousness of the Christian mind. What surer method, therefore, of making his mind grow into the philosophy of Christianity can the theolo- gian employ, than the historic method ? In what better way can he arm himself for the contest with ignorant or with cultivated scepticism, than by getting possession, through the reproductive study of dogmatic history, of the exact contents of Scripture as expanded and system- atized by the consentaneous and connected studies of the Fathers, the Reformers, and the Divines, the Coun- cils, the Synods, and the Assemblies, of the Church uni- versal ? 2. Secondly, notice the interest awakened by histori- THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 165 cal studies in the creeds and symbols of the Christian church as marks of development and progress in theol- ogy- If we have truly enunciated the idea of history, in the first part of this discourse, it follows that all genuine de- velopment is a historical development, and all true pro- gress is a historical progress. For the true history of anything is the account of its development according to its true idea and necessary law. The history of a na- tural object, like a crystal, for example, is the account of its rigorously geometric collection and upbuilding about a nucleus. Crystallization is a necessary process, for it is a petrified geometry. The history of a tree is the ac- count of its spontaneous and inevitable evolution out of a germ. The process itself, in both of these instances, is predetermined and fixed. The account of the process, therefore, if it is exactly conformed to the actual matter of fact, has a fixed and predetermined character also. For, if nature herself goes forward in a straight and unde- viating line, the history of nature must follow on after, and tread in her very and exactest footsteps. Hence, true legitimate history, of any kind, is neither arbitrary nor capricious. It corresponds to real fact, and real fact is the process of real nature. The matter and method of nature, therefore, dictate the matter and method of the history of nature. And the same holds true, when we pass from history in the sphere of nature, to history in the realm of mind and spirit. The matter and method of a spiritual idea dictate the matter and method of the unfolding, and, con- sequently, of the history, of that idea. In the case nov/ under discussion, the real nature and inward structure of Christianity determine what does, and what does not, belong to its true historical development. The true his- 166 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE. OF tory of Christianity, therefore, is the history of true Chris- tianity.* The church historian is, indeed, obliged to take into account the deviations from the true Scriptural idea, because, unlike the naturalist, he is within the sphere of freedom, and of false development, and because redemp- tion itself is a mixed process of dying to sin and living to righteousness. But he notices the deviations not for the purpose, it should be carefully observed, of letting them make up part of the true and normal history of Scriptural Christianity. The church historian is obliged to watch the rise and growth of heresies, not surely be- cause they constitute an integrant part of the legitimate development and true history of Scripture truth. The account of a heresy has only a negative historical value. All the positive and genuine history of Christian doc- trine is to be made up out of that correct apprehension and unfolding which Scripture has received from the Catholic as antithetic to the Heretical mind. Tempo- rary departures from the real nature of Scripture truth, and deductions from it that are illegitimate, may pos- sibly have contributed to a return to a deeper and clearer knov/ledge of revelation on the part of some few minds, and have unquestionably elicited a more full and com- prehensive statement and defence of Christianity on the part of others, and in this way the heresies that appear all along the line of church history, throw light upon the * The reader will notice the value of the qualifying adjective here. The term history is used in two senses ; a general and a special. In the former sense, it denotes all that occurred, right or wrong, normal or abnormal. In the^latter sense, in which alone it is employed above, it denotes only that which oiujht to occur. It is the proper function of the philosophic historian of the Christian religion and church, to reduce the general to the special history, by throwing out of the former all tliat is miscellaneous and hetero- geneous, and retaining only that which accords with the supernatural law and principle that constitutes the basis of sacred, as distinguished from sec- ular, history. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 167 true course of doctrinal development and help to bring out the true history. But these heretical processes them- selves, cannot be regarded as integrant and necessary parts of the great historic process, any more than the dis- eases of the human body can be regarded, equally with the healthy processes of growth, as the normal develop- ment of the organism. Nosology is not a chapter in physiology. It follows, consequently, that the true and proper his- tory of Christianity will exhibit a true and proper theo- logical progress. It will show that the Scripture germ implanted by God, has been slowly but correctly unfold- ing in the doctrine and science of the church. We can- not grant that historical theology is anti-scriptural and radically wrong ; that the Bible has had no true and le- gitimate apprehension in the ages and generations of believers. There has been, notwithstanding all the at- tacks of infidelity from without, and controversies from within, a substantial agreement, and a steady advance, in understanding the written revelation. This is very plainly to be seen in the history of doctrines, and from this we may draw the most forcible proofs and illustrations. Let any one compare the first with the latest Christian creed, and he will see the development which the Scripture mustard-seed has undergone. Let any one place the Apostles' creed beside that of the Westminster Assem- bly, and see what a vast expansion of revealed truth has taken place. The former was all that the mind of the church in that age of infancy was able to eliminate and systematize out of the Scriptures ; and this simple state- ment was sufficient to satisfy the imperfectly developed scientific wants of the early church. The latter creed was what the mind of the church was able to construct out of the elements of the very same written revelation, afte^ 168 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF fifteen hundred years of study and reflection upon them. The "words," the doctrinal elements, of Scripture, are " spirit and life," and hence, like all spirit and all life, are capable of expansion. Upon them ihe historic Christian mind, age after age, has expended its best reflection, and now the result is an enlarged and systematized statement such as the early church could not have made, and did not need. Compare, again, the statement of the doctrine of the Trinity in the Apostles' creed with that in the Nicene creed. The erroneous and defective statements of Arius compelled the orthodox mind to a more profound reflec- tion upon the matter of Scripture, and the result was a creed in which the implication and potentiality of revela- tion was so far explicated and evolved as to present a distinct and unequivocal denial of the doctrine of a created Son of God. But, besides this negative value, this systematic construction of the Scripture doctrine of the Trinity has a great positive worth. It opens before the human mind the great abyss of the Divirfe nature ; and, though it cannot impart to the finite intelligence that absolutely full and perfect knowledge of the God- head which only God himself can have, it yet furnishes a form of apprehension which accords with the real nature of God, and will, therefore, preserve the mind that accepts it from both the Dualistic and the Pantheistic ideas of the Supreme Being. Abstruse and dialectic as that creed has appeared to some minds and some ages in the Christian church; little connection as it has seemed to them to have with so practical a matter as vital religion ; it would not be difl[icult'to show that those councils at Nice and Constantinople, did a work in the years 325 and 381, of which the church universal will feel the salutary efl*ect8 to the end of time, both in practi- THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 169 cal and scientific respects. For, if all right religious feeling towards Jesus Christ is grounded in the ui? assail- able conviction that he is truly and verily God ; " begot- ten, not made, being of one substance with the Father ; " then this creed laid down the systematic basis of all the true worship and acceptable adoration which the church universal have paid to the Redeemer of the world.