Glass J2S^_3£s; Book T^ ' Copwight}!^.. ]Oiy COPYRIGHT DEPOSm 0(AACC ^i/L 0(yiA/UXj THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR BEING SELECTIONS IN PROSE AND VERSE FROM THE WRITINGS OF FREDERIC ROWLAND MARVIN GATHERED AND ARRANGED WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY LIVINGSTON STEBBINS Nous avons donne a penser. Wine is like scholarship: it ripens with age; and it is best from a fresh-opened jar. The top of the wine-jar, the bottom of the teapot, as the saying has it. — Chinese. BOSTON SHERMAN, FRENCH <|f COMPANY 1917 <6 t«H2l9l7 COPYHIGHT, 1917 Sherman, French &• Company ©CI,A478125 5r- TO MY WIFE EDNA STEBBINS A RARE JEWEL IN AN IMPERFECT SETTING INTRODUCTION America is truly enough said to be a land without culture, which is, I suppose, another way of saying that it is a country without tradition, inhabited by a people without leisure. What leisure some of us do have is for the most part unprofitably employed, being too little or recently removed, apparently, from the stress and strain of the business or occu- pation from which it has been wrested to per- mit of the contemplative cultivation of the arts and graces of life. We shall have to look to the children and grandchildren of the present gen- eration for the imaginative perception and the sesthetic taste which will find in architecture, statuary, pictures and literature some of the amenities and satisfactions of life, — unless, perchance, in the turbulence and unrestraint of this swiftly moving time these immediate descendants become the " degenerate sons of worthy sires," and the development of a real American culture be postponed for a few gen- erations, — when tradition, too, may come to INTRODUCTION play its part; until then, sculptors, architects, painters and men of letters other than novelists must needs remain with little honor in their own country as prophets of the nobler things yet to be. Perhaps it is not a matter of surprise, al- though it is of regret, that " the sense of cul- ture " should as yet have gained so slight a hold upon the life and thought of our Amer- ican people. The lack of it is presumably one of the unfortunate conditions that seem innate in the " fretful fever of freedom " that surges through the restless, shifting, unsettled and untraditional spirit of our day. In such a spirit the contemplative mood, which is so at variance with our hurried, over-wrought living, cannot survive; yet no culture or philosophy of life worthy of the name can be attained with- out from time to time an introspective atti- tude of mind and heart. Our political think- ing is done for most of us by newspaper editors, our religious thinking by sensational preach- ers ; our ethical and cultural thinking could be stimulated by our essay writers if we would give them a fair chance. We are, however, what might be called a one-handed country. There can, for instance, be counted on the fingers of one hand the American periodicals that give competent, scholarly book reviews. INTRODUCTION The religious papers of real consequence or spiritual influence are only five or six in num- ber, and all are struggling to keep alive un- less subsidized. Of the quarterlies other than specialized publications there are no more than four or five, supported in most instances by public-spirited philanthropy. The best Amer- ican quarterly, which is, in my judgment, also the best quarterly in the world, is a hobby of, not a profit for, its pubhsher. It is brilliantly edited, its contributions are keen, original, sparkhng, profound, by some of the ablest thinkers of our time. It is issued by one of the three or four publishing houses of highest standing in this country, and yet the American public of a hundred million people does not buy enough copies of it to make it self-support- ing. I am inclined to say that the culture of a nation can be determined by the character and the circulation of its quarterlies, for they may well be considered the index to and the embodiment of the character, scholarship, judg- ment and taste of the communities which they endeavor to serve. Their lack of circulation in this country is not because their place has been usurped by monthly magazines, for so far as I know, there are only two monthlies issued in the United States that are at all comparable with the four or five quarterlies to which I have INTRODUCTION referred. One of these has become self-sup- porting in recent years only by catering to a more popular and less cultured taste than of old; the other is still non-supporting, although it was changed from a quarterly to a monthly with the hope of enabling it to pay its way. Someone may assert that quarterlies do not appeal to the " character and genius of the American people," and the assertion would be more truthful than complimentary ! As for books, it is only within a week that one of the best known booksellers in the country re- marked that the buying and reading of books was ceasing to be a habit or practice on the part of the American public, and that there were not more than between two hundred and three hundred book shops worthy to be called such throughout the entire United States. It is to be hoped our university presses, several of which have been established during the past decade, may be able to do something to encour- age and stimulate the production of books by writers whose work along cultural lines is of the greatest value. The unconventional, untamed, iconoclastic spirit of these early years of the twentieth cen- tury has even affected our verse forms. Our " up-to-date " poets no longer have time or in- clination to trouble themselves with such incon- INTRODUCTION sequential matters as meter and rhyme. The resulting verse is formless, but sounds more shapely when characterized in French as vers libre; its substance, nevertheless, remains as formless as its external guise. Cubist art is an excuse for want of training and lack of skill, which cubist poets, painters and sculptors have neither the time nor the desire to cultivate. Vers libre is cubist poetry. The acquisition of culture is largely a mat- ter of continuous personal training (although much aid comes of natural refinement and good breeding), and this training depends upon ma- turity, inclination, and a reasonable amount of leisure. Its fruition is in the fine art of living, which does not exist in its fulness where the contemplative spirit is absent. We often hear the uncontemplative express regret at not hav- ing had a college education, making that the excuse for personal shortcomings due to the absence of any real effort to remedy them. But culture is not to be gained in the imma- ture years of college life, although the founda- tion for it may then be laid by the acquirement of a genuine taste for knowledge and by study of the humanities. It is not, however, through companionship with twenty year old classmates in college, nor in the taking of eighteen or twenty courses out of several hundred in the INTRODUCTION curriculum, nor by occasional or slight contact with the professors or teachers of our collegiate years that the real spirit of culture can be broadened into a mode of living and an atti- tude toward life; that comes only after years of maturity, with the reflection and independ- ent thinking which is the product of a fuller and richer mental life, stimulated by associa- tion with, or the reading of the writings of, those who have themselves, through study, thought, travel, and personal character, won the privilege and right to influence for good the life of their time and of the future as far as they may. Among the greatest contributors, therefore, to this " good cause of culture " are our foremost writers of essays on art, music, literature, the drama, travel, history, govern- ment, religion, and the many other topics which have their part in a broad and sane understand- ing and appreciation of life and living. Con- sequently, books of essays are of fundamental value in their contribution to American cul- ture. During recent years no American man of letters has done more through his writings to promote a genuine spirit of culture in this country than the author from whose books have been selected the contents of this volume. Before speaking more precisely of his literary INTRODUCTION work, however, let me present Frederic Row- land Marvin, the man. The publishing of books is a privileged business in that into it the personal element enters to an unusual de- gree. The intimate contact between author and publisher has frequently opened the door to close and lasting friendships where the tra- ditional rivalry of interests between author and publisher plays no part, — friendships often savoring much of those to be read about in the annals of the Old World publishers as ex- isting between them and the great figures in English literature. So has come to me the privilege of an intimate knowledge of the ripe culture, sound wisdom, and high character of Dr. Marvin. His keen sense of humor I have often enjoyed upon occasion. Necessarily, communication has frequently been by mail, but by no means always in prose, for he has now and then resorted to delightful and whimsical verse, enjoyable even without a personal knowl- edge of or acquaintance with those concerned and the circumstances involved. Only two of these poems have been included in the present volume ; they are entitled " The Revolt of the Oyster" and "Ye Ballad of a Woeful Pub- lisher." To these the reader who would know Dr. Marvin in one of his lighter and even jovial moods is referred. INTRODUCTION Dr. Marvin was bom September 23, 1847, in Troy, New York, and consequently has reached the ripe age of three score years and ten on the eve of the publication of the pres- ent volume. He received the degree of M.D. from the College of Physicians and Surgeons (Columbia University) in 1870, and for a brief season practiced medicine in the City of New York. Later he was graduated from the Theological Seminary of the Reformed Church in America, at New Brunswick, New Jersey, and in 1879 he was ordained as a Congrega- tional clergyman. His three pastorates were at Middletown, New York, Portland, Oregon, and Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Our author since his retirement from the pulpit has made his home in the old historic city of Al- bany, the capital of our Empire State. Dr. Marvin is the author of twelve books, eight of which his present publishers carry upon their list. To characterize impersonally his work is impossible, even were it desirable. His books are poetical, for he has the spirit of a poet, and thoughtfully written, for he is a scholar who has given a large part of his life to the careful study of men and things. Ex- tensive foreign travel, a wide acquaintance with men of letters and affairs, and a profound study of human progress in many fields have INTRODUCTION given him a cosmopolitan interest in life which has enriched a receptive mind and kindled a responsive heart. His understanding of men and of the things that go to make our human life is that of a lover of his kind, — and as such a lover his perceptions are qualified by broad charity and a kind and genial humor. On Dr. Marvin the gods have bestowed the rare and wholly captivating gift of writing both authoritatively and entertainingly on an almost inexhaustible number of topics, and to his ability to make many a subject hitherto lit- tle known or wholly neglected live and breathe for his readers America owes a genuine debt, for he has added materially to the growth of public interest in art and letters by the allure- ment of his style and the large range of his culture. In his " The Companionship of Books " our author gave us his first volume of essays on lit- erary and