Birmingham ; incessant Clamor of the Place. — Toy-shop of
Britain ; Serious Character of the Games in which its Toys are chiefly
employed. — Museum. — Liberality of the Scientific English. — Musical Genius
of Birmingham. — Theory. — Controversy with the Yorkers. — Anecdote. — The
English Language spoken very variously by the English ; in most cases spoken
very ill. — English Type of Person. — Attend a Puseyite Chapel. — Puseyism a
feeble Imitation of Popery. — Popish Cathedral. — Popery*the true
Resting-place of the Puseyite. — Sketch of the Rise and Progress of the
Puseyite Principle ; its purposed Object not attained ; Hostility to
Science. —English Funerals.
The sun had set ere I entered Birmingham through a long low
suburb, in which all the houses seem to have been built during the last
twenty years. Particularly tame-looking houses they are; and I had begun to
lower my expectations to the level of a flat, mediocre, three-mile city of
brick, — a sort of manufactory in general, with offices attached, — when the
coach drove up through New-street, and I caught a glimpse of the Town Hall,
a noble building of Anglesea marble, of which Athens in its best days might
not have been ashamed. The whole street is a fine one. I saw the lamps
lighting up under a stately new edifice, — the Grammar School of King Edward
the Sixth, which, like most recent erections of any pretension, either in
England or among ourselves, bears the mediaeval stamp: still further on I
could descry, through the darkening twilight, a Roman-looking building that
rises over the market-place; and so I inferred that the humble brick of
Birmingham, singularly abundant, doubtless, and widely spread, represents
merely the business necessities of the place; and that, when on any occasion
its taste comes to be displayed, it proves to be a not worse taste than that
shown by its neighbors. What first struck my ear as peculiar among the
noises of a large town, — and their amount here is singularly great,— was
what seemed to be somewhat irregular platoon-firing, carried on, volley
after volley, with the most persistent deliberation. The sounds came, I was
told, from the “ proofing-house,” — an iron-lined building, in which the
gunsmith tests his mus-ket-barrels, by giving them a quadruple charge of
powder and ball, and then, after ranging them in a row, firing them from
outside the apartment by means of a train. Birmingham produces on the
average a musket per minute, night and day, throughout the year: it,
besides, furnishes the army with its swords, the navy with, its cutlasses
and pistols, and the busy writers of the day with their steel pens by the
hundredweight and the ton; and thus it labors to deserve its name of the “
Great Toy-shop of Britain,” by fashioning toys in abundance for the two most
serious games of the day, — the game of war and the game of opinion-making.
On the morrow I visited several points of interest connected
with the place and its vicinity. I found at the New Cemetery, on the
north-western side of the town, where a party of Irish laborers were engaged
in cutting deep into the hill-side, a good section, for about forty feet, of
the Lower New Red Sandstone; but its only organisms — carbonized leaves and
stems, by much too obscure for recognition — told no distinct story; and so
incoherent is the enclosing sandstone matrix, that the laborers dug into it
with their mattocks as if it were a bank of clay. I glanced over the
Geological Museum attached to the Birmingham Philosophical Institution, and
found it, though small, beautifully kept and scientifically arranged. It has
its few specimens of New Red Sandstone fossils, chiefly from the upper
sandstone band which overlies the saliferous marls; but their presence in a
middle place here between the numerous fossils of the Carboniferous and
Oolotic systems serves but to show the great poverty in organic remains of
the intermediate system, as developed in England. Though of course wholly a
stranger, I found free admission to both the Dudley and Birmingham Museums,
and experienced, with but few exceptions, a similar liberality in my visits
to all the other local collections of England which fell in my way. We have
still great room for improvement in this respect in Scotland. We are far
behind at least the laymen of England, — its liberal mechanicians and
manufacturers, and its cultivators of science and the arts, — in the
generosity with which they throw open their collections; and resemble rather
that portion of the English clergy who make good livings better by
exhibiting their consecrated places, — not too holy, it would seem, to be
converted into show-boxes, — for paltry twopences and groats. I know not a
museum in Edinburgh or Glasgow, save that of the Highland Society, to which
a stranger can get access at once so readily and so free as that which I
obtained, in the course of my tour, to the Newcastle, Dudley, Birmingham and
British Museums.