* And if a correct metaphysical conception of the Divine Being is necessary in order to all right philosophizing upon God and the universe, then this Christian doctrine of the Trinity is the only statement that is adequate to the wants of science, and the only one that can keep the philosophic mind from the Pantheistic and Dualistic deviation to which, when left to itself, it is so liable. The importance of historical studies and the historic spirit in an age of the world that more than any other suffers from false notions regarding the nature of pro- * By this is not meant that there can be no 'true worship until a creed has been systenjatic-ally formed and laid down, but that all true worship is grounded in a practical belief wliicli, when examined, is found to harmon- ize exactly with the speculative results reached by the Christian Scientific mind. So far as the preat body of believers is concerned, their'case is like that of Hilary of Poictiers, who has left one of the best of the patristic treatises upon the Trinity, but who, in his retired bishopric in Gaul, did not hear of the Nicene creed until many years after its origin. He " found in it that very same doctrine of the unity of essence in the Father and the Son, which he had. before this, ascertained to be the true doctrine, from the study of the Now Testament, and had received into his Christian experi- ence, without being aware that the faith which he bore in his heart, had been laid down in the form of a creed." — Torrey's Neander, ii. 396. Consonant with this, Hagenbach, after speaking of the highly scientific charactei* of the Syinl/olttm Quicuniqiie, its endeavor, namely, to express the incffaltle by its series of affirmations and guarding negations, adds, that " tucb formulae nevertheless have their edifying no less than their scientific Bide, inasmuch as they testify to the struggle of the Christian mind after a satisfactory expression of that which has its full truth only in the depths of the believing heart and character." — Dogmengeschichte, third edition, p. 249, note. 15 170 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF gress and development, cannot be exaggerated. But he who is able to see in the creeds and symbols of the Christian church so many steps of real progress ; he who knows that outside of that line of symbolic literature there is nothing but deviation from the real matter of Scripture, will not be likely to be carried away with the notion of a sudden and great improvement upon all that has hitherto been accomplished in the department of theology. He will know that, as all the past develop- ment has been historic ; restatement shooting out of pre statement ; the fuller creed bursting out of the nar- rower ; the expanded treatise swelling forth growth-like from the more slender; so all the present and future development in theology must be historic also. He will see, especially, that elements that have already been examined and rejected by the Christian mind, as unscrip- tural and foreign, can never again be rightfully intro- duced into creeds and symbols ; that history cannot undo history ; that the progress of the present and the future must be homogeneous and kindred with the progress of the past. IH. In the third place, a historic spirit in the theolo- gian protects him from false notions respecting the nature of the visible church, and from a false church feeling. We can devote but a moment to this branch of the discussion, unusually important just at this time. We have seen that the most important part of the his- tory of the church is its inward history. We have found that the external history of Christianity derives all its interest for a thoughtful mind from its connection with that dispensation of truth and of spirit which lies beneath it as its animating soul. The whole influence, conse- quently, of genuine and comprehensive historical etudy THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 171 is to magnify the substance and subordinate the form ; to exalt truth, doctrine, and life, over rites, ceremonies, and polities. It is undoubtedly true, that the study of ecclesiastical hi^ry, in some minds, and in some branches of the church, has strengthened a strong formalizing tendency, and promoted ecclesiasticism. The Papacy has from time immemorial appealed to tradition ; and those por- tions of the Protestant church which have been least suc- cessful in freeing themselves from the materialism of the Papacy, have said much about the past history of "the church. Hence, in some quarters in the Protestant church, there are, and always have been, apprehensions lest history should interfere with the great right of pri- vate judgment, and put a stop to all legitimate progress. But it only needs a comprehensive idea of the nature of history to allay these apprehensions. It only needs to be remembered that the history of Christianity is some- thing more than the history of the Nicene period or of the Scholastic age. It only needs to be recollected that the history of Christianity denotes a course of develop- ment from the beginning of the world down to the present moment ; that it includes the whole of that Divine economy which began with the first promise, and which manifested itself first in the Patriarchal, next in the Jewish, and finally in the Christian, church.* The * Probably the most serious defect in the construction of the history of Christianity by the school of Schleiermacher, springs from regarding the incarnation as the beginning of church history. Even if this is not always formally said, as it sometimes is, the notion itself moulds and forms the whole account. The golden position of Augustine, Novum Testamentum in Vetere latet, Vetits in Novo patet, is forgotten, and the Jewish religion, as it came from God, is confounded with that corruption of it which we find in Ji»e days of our Saviour, but against which the evangelical prophet Isaiah nreighs as earnestly as the evangelical apostle Paul. " He is not a Jew^ 172 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OP influence of the study of this whole great process, espe- cially if the eye is kept fastened upon the spiritual sub- stance of it, is anything but formalizing and sectarian. — If, therefore, a papistic and anti-catholic temper has ever shown itself in connection with the study of eccl^i- astical history, it was because the inward history was neglected, and even the external history was studied in sections only. He who selects a particular period merely, and neglects all that has preceded and all that has fol- lowed, will be liable to a sectarian view of the nature and history of. the church of God. He who reproduces within his mind the views and feelings of a single age merely, will be individual and bigoted in his temper. — He who confines his studies, for example, as so many which is one outwardly, neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh." Judaism is not Phariseeism. There is, therefore, no iinoard and essential difference between true Judaism and true Christianity. The former looked forward and the latter looks backward to the same central Person and the same central Cross. The manifested Jehovah of the Old Testament was the incarnate Word of the New. " The relifjjion," says Edwards, " that the church of God has professed from the first founding of the church after the fall to this time, has always been the same. Though the dispensations have been altered, yet the religion which the church has professed, has always, as to its essentials, been tlie same. The church of God, from the beginning, has been one society. The Christian church which has been since Christ's ascension, is manifestly the same society continued, with the church that was before ("Christ came. The Christian church is grafted on their root; they are built upon the same foundation. — The revelation upon which both have depended, is essentially the same; for, as the Christian church is built on the Holy Scriptures, so was the Jewish church, though now the Scriptures be enlarged by the addition of the New Testament ; but still it is essentially the same revelation with that which was given in the Old Testament, only the subjects of Divine revela- tion are now more clearly recorded in the New Testament than tiiey were in the Old. But the sum and substance of both the Old Testament and the New, is Christ and His redemption. The church of God has always been on the foundation of Divine revelation, and always on those revela- tions that were essentially the same, and which were summarily compre- hended in the Holy Scriptures." — Edwards's Work of Kedempiion, i. 473. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 173 have done, and are doing, to that period from Constan- tine to Hildebrand, which witnessed the rise and forma- tion of the Papacy ; and, especially, he, who in this period studies merely the archaeology and the polity, without the doctrines, the morality, and the life ; he, who confines himself to those tracts of Augustine which emphasize the idea of the church in opposition to ancient radicals and disorganizers, but studiously avoids those other and greater and more elaborate treatises of this earnest spiritualist, which thunder the idea of the truth, in opposition to all heretics and all formalists ; he, ,in short, who goes to the study of ecclesiastical history with a predetermined purpose, and carries into it an antece- dent interpreting idea, derived from his denomination, and not from Scripture, will undoubtedly become more and more Romish and less and less historic. Such a disposition as this, is directly crossed and mor- tified by a comprehensive and philosophic conception of history. Especially will the history of doctrines destroy the belief in the infallibility, or paramount authority, of any particular portion of the church universal. The eye is now turned away from those external and imposing features of the history which have such a natural effect to carnalize the mind, to those simpler truths and interior living principles, which have a natural effect to spiritual- ize it. An interest in the theology of the church is very different from an interest in the polity of the church. It is a fact that as the one rises, the other declines ; and there would be no surer method of destroying the formal- ism that exists in some portions of the church, than to compel their clergy to the continuous and close study of the entire history of Christian doctrines. IV. In the fourth place, a historic spirit in theologians 15* 174 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF promotes a profound and genial