allied themes, a book of wide and varied interests, revealing at once the intellec- tual breadth and the keen perceptions of its au- thor. It is by the study and mental assimila- tion of volumes of this kind, tending to broaden intellectual outlook and social sympathies, that the roots of genuine culture are nourished, the fruit of which is to be had for the plucking. No essayist can do more than place at the com- INTRODUCTION mand of his readers the gathered product of study, travel, and reflection. Later came " Flowers of Song from Many Lands," a fine group of translations of " short poems and detached verses gathered from va- rious languages," incidentally revealing the author's interest in other literatures than his own, — and a command of his own that enabled him by exact word and apt phrase to repro- duce in English the meaning and shade of thought in the widely scattered originals. This book was published in 1902, and is now out of print, its contents having been included in " Poems and Translations," which also incor- porates " A Book of Quatrains," first published in 1909 and now also out of print. Most of the original poems in the present edi- tion of " Poems and Translations " first ap- peared in 1907, but have since been revised and rearranged. The catholicity of the book and of its author is indicated both by the sub- jects represented and by the authors given us in the various renditions. From the philos- ophy in both Christian and ancient civilizations to the prayer of an Indian raider for scalps, the sacrificial hymn of the South Sea Island cannibals, and a gay little folk tale of the West Indies we have striking transitions that require unusual limberness of poetic fibre. His orig- INTRODUCTION inal poems are in no way inferior to many of the translations, which they parallel in charm and beauty. They are full of romance, philos- ophy, and humor, with frequent touches of tenderness and sympathy that warm the heart and quicken the pulse. The imaginative qual- ity, a subtle sensitiveness to rhyme and rhythm, philosophic insight and interpretation, are marked characteristics that lend distinction to our author's verse. This volume, and as well " Flowers of Song from Many Lands " in its original form, and " The Last Words of Dis- tinguished Men and Women," are not infre- quently found catalogued, in special bindings, extra-illustrated and autographed, in collec- tions of costly and unusual books. " Christ Among the Cattle," a little brochure appearing shortly after " The Companionship of Books " and welcomed by anti-vivisection- ists, has passed through numerous editions and has been translated into three European lan- guages. It is a classic of its kind, to be asso- ciated in its mission with " Black Beauty " and " Rab and His Friends." It is effective be- cause written with the authority of personal knowledge trained to accurate observation through the author's early medical education and practice. " The Excursions of a Book-Lover," " Love INTRODUCTION and Letters," and " Fireside Papers " are books of rare interest and curious investiga- tion. American letters would be much the poorer unenriched by these three contributions. A scholarship unique in this age of feverish specialization underlies the essays that compose these books. It is that of the historian, poet, philosopher, and humanitarian, gathered in the three books named and given us by a single writer who has brushed aside the veil from the lives of other men and other times, and with the wisdom of a life's knowledge of men and books has opened a new and wider outlook for the experiences of the present and the future. In one of these essays the author remarks that a writer is generally, though often uncon- sciously, his own hero. Certain it is, as has been intimated, that Dr. Marvin's o^vn person- ality is reflected in his printed words. Of a literary flavor, therefore, all of these essays must be, but they are neither ponderous nor pedantic. There is always the sympathy of " spiritual blood ties," the understanding fos- tered by common " family traits " among schol- ars and men of letters ; and in such a spirit the dry seeds of fact are watered with the gentle dews of human interest till they become blos- soms brilliant in form, fragrant with kindliness, and rich in fruitage. INTRODUCTION An essay in one of these volumes deals with the philosopher. The philosophic temper, as portrayed, demands much, but its attainment is worth the achieving. The comforting com- pound requires a generous quantity of that blessed aromatic, hope, a poetic conception of beauty, a dash of the spice of humor, an accept- ance of the really inevitable — all well com- pounded with love and common sense; and al- though it is not written in the text, there is evi- dence between the lines that this philosopher of ours is also, if unconsciously, an idealist. The pleasant acquaintance which has been formed between Dr. Marvin and his publishers, one of whom is the compiler and editor of this book, has led to a familiar and at times somewhat witty and whimsical correspondence, mostly in verse. To know Dr. Marvin as an author one must know, in part at least, this side of his nature and of his genius. The two poems, "Ye Ballad of a Woeful Publisher" and "The Revolt of the Oyster," to which should be added a poem printed in the collected " Poems and Translations " of our author pub- lished in 1914, and called " The Church of the Holy Furbelows," disclose this peculiarity. The two poems named were not written for publica- tion, and are here introduced because without them and a few other compositions of the same INTRODUCTION kind the witty side of our author's genius must remain in a measure undisclosed; and also be- cause the compiler believes them to be worthy of a place in this collection. One naturally feels some hesitancy about introducing lines so intensely personal, but how else are Dr. Mar- vin's readers to become acquainted with a side of his genius unsuspected by a large number of those who find pleasure in his work? That two of the poems named address the com- piler of this book and even mention his name render their insertion, as has been said, a mat- ter of delicacy ; but one may not change in any wise the work of another without permission, which in this case it was impossible to secure. The two compositions referred to are local in character and color and would without some ex- planatory notes be understood with difficulty by those who are unfamiliar with Boston and its neighborhood. Brief notes have been added in their proper places. Perhaps not all of Dr. Marvin's readers will find marked pleasure in the poems named, but surely those who enjoy Cowper's " John Gilpin " cannot but derive some satisfaction from the three poems to which attention has been called. Dr. Marvin's books have been written, all of them, from a pure love of literature. They are a scholar's contribution to American let- INTRODUCTION ters and American culture, with the unconcealed hope that wisdom sipped from the wine- jar may give pleasure to coming generations that, look- ing back to our own, may deem it not, after all, quite so empty of culture as many of our contemporaries think, and concerning which an increasing number of the enlightened men and women of to-day send forth utterances of de- spair. Surely the spirit in which the author of this noble group of twelve volumes writes can not be better expressed than in the following lines by Kenyon Cox: " Work thou for pleasure ; paint or sing or carve The thing thou lovest, tho* the body starve. " Who works for glory misses oft the goal ; Who works for money coins his very soul. " Work for the work's sake, then, and it may be That these things shall be added unto thee." Livingston Stebbins CONTENTS I PROSE PAGE I GOD, RELIGION, AND IMMORTALITY 1 II PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION ... 21 III ORACLES AND COUNSELS .... 41 IV CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, AND HEROISM 57 V TOIL AND ENDEAVOR 73 VI NATURE 83 VII KINDNESS TO ANIMALS 93 VIII WOMAN, LOVE, AND HOME ... 99 IX MUSIC, ART, AND BEAUTY .... 117 X LITERATURE AND LITERARY FAME 129 XI OLD AGE AND DEATH 143 XII MISCELLANY 163 II POEMS I MISCELLANEOUS POEMS ITl Ether 173 Only a Word 173 True Gesterosity 174 "Thou Knowest" 174 Shelley 174 The Rule of Life 175 PAGE Marcus ArmELius and Epictetus . . .175 Somewhere 176 The Poet to His Lady 177 Kindness 177 Sweet Company 178 A Wayside Flower 178 "Sigh Not a Vanished Past" . . . .179 Age 180 Brahma's Cup 181 From "Berkley Churchyard" .... 182 Here and Now 184 Driftwood 184 How to Remain Young 184 Hope 185 Over-Faith 185 "How Do Cherries Taste?" 186 The Open Door 186 Persis 187 Persis 188 To Persis Reading a Sad Book . . . .188 Persis 189 Sixty 189 Venus Lamia 190 "O Love, Surpassing Sweet and Fair" . . 190 Yes 191 Castles in Spain 191 Passion 192 "If I Love You" 192 To a Rose 192 In Every Field 193 My Hour 193 The Candle of the Lord 193 Trust 194 The Downward Gaze 195 The Daisy 195 Quiet Power 196 Madoiti^a 197 Friend of Lonely Souls 197 "O Little Grain of Dust" 198 Prayer for Strength 199 Beauty for Ashes 200 Infinite Presence 200 United Life 201 Christmas 202 Experience 202 At the Tomb of Senancoue .... 203 Comradeship 205 Madison Cawein 206 The Lion of Lucerne 208 Reality 209 The Land of Golden Stars 209 Two Little Angels 210 America 211 Books 212 Poetry 212 Spinoza 212 On the Desert 213 A Rose for the Living 215 Vanity 215 Transcendentalism 216 Materialism 216 Truth 216 The Reactionary 216 The Kaiser's Soliloquy 217 Dante at Corvo 218 II WIT AND HUMOR 221 Church of the Holy Furbelows . . . 223 The Test of Love 228 Ye Ballad of a Woeful Publisher . . 229 The Revolt of the Oyster 233 A New England Housewife 239 Epitaph 239 PAGE III TRANSLATIONS 241 To THE HUSBAKDMEK 243 The Whistling Daughter 243 A Lover's Wish 244 Humanity 2i5 A Happy Lot *246 Lais Dedicates Her Mirror to Venus . . 247 Faith 248 Song of the Wandering Knight . . . 248 The Unity of Faith 249 The' Words of the Wise Are Few . . . 249 The Fool's Beard 249 The Fool's Flight 250 The Palm 250 Good Night 250 The House of God 251 Scant Hospitality 251 The Fairest Thing 252 III DEDICATIONS DEDICATIONS 257 PROSE There is one thing that prose cannot do: it can- not sing. — Arthur Symons. GOD, RELIGION, AND IMMORTALITY Say your prayers standing; but if you are not able, do it sitting; and if not sitting, in bed. — Mohammed. It is our religion to love God; it is our duty to obey Him; and it is our hope to enjoy His pres- ence forever. CiREDERF NiVRAM. GOD, RELIGION, AND IMMORTALITY More and more we are coming to think of God as inseparably associated with nature, as working with it and through it. We would not undervalue the Divine revelation in man — " the Word was made flesh " — but modern science has disclosed Him in nature with new power and beauty. This is a noble view of His presence and activity. In the blush of the morning and in the evening breeze He is present. In Him as in a mirror is reflected the vast universe. You may call this Pantheism if you will, but it remains a noble thought of the Creator. The poet apparels it in some- thing of its own beauty in " Tintern Abbey " : " I have felt A presence that disturbs me with the joy Of elevated thoughts, a sense sublime Of something far more deeply interfused. Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns, And the round ocean and the living air, And the blue sky, and in the mind of man, — A motion and a spirit which impels All thinking things, all objects of all thought. And rolls through all things." 