■^ IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I ■ 50 l"^™ ^ ii& III 20 1.8 1.25 |||.4 III 1.6 •* 6" ► y] / y >^ Photographic Sciences Corporation m A^ ^ fs,'' t» I- € ; ! AFTER AN ENGRAVING BY JOHNSON JOHN RUSKIN. "That spiuv, stoojiiiii,' fijfuiv, the rou>.^h-heNvn kindly face, with its mobile, sensitive inoutii, and clear deep eves, so sweet and honest in repose, so keen and earnest and elo((uent in debate."— J//'. J. Smart. A COMMENTARY TO SESAME AND LILIES OF JOHN RUSK IN, LL.D. INCLUDING BIOGRAPHY, NOTES, AND APPENDIX BY FRKD. H. SYKKS, M. A. TORONTO THE COPP, CLARK COMPANY, Limukd II Knteml acconlint,' to Act, of Pailiaiiicnt of faiiadu, in the year one thousand ei-ht hundred and ninety-one, hy Tiik Coi-i-, Clark Com 1"A> v, Limitkd, in the ofHee of the MiniKter of Agriculture. li ll.l- ice of TO MV UEAF? AND TRUE FRIfND Prof. Dr. Archibald MacMechan, whose counsel and assistance have made THIS COMMENTARY WHAT IT IS. ii INTRODlilTlON. JOHN KISKIN: HIS LIFK AND WOliK, The life of h ^'ivat iii;ui is of pori'iiniiil iiitcivst. Fn liiiii \\v sw, not only the struggUis uiul fjiilurus iind triinnplis of tlit; individiuil, but ixIho, prosoiitud in their luont coiicruto ;ind iiitellit,'il>li! form, the strngffles of his aj^'e, iqion whose surj,'es he is, as it wv.\\\ the erest of a mighty wave. When this <,'reat man, pure in life, rich in thought, perfect in style, himself tells the story of his life, as Ruskin does in Pniivrita, our interest is vastly increased and vastly more serviceable to us. His thoughts and actions have their wisest and most sympathetic interj)reter, and, set fo)tli by otu* snre know- ledge of the general purposes and habits of thoufrlit of the author, each one of his works actjuiresfor us new and increased signitlcance. As one of the tenderest and most thoughtfu' >f Enijlish wi iters, at one who has added a new realm to Knglisl) literatiue— the criticism of art, as one who has strengthened English f;ut!i in what is pure an "1 beautiful and true, the author of Sesdtna coid LU'ws is a j)er- sonality of peculiar interest, whom to know is an t>ntireiy worthy and profitable study. Heme Hill, when Ruskin was a boy, was reached from London by a pleasant suburban road overhung with apple-trees and chest- nuts and lilacs. To the north, London; to the east and south, the circling Norwood hills; while Windsor, Harrow, and the valley of the Thames with its stretches of varying woods, formed its western horizon. On Heme Hill stands the house of which Uuskin's father, John Ruskin, of Ruskin, Telford, and Domec((, wine merchants of London, took a lease when the sherry horn M, Domec(j's Si)anish plantati(m had given prosperity to the firm. A roomy place it is, three storeys and more, with front garden set with evergreens, lilac, and laburnum, and back garden wh(»se walls cniMi^ihid pear and cherry and ap[tle-trees, and lusciniis gooscilua-riiis and currants an Eden to the boy's eyes, except that all fruit was f(»rbioems, Don Qiiixote, parts of Pc^pe, Spenser, iiyron, Cloldsmith, Addison, Johnson. The boy's own reading, not to mention nursery books, was in Pope's translation of the Iliad, Joyce's Srirntijic DiaUxjnes^ liobinntoii Cru.soc, Pihjrim's /'/•oj/zv.s.s, and Scott's novels. Then the holidays I Every summer Mr. lluskin was accustomed to journey to his customers' homes through half the counties of England and the Lowlands. Mr. Telfonl's travelling chariot was fitted up with innumerable pockets and an additional seat, and the family went alxjard for a tour that literally united pr(jiit and plea- sure — profit to the worthy wine-merchant, who found his customers flattered into larger orders by the honour of the firm's personal solicitation — pleasure in traversing a beautiful country and visiting beautiful and interesting places. What scimes were displayed to the child's eyes through the oriel of that travelling chari«tt! What variety of landscaj)es of hedge and iitild, hill and dale, forest and winding stream I Then, if any great castle was to be seen, they reverently visited it, or if any gallery of pictures, they passed the night in the nearest town. "My father had a (piite infallible, natu- ral judgment in painting, and his scjise of power of the northern masters was as true and passionate as that of the most accomplished artist. He never, when I was old enongh to care for what he himself delighted in, allowed me to look at a bad picture." Looking back on this life, Ruskin saw its merits and defects. He learned, he tells us, Olwdience and Faith, foi- his sul)mission to the will of his father or mother was perfect, while nothing ever occm-red to shake his trust in their sincerity and truth ; he found the meaning of Peace, — peace in thought, word and deed. But it was not a loving household. The parents were distant divinities; no stoi'm was allowed to strengthen the boy's ((ndiiranct!, no mingling in society t<> cure his i>ashfulness and conceit ; his Judgment of light and wrong 4 I r 144 TNTKODUCTION. m\ 1 ' r i was left undeveloped, so that he grew up "by protection innocent rather than by practice virtuous." So in the godly, ]»eaceful, simple home on Heme Hill, varied by the sunniier holiday, or occasional visits to Croydon or Pertli, the early years of lluskin's life slip|»ed away. As the l)oy grew up, tutors were obtained for him, Dr. Andrews first, Mr. Runciman in drawing, and later on the Rev. Thomas Dale, who lost all influence with the boy through calling his grannnar - his mother's grammar — "a Scotch thing I" and "my true master in mathematics, poor Mr. Rowbotham." A litth^ Latin, a very little Greek, some French, three books of Euclid, Algebra to (juadratics made up the s\d)- stance of the boy's scholastic ac(|uirements when at the age of seventeen he entered Christ Church, Oxford, as a gentleman-com- moner. But Ruskin carried to ( )xford what was infinitely more valuable than mere scholastic training. "I possess the gift of taking pleasure in landscape in a greater degree than most men .... In journeyings, when they brought me near hills, and in all mountainous ground and scenery, I had a [)leasure, as early as I can remend)er, and con- tinuing until I was eighteen or twenty, infinitely greater than any which has been since possible to me in anything, and comparable only to the joy of a lover in being near a noble and kind mistress." So, speaking of his first visit to Dover, he describes the pleasure he had from the sea, not in going on it — that was forbidden — but "in simply staring and wondering at it." Add to this love of nature an early devotion to art. His artistic instinct showed itself first in the persistent, painfully accurate way he coi)ied for his amusement maj)s, and illustrations such as those of Cruikshank to Grimm's Tales. From his drawing-master the boy first lieard of Turner, as one who was da/zling the woild by some splendid ideas. Fate ordered it that a chance present of Mr. Telford's to young Ruskin was a copy of Rogers' poem, Ifobj, with illustrations drawn by Turner. Forthwith the vignettes were the boy's only co})ies. What marvel- lous results were to issue from this incipient love for the great landscape painter, we shall see later. Add, now, to this love of natures and devotion to art a «lesir(! f(»r literary composition. The earliest y was moved to write and illustrate a poetical account of their tour, which was designed to c<»ml)ine the style of l)o)i J tum \\'\{\\ that of Chihlc Ifarolil, and which, securely advancing through France to Chamouni, broke down when the writer had exhausted all his descriptive terms on the Jura. Merely mentioning his enthusiasm for mineralogy, we can see the formative process at work in the resolutions he made in his tifteenth year to strive to express genuine sentiment in rhyme, to study engraving, architecture, and mineralogy. At the age of seventeen, as we have said, Ruskin matriculated into Oxford. Throughout the years of his life at Oxford his mother lodged in High Street to be near him. Every night found the son at his mother's tea-table. Every Saturday the father canie down from Heme Hill, and Sunday saw them all at service in St. Peter's, the son a trifle ashamed of " vintner papa and his old- fashioned wife." Wild and riotous as was the life of the undergraduates, Ruskin was, at most, a spectator of their revels. His own college life was very simple : chapel and lectures till one ; after lunch, a lecture till two ; walking till live ; dinner at the college hall ; a chat, tea at his mother's, and a steady bit of reading ended the day. There was only about six hours' work, but it was regularly and conscien- tiously accomplished. Then his drawing went on, with Copley Fielding and Harding great artists for his tutors. Vacations were given up to tours — in 18.'i7 to Yorkshire and the Cumberlanrk. Nobody in all England, says Ruskin, speaking of the year 1839, cared, in the true sense of the word, for Turner, but a retired coachmaker of Tottenham and himself. The Press was venting "its ribald buffooneries on the most exalted truth and the highest ideal of landscape that this or any other age has ever witnessed." Public taste was degenerating. Ruskin found himself forced to act. A letter to a review, rejected because of its length, was amplified into a pamphlet, and from a pamphlet into what at last made the five volumes oi Modern Painters, of which the first appeared in 1843. In order to vindicate Turner's genius it was necessivry to estal)lish principles of criticism by which artists could be judged. The work, therefore, is a treatise on the principles of art — cliierty of landscape painting — and the application of those principles in judging the relative merits of old and (tf modern masters. That art is greatest, says the author, which conveys to the mind of the spectator the greatest num])er of the greatest ideas, and an idea is great in proportion as it is received by a higher faculty (»f the mind, and as it more fully occu])ies, exercises, and exalts the faculty l)y which it is received. The ideas conveyed by art may be classified as (i.) ideas of Power, arising from our per- ception of the powers which j)erfornied the work ; (ii.) ideas of 148 INTBODUr,TTO^ . Imitutioii, iirisiii'j; fr(»ni our [lorcoptioii of tlio similarity of \\\v thiiij^ produced to soniuthiiii^ olsc ; (iii.) idua.s of Truth, or the i»ercc'|»tiou of the faithfuhiuss of the thing })roduccd to thu facts ; (iv.) ideas of Beauty in the thing itself, or by resemblance or suggestion ; (v.) ideas of Relation, the harmony of the parts of the production to each other, or of the production to what it suggests or resembles. In the application