Almost all the larger towns of England manifest some one
leading taste or other. Some are peculiarly literary, some decidedly
scientific; and the taste paramount in Birmingham seems to be a taste for
music. In no town in the world are the mechanical arts more noisy: hammer
rings incessantly on anvil; there is an unending clang of metal, an
unceasing clank of engines; flame rushes, water hisses, steam roars, and
from time to time, hoarse and hollow over all, rises the thunder of the
proofing-house. The people live in an atmosphere continually vibrating with
clamor; and it would seem as if their amusements had caught the general
tone, and become noisy, like their avocations. The man who for years has
slept soundly night after night in the neighborhood of a foundery, awakens
disturbed, if by some accident the hammering ceases: the imprisoned linnet
or thrush is excited to emulation by even the screeching of a
knife-grinder’s wheel, or the din of a coppersmith’s shop, and pours out its
soul in music. It seems not very improbable that the two principles on which
these phenomena hinge — principles as diverse as the phenomena themselves —
may have been influential in inducing the peculiar characteristic of
Birmingham; that the noises of the place, grown a part of customary
existence to its people, — inwrought, as it were, into the very staple of
their lives, — exert over them some such unmarked influence as that exerted
on the sleeper by the foundery; and that, when they relax from their labors,
they seek to fill up the void by modulated noises, first caught up, like the
song of the bird beside the cutler’s wheel or coppersmith’s shop, in
unconscious rivalry of the clang of their hammers and engines. Be the truth
of the theory what it may, there can be little doubt regarding the fact on
which it hinges. No town of its size in the empire spends more time and
money in concerts and musical festivals than Birmingham; no small proportion
of its people are amateur performers; almost all are musical critics; and
the organ in its great Hall, the property of the town, is, with scarce the
exception of that of York, the largest in the empire, and the finest, it is
said, without any exception. But on this last point there hangs a keen
controversy.
The Yorkers contend that their organ is both the greater and
the finer organ of the two; whereas the Birminghamers assert, on the
contrary, that theirs, though it may not measure more, plays vastly better.
“It is impossible,” retort the Yorkers, “that it can play even equally well;
nay, were it even as large and as fine an organ, — which it is not, — it
would be inferior by a half and more, unless to an instrument such as ours
you could add a Minster such as ours also.” — “ Ah,” rejoin the
Birminghamers, “fair play! organ to organ: you are coming Yorkshire over us
now: the building is not in the case at issue. You are surely conscious your
instrument, single-handed, is no match for ours, or you would never deem it
necessary to back it in this style by so imposing an auxiliary.” But the
argument of the York controversialists I must give in their own words : —
“It is worse than idle in the Birmingham people,” say the authors of the
“Guide to York Minster,” “to boast of their organ being unrivalled: we will
by and by show how much it falls short of the York organ in actual size. But
even were their instrument afac simile of ours, it would not avail in a
comparison; for it would still lack the building, which, in the case of our
magnificent cathedral, is the better half of the organ, after all. In this,
old Ebor stands unrivalled among all competitors in this kingdom. Even in
the noble cathedrals that are dispersed through the country, no equal can be
found to York Minster in dimensions, general proportions, grandeur of effect
to the eye, and the sublimity and mellowness which it imparts to sound. It
is true, indeed, that such a building requires an instrument of vast power
to fill it with sound; but when it is filled, as with its magnificent
organ it now is, the effect is grand and affecting in the highest degree;
and yet there are in this organ many solo stops of such beautifully vocal,
soft, and varied qualities of tone, as actually to require (as they
fascinatingly claim) the closest attention of the listener. We beg it to be
clearly understood, that we have not the slightest intention of depreciating
the real merits of the Birmingham organ, as it is confessedly a very
complete and splendid instrument; but when we notice such unscrupulous
violations of truth as have been so widely disseminated, we deem it a duty
incumbent upon us to set the public right.” That I might be the better able
to take an intelligent part in so interesting a controversy, — a controversy
in which, considering the importance of the point at issue, it is really no
wonder though people should lose temper, — I attended a musical meeting in
the Town Hall, and heard the great organ. The room — a very large one — was
well filled, and yet the organ was the sole performer; for so musical is the
community, that night after night, though the instrument must have long
since ceased to be a novelty, it continues to draw together large audiences,
who sit listening to it for hours. I have unluckily a dull ear, and, in
order to enjoy music, must be placed in circumstances in which I can draw
largely on the associative faculty ; I must have airs that breathe forth old
recollections, and set me a dreaming; and so, though neither Yorker nor
Bir-minghamer, I may be deemed no competent authority in the organ
controversy. I may, however, at least venture to say, that the Birmingham
instrument makes a considerably louder noise in its own limited sphere than
that of York in the huge Minster; and that I much preferred its fine old
Scotch melodies,— though a country maiden might perhaps bring them out more
feelingly in a green holm at a “great Psalm-tune ” of its rival. When
listening, somewhat awearied, to alternations of scientific music and the
enthusiastic plaudits of the audience, I bethought me of a Birmingham
musical meeting which held rather more than a century ago, and of the
especial plaudit through which its memory has been embalmed in an anecdote.