agreement on essential pqints, and a genial disagreement on non-essentials. It is plain that the study of church history tends to establish and to magnify the distinction between real orthodoxy and real heterodoxy. History is discriminating and cannot be made to mingle the immiscible. In regard, therefore, to the great main currents of truth and of error, the historic mind is clear in its insight and decided in its opinions. It knows that the Christian religion has been both truly and falsely apprehended by the human mind, and that, consequently, two lines of belief can be traced down the ages and generations ; that in only one of these two, is Scriptural Christianity to be found. But its wide and catholic survey, also enables the his- toric mind to see as the unhistoric mind cannot, that the line of orthodoxy is not a mathematical line. It has some breadth. It is a path, upon which the church can travel, and not merely a direction in which it can look. It is a high and royal road, where Christian men may go abreast ; may pass each other, and carry on the practical business of a Christian life ; and not a mere hair-line down which nought can go but the one-eyed sighting of either speculative or provincial bigotry. Hence historical studies banish both provincialism and bigotry from a theological system, and. imbue it with that practical and catholic spirit which renders it interest- ing and influential through the whole church and world. A system of theology may be true and yet not contain the whole truth. It may have seized upon some funda- mental positions, or cardinal doctrines, with a too violent energy, and have given them an exorbitant expansion, to the neglect of other equally fundamental truths. In this case, historical knowledge is one of the best correctives. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 175 A wider knowledge of the course of theological specula- tion ; a more profound acquaintance with the origin and formation of the leading systems of the church universal; tends to produce that equilibrium of the parts and that comprehensiveness of the whole, which are so apt to be lacking in a provincial creed or system. A similar liberalizing influence is exerted by the study of church history upon the theologian himself. He sees that men on the same side of the line which divides real orthodoxy from real heterodoxy, have differed from each other, and sometimes upon very important, though never upon vital, points. The history of Christian doctrine compels him to acknowledge that there is a theological space, within which it is safe for the theological scientific mind to expatiate and career ; that this is a liberty con- ceded to the theologian by the unsystematized form in which the written revelation has been given to man, and a liberty, too, which, when it is not abused, greatly promotes that clearer and fuller understanding of the Scriptures, which we have seen the historic Christian mind is continually striving after. But this scientific liberality among theologians leads directly to a more profound and genial agreement among them upon all' practical and essential points. The liber- ality of the historic mind is very far removed from that mere indiflerentism which sometimes usurps this name. There is a truth for which the disagreeing, and perhaps (owing to imperfectly sanctified hearts) the bitterly disa- greeing, theologians w^ould both be tied to one stake and be burnt with one fire. There is a vital and necessary doctrine for which, if it were assailed by a third parly, a bitter unevangelic enemy, both of the contending ortho- dox divines would fight under one and the same shield. That truth which history shows has been the life of the 176 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF church and without which it must die ; that historic truth, which is the heritage and the joy of the whole family in heaven and on earth, is dear to both hearts alike. But what tends to make differing theologians agree, profoundly and thoroughly, upon essential points, also tends to make them differ generously and genially upon non-essentials. Those who know that, after all, they are one, in fundamental character, and in fundamental belief; that, after all their disputing, they have but one Lord, one faith and one baptism ; find it more difficult to maintain a bitter tone and to employ an exasperated accent toward each other. The common Christian consciousness wells up from the lower depths of the soul, and, as in those deep inland lakes which are fed from subterranean fountains, the sweet waters neutralize and change those bitter or brackish surface currents that have in them the taint of the shores ; perhaps the washings of civilization. While, therefore, a wide acquaintance with the varie- ties of statement which appear in scientific orthodoxy, does not in the least render the mind indifferent to that essential truth which every man must believe or be lost eternally, it at the same time induces a generous and genial temper among differing theologians. The contro- versies of the Christian church have unquestionably been a benefit to systematic theology, and that mind must have a very meagre idea of the comprehensiveness and pregnancy of Divine revelation, who supposes that the Christian mind could have derived out of it that great system of doctrinal knowledge which is to outlive all the constructions of the philosophic mind, without any sharp controversy, or keen examination among theologians. That structure did not and could not rise like Thebes, at the mellifluous sound of Amphion's lute ; it did not rear THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 177 itself up like the Jewish temple without sound of ham- mer, or axe, or any tool of iron. Slowly, and with diffi- culty, was it upreared, by hard toil, amid opposition from foes without and foes within, and through much earnest mental conflict. And so will it continue to be reared and beautified in the ages that are to come. We cannot alter this course of things so long as the truth is infinite, and the mind is finite and sees through a glass darkly. What is needed, therefore, is a sweet and generous temper in all parties as the work goes on. The theolo- gian needs that great ability : the abilitij to differ genially. It has been the misery and the disgrace of the church, that too many theologians who have held the trulh, and have held it, too, in its best forms, have held it, like the hea- then, in unrighteousness ; have held it in narrowness and bigotry. They have differed in a hard, dry, ungenial way. They have forgotten that the rich man can afford to be liberal ; that the strong man need not be constantly anxious ; that a scientific and rigorous orthodoxy should ever look out of a beaming, and not a sullen, eye. Let us be thankful that some ages in the history of the church furnish examples that cheer and instruct. Look back at that most interesting period, the period of the Reformation, and contemplate the profound agreement upon essentials and the genial disagreement upon non- essentials, that prevailed among the leaders then. Mar- tin Luther and John Calvin were two theologians who differed as greatly in mental structure, and in their spon- taneous mode of contemplating and constructing doc- trines, as is possible for two minds upon the same side of the great controversy between orthodoxy and heresy. No man will say that the differences between Lutheran- ism and Calvinism are minor or unimportant. Probably any one would say that, if those two men were able to 178 THE NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF feel the common Christian fellowship ; to enjoy the com- munion of saints ; and to realize with tenderness their common relationship to the Head of the church ; there is no reason why all men who are properly within the pale of orthodoxy should not do the same. Turn now to the letters of both of these men ; written in the midst of that controversy which was going on be- tween the two portions of the Reformed, and which re- sulted, not, however, through the desire or the influence of these two great men, but through the bitterness of their adherents, in their division into two distinct church- es ; and witness the common genial feeling that pre- vailed. Hear Luther in his letter to Bucer sending his cordial greeting to Calvin, whose books he has read with singular pleasure : cum sing-ulari volvptate. Hear Calvin declaring his willing and glad readiness .to subscribe to the Augsburg Confession, interpreting it upon the sacra- mental question as the Lutherans themselves author- ized him to do.* Above all, turn to that burst, from Cal- vin, of affectionate feeling towards Melanchthon, which gives itself vent in the midst of one of his stern contro- versial tracts, like the music of flutes silencing for a mo- ment the clang of war-cymbals and the blare of the trum- pet : " O Philip Melanchthon, to thee I address myself, to thee who art now living in the presence of God with * Henry's Life of Calvin, II. pp. 96, 99. It is interesting and instructive to witness the lit>eral feeling of the scientific and rigorously orthodox Atha- nasius towards the Semiarians themselves, whose statement of the doc- trine of the Trinity he regarded to be inadequate. See the quotation from Athanasius de Synodis, § 41, in Gicscler, Chap. II. § 83, and the reference to Hilarius de Syiiodis, § 76. Says Augustine: " they who do not periina- ci'iiisly defend their opinion, false and perverse though it be, especinlly when it does not spring from the audacity of their own presumption, while tliey seek the truth with cautious solicitude, and are prepared to correct themselves when they have found it, are by no means to be ranked hmong hereticB.-' — Epistle 43, Newman's Library Version. THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. 