of the principles enunciated he reviews the work of Wilson, Gainsborough, Constal)le, Calc(jt, Robson, Cox, Copley Fielding, DeWint, Harding, and Turiier, })roving that the work of the modern masters of landscape is superior to that of the ancient. From this point the treatise takes a wider sweep in the discussion of the truth of tone, colour, chiaroscuro, space, skies, and of clouds, with which the first volume ends. Taking up the thread of its predecesst)r, the second volume deals with the truth of mountain, water, vegetation, closing with a development of ideas of Beauty. To say that the vindication of Turner was complete is to say little: to-day his paintings are among the most precious of national treasures. But this volume was more than a triumphant vindica- tion. The wide scope of the in([uiry, the breadth of knowledge that embraced every important picture from London to Naples, the brilliancy, pictures(|ueness, and grandeur of style, co-operated in creating a new dej^artment of English literature — the criticism of art, while it greatly aided the renaissance in English painting known as pre-Raphaelism, and gave Ruskin the place of the greatest art critic of the world. The third and fourth volumes, treating of the ideal in art ard of mountain beauty, appeared ten years later (1856), and with the fifth volume, on leaf beauty and ideas of relation (18C0), the work ends. While preparing the third volume of Modern Painters, Ruskin found the time and material for the Seven Lamps of Architecture. Under this peculiar title (how felicitous his titles are I) he traces the influence of national character in all great architecture : the lamp of Sacrifice, in that the nation gives its most costly marble because it is most costly ; the lamp of Truth, showing the sincerity and honest purpose <»f the great l)uildings ; the lamp of Power, pointing man, through his instinct of rule, to great eminences ujjon which to build ; the lamp of Beauty, in the ornamenting of the structure j INTBOrnWTION. 140 the Ijimps (»f Life, Memory and Obodionco, Hhowini; tho origiiiulity »)f tliu iirchituct's design, his rovuronce for tliu past by the comiiiom- oration in the oditice of the great acliievenients of our fatliers, and his submission to the influence of his contemporaries, making his art not individual but national. A still deeper study of architecture, from an historical stand- point, is found in his Stones of Venice, a work which occupied the years from 1849 to 1853, the first volume aj)pearing in 1851. In addition to being a history of Venetian art, written from long personal examinaticm of Venice, it goes to show the era of (Jothic art as the era of national faith and virtue, and the era <»f tlie Renaissance as the era of national infidelity and vice. ' By these volumes,' says Mr. Stillman, ' he introduces an element of common sense into the criticism of architecture unknown before.' Lectures on Art and Architecture delivered at Edinburgh in 1853 ; The Elements of Draivhifj in 1857 ; two lectm-es on Art and its application to decoration and manufacture delivered in 1858, and published under the title Tlie Tivo Paths, complete in the main the first period of Ruskin's literary activity and the first forty years of his life. From what has already been said of Ruskin's work, it will be seen that it is on the one hand allied with art, but on the other with those moral principles in individual and national life which he considered essential to great art. We can easily understand how the critic of art could, in the natural development of his mission, become the apostle of higher individual and national life. Enter- ing, therefore, on the second period of his work, we find it taking more and more a didactic aim — we find it having ever greater bearing on personal conduct and social life. Into the dissemination of liis principles, Ruskin threw himself with untiring energy. From the many addresses delivered to popular audiences may l)e men- tioned A Joy Forever, — two lectures at Manchester in 1857, treating of genius and how the nation should employ it, and how to gatlier and distribute the works of genius that they may l)c a "joy forever." Sesame and Lilies — the nu)st popular of his works — consisting of three lectures,— two delivered in Manchester in 18(54 on books, reading, and the education of girls, and one, in Dublin, on tlie mys- tery of life ; The Crown of Wild Olive, containing lectures on Work, m If 150 INTRODUCTION. TrafHo, War, ilclivcicd in J8(i5, at Caniborwoll, Bradford and VV(MJwicli, resijoctivoly ; Ethics *>/ the Dud, ten lectures at a girls' school, in 1805, on the elements of crystallisation. Appointed, in lb61), Slade Professor of Fine Arts in Oxford, he published various series of lectures on sculpture, science and art, engraving, under the titles, Aratra Fentelici, The Eagle's Ned, The Art of England, Val d'Arno, Ariadne Florod'ma, etc. This, however, is only one phase of a many-sided activity.* The collection of his contributions to the pul)lic press in the f(trni of letters on art, science, politics, war, and other sul)jects, till the two volumes known as Arrows of the Chace. Most original and most interesting, however, is his Fors Clavigeraf, a monthly letter to *I give here, if only for its lesson of industry, a list of Ruskin's chief works, with the dates of first i»ublication in l)ook form. Poems (in the magazine, ' Friendsliip's Oflfering,' 1835-1S1;{), see l)elo\v. Modern Painters, I., 1843 ; II., 184(1; III., 185(j; IV., 18r>(); V., 18G(». Seven Lamps of Architecture, 184i). King of the Golden Kiver (a fairy tale written in 1841), published in 1851. Poems, privately printed, 1851. Stones of Venice (three vols.), 1851-53 Uiotto and hisWorks in Padua, 1855. The Two Paths (five lectures on art in iU relation to manufacture), delivered in 1858-9), 18.59. Elements of Perspective, 18.58. Unto This Last (four essays on political economv in the Cornhill Magazine, 18C0), 1802. Munera Pulveris (six essays on political economy, i)ul)liHhed in Fraser'n Magnzhie, 18«2-3), 1871. Sesame and Lilies, 18(55. Ethics of the Dust, 1800. Crown of Wild Olive, 1800. Time and Tide l)y Wear and Tyne (twenty -five letters to a Sunderland working man, on the laws of work, written in 18()7), 1807. (^ueen of the Air (a study of Greek myths), 1869. Fors Clavigera, 1871-1878, 1883. Aratra Pentelici (six lectures on sculjiture, delivered in 1870), 1871. Michael Angelo and Tintoret, 1872. The Eagle's Nest (lectures on the relation of art to natur.al science), 1S7'2. Ariadne Florentina (six lectures on wood and metal engraving), 1S73-70. Love's Meinie (lectures on Greek and English birds), 1873. Val d' Arno, lectures on Tuscan art. Proserpina (studies of wayside Howers ; two vols.), 1875-0. Laws of Fesole (a familiar treatise on drawing and painting), 1877. St. Mark's Rest (a history of Venice, especially of Venetian .art), 1877. Deucalion, lectures delivered from 1874 to 1878, on mineralogy. Mornings in Florence (guide-books to Florentine paintings), 1875-77. A Joy Forever (two lectures delivered in 1857), 1880. Arrows of the (Jhace (two vols, of letters to the press), 1880. Bible of Amiens, dealing with modern history, 1881. The Art of England, 1884. Prffiterita, I., 1885; II., 1887. \Forit, the best part of the words Force, Fortitude, Fortune ; Clatngera, the best part of clava, a club ; clavis, a key ; clavus, a nail ; together with jero, I carry ; hence the title denotes the strength of Deed, Patience and Law. {Fors, Let. II.) INTRODUCTION. 151 workingmen, which 1)egim [uiblication l»u(liunco to ImiiiJin law hikI appointed persons We will have some music ami [)oetry We will liave some art." It would exceed the limits of tlie i)reHent sketch to enter into a discussion on this social Utopia. It will be noted, however, that Ruskin sets himself resolutely against the i)revailing views of political economy. Anarchy and competition are the laws of death, he declares ; government and co-operation the laws of life. Eng- land gives herself up to industrial activity ; the St. (ieorge's Society would have no railroads to destroy the beauty of nature, no manufactories that would poison the air and pollute the streams. The political economy of to-day recognizes no law beyond that c(m- cerning sujiply and demand ; the creed* of the St. George's Society is a stern n)oral law : its chief prhiciple is — Love (iod and honour the King. Hut whatever value we attach to Ruskin's political economy, *The " creed " of the St. (Jeor^'e'a Society is as follows :— I. — I trust ill the Ijiviii}; (Sod, Father Aliiii!,'hty, Maker of heaven and c;irth, and of all thiiijfs ami (features, visible and invisible. I trust in the kindness of His law, and the f,'oodiiess of His work. And I will strive to love Him, and keep His law, and see His work, while I live. H. — I trust in the nobleness of human nature — in the majesty of its faculties, the fulness of its mercy, and the joy of its love. And I will strive to love my neighbour as myself, and even when I cannot, I will act as if I did. HI. — I will labour, with such strength and opportunity as God gives me, for my own daily brciid ; and all that my hand finds to do, I will do with my might. IV. — I wiU not deceive, or cause to be deceived, nor hurt, nor cause to be hurt, nor rob, nui' cause to be robbed, any human being for my gain or pleasure. v.— I will not kill nor hurt ai v living creature needlessly, nor destroy any beautiful thing, but will strive to save and comfort all gentle life, and guard and perfect all natural beauty, upon the earth. VI.— I will strive to raise my own body and soul daily into higher powers of duty and happiness ; not in rivalship or contention with others, but for the help, de- light, and honour of others, and for the joy and peace of my own life. VII.