One of the pieces performed on the occasion was the “II Penseroso” of Milton
set to music; but it went on heavily, till the well-known couplet ending
“Iron tears down Pluto’s cheek ”
at once electrified the meeting. “Iron tears! ” “Iron tears!”
Could there be anything finer or more original? Tears made of
iron were the only kind of iron articles not manufactured in Birmingham.
I visited the Botanic Gardens in the neighborhood, but found
them greatly inferior to those of Edinburgh; and made several short
excursions into the surrounding country, merely to ascertain, as it proved,
that unless one extends one’s walk some ten or twelve miles into the Dudley,
Hagley, Droitwich, or Hales Owen districts, there is not a great deal worth
seeing to be seen. Still, it was something to get the eye familiarized with
the externals of English life, and to throw one’s self in the way of those
chance opportunities of conversation with the common people, which
loiterings by the lanes and road-sides present. My ear was now gradually
becoming acquainted with the several varieties of the English dialect, and
my eye with the peculiarities of the English form and countenance. How comes
it that in Great Britain, and, I suppose, everywhere else, every six or
eight square miles of area, nay, every little town or village, has its own
distinguishing intonations, phrases, modes of pronunciation, in short, its
own style of speaking the general language, almost always sufficiently
characteristic to mark its inhabitants ? There are not two towns or counties
in Scotland that speak Scotch after exactly the same fashion; and I now
found, in the sister country, varieties of English quite as marked,
parcelled out into geographical patches as minute. In workmen’s barracks,
where parties of mechanics, gathered from all parts of the country, spend
the greater part of a twelvemonth together at a time, I have, if I mistake
not, marked these colloquial peculiarities in the forming. There are few men
who have not their set phrases and forms of speech, acquired inadvertently,
in most cases at an early period, when the habit of giving expression to
their ideas is in the forming, — phrases and set forms which they learn to
use a good deal oftener than the necessities of their thinking require; and
I have seen, in the course of a few months, the peculiarities of this kind
of some one or two of the more intelligent and influential mechanics of a
party, caught all unwittingly by almost all its members, and thus converted,
to a considerable extent, into peculiarities of the party itself; and
peculiar tones, inflections, modes of pronunciation, at first, mayhap,
chance-derived, seem at least equally catching. A single stuttering boy has
been known to infect a whole class; and no young person, with the imitative
faculty active within him, ever spent a few months in a locality distant
from his home, without bringing back with him, on his return, a sensible
twang of its prevalent intonations and idioms. Of course, when the language
of a town or district differs greatly from that of the general standard of
the country, or very nearly approximates to it, there must have been some
original cause of the peculiarity, which imparted aim and object to the
imitative faculty. For instance, the Scotch spoken in Aberdeen differs more
from the pure English standard than that of any other town in Scotland;
whereas the Scotch spoken in Inverness, if Scotch it may be called, most
nearly approximates to it; and we may detect a producing cause in both
cases. The common dialect of Inverness, though now acquired by the ear, was
originally, and that at no very remote period, the book-taught English of an
educated Celtic people, to whom Gaelic was the mother tongue; while in
Aberdeen — one of the old seats of learning in the country, and which seems
to have been brought, in comparatively an early age, under the influence of
tne ancient Scotch literature — the language of Barbour* and Dunbar got a
firm lodgment among the educated classes, which, from the remoteness of the
place, the after influence of the English court served but tardily to
affect. Obviously, in some other cases, the local peculiarity, when it
involves a marked departure from the existing standard, has to be traced,
not to literature, but to the want of it. But at least the great secondary
cause of all such peculiarities — the invariable, ever-operative causer in
its own subordinate place — seems to be that faculty of unconscious
imitation universally developed in the species, which the philosophic Hume
deemed so actively operative in the formation of national character, and one
of whose special vocations it is to transfer personal traits and
characteristics from leading, influential individuals, to septs and
communities. Next to the degree of surprise that a stranger feels in England
that the language should be spoken so variously, by the people, is that of
wonder that it should in most cases be spoken so ill. Lord Nugent, in
remarking, in his “ Lands Classical and Sacred,” that “ the English language
is the one which in the present state of the habitable globe—what with
America, India, and Australia — is spoken by the greatest number of people,”
guards his statement by a sly proviso; that is, he adds, if we recognize as
English “ what usually passes for such in most parts of Scotland and the
United States.” Really, his lordship might not have been so particular. If
the rude dialects of Lancashire, Yorkshire and Northumberland, stand muster
as part and parcel of the language written by Swift and Addison, and spoken
by Burke and Bolingbroke, that of Old Machar and Kentucky may be well
suffered to pass.