1 2 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR II Narrow and puerile ideas of the Divine Presence destroy the power of that Presence. The God who concerns Himself with religious trifles and trinkets will be found to concern Himself with nothing more important. Here lies the danger of every kind of Ritualism. The toy and the child go together, alike in cradle and pew. Vestments, processions, in- cense, altar-cloth, mitre, the pastoral staff, and candles — what are these but the sacred tops, balls, and kites of children who long ago should have developed into full-grown men and women ? Ill " God is on our side ! " is the vainglorious cry of thousands. How few inquire, with humble mind and honest heart, " Am I on God's side? " IV Always the lion-heart is a heart of faith. Character is essentially the power of re- sisting temptation. VI A MAN this morning told me that his lack of education was mainly due to the meanness of GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 3 his surroundings. But it was in the dirty Soho streets that Blake saw the earliest of his divine visions. A man may build him a house for his soul to dwell in where the sons of mud see nothing better than their own rudeness and vileness. And in that house, lighted by the glory of heaven, he may abide in wonder and gladness all the days of his life on earth. Em- erson heard the song celestial, and gazed upon scenes of marvelous splendor in even the " mud and scum of things." A man may not be the creator of circumstances, but neither is he wholly their creature. VII Mohammed was a child of solitude and silence. His visions came to him when he was far out on the desert. It was there, surrounded by natural desolation, that he discovered the spiritual desolation of his time and country. On wild and lonely Mount Hara, near Mecca, he received his first revelation, and from that deserted and remote elevation he went forth proclaiming to an idolatrous world the One God of Islamism. Apuleius tells us, in his " Golden Ass," that he was able to pray to the Goddess Isis because of the silence of the night. The great prayers of aU ages and of all religions have demanded 4 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR tranquillity of spirit ; they were possible only in the hush of a calm and undisturbed temper to which the stillness of surrounding nature in many cases contributed much. Prayer is the very heart of religion. There can be no re- ligion without this inner communion of the soul with God. What is called " natural religion " is, in so far as it is prayerless, no religion at all. Religion without prayer is only philoso- phy, and has nothing whatever to do with the deep places of spiritual experience. Can any- one think of such prayers as those of Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, Saint Bernard, Loyola, Fox, Wesley, and George Miiller in connection with natural religion? Great achievements are born of a deep serenity of the soul. VIII There has been recently discovered, so it is reported, the secret of the " eternal flames " that burned from year to year without any visi- ble renewing of fuel upon the altar of Zoroaster on the " Sacred Isle " in the Caspian Sea, where the founder of the fire-cult preached his re- ligious doctrines. The altar was situated di- rectly over a deposit of natural gas. Neither the prophet nor his followers had any knowledge of the gas, which had probably been lighted by accident, and which, when once lighted, con- GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 5 tinued to burn year after year. The mysteri- ous flame, sustained with apparently no re- newal of material for combustion, was easily mistaken for a celestial fire kindled and sup- ported in attestation of the doctrine and faith taught and served at the altar. A fire that burned for only a brief time authenticated the mission of Elijah and occasioned the overthrow of the priests of Baal. How much more con- vincing to men living under a primitive civiliza- tion must have appeared the " eternal flames " that required, so far as could be discovered, neither care nor fuel. Were those men and women who centuries ago adored that mystical fire fools or impostors? They were neither. They made the best use of the limited knowledge within their reach. More could not have been required of them. I cannot believe that the Infinite Mercy held them accountable for a light that never illuminated their darkened under- standing, and for opportunities they never en- joyed. IX No one ever recovered a lost faith by adver- tising for it. X The silent and unconscious influence of a man of real force in any neighborhood is greater than is commonly supposed. The subtle power 6 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR of personal presence extends in every direction, and refuses to die with the man who set it in motion. Strong men impress others not alone by their opinions and by what they say and do, but by even their trivial mannerisms that seem so unimportant. You cannot imprison a man's influence. You may load the man with chains, but that marvelous something that proceeds from him, and that is in a way a part of him, walks free. XI Many a whispered word of comfort has awakened a never-ending echo of infinite tender- ness. XII There is always at the heart of every great happiness a sense of melancholy without which the happiness would be nothing more than a trivial gayety. XIII The smallest human heart may hold a vast solitude. XIV There is for every one of us an invisible and intangible life that is not less real because re- moved from the world of sense. We live in the lives of others ; in what others are and wish to GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 7 be; in the subtle influences which they diffuse, and by which we are in a measure guided and controlled. Organic ties bind us together. Common hopes and interests make us to be a community. Even the little child of but a few months, perhaps of but a few days only, cannot die without having made some contribution to this common life. Through an impression made upon the mother the child places its little hand, it may be, upon the entire world and upon long ages. Sometimes the dead accomplish more than the living. Here we touch what may be called a neighborliness of the soul. I think George Eliot had in mind this thought when she wrote her noble lines about " the choir invisi- ble" with which every serious reader is fa- miliar. XV The man who contemplates his own littleness without humility, and his own imperfections without disgust, neither loves holiness nor fears sin. XVI The Lord demands not " holy orders," but holy men. XVII There could be no religion but of mud-gods and dirt-worshippers, without the overhanging 8 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR dream-world of which the poet is prophet and interpreter. We shall never know how great is the world's indebtedness to the masters of song who prevent men from living by bread alone. " Where there is no vision," said the sacred writer, " the people perish." The breath of spiritual life is preserved within us by the revelations of those sons of light. XVIII With Plotinus, I thank God my soul is not imprisoned within an immortal body, for in that case I should know a new mortality more to be feared than the one of which I now have knowledge. From every agony possible to man death furnishes a sure escape. A deathless body would mean living death. And yet men would close and fasten as with bolts of steel the one door without which hope were impos- sible. They would inscribe over the cradle of every infant the words that Dante saw over the Place of Doom, " All hope abandon, ye who enter here." I could not wish to live were it not permitted me to die. XIX No power on earth or in hell can make a lie immortal. GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 9 XX Oethodoxy is the heterodoxy of yesterday. XXI Materialism as a system is easily demolished, because it is without foundation ; but material- ism as a tendency of the worldly mind is impreg- nable save to Divine Grace, because it has a real foundation in the nature of the man who enter- tains it. XXII It is a man's majestic " Yes 1 " to the voice of Duty that makes him the man he is. XXIII Goethe was for a moment staggered by the thought of the afterwards of death. " To me," said he, " the thought of a life without end, even though it were a happy one, appears more dreadful than the most acute physical anguish." The great poet forgot the capacity of the human mind for infinite development, and that not even eternity can exhaust its power. A noted mathematician has calculated that in solving the possible problems of plain circles alone, one could spend seven hundred million years. Is it, then, difficult to under- stand how an eternity might be employed in 10 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR the acquisition of knowledge? When Socrates said to the weeping friends who gathered around him after he had received the fatal cup, " You may bury me if you can catch me," he anticipated for his immortal part another life worthy of his philosophical attainments. It was his comfort in the hour of death to know that he should spend eternity in the society of great and gifted men like Hesiod and Homer. Such society seemed to him well calculated to make immortality a priceless boon. XXIV Benvej^uto Cellini, after a terrible dream which he had in the castle of St. Angelo, saw a light over his head wherever he went, and though the flame burned with greater brightness when the grass was wet with dew, it never en- tirely disappeared. The human soul, like the great sculptor, often beholds, after some dread- ful calamity, a luminous presence and sees with clearer vision. Troubles, like thunder-storms, purify the atmosphere, and when the sun shines out upon the moist sod, glistening with crystal beauty, the soul discovers new grace and larger truth on every side. In a shower of tears God often sets the rainbow of His promise. GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 11 XXV To lips unsanctified by the divine grace of self-renunciation there are few cups more bitter than that of neglect. It bites into even the serene heart of Wisdom to see glittering and tinkling Folly crowned in her place. And yet when the soul has learned to put self aside and to say, " Not my will, but Thine be done ! " Gethsemane is peopled with angels, and the bitter cup is changed into a blessed sacrament of peace. XXVI Mud and slime may be good for the oyster, but without sunshine and blue sky there can be no high thinking, noble aspiration, and in- spiring romance. Better than the swamp-gas of materialism is the too thin air of mysticism. Dionysius the Areopagite has had a large fam- ily of dreamers, but there have been among them many sons and daughters of power and enchantment. XXVII Woe to religion when it ceases to be a matter of faith, and becomes one of mere opinion. XXVIII When angry thoughts and impatient words begin to color your argument, remember that 12 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR no two things are more widely sundered than search for truth and strife for victory. XXIX There is an atheism of the head, which is not infrequently associated with noble think- ing and useful living; there is an atheism of the heart, which springs from and results in moral corruption; and there is an antheism of the digestive organs, which, having said to the belly, " Thou art my god," finds its holiest aspira- tions more than realized in a luxuriously selfish life. XXX Teuth must be sought for her own sake. From all who would find her for private ends — to establish their own preconceived opinions or those of their church or party — she hides herself in impenetrable darkness. XXXI It is a sweet and pleasant thought that when all these days of pain and sorrow and work are ended — these