- I will obey all the laws of my country faithfully, and all the orders of its monarch so far as such laws or conunands are consistent with what I suppose to be the law of God ; and when they are not, or seem in any wise to need change, I will oppose them loyally and deliberately— not with malicious, concealed, or disorderly violence. VIII. — And with the same faithfulness, and under the limits of the same obedience which I render to the laws of my country, and the commands of its rulers, 1 will obey the laws of the society called of St. George .... and its masters .... so long as I remain a Companion, called of St. (Jeorge. Fors, Let. Iviii. TNrnoDi'i'rrox. 153 an srly n a iii. howevor wo v'ww tlu! i»i;i('ti(;il)ility of liis ideas, wo must fidniiro tlm c(>ura<^»S fcailcssiu'ss juid lofty iiiotivi's that have luiahlo'l (mo man to sot his fat'(! a.L,Minst tho trend of thought and action <»f his con- temjKJrarios, to devote time, liealth, and fortune, amid contumely and derision, to the loftiest efforts on l)ehalf of his fell(»\v men. In the <)j)oning paragraphs of the ^^yst(^t^l| of Life, Uuskin sor- rowfully acknowledges that much of his work has failed. Twenty years later, in Piuifcrifa, the same confession meets us. Yet it is more than doubtful if this self-depreciation is to be taken at face value. Even if we deem his views on political economy absurd— wliich they are not- and admit with Mr. Stillman that his views on art-criticism are radically and irretrievably wi-ong which they are not — there is still a vast amount of admittedly great work, which this present age knows of and for which it is duly grateful Ruskin has done more than any other living writer to open men's eyes to the beauty of the huml)lest scenes,— of sky or mountain, rock, river or sea. Literature and tho Bil)lo have received from Ruskin's com- ments new beauty and new force, while art has received a new inspiraticm, and ;irtists a new teacher. " Turner's late pictures, viewed without Raskin's light upon them," writes A. M. Wakotield, " would be a closed book to all ; with it thoy are rainbows of light, full of mystic and visionary wonder " He has brcjught ho])e and strength to tho true la))ourer of Eng- land, and put a halo around tho simple virtues of honesty, courage, and humility. " No other man in England that T meet," said Carlyle, " has in him the divine rage against inicjuity, falsity, and baseness that Ruskin has, and that every man ought to have." And what style ! Who shall match his variety of gifts, — that diction pure and copious, flashing and surging like a mountain torrent, that wealth of allusion drawn from tho true metal of all literatures and by his thought transmuted into pure goldiluit infinite play of feeling, now bitter with irony, now melting with pathos, now fierce in denun- ciation of wrong, now sad at the folly or insensibility of men, now reverent before the glory of the divinity that pervades all nature ! At Brantwood, near Lake Coniston, among hills and lakes that he loved as a boy, with his ' pet cousin', Mrs. Severn, as his hostess, the lecturer, professor, painter, economist still lives, surrounded by priceless treasures of art. But perhaps never more for him the ' Ti ir.4 INTIiitDUCTloN. 11 Tiii'iioi'H and TitiniiM, ihu raru coiiiH mid iniHHiilH and iiiaiuiscriptH. Thu .shadow of calamity is said to have vtMlod liiH mind to all tiioii* meaning. Lot us [>i'ay that it may not hi; h«», that for thu vutoran soldier in tluj war of humanity thcro may hu (|uiot consunnnation of days, as for his grave there will he sure renown, " Of old siuij,' Chaucer of llic Flower and lieaf : The mirthful mii^a-r of a ^'oldeti time ; And Hweet hirdH' hoii;,' lhrou;,'liout his daisied rhyme HaiiK fearlesH ; for our cities held no Ki'ief Dumb ill their hiackeiied hearts beneath tlie jjrime Of factory and furnace, and the sheaf WaH home in ;,dadness at the harvest time. So now the Seer would i|uicken our belief: ' Life the ^rreen leaf saith he, 'and Art the Mower, Klow winds of heaven about the hearts of men, ('omelove, and hope, and hel)>fuliiess, as when On faintin;,' vineyard falls the freshening' shower : Kear not that life may blossom yet aj^airi, A nobler beauty from a purer power ! ' " [>iH. Hi'w run NOTHS. m. Thi' iiotoH iii.ukcil " VV," are thoicby rroditcd to the t'dition of Joliii WiU'y iiiiil Sons, Nt!W York, lSS{t. SeviTiil of the illiiHlntivc |>aHSii^,'cH litivc Ik'«'I afTonii'd l)y Art and Lift': A liuskiii Anfhiiliiifji, liy Win. Sloaiic Kt'iiiwdy, .1. P.. Aldtii, Ni-w York, issji. The rt'ferenoe mimhorH used with illustrative passa^ri's from Uiiskin's otlicr works, »'xc('iit I'rittt'titn, ajiplv to I,o\ell's Kditioti of |{ii> lectmcH ut in its place. It contained also a third lecture, ' On the Mystery of Life and its Arts.' (See n. to 102, 1.) The present e ; vol. b\), p. 088. Leinure lloiir,—\o]. lit, p. 11!), Ksy. Maeniillan's,—\o\. 22, p. 423. Natwn, — vol. 7, p. 173; vol. 11, p. 22'J, 201; vol. 12, p. ril; vol. 29, p. Ill ; vol. 40, p. 203. iV«/ ((/•(',— vol. 2!), \). 3").^. Sorth American, — vol. 00, p. 110; vol. 72, p. 204 ; vol. 102, i». 300. Westminster Jie- rici(',~\(A. IS, p. .'^i30; vol. SO, p. 400. (For further infonaatioii, sec I'oole's Inilex to Periodical Literature.) :!il I'kl iii' FIRST PKEFACE. 3, 11. my earUer work. — Uuskin wrote this preface in 1871. if the .student examines tlie list of works on i)age 150 of the Introtluc- tion, he will lind tliat many ol theni are lectures, or essays in magazines, hence for ' temporary purp(»ses.' lluskin, with his matured mind, here criticises the work of his youth ; but the readier must be on his guard against his self-depreciatum. 3, 12. about reUgion. i^ee Seven Lamps, chap. i. ; Stones of Venlrv, vol. iii., p[). lO'J tt". ; in a late preface to Modern Painters, li. re- peats iiis criticism of his early work. "Many parts of the first and second volumes are written in a narrow enthusiasm, and the substance of their metaphysical and religious speculation is only justifiable on the ground of its absolute honesty." (See especially vol. ii., chaps, v.-vii. ) Head for further conunents on his early religious views, Frmterita, I., pp. 22, 112 ; II., pp. 14 11". and pp. 194, 195. 3, 16. doctrines of a narrow sect. See Introduction, p. 142. In Furs, Let. Ixxvi., he describes the occasion of his change of opinion from a narrow Puritanism that rejcctetl, as wnmg, everything that was Ikonian Catludic to what might be called the 'religion of humanity.' " I was still in the bonds of my old evan^'elicjil faith ; and, in iS.'iS, it. was with me I'rotestanli.'^m or nolhin;^ ; (lie crisis of the whole turn of my thouj^hlslieinir one Sunday inorniny:, at Turin, when, from before I'aul \ eronese's l^tueen of Slieha, and under quite o\erwhelmed sense of hisiiod ;^i\en power, 1 went away to !i Waldensian ehapel, where a little s(|ueakinj;- idiot was pre.ic^hiny Ut an audience of seventeen old women and three louts, that they were the only children of (jo(l in Turin ; and that all the people in 'lurin outside the chaiiel, and all the people in the world out of siyfit of Monte Viso, would l)e damned. 1 came out of the chapel, in sum of twenty years of ihoufjjht, a conclusively »/t-eonverted man -converted by this little l'iedn\ontese Hentlenian, so powerful in his or>^Mn-<;rindinj(, inside-out, as it were. Here is an end to my ' Mother- Law ' of Protestantism anyhow !— and now what is there left .'" Vou will find what is left, as, in much darkness and sorrow of heart I gathered it, variously tauylit in my books, written between 18."i7 and 1874. It is all sound and !;ood, as far as it goes : whereas all that went l)efori' was so mixed with I'roteslant en'otisni and insolencie, that, as you have probably heard, 1 won't republish, in their lirst form, any of those former books.... 1 can no more become a /i'(u/*((/i Catholit' than a^ain an Kvanj.;elical-l'ro- testant... Catholic, 1, of the Catholics ; holdini;- only for sure (.UmVh or, iu the fo(»t note to l>iige !.")() of the Jntroiiuction. 3, 21. affected language. Cf. /%/>, x., p. 1S2. la Forn, Let. xxiii. , K. remarks : — " I'eople used to call ine a yood writer then ; now they say I can't write at all ; j because, for instance, if I think any hotly's house is on fire, 1 only say, ' Sir, your house' is on fire'; whereas formerly I used to say, 'Sir, the abode in which you probably passed the delightful days of youth is in a (tate of inflainination,' and everyl)ody usedi to like the effect of the two i)'s' in ' probably passed,' and of the two d's in 'delightful' days.'" 11. is over severe towards himself. 3, 23. Modern Painters — Richard Hooker. Modnm Painters, vol. 11., appeared in 1846. His tutor, Osborne (iordon, whom he admired and believed in, recommended iluskin to model his work oa Hooker's Ecck'siastkal Polity. The chief points of resemblance are the long sentences, the members of which are clearly arranged and skilfully- joined, the earnest, persuasive tone and the poetic imagery. Hooker (1553-1600) defended the system of church government as practised in the Church of England ; and his book is the tirst great monument of English prose. Cf. PnnterUa II., x. p., 337. 3, 27. policy embraces everything connected with the govera- meat aad social organization of a country. A legitimate restoration to the word of its origmal coateats. The use of such words gives a delight- ful, old-fashioaeil air to Kuskia's style. 3, 28. morality as distinct from religion. In Lectures on Art, 11. detiaes the sease ia which he takes these terms. ■' I use to-day, as I shall in future use, the word ' relij^ion' as sitfiiifyiiif; the feelings of love, reverence, or di-ead with which the human mind is affected by its conceptions of spiritual being ; and you know well how necessary it is, both to the riyhtness of our own life, and to the luiderstanding the lives of others, that we should always keep clearly distinguished our ideas of religion, as thus defined, and of morality, as the law of righteousness in human conduct. For there are many religions, but there is only one morality. Theie are moral and inimoral religions, which differ as nuich in |>recept as in emotion ; but there is nnly one morality, which has been, is and must be forever, an instinct in the hearts of all civilized men, as certain and >uiallerable as their out- ward bodily forms, and which receives from religion neither law nor ]>eace ; but only hope and ftilicity. Lfctuira an Arl II., p. 40. 4, 13. the old preface is priated in this edition, pp. TJ tf. 4, 15. lecture in Ireland. See Mystery of Life, p. lO'i. 4, 18. these two lectures- Sesame aad Lilii'H. 4, 21. rouse my audiences. It will be remendicreil that the book Sesaine and Lilies really embodies- three lectures. See Bibliography given above. 4, 23. subjects full of pain. Ruskin doubtless means those social and economic (|uestions, the condition of the pu(ir, the increase of luxury, the debasing iuilueace of aiaaufactures, etc., on which his it I' I") 11^ i : 158 NOTES. most impassioned deliverances have been made. Cf. Crovm of Wild O/ii'c, LI II to This Last, Mtiiicra, I'ulrn'i.s, etc. 5, 2. Fain, ' gladly,' cf. note to 3, 2G. 5, 9. Vile, contains the meaning of the Latin vilis (vile), cheap, as well as base. A t,oo(l writer is allowed to coin new words and restore old ones to their place in the language. Cf. n. to 27, 9, 'audiences.' Ruskin's own practice is the best commentary on this passage. He determined in 1871 to print his own books on the best paper, with wide nuirgins, and strongly bound. (See For-s, Let. vi.) They are not cheap, but are a delight to the reader. L^n fortunately most of us must use a ' vile, vulgar ' edition *at a vile price.' 