I had entered a considerable way into England ere I was
struck by the peculiarities of the English face and figure. There is no such
palpable difference between the borderers of Northumberland and those of
Roxburghshire as one sometimes marks in the inhabitants of contiguous
counties in Scotland itself; no such difference, for instance, as obtains
between the Celtic population of Sutherland, located on the southern side of
the Ord Hill, and the Scandinavian population of Caithness, located on its
northern side. But, as the traveller advances on the midland counties, the
English cast of person and countenance becomes very apparent. The harder
frame and thinner face of the northern tribes disappear shortly after one
leaves Newcastle ; and one meets, instead, with ruddy, fleshy,
compactly-built Englishmen, of the true national type. There is a smaller
development of bone; and the race, on the average, seem less tall: but the
shoulders are square and broad, the arms muscular, and the chest full; and
if the lower part of the figure be not always in keeping with the upper, its
inferiority is perhaps rather an effect of the high state of civilization at
which the country has arrived, and the consequent general pursuit of
mechanical arts that have a tendency to develop the arms and chest, and to
leave the legs and thighs undeveloped, than an original peculiarity of the
English as a race. The English type of face and person seems peculiarly well
adapted to the female countenance and figure; and the proportion of pretty
women to the population — women with clear, fair complexions, well-turned
arms, soft features, and fine busts — seems very great. Even the not very
feminine employment of the naileresses of Hales Owen, though hereditary in
their families for generations, has failed to render their features coarse
or their forms masculine. To my eye, however, my countrymen — and I have now
seen them in almost every district of Scotland— present an appearance of
rugged strength, which the English, though they take their place among the
more robust European nations, do not exhibit; and I find the
carefully-constructed tables of Professor Forbes, based on a large amount of
actual experiment, corroborative of the impression. As tested by the
dynamometer, the average strength of the full-grown Scot exceeds that of the
full-grown Englishman by about one-twentieth,— to be sure, no very great
difference, but quite enough, in a prolonged contest, hand to hand, and man
to man, with equal skill and courage on both sides, decidedly to turn the
scale. The result of the conflict at Bannockburn, where, according to
Barbour, steel rung upon armor in hot, close fight for hours, and at
Otterbum, where, according to Froissart, the English fought with the most
obstinate bravery, may have a good deal hinged on this purely physical
difference.
I attended public worship on the Sabbath, in a handsome
chapel in connection with the Establishment, which rises in an outer suburb
of the town. There were many conversions taking place at the time from
Puseyism to Popery: almost every newspaper had its new list; and as I had
learned that the clergyman of the chapel was a high Puseyite, I went to
acquaint myself, at first hand, with the sort of transition faith that was
precipitating so much of the altered Episcopacy of England upon Rome. The
clergyman was, I was told, a charitable, benevolent man, who gave the poor
proportionally much out of his little, — for his living was a small one, —
and who was exceedingly diligent in the duties of his office; but his
congregation, it was added, had sadly fallen away. The high Protestant part
of it had gone off when he first became decidedly a Puseyite; and latterly,
not a few of his warmer friends had left him for the Popish cathedral on the
other side of the town. The hive ecclesiastical had cast off its two swarms,
— its best Protestants and its best Puseyites. I saw the clergyman go
through the service of the day, and deemed his various Puseyistic
emendations rather poor things in a pictorial point of view. They reminded
me — for the surrounding atmosphere was by much too clear — of the
candle-light decorations of a theatre, when submitted to the blaze of day,
in all the palpable rawness of size and serge, ill-jointed carpentry, and
ill-ground ochre. They seemed sadly mistimed, too, in coming into being in
an age such as the present; and reminded one of maggots developed into flies
by artificial heat amid the chills of winter. The altar stood in the east
end of the building ; there was a golden crucifix inwrought in the cloth
which covered it; and directly over, a painting of one of our Saviour’s
miracles, and a stained window. But the ensemble was by no means striking;
it was merely fine enough to make one miss something finer. The clergyman
prayed with his back to the people; but there was nothing grand in the
exhibition of a back where a face should be. He preached in a surplice, too;
but a surplice is a poor enough thing in itself, and in no degree improves a
monotonous discourse. And the appearance of the congregation was as little
imposing as that of the service : the great bulk of the people seemed
drowsily inattentive. The place, like a bed of residuary cabbage-plants
twice divested of its more promising embryos, had been twice thinned of its