179 Jesus Christ, and there awaitest us, till death shall unite us in the enjoyment of Divine peace. A hundred times hast thou said to me, when weary with so much labor and oppressed with so many burdens, thou laidst thy head upon my breast, ' God grant, God grant, that I may now die!'"* The theology of Richard Baxter differs from the theol- ogy of Johji.Owen by some important modifications, and each of these two types of Calvinism will probably per- peti:|^te itself in the church to the end of time ; but the confidence which both of these great men cherished to- wards each other, should go along down with these sys- tems through the ages and generations of time. But what surer method can be employed to produce and perpetuate this catholic and liberal feeling among the various types and schools of orthodox theology, than to impart to all of them the broad views of history ? And what surer method than this can be taken to dimin- ish the number and bring about more unity of opinion in the department of systematic theology ? For it is one great effect of history to coalesce and harmonize. It intro- duces mutual modifications, by showing opponents that their predecessors were nearer together than they them- selves are, by tracing the now widely separated opinions back to that point of departure where they were once very near together ; and, above all, by causing all parties to remember, what all are so liable to forget in the heat of controversy, that all forms of orthodoxy took their first origin in the Scriptures, and that, therefore, all theologi- cal controversy should be carried on with a constant reference to this one infallible standard, which can teach but one infallible system. * Henry's Life of Calvin, I. 839. 180 NATURE, AND INFLUENCE, OF THE HISTORIC SPIRIT. I have thus considered the nature of the historic spirit and its influence both upon the secular and theological mind, in order to indicate my own deep sense of the im- portance of the department in which I have been called to give instruction by the guardians of this Institution. The first instinctive feelings would have shrunk from the weight of the great burden imposed, and the extent of the very great field opened ; though in an institution where the pleasant years of professional study w^ere all spent; though in an ancient institution, made illustrious and influential, through the land and the world, by the labors of the venerated dead and the honored living. But it does not become the individual to yield to his individuality. The stream of Divine Providence, so sig- nally conspicuous in the life of the church, and of its members, is the stream upon which the difl[ident as well as the confident must alike cast themselves. And he who enters upon a new course of labor for the church of God, with just views of the greatness and glory of the kingdom and of the comparative unimportance of any individual member, will be most likely to perform a work that will best harmonize with the development and pro- gress of the great whole. THE RELATION OF LANGUAGE, AND STYLE, TO THOUGHT.* " It is a truth," (says Hartung in beginning his subtle and profound work on the Greek Particles,) " as simple as it is fruitful, that language is no arbitrary, artificial, and gradual invention of the reflective understanding, but a necessary and organic product of human nature, ap- pearing contemporaneously with the activity of thought. Speech is the correlate of thought ; both require and condi- tion each other like body and soul, and are developed at the same time and in the same degree, both in the case of the individual and the nation. Words are the coinage of conceptions freeing themselves from the dark chaos of intimations and feelings, and gaming shape and clear- ness. In so far as a man uses and is master of language, has he also attained clearness of thought ; the developed and spoken language of a people is its expressed intelli- gence." f Consonant with this, William Humboldt re- marks that " speech must be regarded as naturally inhe- rent in man, for it is altogether inexplicable as a work of his inventive understanding. We are none the bet- ter for allowing thousands of years for its invention. * Reprinted from the Bibliotheca Sacra \ Numbers XX. and XXXI. t Partikeln Lehre, Bd. !.§§!, 2. 16 (181) 182 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. There could be no invention of language unless its type already existed in the human mind. Man is man onJy by means of speech ; but in order to invent speech he must be already man." In these extracts it is asserted that language is an or- ganic product of which thought is the organizing and vitalizing principle. Writers upon language have gene- rally acknowledged a connection of some sort between thought and language, but they have not been unanimous with respect to the nature of the connection. The com- mon assertions that language is the "dress" of thought — is the "vehicle" of thought — point to an outward arid mechanical connection between the two : while the fine remark of Wordsworth that " language is not so much the dress of thought as its incarnation," and the frequent comparison of the relation which they bear to each other, with that which exists between the body and the soul, indicate that a vital connection is believed to exist be- tween language and thought. The correctness of this latter doctrine becomes appa- rent when it is considered that everything growing put of human nature, in the process of its development and meeting its felt wants, is of necessity living in its essence, and cannot be regarded as a dead mechanical contrivance. That language has such a natural and spontaneous origin is evident from the fact, that history gives no account of any language which was the direct invention of any one man, or set of men, to supplv the wants of a nation utterly destitute of the ability to ex- press its thought. Individuals have bestowed an alpha- bet, a written code of laws, useful mechanical inventions, upon their countrymen, but no individual ever bestowed a language. This has its origin in human nature, oi rather in that constitutional necessity, under which hu RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 183 man nature in common with all creation is placed by* Him who sees the end from the beginning, which com- pels the invisible to become visible, the formless to take form, the intelligible to corporealize itself. That thought is invisible and spiritual in essence, is granted by all sys- tems of philosophy except the coarsest and most unphi- losophic materialism. It is therefore subject to the uni- versal law, and must become sensuous — must be com- municated. In the case of the primitive language, spoken by the first human pair, we must conceive of it as a g;ift from the Creator, perfectly correspondent, like all their other en- dowments, to the wants of a living' soul. As in this first instance the bodily form reached its height of being and of beauty, not through the ordinary processes of genera- tion, birth, and growth, but as an instantaneous creation ; so too the form of thought, language, passed through no stages of development (as some teach) from the inarticu- late cry of the brute, to the articulate and intelligent tones of cultivated man, but came into full and finished existence simultaneously with the fiat that called the full-formed soul and body into being. It would not have been a perfect creation, had the first man stood mute in mature manhood, and that too in his unfallen state and amidst the beauty and glory of Eden. As the pos- terity of the first man come into existence by a process, and as both soul and body in their case undergo develop- ment before reaching the points of bloom and maturity, langulige also in their case is a slow and gradual forma- tion. It begins with the dawn of reflective conscious- ness, and unfolds itself as this becomes deeper and clear- er. In the infancy of a nation it is exquisitely fitted for the lyrical expression of those thoughts and feefings which rise simple and sincere in the national mind and 184 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. * heart, before philosophical reflection has rendered them complex, or advancing civilization has dried up Iheir freshness. As the period of fancy and feeling passes by and that of reason and reflection comes in, language becomes more rigid and precise in its structure, conforms itself to the expression of profound thought, and history and philosophy take the place of the ballad and the chronicle. Now the point to be observed here is, that this whole process is spontaneous and natural; is a growth and not a manufacture. Thought embodies itself, even as the merely animal life becomes sensuous • and sensible through its own tendency and activity. When investi- gating language, therefore, we are really within the sphere of life and living organization, and to attempt its comprehension by means of mechanical principles would be as absurd as to attempt to apprehend the phenomena of the animal kingdom by the principles that regulate the investigation of inorganic nature*. It is only by the application of dynamical principles, of the doctrine of life, that we can get a true view of language or be en- abled to use it with power. It is assumed then that thought is the life of language ; and this too in no figurative sense of the word, but in its strict scientific signification as denoting the principle that organizes and vivifies the form in which it makes its appearance. It is assumed that thought is as really the living principle of language as the soul is the life of the body, and the assumption verifies itself by the clear- ness which it introduces into the investigation of the sub- ject, and by the light which it flares into its darker