5, 33. Kings' Treasuries : Men are the kings of the earth and books are the magazines where their wealth — their l)est thoughts — are stored. \l. everywhere asserts that books, paintings, .sculpture, char- acter are more, truly national wealth than money, 6, 12. the letters begun. Referring to Fors Clavigera, begun January 1st, lb7l. See Introd., p. 150. 6, 17. recent events. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71. At Vionville the eoiuiuering (Jermans lost 17,000 men. 6, 19. famine at Orissa. Orissa, an ancient kingdom of India, on the eastern coast, is inhabited by the Khouds, who are sup- posed to be descended from the orii,dnal inhabitants of the country. The fanune referred to eairied otf one fourth of the population. Cf. The Eaijle.H Next, p. lU ; also Sesame, p. 124. 6,24. modern political economy. R. fought persistently against the doctrines ot Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill and others whose works end)ody the received opinions on political economy to-day. He sought to establish character as national wealth rather than riches. He would have co-operation rather than competition, organized servitude rather than individualism. He is against the taking of interest. See Unto This Last and Muvera Pulveris. 6, 26. Supply and Demand. A term uaeeorge Eliot's Romnhi the ethical doctrine of this i)assage admirably illustrated in the development of the character of 'I'ito Melema. 13, 34. your thanksgiving. 'J'here is keen sarcasm in model- ling this supposed thanksgiving on the prayer of the I^harisee, " Lord, I thank Thee that I am not as other men," etc.; cf. Luke xviii., 1 1. 14, 16. How hardly. ..." "Cf. Matt, xix., 23. 14, 19. " not meat . . . . ' Inaccurate : " but righteousness and ;" cf, U(mi. xiv., 17. 1 M \ 160 NOTES. 14, 30. black Sister of Charity, refening to tin: lj|;u;k-i<)J»eroclaimed. In June of the same year, a rising of the Ited Kepublicans of Paris was (pielled only by great blood- shed. 16, 23. VOUS etes Anglaise, etc., "you are English; we believe you. English women always speak the truth." 17, 14. EUesmere. Francis Egerton, lirst Earl of I'^Uesmore (1800- IS")?), a scholarly nol)leman who translated i'^a^.s^ and rendered inany st;rvices to art. "It is probable that the speech here mentioned is the one made by Lord EUesmere May 28th, ISfVi, in behalf of the Baroness von Beck. She was an authoress of some note, who, shortly after her arrival in England, Wi.s arrested on some obscure cliarge as she was returning from a reception. Being thrown into prison in her ball-iliess, she died from exposure in a few ilays. A petition was pre- sented conjplaining of the conduct of her persecutors, and it is presunuv- ble that some circumstances in her case may have suggestetl to Lord EUesmere the (Jretclun of /v<«.s/," W. 17, 16. Gretchen. This word is a (ier. diminutive [-vlitn) of Margarete. It is used iiere, rather than 'lady.' to give concreteness to the reference, and to suggest a[)parentiy some degree of ail'ection, as well as tile nationality of the person referred to. Cf. the preceding note. 17, 16. one girl. PraUntu shows us Ivuskin as forming delight- ful friendships witli young giils. ()i. Ethics uf the JJud, and tluilcttor of the Irish girl in Chap. iii. of pt. 111. 17, 28. one of them. *'.'''''/. l^^ar one. I'eihaps his 'pet cousin,' Mrj. .Severn, who in lSli4 Ijccamc an inmate of his mother's house. See p. 154. NOTES. 161 ) of to as ote. lit- ter 17, 34. weak picturesqueness. 'I'liis sclf-dtprtHiiitioii is chaiai;toristio ; cf. note to .'i, 10 an. I .{, '20. In the M>/sfrrif <>/ Life he umler-esti mates the iiuportaiiee of the revohitioii he has brought ai)uut ill art. Cf. pp. 10") fi". 18, 2. Greek and Syrian tragedy, in Greek tragedy he refers espeeially to Medea, wife of Jason, wln), when repudiated by her husband, slew their children to slake her vengeance. See Euripides, Medea. In Syrian trayedy, since .Syria includes Palestine, he has in mind Sah)me, who to please her mother, Herodias, demanded the head of John the Baptist. See Matt. xiv. Xote the irony in K.'s use of •dutiful.' 18, 28. Guido Guinicelli or Ouuizelli, one of the most famous poets of the Italian literary renaissance of the thirteenth century. Endowed with a genius for poetry, he, though a soldier, cultivated the l)oetic art, giving nobility of seutmient and loftiness of style to his work. Dante, in Purjatorio, refers to him as his master. Of his works are preserved four canzoni, as well as some other slight pieces. He died about 1270. Wei»s in Bioyraphie Universelle. 18, 30. Marmontel ( 1 72:i- 1 799), author of Co>des Moraiix. ' ' He was a French gentleman of the old school ; not noble, nor, in French sense, even 'gentilhomme,' but a peasant's son who made his way into Parisian society by gentleness, wit, and a diiinty and candid literary power. He became one of the humblest, yet honestest placed scholars at the court of Louis XV., and wrote pretty, yet wise sentimental stories in linished French." Fors Claviyera, Let. xiv. 18, 32. Swift (IG07-17-45). The most prominent figure among the wits of Queen Anne's time — clergyman, politician, pamphleteer and satirist of humanity. The author of Tale of a Tub, (jiiKioer'H Travels, etc. The greatest master of English prose. Perhaps R. refers to his saying, " 1 hate mankind but I do not dislike Tom, Dick and Harry." Taine paints the * temper ' of the man graphically ; — " Twenty years of insults without revenge, and humiliation without respite ; the inner tempest of fostered and crushed hopes, vivid and brilliant dreams, ; the habit of suffering and hatred, the neet-ssily of (^oneealing these, the baneful con- sciousness of sui)eriority, the isolation of jjenius and pride, the biiterness of accumu- lated wrath and pent-up scorn." Such was the working life of Swift. 18, 37. Denmark Hill. A district in the southern suburbs of London, describing the house on Ueiiniark Hill, his residence after Heme Hill, ii. writes : — " But the Heme Hill days, and many joys with them, were now ended At last the lease of the larger house was bought : and everyl)ody said how wise and proper; and my mother dtti like arranging the rows of pots in the big greenhouse; and the view from the breakfast room into the field was really very lovely. And we bought three cows, and skinuned our own cream, and churned our own butter. And there was a stable aiul a farm yarci; and haysta('k, and a pigstye, and a porter's lodge, where undesirable visitors couline adventure. Mr. Whyniper, in .July, 18(3;"), was niakinj; his eit,'hth atteni))! to ascend the hitherto inaceessable Matterhorn. With him were the liev. Mr. Hudson, Lord Francis I)out,'las, Mr. Hadow, and three j,Miides, C'roz and the two Taujiwalders. They had triumphantly reached the top on .July 14th, and, roped together, were rounding a clitf on the return, when : — " Michel had laid aside his axe, and, in order to j,nve Mr. Iladow {greater security, was absolutely takinjx hold of his le^jfs and jiuttin;;- his feet one by one into their proper positions. As far as I know, no one of us was absolutely descendiiifj:. I cannot sjx-ak with certainty, because the leading men were partially hidflen from my siy^ht by an interveninj,' mass of rock, but •: is my lielief, from the movements of their shoulders, that Croz, bavintr done as I said, was in the act of turniufr to yo down a step or two liimself ; at this moment Mr. Hadow slipped, fell a;,'ainst him, and knocked him over, I heard one startled exclamation from Croz, then saw him and Mr. Hadow flying downward ; in anotlier moment Hudson was draj^i^ed from his steps and liOrd Dou^das innnediately after him. All this was the work of a moment. Inmiediately we heard Croz's exclamation, old I'eter and I i>!anted ourselves as firmly as the rocks would permit ; but the roj>e broke between Tauj,'walder and Lord Doufilas. For a few seconds we saw oiu' unfortunate comjiar.ions sliding downwards on their backs, and spreading out their bands, endeavoring to save themselves. They passed from our sight. . ..fell from precipice to jirecipice on to the Matterhorngletseher fielow, a distance of nearly I.OOU feet So perished our companions." — Whymper, Axcrnt of the Mnttcrhitrn. 19, 16. Who have made mercenary soldierp After defeating Charles the Hold of Burgundy, the Swiss were sought after by many European j)rinees, and the battles of the Papacy, ]<>ance, and the Empire wero often decided by vSwiss mercenaries. When Louis XI 1. and Lutlovico Sforza, Duke of Milan, wore at war, Swiss soldiers fought on both sides, but they deserted aiul betrayed the Duke. Sometimes ditlerent cantons favored different foreign combatiuUs ; sometimes the whole country supported one foreign cause : as a rule the Swiss went where there was most money. From 1477 to 1525, from tlie Battle of Nancy to the Battle of Pavia, was the time when Swiss mercenary valour was at its highest renown. The Pope still maintains a regiment of Swiss guards. 19, 19. The piece of work.— Tuileries. I\eferring to the defeiuH! of the royal palac(i in Paris against the assaults of the ivcvo- lutionists on Aug. 10th, 179-, wiien 20 olheers and 700 soldiers of the Swiss (iuard fell at their post. This event niorks the downfall of the monarchy in France. (,'arlyle speaks of tliis with Iteroic sympathy : — " What ineffaceable red streak, flickering so sad in the memory, is that, of this poor column of red Swiss ' breaking itself in the confusion of opinions'; dispersing into blackness and death I Honour to you, bravemcn ; hduourable j)ity, through longtimcs I Not martyrs were ye; and yet almnst more. He was no kmg of yours, this Louis ; and lie forsook you like a king of shreds and jtatches : ye were but sold to him for some poor sixpence a day : yt.'t would .\e work for yoiu' wages, kec|) your jilighted word. The work now was to die ; and ye did it. Honour to you, <) Kinsmen, and may the old '>^.'u^sch Hii'dfykcit and Tapfcrkfit, and Valour which is Wmtli and Truth, be they , • i-ss. be they Saxon, fail in no age I Not bastards, true-born were these men : sons NOTES. 168 Ijioor 1 into Incs ! IniR ; Konie ford. old ley )ns of the nit'Ti of Soinpuch, of Murton, who kiiilt, Imt not to thee, O niin;tiii(ly ! I^i't Ww travellLT, us ho \>: ;si;s liir<)iiu:h Lul-itiu', liirii asidu to lnok a littlf at tlicir ni'inuim-ntii lion ; not fjr ThorwaMsfn's wike aloiif. Ili'wii mit of tlit- liviiij,' rock, tlio l'"i;;»ire vvh\h thure, liy thf still lake svators in lullahy of (lislant-tiiikiinj,' runrc-itrs-nirlii:'), \Uv j^raiiite inouiitams dumbly kcepin;^ \vat(!h all round ; and, thou<^h inaniinati-, siit-akH." Carlyle, French llvvidutiiin, II., 255. 