earnestness, — first of its Protestant earnestness, which had flowed over to
the meeting-house and elsewhere, — next of its Puseyite earnestness, which
had dribbled out into the cathedral; and there had been little else left to
it than a community of what I shall venture to term otf-Christians, — people
whose attachments united them, not to the clergyman or his doctrines, but
simply, like those of the domestic cat, to the walls of the building. The
chapel contained the desk from which their banns had been proclaimed, and
the font in which their children had been baptized : and the corner in which
they had sat for so many years was the only corner anywhere in England in
which they could fairly deem themselves “at church.” And so there were they
to be found, Sabbath after Sabbath, regardless of the new face of doctrine
that flared upon them from the pulpit. The sermon, though by no means
striking as a piece of composition or argument, was fraught with its
important lesson. It inscribed the “ Do this and live ” of the abrogated
covenant, so congenial to the proud confidence of the unsubdued human heart,
on a substratum of that lurking fear of unforgiving trespass, not less
natural to man, which suggests the mediation of the merely human priest, the
merit of penance, and the necessity of the confessional. It represented man
as free to will and work out his own salvation; but exhibited him also as a
very slave, because he had failed to will and to work it. It spoke of a
glorious privilege, in which all present had shared, — the privilege of
being converted through baptism; but left every one in doubt whether,
in his individual case, the benefit had not been greatly more than
neutralized by transgression since committed, and whether he were not now in
an immensely more perilous state of reprobation than if he had never
been converted. Such always is the vaulting liberty of a false theology,
when held in sincerity. Its liberty invariably “overleaps itself, and falls
on the other side.” It is a liberty which, “gendereth to bondage.”
I next visited the Popish cathedral, and there I found in
perfection all that Puseyism so palpably wanted. What perhaps first struck
was the air of real belief — of credulity all awake and earnest — which
characterized the congregation. The mind, as certainly as the body, seemed
engaged in the kneel-ings, the bowings, the responses, the crossings of the
person, and the dippings of the finger-tip in the holy water. It was the
harvest season, and the passages of the building were crowded with Irish
reapers, — a ragged and many-patched assemblage. Of the corresponding class
in England and Scotland, Protestantism has no hold, — they have broken loose
from her control ; but Popery in Ireland has been greatly more fortunate :
she is peculiarly strong in the ignorant and the reckless, and formidable in
their possession. In the services of the cathedral everything seemed in
keeping. The altar, removed from the congregation by an architectural
screen, and enveloped in a dim obscurity, gave evidence, in its picturesque
solemnity, — its twinkling lights and its circling incense, — that the
church to which it belonged had fully mastered the principles of effect. The
musically modulated prayer, sounding in the distance from within the screen,
— the imposing procession, — the mysterious genuflections and frequent
kneelings, — the sudden music, rising into paroxysms of melody in the crises
of the passing ceremony, — the waving of the smoking censer, — the tolling
of the great bell at the elevation of the host, — all spoke of the
accumulative art of more than a thousand years. The trick of scenic devotion
had been well caught, — the theatric religion that man makes for himself had
been skilfully made. The rites of Puseyism seem but poor shadows in
comparison, —mere rudimentary efforts in the way of design, that but serve
to beget a taste for the higher style of art. I did not wonder that such of
the Puseyites of the chapel as were genuine admirers of the picturesque in
religion should have found their way to the cathedral.
In doctrine, however, as certainly as in form and ceremony,
the Romish church constitutes the proper resting-place of the Puseyite. The
ancient Christianity, as it exists in the Anglican Church, is a mere
inclined slide, to let him down into it. It furnishes him with no doctrinal
resting-place of its own. In every form of Christianity in which men are
earnest there must exist an infallibility somewhere. By the Episcopalian
Protestant, as by the Presbyterian, that infallibility is recognized as
resting in the Scriptures; and by the consistent Papist that infallibility
is recognized as resting in the Church. But where does the infallibility of
the Puseyite rest? Not in the Scriptures; for, repudiating the right of
private judgment, he is necessarily ignorant of what the Scriptures truly
teach. Not in tradition; for he has no trustworthy guide to show him where
tradition is right, or where wrong. Not in his Church; for his Church has no
voice; or, what amounts to exactly the same thing, her voice is a
conflicting gabble of antagonist sounds. Now one bishop speaks after one
fashion, — now another bishop speaks after another, — and anon the queen
speaks, through the ecclesiastical courts, in tones differing from them all.