days of contending and unrest — there will come the folding of hands. It is sweet, when sorrow and weariness are our only companions, to remember that the hour is not far away when the Father will fold the tired GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 13 hands of His child in His, will seal the aching eyes with sleep, and breathe under their trem- bling lids the sweet dream of heaven. Weary not, nor faint ; the Father sees you, and, though you know it not, His hand leads you. A little pain and a little labor He metes you for your good; be patient, and when the night comes He will give you rest. XXXII Strange it is that men who are so anxious to find the dead Christ in His tomb, and the his- torical Christ in Palestine, care so little for the spiritual Christ in their own hearts. XXXIII After all it is possible to say against creeds has been said, it still remains true that the man is weak indeed and greatly to be pitied who cannot say, " I believe." XXXIV Whoever believes there is a difference be- tween a lie and the truth has a creed. XXXV With the reason one may discover duty; with the will he may force himself into external 14 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAE obedience to its requirements ; but only with the heart can he so love " I ought " as to change it into " I desire." XXXVI You cannot drink water from an empty cup, neither can you drink the water of life from an empty soul. XXXVII The Sacred Writings describe God as a searcher of hearts, but nowhere do they repre- sent Him as a searcher of church records. XXXVIII More strength comes from believing one thing than from doubting a thousand. XXXIX It does not greatly trouble me that I am called to believe some things I cannot under- stand, but it would seriously trouble me were it otherwise. Were there no thoughts in the infinite mind of the Creator too large for my feeble and fallible understanding, it would fol- low by a fatally irresistible logic that God is no wiser than his creatures, and, therefore, no better able to guide them than they are to guide themselves. A God comprehended is a God dethroned. GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 15 XL In the cathedral-building centuries of long ago the church included in its fellowship nearly all there was of civilized society. It touched our human race at every conceivable point. No work could be commenced without its sanc- tion. It well-nigh monopolized architecture and the fine arts. The greatest pictures by the greatest artists were made under the inspira- tion of religion, and were altar-pieces for sacred edifices. Raphael and Michael Angelo crowned with immortal genius the holy faith and spirit- ual aspiration of an ecclesiastical system that had its living root in every human heart. Lit- erature belonged to the church. Learning was its possession, as was also civil government. The church was everything. Soldiers wore the cross emblazoned upon their breasts, and every nook and corner had its shrine. But now things are changed. The priest no longer com- mands the conscience and shapes the conduct of men. The tides of religious authority are at their ebb, and the naked shingles of belief are stirred no more by shifting waves. XLI It should always be remembered that no philosophy is sound that leaves God out of con- sideration, or that fails of perceiving his good- 16 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR ness and of confiding in his character. Day and night we are in the encircling embrace of infinite Love. That Love called us into being, and upon its bosom we are cradled. " Beneath us are the everlasting arms." Thus do the sacred writings teach us to view the Creator, and all the later disclosures of natural science point in the same direction. Kant holds that it is the office of philosophy to answer three questions: 1. What can I know.? 2. What ought I to do? 3. What may I hope for? It seems to us that true philosophy goes further, and makes to us dis- closure of our present possessions. It opens the eye to the vision of an infinite, eternal, and unchangeable Friend, and renders forever true the words of the poet: ** Out of the shadows of night The world rolls into light; It is daylight everywhere." XLII The supreme office of the church is spiritual. Books, music and art are now within the reach of all. We have the news of the entire world in our morning paper. Travel is no longer difficult, and its expense is not now prohibitive. The problems of science are discussed at the club and in the street. We are surfeited with GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 17 the haste and clatter of unromantic, selfish, grinding modern life. " One man is as good las another ; " " All men are born free and equal ; " " We demand our rights ; " "A dollar saved is a dollar earned ; " " Time is money ; " " Get out of the way ; " " Mind your own busi- ness " — these graceless mottoes are a fair epit- ome of the rude, vulgar, and unspiritual thought and feeling of thousands. The dream is gone. The aspiration is evaporated. The vision is no more. To the church men turn for help and uplifting. In her we must find our spiritual ideal. She must teach us that life is more than meat and drink. A pro- foundly spiritual pulpit is the one great need of the age. Eloquence is good if we do not have too much of it; a trained choir is to be desired if we can have it without the opera ; an elaborate ritual may serve noble ends if only it be so transparent that through it we dis- cern the living Christ ; but over and above all is the one great cry of the human heart in every land and age, " We would see Jesus ! " A spiritual, God-illuminated, uplifting, inspiring pulpit is the demand of the heart and the need of the world. " Jesus Christ, and Him cruci- fied ! " — without that no pulpit Is worth the timber that goes into its construction. 18 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XLIII Certain materialistic philosophers are en- quiring : " Is this the best of possible worlds ? " Perhaps not! The gourmand who fails of ob- taining all the terrapin and champagne he de- sires has a ground of complaint. He who wants a sovereign and has only a shilling is not without a grievance. But the fact that God made this world to His own mind satisfies me, and I can see that His glory is better than the beastly gratification of the hon vivant, XLIV The effort to retain an obsolete church, an effete government, or an antiquated supersti- tion has always proved a failure, and is like a child's endeavor to retain a melting icicle by squeezing it in its little fist — the firmer the grasp the more speedy the departure. While a man repeats a dead creed with his lips, that very creed slips out of his heart and is gone. Liturgy is often only another way of spelling lethargy, and the creed from being a statement of belief too easily becomes a substitute for faith. XLV Do thy duty, and be at peace with God and thine own conscience. There can be no true peace for thee apart from the honest and daily GOD, RELIGION, IMMORTALITY 19 discharge of those obligations, great and small, which, come into thy life from the Creator, and which, rightly viewed, are angels of divine dis- cipline. Thou hast too much to say about thy rights, and thinkest too little about thy duties. Thou hast but one inalienable right, and that is the sublime one of doing thy duty at all times, under all circumstances, and in all places. XLVI Wonderful is the power of great sorrow to sanctify the heart and purify the life. Under its influence the most deep-seated prejudices are dispelled, and the bitter and contentious heart is completely subdued. No one is fitted for companionship, much less for the holy ofiice of friendship, who has not quaffed at least one wholesome draught from the cup of affliction. Therefore, O Lord, while my weak human heart dare not pray for even those most salutary sorrows which so strengthen character and -clarify spiritual vision, it does most earn- estly entreat that sorrows which have already crossed its path may never be forgotten, but remain the priceless treasure of a sanctified memory, and of a pure, believing, and loving heart. II PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION Philosophy is a loving use of wisdom. — Dante. Hast any philosophy in thee, shepherd? — Shakespeare. The people's prayer — the glad diviner's theme, The young men's vision, and the old men's dream. — Dryden. PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION The philosophic temper kindles hope. To every man it says, " Fortune smiles upon thou- sands; your turn may come next." It lights up the ideal world. It whispers, " Wait." It suggests to the soul that what it most fears may not be so bad after all, and that many things coveted are not so good as they appear. It brings to mind the advice, " Never cross a bridge before you come to it " — that is to say, do not anticipate troubles. It takes short views of life. The future we dread may never come to us. Many things we fear we should not fear did we but know them better. II To a thoughtful mind the silence of Nature is even more impressive than are the convulsions and tornadoes that startle and affright. The untrained imagination is filled with surprise and wonder when fierce winds lash the ocean into wild and ungoverned fury; but to poet and artist the serene glory of sunrise and the gentle 23 24 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR approach of evening twilight present an attrac- tion quite as pleasing as are the more excep- tional displays of natural force. In the great world of human life of which we are a part the same thing is true. To a finely attuned tem- per and a cultivated mind there is an impres- siveness in the silence of the right man at the right time that no display of passion can equal. The silence of our Saviour not only surprised Peter, but impresses and will always impress men by the fine eloquence of its rebuke. " Study to be quiet," wrote an apostle. Few of us, with all our study, have yet acquired much of that Divine skill. Ill As ships cross lines of latitude and longitude without experiencing any change in tempera- ture, so the ship of human life sails over the years and marks not the passage. And how variable and unreliable is human perception in this matter. Have as many clocks and watches as you please, still " we live in feelings, not in figures on a dial, and count time by heart- throbs." We believe our own pulses against all the chronometers in the world. We may whisper to ourselves, " There are but sixty minutes in the hour," nevertheless happy hours fly and sad ones creep. PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 25 IV The real man is, after all, not the man with whom we have personal acquaintance. Not tiU Time has sifted out the chaff can we garner the pure grain. Only when the visible man has be- come a phantom are we able to discern the sub- stantial and enduring man whose home is his- tory, and whose work is the common possession of an entire race. V As the housemaid believes that the only dif- ference between her mistress and herself is that of money or of fine clothes, so the village lubber holds that the only difference between the wisest and ablest man that ever walked this earth and himself is that of opportunity. He will tell you that the same opportunity must in either case, or in both cases, produce exactly the same result ; all of which is as untrue as would be the statement that, given the same soil, moisture, light, and temperature, all seeds must come to the same flower. VI To be open to argument and to be open to conviction are two different things. VII You can never rejoice in what you do not believe. 