19,20. lion of flawed molasse. A massive sculptured lion, twenty-eight feet in length and eighteen in height", designed l)y Thor- waldseu and standing in ijucerne. ' 'I'he dying lion, transtixed by a broken lance, and sheltering the jiourbon lily with his paw, is hewn out of the natural sandstone.' ' Molasse ' is soft, green Swiss sandstone, 19, 22. Schweizer Hof. Spacious and adniitably fitted up, the chief hotel of Lucerne. 'The Schweizer. lof Quay, with its tine avenue of chestnuts, occu])ies the site of a l)ay of the lake which was tilled up in 1852, and affords a delightful view.' Bail eke t\ 19, 29. economically watched. Note the ii^ienf social iuiiimcmont, iH-inliii;^', (lancin<^, gaming, otc. 22, 38. Passage of the Jura, ^^^i 'nap of Swit/erlaiul for Olten, Basle, l^ucernu. Tlie first iiaiiied place stauds between I>asle and Lucerne, and at the head of a valley leading through the entreiue spura in Switzerland of the .Jura range. 23, 16. Theocritus. Greek i)oet of the third century, the inventor of the idyll. His idylls give us glimpses into the life of Sicilian lishers, herdsmen, milkmaids of that time, and show the author's delight in nature. Virgil iniitates them in his Buceolies, while his (Jeorgics also are .igrieultural poems, with line descriptive passages ; from them is rt/t(r-o/-D('((^/*." 25, 26. Rhone flowed "like one lambent jewel ; its surface is nowhere, its ethereal self is everywhere, the iridescent rush and translucent strengtli of it blue to the shore, and radiant to the depth. Fifteen feet thick, of not flowing, but flying water ; not water, neither, — melted glacier, lather we should call it ; the force of the ice is with it, and the wreathing of the clouds, the gladness of the sky, and the con- tinuance of Time. Pra4crita, II, p. 159. 25, 28. Geneva. ' ' This bird's nest of a place, to be the centre of religious and social thought, and of physical beauty, to all living Europe." See Pra'terUa, II., chap. v. 25, 29. marble roof of Milan cathedral : 'a mount of marble, a hundred spires,' Teiniysou calls it. 25, 29. Rose of Italy- Monte Rosa, on the southern border of Switzerland, north-west of Milan. 25, 32- ripples of Otterburn. An allusion to the fierce battle between the families of Percy and Douglas, Aug., 1388, cele- brated in the ballad of Chev'y Chase. Otterburn is in Northumberland. By ' dawn taken sadness from the crimson,' R. refers to the bloodshed caused by the religious (juarrels of the Swiss cantons between 1839-48. •1 NOTPJS. 107 LF/TUIIK I.— SKSAME. 27. 4. Sesame. An eivstem plant, with sweet, oily seeds from which cake is made. It denotes tile useful in life, as "Lilies" the beautiful. The full meaning of the title will not be felt without a knowledge of the story <}f Ali Baba and the B'orty Thieves, in the Arabian Nljhts. 27, 5. Lucian. A (Jreek satirist and humorous writer of the second century, famous for his Dialoijur.t and True IlUtorij, written in the style of Uaron Munchausen. Jn this p.assage Lucian ridicules philo- sophers l)y implying that they are easily bribed, — a cake of sesame will bring them together. Ruskin wishes to suggest that education is desir»'d at prtsent, not for itself, but for the material benefits it confers on its possessors. 27. 10. audiences. <'f. Jl to .S, 20. ('(»uM 'hearing' be used? 27. 14. attention on trust. Apparently the lecture, in its first draft, began at " Jt happens," and afterwards, in order to avoid ambiguity, as he says himself, the opening sentences from " I believe " to " irrigation of literature " were adtled. 27, 19. "But since — What to read" is omitted, and in later editions ; for the sentence is purely temporal in its nature. 27. 25. I will take the slight mask off. Note the effect of what precedes in exciting the curiosity of the reader, and at the revelation of the true subject, in adding emphasis to the enunciation of it. 28, 7. connection with SChopls. In 1857, H. accepted the mastership of tlie School of Drawing in the VVorkingmen's College, London, fulfilling his duties without salary. 28, 21. Double-belled doors, (iood Ix>ndon residences have two bells, marked " Servants " and " Visitors," a mark of respectability like Carlyle's ' gig. ' 29, 7. last infirmity. - " Fame is the spur which the clear spirit doth raise, (That last inlirmity of noble mind) To scorn delights and live laborious days." Milton, Lycidas. 29, 18. mortal- R. has in mind its derivation, — mor.s (L.), death. 30, 13. my writings on poUtical economy. See Introd. p. 150. 33, 34. to preserve it. So Milton, in Areopatfitka : — "A good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and trea- sured up on purpose to a life l>eyond a life." 34, 19. piece of art. So in Qitcm of the Air, p. 82, §101 :— *' Now I have here asserted two thhij^s -first, the foundation of art in moral charae- ter ; next, tlie foundation of moral character in njan, 1 must now make i)0th these assertions clearer, and prove them, C fel ,1 • 'M i \ i 'II > 'l\' 'i H ■ ij i i ir.8 NOTES. " FiiMt, of the foiiiiiliitinii of art in iiionil chiiiiutfr. of coiiinc, iut-irifi ami iimiii- liility of (lisposiMoii arc two (lillVrciil ttiiii;;s ; a u^ood man is no! nt'ci'ssai'il.\ ii ','oim| iiainlcr, nor docs an eye for <'oloMr ncccssiiril\ imply an lioncnl mind. Hui ifrcal art. ini|ilicH tfic union of i).)tli jiowci's : it is ific cNprcssion, Ity an art-u'ift, of a jmrc soul. If the ;,'ift iw not Ihcrc, \\c can liavc no art at all ; and if llic soul -and a ri;,dit hi>u1, too— \H not there, the art is liaii, however dexterous." 34, 32. entree ( l''i'.), Hglit of cintranco. 35, 13. Elysian gates, fntm lllysimii, tlu; (irctk heaven for good men after ileath— ;i place of re[)o,s(! and ealni deliglit. 35, 15. portieres, cnrtain.s l)efore tlie do(»r\vay. 35, 15. faubourg St. Germain, the aristoenitie ,'c habit of wise luunanity to si)eak in eniirmas oidy, so that the highest truths and uscfnilesi lasvs must, he hunted for throui,di whole iiicture ;,'allerie8 of dreams." Minimi, /'iilirrix. 36, 38. smelting-furnace. The lignre is consistent through- out. 'Die iniphinients with wliich the )n(!aning is readied, tlie pickaxes, are care, patient anprehen- siou ; learning, knowledge whic:li guides in the investigation. The snielting-furnace makes tlie goM marketable, a long, slow, brooding process. An excellent examide of an entirely apt metaphor. 37, 3. patientest. <^'f. 'distantest' in 1. L'Dhelow, and n. to 9, 26. 37, 15. British Museum, in London ; a national C(dlection of })ooks, manuscripts, (toins, medals, anticjuities, and of specimens in the natural sciences. The library, consisting of over a million volumes, is the second in importance in the world. 37, 28. canaille (Fr.), vulgar rabble. 37, 31. noblesse (Fr.), the nobility as a body. 37, 37- accent will at once mark. "You see, my friends, what immense conclusions, touching our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honour, may be reached by means of very iusignilicant premises. This is eminently true of manners and foiins of speech ; a movement or a phrase often tells you all you want to know about a person." — Aut- ocrat of the Brcdl'/a.^t Table. Chap. V., p. 42. 38, 7. false Latin quantity. 'I'he rhythm of Latin poetry depends upon the length of the vowel ((jiumtity). Hence, in using Latin words, it would be as great an error to sound a long vowel short as in English to misplace the accent on a word. * .Sydney Smith says somewhere that a public man rarely gets over a false quantity uttered in early life.' Jloliues. 38, 24. Chameeleon cloaks. '. ?'. words such as have one meaning to one and a diiicrcnt meaning to another ; just as the reptile, the chameleon, has the power of changing the color of its skin. 38, 25. Groundlion, the literal meaning of the Gk. words com- prising ' chamadeon.' Xrt//a//./6>j', ground-lion or earth-lion : iSkeat. 38, 30. unjust stewards. Unjust, because they do not take NOTKS. !«;!» ^etry jsiug khort says pered one itile, Icom- take i»r(»j>«'r (juv of the iiiHn'K idriis. 'I'licy clic-vt tln-ir nuistfrs as the .stfwjiid in the [Kiralilc clit'.itiMl liis tiuisttr. ('\'. I.iikf xvi., I-S. 39, 23. sown on any wayside. < f. .Mitt. \iii. .'$. 40, 8. Greek word for public meeting. iKh/i/nin. riiis word, 'ekklcsiiv,' oii^^iiiiilly lucaiiiiij^ .imply ' .i I'oniiiil public a.s.scinlily of citi/eiis,' was adopted liy tho rally ( 'liristian (iliuich a.s a tt-nii for a meeting p. T)!.*}, IT. 'I'riest' is a contraction for ' preshyter,' since it is derived from <>. K, /m sire, whicli comes from the hat. pri.s/ti//n\ Nott; the \\i, th I ', i K f. k A A, I M ,«» til N () (1 P V T T .'(;w Sarum, is the ca[»ital of Wiltsliire. 44, 12. St. Paul's idea of a bishop. i:cad 1. Tim., iii. 1-7. 44,23. Spirit. From O. Fr. cspirlt; from L. .ipiritu-'^, breath, spirit ; from the L. veri) sjii/yitr, to breathe. 44, 37- Time and Tide. The thirteenth letter in the series called 'J'iiiir (inil T'uh (see Introd., p. !.')(►) deals with the [»ro[)er otKces of the bislioj) and duke; or, "overseer" and leader. Asserting as indisputable ' that the lirst duty of Stale is to see that every ehihl born therein shall be well housed, clothed, fed, and educated till it attain years of discretion,' It. furtlu'r wouhl have a social organization in which ' over every hundred of the families comprising a Christian State there should be a^jpointed an overseer, or bishop, to render an account to the State, of the life of every individual.' 'A bishop's duty being to watch over the .st>«/.s of his people, and give acccmnt of every (me of them, it becomes practically necessary to i;ivc some account of these bodies.' 45, 6. cretinous. From Fr. cretin, a kind of idiot peculiar to deep valleys in the Alps, the Pyrenees, etc. The cretin is ' de^f and dumb, insensible to ht^at, cold, blows,' — a loathsome spectacle of disease. The cause of the malady is not known with certainty ; it seems to be due to the metallic nature of certain soils, aflecting the drinking water. Sonu', however, attribute it to ' a S[)ecial form of nuirsh-fever, malaria, or even a special poison-germ in the atnu)sphere.' 45, 13. thinking rightly. l^lsewherc W. iterates this idea : " There are briefly two, and two only, forms (»f possible Christian, Pagan, or any other gospel, or ' good message ;' one, that men are saved by themselves doing what is right ; and the other that they are saved by believing that somebody else did right instead of them. The first of these gospels is eternally true, and holy; tlie other eternally false, damnable, and damning." III. F()r.