and more mysterious parts. That fusion^ for instance, of the thoughts with the words, which renders the discourse of the poet glowing and tremulous with -feeling and life, RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 185 can be explained upon no other supposition than that the immaterial entity born of beauty in the poet's mind actually materializes itself, and thus enlivens the other- wise lifeless syllables. Nothing but a vital connection with the thoughts that breathe, can account for the words that burn. "We are not therefore to look upon language as having intrinsic existence, separate from the thought which it conveys, but as being external thought, expressed thought. Words were not first invented, and then assigned to conceptions as their arbitrary, and intrinsically, mean- ingless signs ; mere indices, having no more inward con- nection with the things indicated, than the algebraic marks, -f- and — , have with the notions of increase and diminution. In the order of nature, language follows rather than precedes thought, and is subject to all its modifications from its first rise in the consciousness of the individual and the nation, up to that of the philoso- pher and the philosophic age in a nation's history. Lan- guage in essence is thought, is thought in an outward form, and consequently cannot exist, or be the object of reflection dissevered from the vital principle which sub- stantiates it. The words of the most thoughtless man do nevertheless contain some meaning, and words have effect upon us only in proportion as they are filled with thought. And this fulness must not be conceived of as flowing into empty moulds already prepared. It is a statement of ^j^of the most profound investigators of physical life, that the living power merely added to the dead organ is not life;* i. e. that no intensity whatever of physical life ♦ Cams' Physiologie, Bd. 1. Vorrede. He denies the correctness of the following formula upon which, he affirms, the mechanical school of physi- ologists proceeds : todtes Organ -f- Kraft = Leben. 16- 186 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. streamed upon and through a dead hand lying upon a dissecting table can produce life in the form of the liv- ing member. The living member cannot come into ex- istence except as growing out of a living body, and the living body cannot come into existence unless life, the immaterial and invisible, harden into the materiality and burst into the visibility of a minute seminal point which teems and swells with the whole future organism ; a point or dot of life from which as a centre, the radiation, the organization, and the circulation may commence. In like manner it is impossible, if it were conceivable, to produce human language by the superinduction of thought upon, or by the assignation of meaning to, a mass of unmeaning sounds already in existence. When a conception comes into the consciousness of one mind, and seeks expression that it may enter the consciousness of another mind, it must be conceived of as uttering it- self in a word which is not taken at hap-hazard, and which might have been any other arbitrary sound, but which is prompted and formed, by the creative thought struggling out of the world of mind, and making use of the vocal organs in order to ent6r the world of sense. We cannot, it is true, verify all this by reference to all the words we are in the habit of using every day, be- cause we are too far off from the period of their origin, and because they are oftentimes combinations of simple sounds that were originally formed by vocal organs dif- fering from our own by marked peculiarities, yet the simplicity and naturalness of the Greek of Homer, or the English of Chaucer, which is no other than the affi- nity of the language with the thought, the sympathy of the sound with the sense, cause us to Jcel what in the present state of philology most certainly cannot be proved in the case of every single word, that primarily, in the RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 187 root and heart, language is self-embodied thought. Yet though it is impossible at present in the case of every single word to verify the assumption upon which we have gone, it is not difficult to do this in the case of that portion of the language in which there is emphasis and intensity of meaning. The verb, by which action and suffering (which in the animal world is but a calmer and more intense activity) are expressed, is a w^rd often and evidently suited to the thought. Those nouns which are names not of things but of acts and energies, are like- wise exceedingly significant of the things signified. The motions of the mouth, the position of the organs, and the tension of the muscles of speech, in the utterance of such words as shock, smite, writhe, slake, quench, are produced by the force and energy and character of the conceptions which these words communicate, just as the prolonged relaxation of the organs and muscles in the pronunciation of soothe, breathe, dream, calm, and the like, results naturally from the nature of the thought of which they are the vocal embodiment. And this leads us to notice that this view of the origin and nature of language acquires additional support from considering that the vocal sound is the product of physi- cal organs which are started into action and directed in their motion by the soul itself.* Even the tones of the animal are suited to the inward feeling by the particular play of muscles and. organs of utterance. The feeling of pleasure could not, so long as nature is herself, twist these muscles and organs into the emission of the sharp scream of physical agony, any more than it could light up the eye with the glare and flash of rage. Now if this is true in the low sphere of animal exist- * See on this fcoint Wallia's English Grammar, and Hearne's Langtofts Chronicle, Vol. 1 Preface. 188 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. ence, it is -still more true in the sphere of intellectual and moral existence. If life is true to itself in the lower, it is true to itself in the higher realm of its manifestation. When full of earnest thought and feeling the mind uses the body at will, and the latter naturally and spontane- ously subserves the former. As thought becomes more and more earnest, and feeling more and more glowing, the body bends and yields with increasing pliancy, down to its minutest fibres and most delicate tissues, to the working of the engaged mind ; the organs of speech be- come jjjjp with the soul, and are swayed and wielded by it. The word is, as it were, put into the mouth, by the vehement and excited spirit. When the mind is quickened, out of doubt, The organs, though defunct and dead before, Break up their drowsy grave and newly move With casied slough and fresh legerity.* As well might it be said that there is no vital and na- tural connection between the feeling and the blush in which it mantles, or the tear in which it finds vent, as that the word — the '•^winged word''^ — has only an arbi- trary and dead relation to the thought. Again, it is generally conceded that there is an inher- ent fitness of gesture, attitude and look, to the thought or feeling conveyed by them ; but do attitude, gesture, and look, sustain a more intimate relation to thought and feeling than language does ; language, at once the most universal as well as most particular in its applica- tion, the most exhaustive and perfect, of all the media of communication between mind and mind, between heart and heart? The truth is, that all the media through which thought becomes sensuous and communi- * Henry IV. Act IV. Sc L RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 189 cable are in greater or less degree, yet in some degree, homogeneous and con-natural with thought itself. In other words they all, in a greater or less degree, possess mani- fest propriety. It is to be borne in mind here, that the question is not whether thought could not have embodied itself in other forms than it has, whether other languages could not have arisen, but whether the existing forms possess ad- aptedness to the thought they convey. Life is not com- pelled to manifest itself in one only form, or in one par- ticular set of forms, in any of the kingdoms, but it is compelled to make the form in which it does appear, vital like itself. The forms, for aught that we know, may be infinite in number, in which the invisible princi- ple may become sensible, but the corpse is no one of them. Thought as the substance of discourse is logical, ne- cessary, and immutable, in its nature, while language as the form is variable. The language of a people is conti- nually undergoing a change, so that those who speak it in its later periods, (it very often happens,) would be unintelligible to those who spoke it in its earlier ages. Chaucer cannot be read by Englishmen of the present day without a glossary.* Again, the languages of dif- ferent nations differ from each other. There is great variety in the changes of the verb to express the passive form. The subject is sometimes included in the verb, sometimes is prefixed, and sometimes is suffixed to it. The Malay language assumes the plural instead of the * Y«'t even in this ease, as Wordsworth truly remarks, " the affecting parts are almost always expressed in laiiyuajre pure, and universally iiiiel- li^ilile even to this diy." — Preface to Lyriail Ballads. The more intense and vital the ihuught, the nearer the form approaches the essence, the more nniversal does it become. 