Hence the emphatic complaint of Mr. Ward, in the published letter in which
he assigns his reasons for entering the communion of Rome: — “He can find,”
he says, “no teaching” in the English Church; and repudiating, as he does,
the right of private judgment, there is logic in his objection. “If we
reverence,” he argues, “ the fact of the apostolicity of creeds on the
authority of the English Church, so far as we do not believe the English
Church to be infallibly directed, exactly so far we do not believe the
creeds to be infallibly true.” Consistent Puseyism can find its desiderated
infallibility in Rome only.
The rise and progress of this corruption in the Church of
England promises to form a curious episode in the ecclesiastical history of
the age. It is now rather more than ten years since Whigism, yielding to the
pressure of rei’nvigorated Popery, suppressed the ten Irish bishoprics, and
a body of politic churchmen met to deliberate how best, in the future, such
deadly aggressions on their Church might be warded off. They saw her
unwieldy bulk lying in a state of syncope before the spoiler; and concluded
that the only way to save was to rouse and animate her, by breathing into
her some spirit of life. Unless they succeeded in stirring her up to defend
herself, they found defence would be impracticable: it was essential to the
protection of her goods and chattels that she should become a living soul,
too formidable to be despoiled; and, in taking up their line of policy, they
seem to have set themselves as coolly to determine respecting the nature and
kind of spirit which they should breathe into her, as if they were a
conclave of chemists deliberating regarding the sort of gas with which a
balloon was to be inflated. They saw two elements of strength in the
contemporary Churches, and but two only, — the Puritanic and the Popish
element; and making their choice between them, they selected the Popish one
as that with which the Church of England should be animated. On some such
principle, it would seem, as that through which the human body is enabled to
resist, by means of the portion of the atmospheric air within, the enormous
pressure of the atmospheric air without, strength was sought in an internal
Popery, from the pressure of the aggressive Popery outside. An extensive and
multifarious machinery was set in motion, in consequence of the
determination, with the scarce concealed design, of “un-protestantizing the
English Church.” Ceremonies less imposing than idle were introduced into her
services; altars displaced at the Reformation were again removed to their
prescribed site in the east; candles were lighted at noon-day; crucifixes
erected; the clergyman, after praying with his back to the people, ascended
the pulpit in his surplice to expatiate on the advantages of the
confessional, and the real presence in the sacrament; enticing pictures were
held up to the suffering poor, of the comforts and enjoyments of their class
in the middle ages; and the pew-battle was fought for them, that they might
be brought under the influence of the revived doctrines. To the aristocracy
hopes were extended of a return to the old state of implicit obedience on
the part of the people, and of absolute authority on the part of the
people’s lords : the whole artillery of the press was set in requisition, —
from the novelette and poem for the young lady, and the tale for the child,
to the high-priced review for the curious theologian, and the elaborate
“Tract for the Times.” Nay, the first journal in the world was for a season
engaged in advocating the designs of the party. And the exertions thus made
were by no means fruitless. The unprotestantizing leaven introduced into the
mass of the English Establishment began to ferment, and many of the clergy,
and not a few of the laity, were infected.
But there was a danger in thus animating with the Popish
spirit the framework of the English Church, on which the originators of the
scheme could not have fully calculated. It has been long held in Scotland as
one of the popular superstitions of the country, that it is a matter of
extreme danger to simulate death, or personate the dead. There is a story
told in the far north of a young fellow, who, going out one night, wrapped
in a winding-sheet, to frighten his neighbors, was met, when passing through
the parish churchyard, by a real ghost, that insisted, as their vocation was
the same, on their walking together; and so terrible, says the story, was
the shock which the young fellow received, that in a very few days he had
become a real ghost too. There is another somewhat similar story told of a
lad who had, at a lyke wake, taken the place of the corpse, with the
intention of rising in the middle of the night to terrify the watchers, and
was found, when a brother wag gave the agreed signal, deaf to time; for in
the interval he had become as true a corpse as the one whose stretching
board he had usurped. Now, the original Puseyites, in dressing out their
clerical brethren in the cerements of Popery, and setting them a-walking,
could hardly have foreseen that many of them were to become the actual
ghosts which they had decked them to simulate. They did not know that the
old Scotch superstition, in at least its relation to them, was not an idle
fancy, but a sober fact; and that these personators of the dead were
themselves in imminent danger of death. Some suspicion of the kind, however,
does seem to have crossed them. Much that is peculiar in the ethics of the
party appears to have been framed with an eye to the uneasinesses of
consciences not quite seared, when bound down by the requirements of their
position to profess beliefs of one kind, and by the policy of their party to
promulgate beliefs of another, — to be ostensibly Protestant, and yet to be
instant in season and out of season in subverting Protestantism; in short,
in the language of Mr. Ward, “ to be Anglican clergymen, and yet hold Roman
Catholic doctrine.” But the moral sense in earnest Puseyism is proving
itself a too tender and sensitive thing to bear with the morality which
politic Puseyism, ere it gathered heat and life, had prepared for its use.