-<, Ijct, Ivi. 45, 15. clouds, these. Seclude, 12. 45, 22. Dante. Dante Alighieri, soldier, statesman, and poet of NOTES. 171 45. 30. 45, 33. 45, 38. 46, 1. 46, Tifrpa 2. (G.), 47, 18. difficulties 47,21 liha :— all tunc l.crn Ml hlorciH',. in I2(;r, ; nutiiur uf tl.u Vi/a Xmuu,, and the (Hell, 1 u.-;it,),y an.l loaven), ..ne of th.. vrry oreuUvst works m litera- ture. JMiite (lied in \ tnice in 1.S21. " have taken away the key." Aca Luke, xi. 52. " He that watereth." See I'rov. xi. 2"). he who is to be bound. C!f. Matt. xvi. id. That command. Cf. Mutt xxii. 13. the rock-apostle. St. I'eter, since prtra (L ) from means 'r..ck.' Cf. Matt, xvi., IS. l M, nom pertinent questions, /. <., their thoughts do not solve ; tlK^y merely awakeji ns to the fact tliat difficulties exist. "To mix the music." (Rioted from Emerson's i)oein, •"Tishissfiirlyanddeliu'lit To lilcss tlial creuturo dav and iiiidif From all evils to defend 'her; '"^ ' In her lap to pour all splendor ; To ransack earth for riches rare, And fetch her stars to deck her hair. He mixes mnsic with iier ihonvjhts, And saddens her with heavenly oint ; and siieh our Patriarch was.' St. Dominie (I 170- 1221), founder of the order of Dominicans. Of St Dwmimc, we rejid. Farad, xii., II. sni: - " he h(>soiiMht ^ No dispell- a( ion for connnuted wron^r, N'or the th-s* vacani iortune, nor lle'tcnlhs, Th.it to (;.,d's paupers nii-lit appertain." Oppose.l to tiicse M'c have him whom Vir.i.i| (fh,; sm|.i.o.s..,] ,M.i,le of Dai. e wii,h> journey ng tluougli the /./V..o, is represcnLl as wonde^! ing at, that is, (.iuu^/ia.^, the high-priest. (See Matt, xxvi, r>7) :- " Allot vid'io maia\i-liar \irnilio Sopra colni ch'eia disirso in ciucc Tanto vilrneiite neH'clcrno esiliu , " Iii/rniii, wiii., II. i-.>|.7 ^ ? « ri' f i- 172 NOTES. And ihcrcupoii I saw \'ir,u'ilius iiuumI < >'cr hi III whii was cxIcikIimI on I lie cross So \ ilil\ ill ft(.rii:il liaiiisliniLiit." Liniijfi'llow. Wi! liinl also " liiin w lioiu Dante stood beside " : — " Instava coiiie 11 frate che coiift'ssa [.o jierfido assassin, che jioi cli' c fitfn, llifhiania liii, i>c'r chc la iiiorto cessa." Inferno, xix., 49-r)l. " There stood I like a friar, that doth shrive, A wreti'h for murder doom'd, who, e'en when fix'd, ( 'alleth him hack, whence death awhile (el ivs." Gary. This wretcli is Nicholas 111., a jiolitical o[)j)onent of Dante, who describes him suilering torments in the 'Third Ciele of Hell, where those guilty of simony were punished. 48, 4. into articles. ' Articles ' here means formal statements of creed, as in the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England. 48, 5. Ecclesiastical Courts : those which take cognizance of matter's relating to the clergy and to religion, c.ij., the Court of Arches in England, the (Jeneral Assembly in Scotland. 48, 17- ash heaps enriching the soil with mineral salts, helpful to vegetable growth. 48, 20. " Break up " See Jer. iv., .3. 49, 6. "Vulgarity." If. tlevotcs an entire chapter to this sub- ject ; Modern Painters, I't. I\., chap. vii. — " We may eonclude that vulval ity consists in a deadiiess of the heart and hody, resultinif from prolonu'ed, and especially from inherited, conditions of ' detfeneracy,' or literally ' unraeiii;,','- ijentleinanliness lieiii",' another word for intense humanity. And vuli;arity shows itself jirimarily in dulness of heart, not in raufe or enmity, hut in iiiahility to feel or conceive noble ehai'acter or emotion. This is its essential, pure and fatal form. l)uliiess of hodily sense ae 1 uener.'il stujiidity, with such forms of crime as peculiarly issue from stupidity, are its material manifestations." 49, 18- Mimosa, the sensitive plant. It is found chielly in the Tropics, though n()t unknown in our gardens. It closes its leaves on being touched. Soiiic species are trees, others small plants. It takes its mime from,a (irceU word meaning to imitate, mimic. ^,\ "^vtXt<^ 50, 12. "the angels desire...." Cf. 1. IVteV- i. 12. See 50, 21. Noble nations murdered. I J. alludes to various wars. . Austria ;uid I'russia wen; robl>iiig Denmark of her southern provinces. Iliissia likewise Mas putting down the last revolt of the conquered Poles by massacring whole villages. Italy's long struggle with Austria culminated in KStiO. A rebellion had broken out, in 1848, in Naples, I'ieilniont and Home, in favor of constitutional rights and against the Austrians, M'ho held most of Italy. The rising was crushed, and the Italian.s were the victims of frightful cruelty, until early in 1800, X'ictor Emmanuel, King of Sardinia, and his independent and even opposed general, (iaribahli, freed Ittdy from the oppressor. NOTJ'JS. 173 51, 3. weighing" evidence, my whole soul to (ireek learning, and as soon as I get any money 1 shall buy Creek books — and then 1 shall l)uy some clothes." See Chaucer's ci>nception of the Scludar in the I'rologue to the Canterbury Tales, 11. 'JHo-.SOS. 55, 21. cheapness of literature. In A Jo// For I'Jnr, It. halt seriously propounds his views on tin; evils of cheap books :-" in my sliuid of liarataria, when I get it well in oi'dei', I assure you no bf'ok shall be sold for less than a pound sterling ; it it can bt; published ■ i" aper than that, the surplus shall all go into my treas\iiy, and save niN )'" ■)[(; taxation in otlnu* directions ; only [)(.o[)le really po(»r, who cannot pny the j)Ouud, shall be supplied with the books they want for nothing, in a certain limited (piantity.'' 56, 34. Professor Owen. Sir Ilichard Owen (b. 1804), practiced lirst as a physician, but showing special aptitude in anatomy, he was made pr(»tessor, lirst in St. Bartholomew's (Ib.'U), then in the r'oilege of Surgeons (I8.'i<>). In 18")() he was a[)i)ointed superintendent of the Natural History Departnu'iits of the Ihitish Museum, bir wliich '$1 11^^ I I m h 174 NOTES. the fossils wero intended. He is tlio author f»f a very great many \v(»rks on science. 57, 31. Ludgate, <»ne of tlie chief thoroughfares of London, in the heart of the city. 58, 12. Austrian guns. " In the })ombardment of Venice in 1848 [by the Austrians], liardly a single palace escaped without three or four balls through its roof ; three came into the Scuola di San Jvocco, te«ring their way through the pictures of Tintoret, of which the raggt;d fragments were still hanging from the ceiling in 1851 ; and the shells had reached to within a hundred yards of St. Mark's Church itself, at the time of the capitulation." Stones of Venice. 111. App. 3, note. 58, 13. Titian, (1477-1576), the chief of the Venetian school of painting, famous for the ' splendour, boldness and truth of his coloring, which alone h;is sufficed ti» give him a place alongside the greatest names in art, Raphael, da Vinci, and Michael Angelo. ' 58, 24. SchafPhaUSen, a' town in the very north of Switzerland, on the Khine. When Kuskin was twelve years old (18.S.*?) he was taken to the continent bv li'S parents. The sight of this beautiful waterfall of Shaffhausen, 1 > •""iut old town, and the distant moun- tains made a profound impic* upon his mind : — " I went down that eveniiij;' fro;i <\q irarden-terracc of SchafThausen with my destiny fixed in all of it that was to be sacr<;, II., p. lO.'i. 58, 25. Tell's chapel. Tell, the national hero of S\\ itzisrland, one of the leaders in tlie Swiss rebellion of 1807, was forced by (Jessler, because he would not bow to the tj'rant's caj), to shoot at an apple placed on the head of his own son. He was afterwards arrested, and while crossing Lake Lucerne in a storm, was given control of the boat. He guided it close to the shore, sprang to the rocks and made his escape. A religious service was instituted to commemorate Toll's brave act, and in 1388, this chapel was built near the spot where he was said to have landed. F NOTES. 175 III ^^•\ 58, 26. Claren's shore, ('larons is a l>cjuitiful village on the shore of Lake (leiuiva, near V'ivay. The "destruction" is probably the railway by the lake. 58, 33. your own poets used to love. See Coleridge's Ifi/mn he/ore tSKDrise in the Vale of Chamouni ; Shelley's Mont Blanc ; Byron's Childc Harold, III ; Wordsworth's Memorials of a 7'our on the Coiitbu'iit, etc. 59, 10. Swiss vintagers of Zurich. "I was somewhat anxious to see what species of thanksgiving or exultation would be ex- pressed at their [the Zurich peasants'] vintage. It consisted in two cere- monies only. During the day the servants of the farms where the grapes had been gathered collected in knots about the vineyards, and slowly tired horse-pistols, from morning to evening. At night they got drunk." — Time and Tide, Let, ix. 59, 24. St. Paul's, in London, the largest Protestant cathedral in the world. 60, 5. Spitalfields, a district in London. 60, 27. workhouse. A sort of prison under stern though not unkind discipline peculiar to England. It is much dreaded by the self- respecting poor. 61, 8. get the stones*, *be condemned to break stones.' For the " certain passage," see Matt, vii., 9. 61, 20. salons (Fr.), drawing-rooms. 61, 23. Princess Metternich, wife of the Austrian ambas- sador at the court of Napoleon III., Mme. Urouyn de Lhuys, wife of the then Minister of Foreign Atfairs : both leaders of the fashionable world. 61, 33. chaine diabolique, etc. Indecent dances. " Chain of the Devil and Cancan of Hell." See Time and Tide, Lett. ix. and x. 61, 35. menu, the bill of fare. This cook's jargon of French cannot be rendered accurately into English : chicken soup, Bagration style ; IG different side-dishes ; Talleyrand patties ; cold salmon, Kavigote sauce ; tillet of beef, Hellevue ; Milanese timbales (baked pies, highly seasoned) ; game chaudfioid (certain preparation usually of fowl) ; trutiied turkey ; foie gras i)ies ; pyramids of crawfish ; Venetian salads ; white fruit jellies ; Maneini cakes ; Parisians, cheeses, ices, pine-apples, dessert. 63, 8. Satanellas. In all the operas mentioned, Satan is im- personated. iSV<^(;//f//«, au opera (ISoS), by Halfe, the Irish composer (1808-1870). In Meyerbeer's opera of A'o/m'>-< /« Diable (1831), there is a whole convent of resuscitated nuns with a church-service on the stage. In (iounod's Faust (1859), there is a wedding in the church with appropriate orj^an -music. The 'Dio ' (Ital. for (Jod), is a psalm chanted in Catholic churches. 64, 7. Modern English religion. English religion, K. thinks, is a mockery. "Notably within the last hundred years, all religion has ^ 17G NOTES. Hi perished from the praeticjilly active national iiiiiids nf Krance ami Kiig- laml. No statenman in the senate of either eountry would .ek.. Chap. viii. 65, 25. Chalmers. Thomas Chalmers (17S0-1S47), a great Scotch preacher, philanthr(»[>ist, and scholar. 