190 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. singular as the basis of number, all nouns primarily de- noting the plural. Some use the dual and some do not ; some give gender and number to adjectives, and others do not ; some have the article and some have not. And yet all these dift'erent languages are equally embodiments of thought, and of the same thought substantially. For the human mind is everywhere, and at all times, subject to the invariable laws of its own constitution, and that logical, immutable, truth which stands over against it as its correlative object, is developed in much the same way among all nations in whom the intellect obtains a devel- opment. The vital principle — logical, immutable, truth in the form of human thought — is here seen embodying itself in manifold forms, with freedom and originality, and with an expressive suitableness in every instance. That a foreign language does not seem expressive to the stranger is no argument against the fundamental hy- pothesis. It is expressive to the native-born, and be- come so to the stranger in proportion as he acquires (not a mere mechanical and book knowledge, but) a vital and vernacular knowledge of it. And this expressive- ness is not the result of custom. Apart from the in- stinctive association of a- certain word with a certain conception, there is an instinctive sense of its intrinsic fitness to communicate the thought intended — of its ex- pressiveness. For why should some words be more ex- pressive than others, if they all equally depend upon the law of association for their significance ? And why is a certain portion of every language more positive, empha- tic, and intense, than the remaining portions ? There is in every language a class of words which are its life and life-blood, a class to which the mind, in its fervor and glow, instinctively betakes itself in order to free itself of its thoughts in the most effective and satisfactory man- RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 191 ner. But this is irreconcilable with the hypothesis that all words are but lifeless signs, acquiring their significa- tion and apparent suitableness from use and custom, and all consequently being upon the same dead level with respect to expressiveness. Still another proof that the connection between lan- guage and thought is organic, is found in the fact that the relation between the two is evidently that of action and reaction. We have seen that language is the produce of thought ; but this is not to be understood as though language were a mere effect^ of which thought is the mere cause. The mere effect cannot react upon the pure cause. It is thrown off and away from its cause (as the cannon ball is from the cannon), so that it stands insulated and in- dependent with respect to its origin. This is not the case with language. Originated by thought, and undergoing modifications as thought is de- veloped, it, in turn, exerts a reflex influence upon its ori- ginating cause. In proportion as language is an exact and sincere expression, does thought itself become exact and sincere. The more appropriate and expressive the language, the more correct will be the thought, and the more expressive and powerful will be the direction which thought takes. But if language were a mechanical invention, no such reaction as this could take place upon the inventor. While connected with thought only by an arbitrary com- pact on the part of those who made use of it, it would be separated from thought by origin and by nature. Not being a living and organic product, it could sustain to thought only the external and lifeless relation of cause and efiect, and consequently would remain one and the 192 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. same amid all the life, motion, and modification, which the immaterial principle might undergo. Of course if such were the relation between the two, it would be impossible to account for all that uncon- scious but real change ever going on in a spoken lan- guage, which we call growth and progress. Language upon such an hypothesis would remain stationary in substance, and at best could be altered only by aggrega- tion from without. New words might be invented and added to the number already in existence, but no change could occur in the spirit of the language, if it may be allowed to speak of spirit in such a connection. Furthermore, if there is no vital relation between lan- guage and thought, it would be absurd to speak of the beneficial influence upon mental development (which is but the development of thought) of the study of philo- logy. If in strict literality the relation of language to thought is that of the invention to the mind of the in- ventor, then the study of this outward, and in itself life- less instrument, would be of no worth in developing an essence so intensely vital, so full of motion, and with such an irrepressible tendency to development, as the human mind. It is however a truth and a fact that the study of a well organized language is one of the very best means of mental education. It brings the mind of the student into communication with the whole mind of a nation, and infuses into his culture its good and bad elements — the whole genius and spirit of the people of whose mind it is the evolution. In no way can the mind of the individual be made to feel the power and influence of the mind of the race, and thereby receive the greatest possible enlargement and liberalizing, so well as by the RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 193 philosophic study of language A rational method of education makes use of this study as an indispensable discipline, and selects for this purpose two languages distinguished for the intimate relation which they sus- tain to the particular forms of thought they respectively express. For the Greek language is so fused and one with Grecian thought, that it is living to this day, and has been the source of life to literature ever since its revival in the fifteenth century ; and the rigid but majes- tic liatin is the exact embodiment of the organizing and imperial ideas of Rome. These languages exhibit the changes of thought in the Greek and Roman mind. They take their form and derive their spirit from the peculiarities of these nations. Hence the strong and original influence which they ex- ert upon the modern mind. If these languages really contained no tincture of the intellect that made them and made use of them, if they communicated none of the spirit of antiquity^ they would indeed be " dead " lan- guages for all purposes of mental enlivening and devel- opment. But it is not so. The Greek and Roman mind with all that passed through it, whether it were thought or feeling, whether it were individual or national, instead of remaining in the sphere of consciousness merely, and thus being kept from the ken of all after ages, projected itself, as it were, into these fine languages, into these noble forms, and not only became a Krrjfia 69 ael for man- kind, but also a possession with whose characteristics the possessor is in sympathy, and from which he derives intellectual nourishment and strength. A further proof that language has a living connection with thought, is found in the fact that feeling and passion suggest language. 17 194 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. Feelingand^jjagsion^are the mQ§t^\dt3^LiifLsdlthe_acti-_ vities of the human soul, flowing as they do from the heart, and that which is prompted by them may safely be aflirmed to have life. That words the most expres- sive and powerful fly from the lips of tlje impassioned thinker is notorious. The man who is naturally of few Words, becomes both fluent and appropriate in the use of language, when his mind glows with his subject and feeling is awakened. But the use of language is the same in kind and cha- racter with its origin. The processes through which language passes from the beginning to the end of its existence are all of the same nature. As in the wide sphere of the universe, preservation is a constant crea- tion, and the things that are, are sustained and perpe- tuated on principles in accordance with the character impressed upon them by the creative fiat, so in all the narrower spheres of the finite, the use and development are coincident and harmonious with the origin and na- ture. We may therefore argue back from the use and development to the origin and nature ; and when we find that in all periods of its history human language is sug- gested, and that too in its most expressive form, by feel- ing and passion, we may infer that these had to-do in its origin, and have left something of themselves in its nature. For how could there be a point and surface of communication between words and feeling, so that the lattep-should start out the former in all the freshness of a ne.w creation, if there were no interior connection be- tween them. For language as it falls from the lips of passion is tremulous with life — ^with the life of the soul — and imparts the life of the soul to all who hear it. K, then, in the actual every-day use of language, we find it to be suggested by passion, and to be undergoing RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 195 changes both in form and signification, without the intervention of a formal compact on the part of men, it is just to infer that no such compact called it into existence. If, upon watching the progress and growth of a language, we find it in continual flux and reflux, and detect every- where in it, change and motion, without any consciously directed effort to this end on the part of those who speak it, it is safe to infer that the same unconscious spontane- ousness characterized it in its beginning. Moreover, if in every-day life we unconsciously, yet really, use language not as a lifeless sign of our thought, but believe that in employing it we are really expressing our mind, and furthermore, if we never in any way agreed to use the tongue which we drank in with our mother's milk, but were born into it and grew up into its use, even as