26 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR VIII True peace and deep conviction are insep- arable. IX Centres of power are silent. X No defeat is final that does not involve the will. XI It is a dangerous thing to stir emotion with- out creating conviction, for such emotion is wholly irresponsible. It is an advancing flame that respects neither the good nor the bad, but sweeps before it whatever would obstruct its progress. The man who is at the mercy of his emotions is at the mercy of a mob. A crowd of tatterdemalion feelings, scatterbrained sans- culotterie of the mind, come, hot with silly indignation, trampling over what should have been cultivated ground, to right some fancied wrong, or it may be to avenge some real wrong by the commission of a greater. So were the noisy creatures of the French Revolution bent upon changing this old world, or so much of it as was In France, Into a veritable garden of Eden — for whom ? the f anf aron of the lamp-post, drunk, blear-eyed, and full of mur- PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 27 der. Man is never safe when guided by his emotions. Even our good emotions are bad guides. XII The politician bears the same relation to the patriot that the scarecrow bears to a living man. Both are grotesque imitations and noth- ing more. XIII The good man sees around him a world of divine beauty ; he sees as well a world of oppor- tunity, and he feels within him a desire to im- prove still more the world as it presents itself to his mind. The evil man beholds a world full of base and worthless things that please his evil mind, and he proceeds at once to make it still worse. The loneliness of the desert is a poetical conception formed in the human mind. The traveler, standing on the edge of the Lib- yan waste, is overcome by the sense of solitude ; but the Arab pitches his tent far out in the rainless region, and lies down at night beneath the silent stars with no thought of discomfort. The two men inhabit different worlds and each has created for himself the world in which he lives. Algot Lange, who was lost in the intermina- ble forests that surround the headwaters of the Amazon, told me how, having seen his little 28 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR party die, one after another, from fever and snake-bite, until he was left alone in the vast jungle, he came face to face with a horror that neither language nor art can depict. It was the opening of his eyes to the terror of his situation. He was not overcome by the fear of death, for neither he nor his men were afraid of death at any time during the journey. It was not privation, for they were inured to that. It was an absolutely unique experience that came with a vision of the loneliness of his situa- tion. A sudden internal experience changed for him in a few moments the entire appearance of so much of the world as at that time con- cerned him. But the South American Indians inhabiting that part of the continent saw noth- ing in the landscape to terrify or distress them. Geographically they were not far away, but though only a dozen miles, it may be, separated them from Lange, they and the explorer were, nevertheless, dwelling in entirely different worlds. XIV Life must always be lonely to one who thinks. Thinking is a process of separation. It sun- ders man from man, and gives to the mind a separate life and an aim different from that which controls the surrounding world. It is surprising how large a part of our common ex- PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 29 istence is carried on with little thought, and how much of that little thought is automatic, subconscious, and hap-hazard. I do not know how much of the depression that enters so surely into the mind of the man who thinks apart from the conventional beliefs and opin- ions of his fellows, is due to the isolation that must in the very nature of the case follow; but certain it is that men who blaze new trails must learn to draw their strength from within and not from without. Social habits and common- place opinions provide an easier road for the ordinary traveler, and there can be no good reason why he should not remain in that road to the end of his days, in association with agree- able companions. But there will always re- main those who find other roads more to their liking; those who are willing to forego fellow- ship and joint interests of every kind if only they may come upon unfrequented ways and break into undiscovered worlds. To such trav- elers the commonplace route, though safer and less difficult, is dull and unattractive. The highway is well graded and leads straight ahead, with few turns to right or left; but one must take chances in strange paths and in dis- tricts where there are no paths at all. In lonely roads there are lonely experiences, and such experiences are never far removed from the sadness that surrounds us all, whether we so THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR know it or not. The more isolated the way, the more intrusive and persistent the sadness. A mournful spirit breathes through all human ex- periences, of whatever kind. One does not have to turn* to the pages of Schopenhauer if he would learn how vast is the loneliness of our human life. One has but to think, and at once the process of disillusionment commences. XV It is wonderful, the large and rich culture that comes to even the most sterUe personality when every opportunity is improved and every power systematically developed. Although the area of Egypt capable of cultivation is about sixteen thousand square miles — only half the area of Ireland — yet Egypt was in the time of the Pharaohs one of the granaries of the world. Ordinary qualities of mind and heart may be cultivated until the desert blossoms as the rose. XVI Inequality is the rule of life, and the sooner we make up our minds to take things as they come, turning them to the best account for our- selves and others, the larger will be our field of usefulness and the greater will be our reward. We should all of us cultivate a philosophic temper that refuses to brood over troubles, PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 31 break its heart over trifles, and contend against the inevitable. We must adapt ourselves to circumstances, and remember that the wise man " stoops to conquer." The forces of nature become our willing servants only when we learn to obey them. The key to every situation is found in surrender. The man who most vigor- ously asserts his personal independence is most likely the very man who knows the least of true liberty. Any fool may fire a gun and wave a flag, but he is the true patriot who obeys the law, minds his own business, practices virtue, and subordinates his personal interests to the public good. XVII I QUESTION the propriety of spending much time in early life over introspective studies. We need a firm grasp upon surrounding reali- ties before we put to ourselves the riddle of the Sphinx, which we shall find no matter of wit and laughter. The fable is at fault that tells us the Sphinx, when she found her perplexing question answered, leaped to her death. She continues to " brood on the world," every mo- ment demanding " the fate of the man-child and the meaning of man." They who would solve this riddle of their own humanity must first know much of the surrounding universe. It was by no shrewd guess that CEdipus won 32 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR the crown from all the fools in Thebes. Behind the answer " Man " was a man's clear percep- tion of himself as he stood out in bold relief against an objective background. To start questions one cannot answer is to unsettle the mind, destroy the foundations of conviction and establish a habit of insincerity. Too much in- trospection has made many a sceptic and para- lyzed many a noble will. It is the old story of the perplexed centipede: " The centipede was happy quite, Until the toad for fun Said, * Pray, which leg comes after which ? * This worked her mind to such a pitch She lay distracted in a ditch. Considering how to run." XVIII Give me no narrow-minded, selfish son of New England to whom a dollar-bill is larger than a blanket; no uncut diamond of the far west with a rude familiarity that repels at every turn, and a boastful temper one does not like to encounter; nor yet would I cast my lot with the southern " gentleman " whose horizon is even more restricted than his pocket-book; but make me, I pray you, well acquainted with the generous and courteous, even if at times commonplace, son of our great middle state, New York — the man of large ideas and easy PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 32 circumstances. He has always at hand the friendly glass of wine, fragrant as the breath of many flowers, and a good cigar, equally fragrant and enticing. He knows the world and has laid hold of its life with hearty good will. He is, in fact, a man of the world in the best sense of that phrase. A brave heart, full of hope and cheer, goes with him in every jour- ney. He may outwit me, but he will not pick my pocket. He may make for himself too good a bargain, but he will not split the cent when it comes to the casting up of accounts. If, perchance, he should prove a rascal, his will be no pilfering rascality. To the assault upon my money he will add no stench of meanness to distress my nostrils. XIX Consume little time in regret. The best re- pentance is reformation. What tears of con- trition are powerless to effect, an altered life easily accomplishes. XX His life only is worthless who fails of discov- ering the worth in other lives. XXI There are few kindhearted sentimentalists in this sorrow-stricken world of ours. The S4 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR sentimentalist, wherever you find him, is natu- rally selfish and cruel. Sterne could write like an angel, but he had no more regard for his fellowmen than one might expect the devil him- self to display in dealing with high or low, the living or the dead. Sterne was absolutely de- void of anything like pity or compassion. While he wept over the distress of those who surrounded him and whose lives were in close proximity to his own, he increased the troubles he lamented, made sport of tears and grief, and laughed at the bitterness of human anguish. Men admired his genius and will always admire it, but no one ever loved him. His own wife fled from him as from " plague, pestilence, and famine." The author of " Tristram Shandy " wrote lines that we must account among the most beautiful in English literature. It may not be amiss in this connection to quote them: " The accusing spirit which flew up to heaven's chancery with the oath blushed as he gave it in; and the recording angel, as he wrote it down, dropped a tear upon the word and blotted it out forever." Thus was Uncle Toby's oath disposed of by angelic beings who felt a pity that Sterne could only describe. Strange it is that one who could tell us how " God tempers the wind to the shorn PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 35 lamb " knew only the art of shearing the lamb Heaven could encircle with compassion. Rousseau was another man of the same tem- per and spirit, and of a much worse life. He could sob as though his heart must break the while he was breaking the hearts of those around him. Over well-nigh every graceful line he composed, the trail of the serpent is dis- cernible. He was the prince of sentimentalists. His written paragraphs, well-nigh as tearful as were his spoken words, will in all the years to come delight those who find pleasure in literary art, but the man himself was false at heart and no one will ever rise to call him blessed. Goethe was of all modern writers one of the