66,1. last of our greet painters. Turner. " Another feelinj; traceable in several of his former works is an acute sense of the contrast hetween the careless iiiteiests and idle i>l(asures of daily life, and the state of those whose time for labour or kn<)\vlt(l;;e or delitfbt is passed forever. There is evil dence of this feeliiiff ni the introduction of the boys at play in the chiucliyard of Kirkhy Lonsdale. Modi'ni I'aintvfK, pt. V. j». SIT). 66, 22. fallen kings of Hades. Hades was the kingdom of Pluto (Hades), the abode of departed si)irits. 'I'he meaning is : — The shades of deail kings in Hades n:jet the kings who have just died. GG, 31. Scythian custom. " When the master of a Scythian family died he was placed in his st ite chariot, and carried to visit every one of his Idood relations. Each of them gave him and his attendants a splenditl feast a^ which the dead man sat at the head of the table, and a piece of everything was put on his plate. In the morning he con- tinued his circuit. 'I'his round of visits generally occupied nearly forty days, and he was never buried till the whole number had elapsed." Note to The Sci/lhian (iiu^st, a poem b y— Ru*»k+H. 67, 3. Caina, the lowest circle in Dante's Hell, reserved for betrayers of kindred. The traitors are innnersed in ice up to the neck.. V*<^ 67, 30 . "visible governments," etc., from Manera PalM'l% li. p. 11;^. 67, 37. Achilles' epithet. Achilles, the hero of Homer's Iliad. Througii his ell'orts the CJ reeks were successful in the siege of N(tTEi<. 177 for ^ of Troy. See note to 114, (>. The; epithet is used by Achilles in his (luarrel with Agamemnon. See Iliad, Hk. i.^ 67, 38. 68, 13. *li ~r II. r,'j-r,o " etc. Kon>. viii. G. il gran refiuto," the great refusal. '* Vidi e conobbi Tomhra decolui Che fece per viltate il gran rifiuto." Inferno, III. " I looked, and I beheld the shade of him Who made through cowardice the great refusal." Longfellow's Translation.^ This is commonly thought to refer to ("elestino V., who, too timid to /^ »--'^*- ; Oriaiuh) and llosalind are the hero and heroine of yl.s You Like It ; (Jordelia, the "one true daughter" in King Lear; Desdemona, the injured wife of Othello, in Othello; Isabella, Measure for Measure; llermiono, Winter's Tale; Imogen, Cymbeline ; Queen Katharine, Kimj Ilenrji VI I L ; Perdita, Winter's Tale ; Sylvia, Two Oentlemen of Verona ; Viola, Ttcelfth Nitjht ; Helena, Midsunimer Niyht's Dream ; Virgilia, Coriolanus. 75, 23. The catastrophe of King Lear consists in the king being driven mad by the unlilial daughters, jjetweeu whom \\v had divided his kingdom. NtrPES. 179 75, 28. the one weakness : lii^ credulity which Ia<^o ]>lay8 upon ;iiil' <» /"')■ When dvllpus, tlie blind king of Thebes, was driven forth from his kingdom, his daughter Antigone ah»ne shared liis wanderings, remaining witli him till his deatli Her l)r<)thers meanwhile had o»ly Polynices was to be unl)uried, a prey to the dogs and i vultures, 'i'he sister's heart rebellefl, and with her (»wn hands she attempted to consign the body to the grave. Detected in the act, she was by the order of ("reon, liuried alive. 79. 25. Iphigenia- ilf ij'' «»' '<)• While the (Ireek Heet was as- sendding in iWeotia in preparation for the expe,'hs, As in a dreaiii. IHnil.v I could decry The stern, black-bearded kiiii^'M, with wolfish eyes, VVaitiiitf to see me die. The hi;,di masts ((uivered as they lay afloat, The crowds, the temples, waver'd, and the shore ; " The bri;;hl death fniivered at the victim's throat ; Touched ; and I knew no more." Teiinyaon, Dream of Fair Wom4:n, 79, 28. Alcestis. Admetus had wcm Alcestis as his wife by fulfilling her father's tlemands that he should come for her in a chariot drawn by lions and bears. Once falling sick, he obtained a reprieve from death through the intercession of Apollo, only, however, on condition of finding some one to die iuliis place. Was that difficult for a king? But courtier and soldier drew back from their professions of devotion, and only the faithful Alcestis, his wife, was willing to die for him. As the king recovered health, the queen gradually faded away. P'ortunately Hercules had just arrived at the palace of Admetus, and when J^eath came to claim Alcestis, the he 'o seized him and forced him to forego his intention. The ({ueen " as restored to her husband. 79, 31. Chaucer. Geotrrey Chaucer (1340-1400), the father of P]nglish poetry, ' well of English undeHled :' author of The Canterbury Talcn, Leijend of Gooil Women, and many other poems. " I reaelow ; Dan Chaucer, the first warbler. . Tennyson, Dreatn oj hair Woh.'.n. 79, 33. Spenser. Edmund Sixuser (Lm-'MoDO), the greatest . the purely poetic writers of Elizabeth's reign, a contemporary of 182 NOTKS. ShakeBpenre. His chief work is tho lony, HllD^oiical [(ocm, 77/c Fni rif Qncen. The Fniry Ku'njhts were the htiroiH of diU'ereiit ii_'I;i« sffMck liini witli lii>i lil.-ule; 'Saint .Mi( li,M ! rill S.ii.;i Ailrcw ai'l, I iliili III! <' Kiii^lil. Aii-c, Sir |{:il|i|i, lie Wilton's licirl For Kin;,', for Cliuri'li, for Lads fair, Set.' tliivl tlioii liuht.' " S''uit, .][iiniiii>ii, VI. xii. 81, 39. Coventry Ptitmore Ikih won Uuw, ;is tint poet of (loiiu;.stic lovo, lit'ini; iiott'd for his tcinlcr iui Komans looked upon the State as a great family, and as each family hail its Household Gods, or divinities that watched over the welfare of the house, so the nation had its Penates and Vesta, who guarded the welfare of the general state. The service of Vesta was entrusted t«» six virgins, under penalty of being buried alive if foinid unworthy of their vows, lience the text means, 'a home sanctitied by purity." 83, 22. Pharos, the most celelu-ated lightdiouse of anticpiity, erected in *280 H.c, on the ishuid of I'haros, at Alexandria. 84, 6. La donna . the wind.' O woiniui I in our hours of easi- Uncertain, coy, and lianl to Mlcasc, And variable as Mic sliado 15y the li;;ht (|iii\ eriii^ a«])on niado ; When i>ain and anLfuish wnnj,' the brow, A iniuisteriiiy: anj,'el thou I Scott, Marnn'o)!, VI., x xx. 84, 27. That poet. William Wordsworth (1770-1850) the greatest of the poets in the literarj' revolution against the school of l^ope and his imitators. For Wordsworth, because of his truth to nature and human passion and purity, II. has a certain liking. "(Jifted," he writes of liini in Fh'tion — Fiiir m Wordsworth's poem, She Wan a FhuiUom of Deliijht. .'Woman is chang<'al)le,' 'as the feather in l/L tt/: (W iWo^&UX^ " she was a phantom of delight When tirat slie ;,deamed ujion my a'l', * * * * ht / 184 NOTES. I saw hor upon nearer view, A si>irit, yvi a woiiian ton I IFer lioiisehold motions liu'ht and free, And steps of virffin liberty ; A countenance in whieii did meet Sweet records, proniises as sweet ; A creature not too bright and good For human nature's daily food ; For transient sorrows, simple wiles, Praise, blame, love, kisses, tears, and smiles. And now I see with eye serene The very pulse of the machine ; A being breathing thoughtful breath, A traveller betwixt life and death ; The reason firm, the temperate will, Endurance, foresight, strength and skill, A perfect woman, nobly ])lanned, To warn, to comfort, and connnaud ; And yet a spirit still, and bright With' something of an angel light." 86, 25. Valley of Humiliation. A phrase from the Piltjrhn's Progress. Christian, the reader will remember, had to pass through this valley, fighting with the dragon Apollyon. The sense H. attaches to it is, that consciousness of the powerlessness of human reason to penetrate the mysteries that surr<^und life. 86, 27. children gathering pebbles. An allusion to the famous words of Sir Isaac Newton, uttereil when he liad become the most famous mathematiciaji of the world, and shortly before his death : — " I do not know what I niaj- appear to the world ; but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in, now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell, while the great ocean of truth lay all luidis- covered before me." 87, 19. '* for ail who are desolate." Quoted from the touch- ing supplication in the Liturgy of the Church of England : — " That it may please thee to defend, and provide for, the fatherless children and widows and all that are desolate and oppressed ; We beseech thee to hear us, good Lord. 87, 29. science trembled. A reference to Francis Bacon (15Gl-lG*2G). ' But in theology — all theologians asserted — reason played but a subordinate part. " If I proceed to treat of it," said Bacon, " I shall step out of the bark of human reason, and enter into the ship of the church. Neither will the stars of philosophy, which have hitherto so nobly shone on us, any longer give us their light. " ' Green, Short History, p. 590. 87, 33. consecrated myrrh. Myrrh is the gunnny exudation of a Persian plant, bitter to the taste. It was used by the .Jews in pre- paring their 'holy anointing oil.' Jl. means that when a woman becomes an advocate of a religious sect she devotes to (lod's service only her pride, her prejmlice and her nnreason — a bitter ottering. 89, 2. wet with the spray. 11. here s[>eaka against the eagerness of the many to read the latest sensational novel. 89, 25. Thackeray, (1811-18G3), one of tlie greatest of English NOTES. 185 tho novoUists. pKirii in ( "aK-iitta, T. w.is ciliK-itctl in Mii^liiid. Lowinj^ a sniiill tctrtunu, lie wrote Un i\u- iiuiiri/.iius. In IS4S Vdiilfif Fair was tinishfd, fullowtd ;it intctv.il.s uutil l^idO, l»y }*( inlrmi'is. The New- tv;w(.v, 1I( iirij E-sHouil. 'I'hf spirit of \\\a writing i.s, on the ono ]ian(l, hatred of sham, schislines.s, and so to many sooins liarsh, cynical ; yet oo the other it is sympathy witli wliat is true and noble. The student should make tlie aci|uaintauce — if he has not already done so — with Becky Sliarj) in Vaiilfij Fair. 89, 37. not for what is out of them. K. puts this more clearly in later eilitioiis, " not for tlieir freedom from evil, hut for their possession of good." 90,5. old and classical bocks Comi-are Kmerson's advice in his essay on Hooks. ' The tiiree [irat/tieal rules, then, which I have to olFer, are, — 1. Never read any liook that is not a year ohl. 2. Kever read any hut famed books. .'{. Never read an}' l)ut what you like ; or, in .Shakespeare's phrase, " \o iiri)(it ;;oos wlitTi' is no jilcasure ta'en ; III liiiuf, sir, study what ymi iiKist affect." ' 90, 15. narcissus, ;i genus of ])lants end)raci»ig those known under tiie names Uallodil, .louipiil, Narcissus. The l)est known of the last named is the I'oet's Naicissus, which has a very fragrant white flower that emerges from a green sheatli. 