we were born into and grew up under the intellectual and ^ moral constitution imposed upon human nature by its Creator, we may safely conclude that language, too, is a provision on the part of the author of our being, and consequently is organic and alive. Indeed, necessity of speech, like necessity of religion and government and social existence, is laid upon man by his constitution, and as in these latter instances what- ever secondary arrangements may be made by circum- stances, the primary basis and central form is fixed in human nature, so in the case of language, whatever may De the secondary modifications growing out of national differences and peculiarities of vocal organs, the deep ground and source of language is the human constitution itself. Frederick Schlegel, after quoting Schiller's lines : Thy knowledge, thou sharest with superior spirits ; Art, oh man ! thou hast alone, 196 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. calls language " the general, all-embracing art of man." This is truth. For language is embodiment — the em- bodiment not indeed of one particular idea in a material form, but of thought at large, in an immaterial yet sensi- ble form. And the fact that the material used is sound — the most ethereal of media — imparts to this "all embracing art" a spirituality of character that raises it above many of the fine arts, strictly so called. It is an embodiment of the spiritual, yet not in the coarse ele- ments of matter. When the spiritual passes from the intelligible to the sensible world by means of art, there is a coming down from the pure ether and element of incorporeal beauty into the lower sphere of the defined and sensuous. The pure abstract idea necessarily loses something of its purity and abstractedness by becoming embodied. By coming into appearance for the sense it ceases to be in its inefi'able, original, highest state for the reason — for the pure intelligence. Art, therefore, is degradation — a stooping to the limitations and imper^- fections of the material world of sense, and the feeling awakened by the form, however full it may be of tlie idea, is not equal in purity, depth, and elevation, to the direct beholding of the idea itself in spirit and in truth.* We may, therefore, add to the assertion of Schlegel, and say, that language is also the highest art of man. — With the exceptions of poetry and oratory, all the fine arts are hampered in the full, free, expression of the idea by the uncomplying material. Poetry and oratory, in * It is interesting in this connection to notice that the Pui^tan, though penerally charged with a barbarian ignorance of the worth of art, nevertbe- lc88 in practice took the only strictly philosophic view of it. That stripping flaying hatred of form, per sp, which he manifested, grew out of a (practi- cally) intensely philosophic mind which clearly saw the true relation of tho form to the idea — of the sensible to the spiritual. RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 197 common with language, by employing the most ethereal of media, approach as near as is possible for embodiments to the natm-e of that which they embody, but the latter is infinitely superior to the two former, by virtue of its infinitely greater range, and power of exhaustive expres- sion. Poetry and eloquence are confined' to the particu- lar and individual, while language seeks to embody thought in all its relations and transitions, and feeling in all its manifoldness and depth. The sphere in which it moves, and of which it seeks to give an outward manifes- tation is the whole human consciousness, from its rise in the individual, on through all its modifications in the race. It seeks to give expression to an inward experi- ence, that is " co-infinite with human life itself." Viewed in this aspect, human language ceases to be the insignificant and uninteresting phenomenon it is so often represented to be, and appears in all its real mean- ing and mystery. It is an organization^ as wonderful as any in the realm of creation, built up by a necessary ten- dency of human nature seeking to provide for its wants, and constructed too, upon the principles of that universal nature, which Sir Thomas Brown truly affirms to be " the art of God." * Contemplate, for a moment, the Gre^k language as the product of this tendency, and necessity, to express his thought imposed upon man by creation. This wonderful structure could not have been put together by the cunning contrivance, and adopted by the formal consent, of the nation, and it certainly was not preserved and improved in this manner, f Its pliancy and copiousness and precision and vitality and harmony, ♦ Die philosophische Bildung der Sprachen, die vorzuglich noch an den urspriin^lichen sichtbar wird, ist ein wahrhaftes durch den Mcdianismus des menscblichen Geistes gewirktes Wunder. — Schelling's vom Ich. u. s. w. ^ 3. 17* 198 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. whereby it is capable of expressing all forms of thought, from the simplicity of Herodotus to the depth of Plato, are qualities which the unaided and mechanizing under- standing of man could not have produced. They grew spontaneously, and gradually, out of the fundamental characteristics of the Grecian mind, and are the natural and pure expression of Grecian thought. Contemplate, again, our own mother tongue as the product of this same foundation for speech laid in human nature by its constitution. Its native strength and energy and vivid- ness, and its acquired copiousness and harmony, as exhibited in the simple artlessness of Chaucer, and " the stately and regal argument" of Milton, are what might be expected to characterize the Latinized Saxon. A creative power, deeper and more truly artistic than the inventive understanding, produced these languages. It was that plastic power, by which man creates form for the formless, and which, whether it show itself univer- sally in the production of a living language, or particu- larly in the works of the poet or painter, is the crowning power of humanity. In view of the wonderful harmo- nies and symmetrical gradations of these languages, may we not apply the language of Wordsworth : • Point not these mysteries to an art Lodged above the starry pole, Pure modulations flowing from the heart Of Divine love, where wisdom, beauty, truth, With order dwell, in endless youth. * We should not, however, have a complete view of the relation of language to thought, if we failed to notice that in its best estate it is an imperfect expression. — Philosophy ever labors under the difficulty of finding * Power of Sound. RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. 199 terms by which to communicate its subtle and profound discoveries, and there are feelings that are absolutely- unutterable. Especially is this true of religious thought and feeling. There is a limit within this profound domain beyond which human speech cannot go, and the hushed and breathless spirit must remain absorbed in the awful intuition. Here, as throughout the whole world of life, the principle obtains but an imperfect embodiment. There is ever something more perfect and more glorious beyond what appears. The intelligible world cannot be entirely exhausted, and therefore it is the never-failing source of substantial principle and creative life. In the case before us, truth is entirely exhausted by no language whatever. There are depths not yet penetrated by con- sciousness, and who will say that even the consciousness of such a thinker as Plato can have had a complete expression, even through such a wonderful medium as the Greek tongue ? The human mind is connected with the Divine mind, and thereby with the whole abyss of truth ; and hence the impossibility of completely sounding even the human mind, or of giving complete utterance to it ; and hence the possibility and the basis of an unend- ing development for the mind and an unending growth for language. We are aware that the charge of obscurity may be brought against the theory here presented, by an advo- cate of the other theory of the origin and nature of language. We have no disposition to deny the truth of the charge, only adding that the obscurity, so far as it perlains to the theory (in distinction from the presenta- tion of the theory, for which the individual is responsible,) is such as grows out of the very nature and depth and absolute truth of the theory itself. We have gone upon the supposition that human language, as a form, is 200 RELATION OF LANGUAGE TO THOUGHT. neither hollow nor lifeless — that it has a living principle, and that this principle is thought. Now life is and must be mysterious ; and at no point more so than when it begins to organize itself into a body. Furthermore, the spontaneous, and to a great extent, unconscious processes of life, are and must be mysterious. The method of genius — one of the highest forms of life — in the pro- duction of a Hamlet, or Paradise Lost, or the Trans- figuration, has not yet been explained^ and the method of human nature, by which it constructs for itself its wonderful medium of communication — by which it externalizes the whole irmer world of thought and feel- ing — cannot be rendered plain like the working of a well poised and smoothly running machine throwing off its manufactures. Simply asking then of him who would render all things clear by rendering all things shallow, by whom^ when^ V7here^ and how^ the Greek language, for example, was invented, and by what historical compact it came to be the language of the nation, we would turn away to that nobler, more exciting, and more rational theory, which regards language to be " a necessary and organic product of human nature, appearing contemporaneously and parallel with the activity of thought." This theory of the origin of language throws light over all departments of the great subject of philology, finds its gradual and unceasing verification as philological science advances under a spur and impulse derived from this very theory, and ends in that philosophical insight into language, which, after all, is but the clear and full intuition of Its mystery — of its life. Having thus specified the general relation of language to thought, we naturally turn to the uses and applications of the theory itself. Its truth, value, and fruitfulness, are RELATION OF STYLE TO THOUGHT. 