greatest, but he was in every sense of the word a sentimentalist. The man who could write " The Sorrows of Young Werther " and " Elec- tive AfRnities " was, if not a sorrow-maker, at least no assuager of grief. He was not com- passionate, nor was he sympathetic, forgiving, and kind. Men point to the fact that he cher- ished no violent animosities, but they forget that he was not a violent man. His general attitude was one of indifference. Violence and indifference seldom go together. He was self- centered, as are all sentimentalists, and there is nothing in the service he rendered Schiller that can in any wise cancel his self-absorption and self-love. His world-wide and penetrating vis- 36 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR ion and his uncommon knowledge of men and more especially of women, are not matters of the heart as are compassion and sympathy. He was a calm, serene, unclouded, indifferent man, who could dip his pen in the tears of oth- ers and write with marvelous grace of what he could only see and never feel. XXII The professional reformer may be distin- guished by nothing else, but he will always and at every time display a bad taste extremely wearisome to all who have any sense of pro- portion. XXIII Culture is not so much something we have as it is something we have absorbed, and that has become a part of us. It is a state rather than a possession. It is that within us by means of which we enjoy beauty of whatever kind. XXIV " The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth 1 " Did ever angel in heaven or man on earth succeed in telling the truth after that fashion? And yet there is not a little Justice of the Peace in all the length and breadth of our land who does not feel called PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 37 upon to demand from every witness who comes before him a divine veracity of which he is him- self as incapable as his fellow mortals. To hear the lawyers and doctors of divinity dis- cuss, one would think that they all had truth and the well in their back yard. XXV " Away with remorse ! " cries La Mettrie, the gay and brilliant author of " L'Histoire Natu- relle de I'Ame " ; « it is a weakness, an outcome of education." What a pity it is La Mettrie was not near by to comfort Judas Iscariot, the Emperor Nero, Charles IX of France, and Benedict Arnold, when those great men were ruthlessly crushed beneath the iron heel of that *' outcome of education." With what enchant- ing grace and ease the hand that penned " L'Homme-machine " waves away all that self- reproach and self-revenge which made a mon- arch's blood to ooze through the pores of his skin, and to start from the corners of his eyes and from his nostrils. Could that monarch only have known that all his self-accusations were but " weakness and the outcome of educa- tion," great would have been his peace of mind, even when forced to contemplate the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day. Poor Judas! — his death was entirely due to over-education. 38 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XXVI He who holds the realization of his highest ideal essential to success must be content either to cherish a poor ideal or to inscribe " failure " over his best endeavors. We all come short of our possibilities and of our dreams, but it does not follow that life is a failure. Success must be measured by the grand result rather than by the far-away ideal. XXVII With known conditions we can deal, but with the unknown we need give ourselves no concern, since they are beyond our reach. It is the un- certain conditions, partly known and partly unknown, that cause us to worry. All friction is on the surface. Storms rage where wind and sea meet. In both upper air and ocean depths all is tranquility. Worry exists where the known and the unknown meet to form uncer- tainty. There it is that we fret and fume. Why may we not treat alike the unknown and the uncertain, refusing to concern ourselves with both of them? The certain only will be left, and with it we may hope to deal. XXVIII The phrase " naked truth " is a phrase only, and to it nothing in man or nature corresponds. PHILOSOPHY AND OPINION 39 All things in this world are clothed, tempered, and adapted. XXIX The fanatic swings his fancied truth as a savage swings his club — regardless of conse- quences, while the reasonable man uses truth in ways and proportions that help his fellows. Too much truth spoken at the wrong time may be more injurious than open falsehood. There are, according to Margaret Deland, " unscru- pulous truth-tellers." These believe it to be always a man's duty to disclose the entire truth at whatever cost to the person to whom the disclosure is made. You may kill the person, but you have discharged your duty and un- burdened your conscience. XXX Yesterday is dead. It has done its work and lives no more. One may regret its fail- ures, but nothing remains save to give it decent burial. XXXI My thoughts, opinions, and beliefs are pri- vate property. They are wholly mine, and no one may meddle therewith; nor may the tenure with which I hold them be disputed. But what I feel I share with others. Feeling is common property. It is the heart and not the head that binds me to my race. Ill ORACLES AND COUNSELS Eat laurel, chew it, bite it with your teeth. — Sophocles. ORACLES AND COUNSELS No man ever dreamed himself into either earthly or heavenly wisdom. No man ever wished himself into a character. If one would have these he must endure hardness ; and to the hardness there must be added continuance in well-doing. There is in morals a certain " squatter sovereignty " whereby continued ex- ercise of a grace or virtue renders that grace or virtue the possession of the man who exercises it. Shakespeare makes one of his characters advise that if one be without a virtue he as- sume it. Therein lies a world of philosophy. Assume the virtue long enough, and moral " squatter sovereignty " perfects the title. True culture has in it a certain element of hardness, to which is added continuance. The Sacred Writer puts it in a line : " Having done all, stand." II Never imagine thyself to be what thou art not, lest the contrast make thee unhappy with- out rendering thee better. Thou hast no more 43 44 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR right to intoxicate thyself and confuse thine understanding with idle fancies and silly con- ceits than with strong drink — both are mock- ers and do thee harm. Halo thy head with no false glory, and burn no sacrilegious incense before thy soul, but strive to view thyself in the clear light of truth. Ill " Vetulam suam prcetulit immortalitati" — and so Ulysses chose the aged Penelope, when Calypso would have given him herself and im- mortality. The philosophy of that old heathen is good for all ages and religions. Better than immortality is duty well performed in the face of every allurement. Live a loyal and true life to-day, and thou hast truly lived, even shouldst thou never live again. IV If there is no judge in heaven, there is surely all the greater need for a judge within thine own heart. All God requires of any of His children is faithful discharge of duty in the place to which He assigns the obedient soul. It is not neces- sary to do some great thing in order to secure ORACLES AND COUNSELS 45 the Divine blessing and the approval of con- science. " Do to-day thy nearest duty," whether it be pleasant or otherwise, and thou shalt well answer the end of life. VI Consider the magnitude of time. An hour is exhaustless. No one ever emptied a second. As animalculae swim without sense of confine- ment in a drop of water, so our lives float in the present moment. We never live in more than one second at a time, and yet we experi- ence no constraint and have all the space we require. We cry for more time, and cannot dispose of what we already have. We possess not too little, but too much ; we waste what we have. We nibble at an hour, and then leave it for another, as a mouse gnaws at a cheese many times its size, and which it cannot devour. Men are praying for eternity who wasted yes- terday, and are utterly unable to dispose of to-day. Before the day arrives it has no ex- istence, and when it is over there still remains to it no existence. Thus are all our marks upon the sand washed out by the flowing tides of a sea no man may compass. To one who has been dead a day it is practically the same to him, so far as this earth is concerned, as if he had been in the grave a hundred thousand 46 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR centuries. The shallowest grave is bottomless ; and yet into a grave so deep the human soul looks with unshaken confidence, and dares to exclaim, " This corruptible must put on incor- ruption, and this mortal must put on immor- tality." VII The honors and pleasures of this world, and it may be of other worlds as well if such ex- ist, are for the men and women who have cour- age to take them. Strong, self-reliant souls spend no time in foolish regret, but reach out in every direction and appropriate to their own use whatever is fitted for their service. Au- dacity wins by divine right of conquest. Think meanly of yourself, and the world will take you at your own estimate. VIII If the source of all wrongdoing is in the will, so also is the hidden root of every worthy ac- tion. Not what I am, but what I would be is the one important thing. Whether I perceive it or not, I am proceeding in the direction of my desire. IX Every man is his own Adam, and every woman is her own Eve. The story of creation ORACLES AND COUNSELS 47 starts over again in every cradle and ends in every new-made grave. X The suppression of knowledge on the ground of expediency is like the quenching of the sun. The Man of Galilee said, " I am the Light of the world." That in some measure should every man be. What new truth I possess must be imparted. The good man is a socialist when he comes to the field of ethics. XI Truth casts off first this creed and then that, as the serpent sheds year after year its once bright and glittering skin. The integu- ment, becoming dry and useless, must perish, but the living creature survives. Let no man mourn for Truth. XII When in his own bosom man enthrones the dream and neglects the reality; when he exalts the idea and forgets the prior and superior claim of the deed, thus preferring the shadow to the substance; when he has made this final and supreme choice of the unreal, putting aside life itself for the passing emotions engendered by life, then has his doom been pronounced. Then is his service forever ended. 