It finds that the English Church is not the Church of Rome, — that the
Convocation is not the Vatican, nor Victoria the Pope, — that it is not
honest to subvert Protestantism under cloak of the Protestant name, nor to
muster in its ranks, and eat its bread, when in the service of the enemy.
And so Puseyism, in its more vital scions, is fast ceasing to be Puseyism.
The newspapers still bear their lists of conversions to Rome; and thus the
means so invidiously resorted to of strengthening the English Establishment
against Popery is fast developing itself into a means of strengthening
Popery at the expense of the English Establishment.
The influence on science of this mediaeval Christianity, so
strangely revived, forms by no means the least curious part of its history.
It would appear as if the doctrine of authority, as taught by Puseyism and
Popery, — the doctrine of a human infallibility in religious matters,
whether vested in Popes, Councils, or Churches, — cannot coexist in its
integrity, as a real belief, with the inductive philosophy. It seems an
antagonist force; for, wherever the doctrine predominates, the philosophy is
sure to decline. The true theologic counterpart to the inductive scheme of
Bacon is that Protestant right of private judgment, which, dealing by the
word of God as the inductive philosophy deals by the works of God, involves
as its principle what may be termed the inductive philosophy of theology.
There is certainly nothing more striking in the history of the resuscitation
of the mediaeval faith within the English Church, than its marked hostility
to scientific truth, as exhibited in the great educational institutions of
England. Every product of a sound philosophy seems disappearing under its
influence, like the fruits and flowers of the earth when the chilling frosts
of winter set in. But it is impossible to state the fact more strongly than
it has been already stated by Mr. Lyell, in his lately published “Travels in
America.” “After the year 1839,” he says, “we may consider three-fourths of
the sciences still nominally taught at Oxford to have been virtually exiled
from the university. The class-rooms of the professors were some of them
entirely, others nearly deserted.
Chemistry and botany attracted, between the years 1840 and
1844, from three to seven students; geometry, astronomy, and experimental
philosophy, scarcely more; mineralogy and geology, still taught by the same
professor who, fifteen years before, had attracted crowded audiences, from
ten to twelve; political economy, still fewer; even ancient history and
poetry scarcely commanded an audience; and, strange to say, in a country
with whose destinies those of India are so closely bound up, the first of
Asiatic scholars gave lectures to one or two pupils, and these might have
been absent, had not the cherished hope of a Boden scholarship for Sanscrit
induced them to attend.” I may state, in addition, on the best authority,
that the geological professor here referred to, — Dr. Buck-land, — not only
one of the most eminent masters of his science, but also one of the most
popular of its exponents, — lectured, during his last course, to a class of
three. Well may it be asked whether the prophecy of Pope is not at length on
the eve of fulfilment: —
"She comes! she comes! the sable throne behold,
Of Night primeval and of Chaos old,
As, one by one, at dread Medea’s strain,
The sickening stars fade off the ethereal plain, —
As Argus’ eyes, by Hermes’ wand oppressed,
Close one by one in everlasting rest.
Thus, at her felt approach and secret might,
Art after art goes out, and all is night.”
The anti-scientific influences of the principle have,
however, not been restricted to the cloisters of the university. They have
been creeping of late over the surface of English society, as that
sulphurous fog into which the arch-fiend in Milton transformed himself when
he sought to dash creation into chaos crept of old over the surface of Eden.
The singularly extended front of opposition presented last autumn by the
newspaper press of England to the British Association, when holding its
sittings at Southampton, and the sort of running fire kept up for weeks
after on its more distinguished members, — men such as Sir Roderick
Murchison, Dr. Buckland, and Mr. Lyell, — seem to have been an indirect
consequence of a growing influence in the country on the part of the revived
superstition. One of the earliest assaults made on the Association, as
hostile in its nature and tendencies to religion, appeared several years ago
in the leading organ of Tractarianism, the “British Critic;” but the
“Critic” in those days stood much alone. Now, however, though no longer in
the field, it has got not a few successors in the work, and its party many
an active ally. The mediaeval miasma, originated in the bogs and fens of
Oxford, has been blown aslant over the face of the country; and not only
religious, but scientific truth, is to experience, it would seem, the
influence of its poisonous blights and rotting mildews.