201 nowhere more apparent than in the department of Rhe- toric and Criticism. For this department takes special cognizance of the more living and animated forms of speech — of the glow of the poet, and the fire of the orator. It also investigates all those peculiarities of con- struction, and form, in human composition that spring out of individual characteristics. It is, therefore, natural to suppose that a theory of language which recognizes a power in human thought to organize and vivify and modify the forms in which it appears, will afford the best light in w^hich to examine those forms; just as it is natural to suppose that the commonly received theory of physical life, will furnish a better light in which to examine vegetable and animal productions, 1 han a theory like that of Descartes, e. g. which maintains that the forms and functions in the animal kingdom are the result of a mechanical principle. Life itself is the best light in which to contemplate living things. We propose therefore in the remainder of this essay to follow the same general method already pursued, and examine the nature of style, by pointing out its relation' to thought. Style is the particular manner in which thought flows out, in the case of the individual mind, and upon a par- ticular subject. When, therefore, it has, as it always should have, a free and spontaneous origin, it partakes of the peculiarity both of the individual and of the topic upon which he thinks. A genuine style, therefore, is the free and pure expression of the individuality of the thinker and the speciality of the subject of thought. — Uniformity of style is consequently found in the produc- tions of the same general cast of mind, applied to the same general class of subjects, so that there is no dis- tinguishable period in the history of a nation's literature, 202 RELATIOx\ OF STYLE TO THOUGHT. but what exhibits a style of its own. The spirit of the age appears in the general style of its literary composi- tion, and the spirit of the individual — the tone of his mind ^nowhere comes out more clearly than in his manner of handling a subject. The gravej„lofty, and- calm, style of the Elizabethan age is an exact representa- tion of the spirit of its thinking men. The intellectual temperament of the age of Queen Anne flows out in the clear, but diffuse and nerveless, style of the essayists. From this it is easy to see that style, like language, has a spontaneous and natural origin, and a living con- nection with thought. It is not a manner of composing, arbitrarily or even designedly chosen, but rises of its own accord, and in its own way^ in the general process of mental development. The more unconscious its origin, and the more strongly it partakes of the individuality of the mind, the more genuine is style. Only let it be care- fully observed in this connection, that a pure and sincere expression of the individual peculiarity is intended. Af- fectation of originality and studied effort after peculiarity produce mannerism^ in distinction from that manner of pure nature, which alone merits the name of style. If this be true, it is evident that the union of all styles, or of a portion of them, would not constitute a perfect style. On the contrary, the excellence of style consists in its having a bold and determined character of its own — in its bearing the genuine image and superscrip- tion of an individual mind at work upon a particular subject. In a union of many different styles, there would be nothing simple, bold, and individual. The union would be a mixture, rather than a union, in which each ingredient would be neutralized by all, and all by each, leaving a residuum characterless, spiritless, and lifeless. • Style, in proportion as it is genuine and excellent, is RELATION OF STYLE TO THOUGHT. 203 sincere and artless. It is the free and unconscious ema- nation of the individual nature. It alters as the individ- ,ual alters. In early life it is ardent and adorned; in mature life it is calm and grave. In youth it is flushed with fancy and feeling ; in manhood it is sobered by rea- son and reflection. But in both periods it is the genu- ine expression of the man. The gay manner of L' Alle- gro and Comus is as truly natural and spontaneous, as the grave and stately style of Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes. The individuality of a man like Mil- ton passes through great varieties of culture and of mood, and there is'seen a corresponding variety in the ways in which it communicates itself; yet through this variety there runs the unity of nature ; each sort of style is the sincere and pure manner of the same individual taken in a particular stage of his development. No one style, therefore, can be said to be the best of all absolutely, but only relatively. That is the best style relatively to the individual, in which his particular cast of thought best utters itself, and in which the peculiarity of the individual has the fullest and freest play. That may be called a good style generally, in which every word tells — in which the language is full of thought, and alive with thought, and so fresh and vigorous as to seem to have been just created — while at the same time the characteristics of the mind that is pouring out in this particular manner, are all in every part, as the construct- ing and vivifying principle. The truth of tliis view of style is both confirmed and illustiated by considering the unity in variety exhibited by the human mind itself. The mind of man is one and the same in its constitution and necessary laws, so that the human race may be said to be possessed of one uni- versal intelligence. In the language of one of the mosf 204 RELATION OF STYLE TO THOUGHT. . elegant and philosophic of English critics,* " It is no un- pleasing speculation to see how the same reason^ has at all times prevailed : how there is one trutJ^ like one sun, that has enlightened human intelligence through every age, and saved it from the darkness of sophistry and error." Upon this sameness of intelligence rest all abso- lute statements, and all universal appeals. Over against this universal human mind, as its coiTesponding object and counterpart, stands truth, universal in its nature and one and the same in its essence. But besides this unity of the universal, there is the variety of the individual, mind. Truth, consequently, coming into consciousness in the form of thought in an individual mind, undergoes* modifications. It is now contemplated not as universal and abstract, but as con- crete and in its practical relations. It is, moreover, seen, not as an unity, but in its parts, and one side at a time. Philosophical truth in Plato differs from philosophical truth in Aristotle, by a very marked modification. Poet- ical truth is one thing in Homer and another in Virgil. Religious truth assumes a strikingly different form in Paul and Luther, from that which it wears in John and Melanchthon. And yet poetry, philosophy, and religion, have each their universal principles — their one abstract nature. Each, however, appears in the form imposed upon it by the individual mind ; each wears that tinge of the mind through which it has passed, which is de- nominated style. No m^n has yet appeared whose individuality was so comprehensive and universal, and who was such a mas- ter of form, that he exhausted the whole material of ^ poetry, or philosophy, or religion, and exhibited it in a style * Harris. Preface to Hermes. RELATION OF STYLE TO THOUGHT. 205 and form absolutely universal and final. Enough is ever left of truth, even after the most comprehensive presenta- tion, for another individuality to show it in still a new and original form. For there is no limit to the manner of contemplating infinite and universal truth. Provided only there be a pecuharity — a particular type of the hu- man mind — there will be a peculiarity of intuition, and consequently of exhibition. The most comprehensive and universal individual mind was that of Shakspeare, and hence his productions have less of style, of peculiar manner, than all other lite- rary productions. Who can describe the style of Shak- speare ? Who is aware of his style ? The style of Mil- ton is apparent in every line, for he was one of the most svi'generic of men. But the form which truth takes in Shakspeare, is as comprehensive and universal as the drama, as all mankind. This is owing to that Protean power by which, for the purposes of dramatic art, he con- verts himself into other men, takes their consciousness, and thereby temporarily loses his own limited individual- ity. But that Shakspeare was an individual, that a pecu- liar type of humanity formed the basis of his person kl being, and that he had a style of thought of his own, it would be absurd to doubt. And had he attempted other species of composition than the drama, (which by its very nature requires that the individuality of the author be sunk and lost entirely in the various characters,) had he taken, like Milton, a particular theme ^s the " great argument" for his poetic power, doubtless the maw, the individual^ would have come into sight.* * In corroboration of this, it may be remarked that we have far more sense of the ivdividualify of Shal^speare, while perusing his poems and 8onnets,