48 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XIII Man is the measure of his own universe. Of every circle he is the centre. Only that which reflects his age-long conflict with destiny has for him enduring interest. XIV When the intellect announces to man's spir- itual nature that he is at liberty to believe what pleases him, and that it is a matter of no consequence to what conclusions he may arrive, the spiritual nature is in most cases ready to respond, " I believe in nothing." There remains to be taken but one more men- tal step, and that is the conversion of negation into a philosophical system. Such conversion we have in Schopenhauer's pessimism and von Hartmann's exposition of the doctrine of the innate evil of all things which Edgar Saltus has called " The Philosophy of Disenchantment." XV They only are elect who elect themselves. The work must have in it some worthy or, at least, some unusual element. Cistacious made so gracious an obeisance to Eternal Forgetful- ness that even the silent genius of Oblivion spared his name, and would have spared more had there been more to spare. Not one mason ORACLES AND COUNSELS 49 of all those who labored in the building of the Temple of Diana has left to us even his name, but it is known to every schoolboy that Heros- tratus burned that sacred structure. Time, which has effaced with ruthless hands so many worthy names, has embalmed in history the less worthy name of " the aspiring youth that fired the Ephesian dome." XVI We need to be constantly warned against imagining " we are the people, and wisdom will die with us." We are not the sole repositories of all truth. The builders of the pyramids thought they were standing on the summit of masonry and architecture. The men who blew Egyptian glass four thousand years ago, who distilled attar of roses three thousand years ago, and who divided the land of Syria by means of geometry, all believed they had found out the last secret of God and nature. But they were mistaken, and we are equally mis- taken when we imagine that God has nothing more to reveal to posterity, because we have discovered the final secret. XVII No victory is final that is not just. 50 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XVIII In the end a man's rights and his necessities are one. XIX All private ownership in truth is moral rob- bery. XX What we call cooperation is usually nothing but compromise, and compromise means the annihilation of personality. I am weary of patched-up agreements that destroy individual action and purpose. The men who have in- fluenced others have acted apart from them. The strong swimmer sinks when he is seized in a death-grip by the drowning man he would save. We help men most when we remain apart from them ; when we grasp them, and will not permit them to grasp us. XXI I MUST not only impart what truth I pos- sess, but I must also welcome new truth from whatever source. To reject any truth because it seems to contradict a preconceived opinion, is to quench the light ; and of all sins those against light are the most deadly. I must tell the truth and shock the world. ORACLES AND COUNSELS 51 XXII Clear discernment and frank acknowledg- ment of good qualities in a foe are the surest signs of true nobility of character. XXIII He has the largest life who lives in the lives of the largest number of people. XXIV Let the gentleman keep his distance if he would be accounted a gentleman. All cheap familiarities disgust. Noble qualities demand large space for growth. We cannot honor each the other at too close a range. Many logs piled upon the fire may extinguish the flame. An over-display of affection will de- stroy what measure of real affection there ac- tually is. XXV " Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself ; " this is surely a rule than which none can be more golden, for therein is taught a kind of self-love that is never selfish. We can love others only when we have learned to love our- selves in a noble and generous fashion. 52 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XXVI Sidney wrote, " Look in thy heart, and write." I should think a glance at one's own heart would render writing difficult. Why not look at the needs of others, so far as they may be discovered, and write with them in view? XXVII " Live while you live " is the motto of thou- sands who have never lived at all. XXVIII An ounce of enterprise is worth a pound of privilege. XXIX Theke is no medicine in the wisdom of this world that can make a blind eye see God. XXX To-day neglected is to-morrow lost. XXXI Now that every house has its clock and every man his watch, are not our days " cut and hacked wretchedly into small portions ? " And are not our lives in danger of becoming entirely mechanical under the constant swing- ing of pendulums and uncoiling of mainsprings? It is the time element that so impoverishes our ORACLES AND COUNSELS 53 work; and he who obsequiously complies with the humors of men, and fulfils the letter rather than the spirit, is correctly called a time- server. The best things cannot be finished on time. Michael Angelo must work when the spirit is upon him. Great frescoes and cathedrals grow out of the minds that conceive and execute them, as trees rise from the earth. He who would perform his task well must make of it no task at all. No great deed can ever be per- formed in the workshop of time. Count time as you please — by lunar, solar, siderial, or tropical years — and it is all the same; one year is as good as another. Any one of them might as well end in June as in December. All these boundary lines are wholly imaginary, and every moment marks the ex- piration of twelve months. " No rising sun but ligJits a new year," December comes to an end, and at midnight the sun completes its revolution through the elliptic, and the earth its circuit round the sun; but faith hears no song in the heavens, and science discovers no clicking of celestial machinery and no rush of aerial currents. As ships cross lines of lati- tude and longitude without experiencing any change in temperature, so the ship of human life sails over the years and marks not the passage. 54 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR And how variable and unreliable is the hu- man perception in this matter of time. Have as many clocks and watches as you please, still " we live in feelings, not in figures on a dial, and count time by heart-throbs." We believe our own pulses against all the chro- nometers in the world. We may whisper to ourselves, " There are but sixty minutes in one hour ; " nevertheless the happy hours fly and the sad ones creep.^ XXXII Men ask for criticism, but you will be safe only when you give them praise. It is what they want. " A rose by any other name would smell as sweet," but it must be a rose. XXXIII The riddle of the universe it is not ours to solve. To discover duty is our noblest quest, and to do it our best achievement. XXXIV Too close an inspection of truth results in fanaticism, while the entire neglect of it begets within us a fixed habit of dishonesty. Truth 1 This paragraph appears in two of Dr. Marvin's books, and it has been thought best to retain it in this connec- tion though it is also part of another excerpt which may- be found on page 24 of this book. ORACLES AND COUNSELS 55 must be tempered to the mind that is to re- ceive it. XXXV Love your friends and forget your enemies. Love brings with it a sense of reality, but for- getfulness breathes over all the spirit of oblivion. To forget is to annihilate, at least for the time being; while love is, in its nature, creative. XXXVI Yesterday is remembrance, and to-morrow faith. XXXVII The world belongs to those who best serve it. XXXVIII Show your sore only to God and your physi- cian. Personal troubles have little interest for strangers and are likely enough to disgust friends. XXXIX The way to win friends is to betray little need for them. When you want the world it will not want you. The unfortunate are un- attractive. XL The fenced field makes fast friends. 56 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XLI When we speak we remember yesterday, but it is more important that we anticipate to- morrow. IV CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, AND HEROISM Cities are governed, so are houses too, By wisdom, not by harp-playing and whistling. — Menedemus. CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, AND HEROISM The heroism of medical men is astonishing when one considers how little applause it wins. We all admire the brave soldier who follows his flag into the thickest of the fight. If he is dis- abled through wounds received in battle how gladly we vote him a pension. But the daring of the doctor is greater than that of the sol- dier. The latter goes into battle to the sound of martial music, surrounded by enthusiastic comrades, while the physician, alone and with no public demonstration of approval, enters the pest-house and there calmly and without ostentation ministers to suffering humanity. The soldier is not rendered by his peculiar training more sensitive to the perils of his dan- gerous profession. On the contrary, the more extensive his training and experience, the more indifferent he becomes to danger. It is not so with the educated physician. To his cultivated mind a thousand risks in the matter of con- tagion, of which the ordinary man knows noth- ing, are clear and distinct. The civilized world 59 60 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR was moved to admiration by the story of Father Damien's courage and self-sacrifice. The priest went to live with lepers on the Island of Molokai in order to minister to them in spiritual things. But when in a southern country I visited a leper hospital I found there, hard at work and with no thought of danger or of disgust at the loath- someness of the disease, a number of able physi- cians and eflScient nurses. Brave, patient, self- sacrificing, loyal to the spirit of science, those noble men and women were working day and night to help and comfort the distressed. II The inherent gladness of genuine courage, whether physical or moral, is exhibited with peculiar force in the literature of the ancient Greeks, and may be viewed upon many a page of Homer. Always the heroes turn them to- ward the sunrise. They delight in the uncon- ventional freedom of the natural world, and are at home under twinkling stars and swinging boughs. Ill Civilization is the triumph of society. IV It may be that our revolutionary fathers were far above the average in honesty, but they CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, HEROISM 61 certainly could not, all of them, have believed the Declaration of Independence, which they nevertheless signed ; that is to say, they could not have believed it In anything but a Pick- wickian sense. When they signed the docu- ment, with its statement that " all men are born free and equal," they knew very well that slavery was a part of their system. They knew also that the " inalienable " rights named in the Declaration were not Inalienable. And they knew many other things which the children who came after them never gave them credit for knowing. It Is astonishing how Glory takes to the woods when History turns upon her the blaze of a searchlight. If we would fare bet- ter with our children and stand well with our consciences. It is incumbent upon us to do better while we have the opportunity. V It Is generally believed that the majority should rule, but I think our world would be in a much better condition were the minority in power. The few are wiser than the many. The opinion of a judge is usually worth more than that of a jury. VI The rule of the majority is often a very un- worthy one. Good government is the gift of 62 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR the trained few to the incompetent and thought- less multitude. VII The voices that shouted, " Hosanna to the Son of David ! " cried a few hours later, " Cru- cify Him ! Crucify Him ! " Popular ap- plause and popular clamor come in the end to one and the same thing. The statue and the hemlock are never far apart. VIII The men who traveled on the Titanic be- lieved that ship unsinkable, and they believed it even when the great vessel was making ready for its final plunge. Men are equally sure that our present civilization is imperishable, and yet there are now on every side ominous signs that should awaken in thoughtful minds anxiety if not actual alarm. The tap-root of every civilization is buried deep in its aristocracies ; these are the depositories of ancient superi- orities. Under the leveling processes of De- mocracy all these are rapidly disappearing. What is to take their place in this world, re- ceiving and preserving the sacred deposit of the ages.? CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, HEROISM 63 IX Civilizations have passed away, some of them leaving to our world treasures in art and letters that must always delight the cultivated mind. Our present civilization in no essential feature differs from those that have preceded it. It is disintegrating; and all history shows us that, while the process of disintegration may be at first, and for a long time, slow, a fearful momentum will be later acquired. The final plunge, alike in the Atlantic liner and in the great Ship of State, must be sudden. It may be in one case an iceberg that brings about the catastrophe, and in the other some extensive strike of workmen, a contested election, internal dissension, or the treachery of an ambitious man. Unless some force can be brought to bear capable of resisting the downward leveling of Democracy, the final plunge must be sooner or later taken. X Whether a flag is worth fighting for will depend upon what that flag stands for. Un- conditional loyalty to any country is treason to mankind. XI No government can long endure that rests upon the unenlightened judgment of the un- trained masses. 64. THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XII War will become a thing of the past when the common men of all lands refuse to leave farm and shop, and say to governments of every kind, " We will not fight." All must refuse if the movement is to succeed. If a few hold back and refuse to fight, they must be accounted guilty of treason. The movement must cease to be treasonable by becoming general. No single nation can disarm. If the German Empire can spend forty years in preparing to subjugate Europe, then Europe must spend those same forty years in prepar- ing to prevent that subjugation. The common people in all lands must act together. When they do so act, there will be no more war. The common men are the men that are killed in battle. Most of those who enlist and nearly all who are drafted are from the humbler walks of life. That is because most of the men and women in all lands are born and live in the lowly homes and occupations of the world. The few are educated, and still fewer may be trusted with the care of property and the great enter- prises of this world, all of which render them far too valuable to be wasted in a bloody bat- tle. Their education enables them to avoid in many ways the common conscription. Know- ing more than the average men and women of the world, they know the various ways of es- CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, HEROISM 65 caping duties and dangers that others must face with what courage they may. There is a way of escaping almost everything if you only know the way. Educated men know many ways and many things of which the uneducated are ignorant. It is said that most of the taxes are paid by the poor. There is much truth in the saying. There are various ways of avoiding taxation. Some of those ways are dishonest, and some of them involve no breaking or evading of law. Education helps a man here as elsewhere. The professional classes, as a general thing, do not go to war. They are of less use in the army than are men of affairs. When men of culti- vated mind do go, they are usually commis- sioned officers, chaplains, surgeons, or engineers, and as such are not wanted on the firing line. They also may resign if they wish. The dan- gers, burdens, and hardships of war fall to common men, whilst the emoluments and advan- tages go to the privileged few. It would be a blessed thing if the common men of all nations could combine and refuse to fight. We have already learned not to waste men of genius and of exceptional ability upon war; how long will it be before we learn that common men have a value, and are not to be wasted on shot and shell! The rights of common men will not be re- 66 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR spected so long as the military idea prevails. German Imperialism is opposed to both mod- ern civilization and the rights of ordinary men. Civilization rests upon the people, while Im- perialism looks to the army. The German Em- peror said, " The army is the foundation of the social structure of the Empire. . . . The soldier and the army, not parliamentary ma- jorities and decisions, have welded together the German Empire. My confidence is in the army; — as my grandfather said at Coblentz, ' These are the gentlemen on whom I can rely.' " What the Emperor thinks of the people may be learned from one of his addresses as reported by a German professor, the distinguished Dr. Ludwig Gurlitt. This is what the Emperor said : " The masses are children not yet of age. The government alone is competent to prescribe the course of their social and cul- tural development." The Emperor is Ger- many. It is his prerogative to govern alone, with no responsibility of any kind. His word is law. Of course that means despotism pure and simple. The common man can have no rights under such a system. In order to carry out the German program It is necessary to shut off criticism. The light must be extinguished. It is a rule with the CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, HEROISM 67 English royal family that no member of it, from the King himself down to the least im- portant person connected with him, is ever to bring an action for libel, no matter how vile the slander may be. The German Emperor takes a more drastic method of procedure. All criticism of the sovereign is leze majesty, no matter how just and wholesome it may be. If you say anything about the Emperor of which he does not approve, he may send you to prison. The man who is placed above criticism is also placed above responsibility. You cannot call him to account for anything. Under such a system neither the common man nor any other kind of a man can have a guar- anty that his rights will be protected. He has no rights to protect. All absolutists hate free institutions. Thus Bismarck did not like the United States. He was born under an absolute monarchy and he was a believer in militarism, and it grieved him to see German boys emigrate to our American Republic. Why should they wish to leave the Fatherland and live all their days under a con- stitutional government.? He could not see, or rather he would not see, that only under free governments like those of England and America the common man possesses rights that must be respected by all. 68 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR XIII History bears strange testimony against our human race. Its pages are filled with battles and colossal outrages, and reddened from first to last with human blood. But what we so often call history is not history in the best sense of that word. Some day we shall have a real history concerning itself with useful dis- coveries and inventions and with the advance of civilization. Our books of every kind are reverberant with the names of heroes — Alex- ander, Caesar, Napoleon; but the men who in- vented the useful and common appliances of every-day life are wholly forgotten. What did the conquerors named, and more like them, do for mankind? Is the world better for their having lived ? No ; they deluged the earth with blood, burned cities, murdered thousands of men and women, and orphaned millions of chil- dren. Yet history mainly concerns itself with the recording of their names and deeds. XIV When Memorial Day comes around I hear voices crying from the dust : " Fewer flowers for our graves, and more loyalty to the insti- tutions for which we were willing to perish! Fewer celebrations of our valor, and more of the spirit that made that valor possible! The CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, HEROISM 69 wreaths of the coward and of the politician mock the memory of the hero ; the courage of the good soldier is best honored by the faith and virtue of the generations that follow after." XV Universal suffrage is only glorified mob- rule; a sort of ragamuffin respectability. XVI No one who knows anything about the glory and worth of patriotism will wish to belittle that love of country which lies at the founda- tion of civil government, but there are nobler sentiments than ordinary love of country. The love of mankind is greater than that of a com- paratively small number of men and women who live in one place and speak the same lan- guage. The love of God comes before all other loves, and may even lead us to refuse aid to the land of our birth when that land is ranged against what is worthy of support. " My country, right or wrong," is an evil motto, and unconditional loyalty is disloyalty to God be- cause it exalts one's country above its Creator and above the Creator of all lands and of the world itself. XVII It would be difficult to find a better illustra- tion of the peril of " brilliant generalization " 70 THE TOP OF THE WINE-JAR than that which our own Declaration of Inde- pendence affords. The phrase, '' All men are born free and equal," when turned into the everyday English of common-sense, amounts to just this: All men are born equally helpless and dependent. It sounds well on paper to say, " All men are endowed with certain in- alienable rights, such as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," but every well-instructed child knows that the verbal air-castle has only empty breath for its foundation. There is but one inalienable right, and that is the sublime right of doing one's duty. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are alienated by the commission of crime, and even the innocent are at times justly required to give up one or all of these for the welfare of society at large. True liberty is attainable only through some degree of surrender, and it is an axiom, not in religious matters only but in secular things as well, that he who would find his life must lose it. Unrestricted liberty of action can exist only upon a desert island, where one man, with no human companion, is " monarch of all he surveys." XVIII TuRENNE displayed true courage when in the hour of battle he thus addressed himself: " You are trembling, carcass of mine ; you CIVICS, PATRIOTISM, HEROISM 71 would tremble more could you know where I am going to take you." He was alive to the actual danger by which he was surrounded, and yet unshaken in his resolve to face without flinching every peril it was his duty to encoun- ter. Unknown and uncomprehended dangers may be encountered recklessly; only those evils which we see and understand admit of true bravery in the way in which we deal with them. Where there is no fear there can be no cour- age. He only who still desires to live can die the death of a brave man. The religious en- thusiast who, despising this world and longing for a better one, courts martyrdom, is no hero at aU when compared with the soldier who resolutely exposes himself to a death of inde- scribable agony from which every nerve in his body shrinks, and from which his whole soul recoils. Pale cheeks, bloodless lips, and trem- bling knees are not signs of cowardice when the soul remains dauntless. Sometimes the con- fession of cowardice indicates a certain degree of moral courage. With commendable candor Erasmus said of himself : " Non erat animus ad veritatem, capite, periclitarl; non omnes ad martyrmm satis hahent rohoris; vereor autem si quis incident tumtdtus, Fetrum sim imitor turns. ^^ But the same Peter who denied the Master afterward served him with fidelity, and died for him with unshaken courage. TOIL AND ENDEAVOR H yap iv r(o iroidv cvx^p^ui Kal rax^nys ovk ivTiO-qcTL Pdpor]IXLa, KOL aVTT] Brj Kara SLaSox^Jv avOpiOTrapcoiV rdxtcTTa TeOvrj^Ofxeviov, Kai ovK elSoTOiv ovSe €avTov* CKaTepa dirupov atwvo?, koX to kcvov Trj* rjfuv 8okovvt(ov kol to a-Tcvov TOV TOTTOv Iv o) 7repLypd(f>eTaL. ^'OXrj re yap y yrj o-TtyfJir) KOL TavTrjs Troaov ywvtStov rj KaTOiKr]aL