It is not difficult to conceive how the revived superstition
of the middle ages should bear no good will to science or its institutions.
Their influences are naturally antagonistic. The inductive scheme of
interrogating nature, that takes nothing for granted, and the deferential,
submissive scheme, that, in ecclesiastical matters, yields wholly to
authority, and is content though nothing should be proved, cannot well
coexist in one and the same mind. “I believe because it is impossible,” says
the devout Medievalist; “I believe because it is demonstrable,” says the
solid Baconian. And it is scarce in the nature of things that one and the
same individual should be a Baconian in one portion of his mind and a
Medievalist in another, — that in whatever relates to the spiritual and
ecclesiastical, he should take all on trust, and in whatever relates to the
visible and material, believe nothing without evidence.
The Baconian state of mind is decidedly anti-mediseval; and
hence the avowed Puseyite design of unprotestantizing the English Church
finds a scarce more determined enemy in the truth elicited by the
enlightened and well-directed study of the word of God, than in the habit of
mind induced by the enlightened and well-directed study of the works of God.
Nor is it in any degree matter of wonder that modern Tractarianism should on
this principle be an especial enemy of the British Association, — an
institution rendered peculiarly provoking by its peripatetic propensities.
It takes up the empire piecemeal, by districts and squares, and works its
special efforts on the national mind much in the way that an agriculturist
of the modern school, by making his sheepfold-walk bit by bit over the area
of an entire moor, imparts such fertility to the soil, that the dry
unproductive heaths and mosses wear out and disappear, and the succulent
grasses spring up instead. A similar association located in London or
Edinburgh would be, to borrow from Dr. Chalmers, a scientific institute on
merely the attractive scheme : men in whom the love of science had been
already excited would seek it out, and derive profit and pleasure in that
communion of congenial thought and feeling which it created; but it could
not be regarded as a great intellectual machine for the production of men of
science, and the general formation of habits of scientific inquiry. But the
peripatetic character of the Association constitutes it a scientific
institute on the aggressive system. It sets itself down every year in a new
locality; excites attention; awakens curiosity; furnishes the provincial
student with an opportunity of comparing the fruits of his researches with
those of labors previously directed by resembling minds to similar walks of
exploration; enables him to test the value of his discoveries, and ascertain
their exact degrees of originality; above all, brings hundreds around him to
experience an interest they never felt before, in questions of science;
imparts facts to them never to be forgotten, and habits of observation not
to be relinquished; in short, communicates to all its members a disposition
of mind exactly the reverse of that indolent and passive quiescence of mood
which Puseyism so strongly inculcates by homily and novelette, on at least
its lay adherents,. Truly, it is by no means strange that the revived
principle, and those organs of the public press which it influences, should
be determined enemies of the British Association. It is, however, but just
to add, that Tractarianism and its myrmidons have not been the only
assailants. Tractarianism first raised the fog, but not a few good simple
people of the opposite party have since got bewildered in it; and, through
the confusion incident on losing their way, they have fallen in the quarrel
into the ranks of their antagonists, and have been doing battle in their
behalf.* On quitting the Puseyite chapel, I met a funeral, the first I had
seen in England. It was apparently that of a person in the middle walks, and
I was a good deal struck with its dissimilarity, in various points, to our
Scotch funerals of the same class. The coffin of planed elm, finished off
with all the care usually bestowed on pieces of household furniture made of
the commoner forest hardwood, was left uncolored, save on the edges, which,
like those of a mourning card, were belted with black. There was no pall
covering it; and, instead of being borne on staves, or on the shoulders, it
was carried, basketlike, by the handles. An official, bearing a gilded
baton, marched in front; some six or eight gentlemen in black paced slowly
beside the bearers; a gentleman and lady, in deep mourning, walked
arm-in-arm at the coffin-head; and a boy and girl, also arm-in-arm, and in
mourning, came up behind them. Such was the English funeral, — one of those
things which, from their familiarity, are not described by the people of the
country to which they belong, and which prove unfamiliar, in consequence, to
the people of other countries. On the following Monday I took an outside
seat on a stage-coach, for Stratford-on-Avon. |