91, 34. Dean pf Christ Church. Christ Church is the most aristocratic college of Oxford. It was [irimar ily a religious foundation and hence the title of its head is tlie Dean. Trinity < 'ollege is the chief of the colleges of Cand)ri(lge ; its head is called the Master. Creat men, such as Sir Isaac Newton, have been at diirerent times at the head of these colleges. 92, 12. Joan of Arc. .Jeanne d'Arc or Dare {141'2-14.'il), was a poor peasant girl of tlie viUage of Domr^my, auKuig the forests of the Vosges nu)untains of France. 'I'aught, like her companions, to sew and spin, she was nuirked out from them only by her greater purity and sin)]>le candor. At lifteen she felt herself inspired by heaven to deliver France from the English, who, under Henry \'. , had almost become masters of it. Chul like a man, with sword and banner of white, she headetl the forces of the Dauphin in the relief of Orleans. i'^very- thing gave way before lier, and !'' ranee was practically fret;. ('aptnred l)y the Ikirgundians in the siige of Coinpifgne, she was sold to the English, and burned as a heretic and a witch. See (Jreen's Shnrt Iliduii/, pp. UOS-L'T.'J, and /f. S. l/is/,,,-;/, [ip. DS-Dll. 92, 27. Touraine, name of oii(> of the former provinces of Frajice, surrounding its capital, Touis, in central France. 'I"he county is now inchuled in the dei»artment of Indre-et-l.oirc. 92, 28. German Diets. I'he diet was the delibei-ation body of the old ( ierman empire; from the Lat. (/'ns, a day, -the ringtime with more jiassionate blessing; no sweeter homes ever hallowed the heart of-Uie passer-hy with their jnide of ]>eaeeful gladness— fain-hidden yet full- (!om}K)sed. The i)lace remains, or, until a fewiiiontiisago, remained, nearly unchaniged in its large features ; hut, with deliheratc mind I say, that I have never seen anything so ghastly in its inner tragi(! meaning, not in I'isan Maremma— not hy Campagna tomh, not hy thesand-iies of Torcellan shore, ;is the slow, stealing asjiect of reckless, indolent, animal neglect, over the delicate sweetness of that Knglisli scene ; nor is any hhusi)hemy or impiety--or any frantic raging or godless thought- more apijalling to me, using the hest power of judgment I have to discern its sense and scope, than the insolent defiling of those springs hy the human herds that drink of then). Just where the welling of stainless water, tremhling and pure, like a body of light- '^'ters the pool of Caishaltoii, cutting itself a radiant channel down to the grave!, jugh wiU'f of feathery weeds, all wavy, which it traverses with its dec]) thre.ids of c. mess, like the chalcedony in moss-i.gate, starred here and there witii white grenouillette ; just in th(! very rush and nun'nnu- of the tirst spreading currents, the human wretches of the place cast their street and house foulness ; jieajis of dust and slime, and broken shreds of all metal, and rags of putrid cloliies ; they have neither energy to cart it away, nor decency enough to dig it into the ground, thus shed into the stream to diffuse what venom of it will lloal and unit, far away, in all pl.aces where (Jod meant those waters to biing joy and health. And. in a little pool behind sonie houses farther in the village where another spring rises, the shattered stones of the well, and of the little fretted channel which was long ago Imilt and traced for it by gentle hands, lie scattered each from each under a I'agged bank of mortar and scoria, and br'"kla\ers' refuse, on one side, which the dean water nevertheless chastises to purity; b\it it cannot conre in Holy Island, <»iie (»f the last refuges of the Druids. To tlie north-west of the little island lies the promontory Ibdy He.ad with its lighthouse. Now look at ymir map of classical Greece ; Had the county oi Phocis ami iuit Delphi (n., 01), 12), NOTE^. 187 the lard Iw- ] are the Ithe 1-2), from which the two siimiuits of snow-capped Parnassus are visible. There is the licart of (1 recce, the niount.iin celebrated l»y the [loets, and sacred to Apollo and the Muses. Nine in nninber, the muses inspired humanity to dance, to play on tlie harp, to write liistory and science and soni,'. 'rutn now to Attica, and see t<» the west of it. like Anirlesca and Wales, the Island of .Iviina, i!i which stood, as nii'^iity ruin and noble .statues still .ittest, the temple of ,Kij;ina, dedicated to Minerva, that benelicent iroildess who inspired every wise thought and noble deed in war or science or art. 94, 22. waters which a Pagan. Wonlsworth, in language as strong as lluskin's, laments the materialistic spirit that blots out all care for the beauties of iiatuie. "Tlic world is too iniicli with iis ; lale iiinl -^ooii, Ierisant lea, llaxc yliniiises that would make me less forlorn ; Have sit,'lit of I'roteus risiiii;- from the sea ; Ov iicar okl Triton hlow his wreathed horn." William Wnnlxinnih. 94, 29. Unknown God. C'f. Acts xvii. 2i2-.Sl. 95, 38. dragon's breath. In the oMest Ihiglish i)oems, the epic of Beowulf, the ilragon breathes out destroying flame. 96, 2. royal hand that heals. Scrofula, called King's Evil, was thought susceptiljle of cure by a tcmch of the haiul of royalty. Dr. Johnson, when a boy, was taken up to liOiulon to be * touche\ hich is a very likely one.'* Of Lord. A.' S. /lui/nrd, lu; s.iys : -It is certain that the word is a compound, ami that the former syll,il>le is A. S. /i/n/, a loaf. It is extremely likely that -on/ stands for iriaril, a warden, keeper, master ; whence hbif-iocunl loafdvceper, /. c. the master of the house." 96, 31. DoniinUS. Theitymolojiy isjiroixij-ly thcSanseiit'/'/w- (lilds, he who subtitles, coiniectcd with tiie l,;it. ilnniit, I t;i.me, to which Verb it is akin ; while ilonins, Inutse, is eoiiiiccted with Saiisci it (/r////»».s, house, itself akin to the I'Jiglish ' timlier.' 188 Nretatioii of it. than tiiat uttered from your lips. I'.id Iheiii he lirave ; — they will he l)ra\e for yoii; hid them lie cowards; and how nohle soe\er they he, — they will (|uail for you. Hid them be wise, aiiur rule over them. You fancy, perliai>s, as you have heeu told so often, that a wife's rule should only he over her hushand's honse, not over his mind. Ah, no I the true rule is just the reverse of that ; a true w ife, in her hushand's house, is his servant ; it is in his heart that she is (jueeii. Whatever of t lie hest he laii conceive, it is her jiart to he ; what- ever ot hi;.;hest he can lioiie, it is hers to promise: all (hat is dark in him slu' must purjjfe into purity , all that is failing; in him she must stren,!,'lheii into truth ; from her, throuf^h all the world's clamour, he imiht win iiis praise ; in her, throu.nh all the world's warfare, he must find his ])eace. Crown of Wild OliiY, Wur, p. 92. 97, 29. Prince of Peace. Cf. Isaiah, ix. o. 97, 35. Dei gratia, ^at. for 'by tlic grace of (Jod,' used with the names of our sovereigns, in royal jiroclainutioiis and inscriptions on coins, to indicate that the ruler is such, l)y viitue of divine favour. 97, 38. you have not hindered. See I'roirn oj Wi/d Ollrc, War, p. \y,\ :— "If the usual course of war, instead of unroonn^' iH-asants' homes, and rava^nnj; peasants' fields, nu'rely hroke tlie china u]>on your own drawing-room tahh's, no war in civilized countries could last a week. ! tell you more, that at wliatever moment you choose to i>ut a jierio'l to war, you could do it wiih less ironMc than you take any day to j;o out to dinner. You know, or at hast you ini,:,dit know if yuw would think, that every hattle .vou hear of has macle inanv w idows and orphans. We liave, none of us, heart enou>;h to mourn with thesi. Uui at least we minlit jiul on the outward symhols of mourniii'-r vvith them. hel i)Ut everv Chrisiian hidv who has conscience t'o\var more true, Ne'er from the heath-llower dash'd the dew, E'en the slij;:ht harebell raised its head, Klastic from her airy tread." 'J'he harebell is a fragile plant with delicate, bhie bell-sliaped flowers of rare beauty. Jt is found among the rocks, especially in the neighbor- hood of water. 99, 36. the garden of some one who loves them, liead Shelley's Si'u-sUin- Plant. 100, 6. " Come, thou South," Head Solomon's Song, iv. 16. 100, 15. feeble florets, lit., fragile little flowers; fig., young girls sad aneatl». The most famous illustration of the allegory is a , series of lifty-three sketches for wood-cuts by ifans Holbein. In oiiTj text, the sense is, that Satan is gloating over the misery and death J that infest the crowded factories and houses of the poor. --" 100, 24. English poet's lady. The heroine, Maud, of Tenny- son's most passionate love poem, Maud. 100, 25. Dante's great Matilda, A lady whom Dante sees in I'nrgatory by tlic eicutioiieral lesson from it. 103, 17. "what is your life." See James, iv. 14. 103,33. "manwalketh." See Ps. xxxix. C. 104, 8. " the mist of Eden." See (ien. ii. 6. 104, 11. •' wells without water." See 2 Pet. ii. 17. 104, 23. disappointment. . of cherished purposes. From his failing to inliuence men's minds to sympathy with his own. See pp. 105 flF. " I iiscd to fancy th.at overy1)0(ly wouM like cloiuN iiiid rocks as well as I did, if once told to look at theiii ; whereas, after fifty years of tiial, I find lliat is not. so, even in modern days ; lia\iny Ion;,' a>;o kiioun tliat, in ainient ones, the elouds and luonii- taiiis which ha\e been life to me, were mere inconxenienee and horror to most of man- kind." Prceterita, II. 1. 104, 29. twilight so beloved by Titian. Seen, to r^s, 13. "The great splendotir <»f the \'eiutian scliool arises for tlieir having seen and held from the beginning this great fact — that shadow is as much colour as light, often more so. In Titian's fullest red the lights are [tale 11 'I'll 192 NOTES. rose-colour, passing into white- Lecturea on Art. -the shadoM's warm, 'leep crimson.' Turner, See 105, 7. greatest painter — of England. Introd. pp. 14Gff. 104, 8. Reynolds. Sir Joshua lleynolds (172:M70-J), the greatest English portrait-painter, famous also as the first president of the lUtyal Academy. Ho was the friend of .Johnson, (Jarriek and lUirke. 105, 22. National Gallery. A great gallery of paintings in London, founded by the nation in 18'2'4. It is in a large stone edifice near Trafalgar Sfjuare. Though not ecpiailing tfie great European galleries, it contains many of the w()rks of the old and new masters. One section, called the Turner gallery, contaiiis the works of the greatest of landscape painters. R.'s work in arranging the Turner drawings is described in the Pre- face to Modern Painters, Vol. V. " In seven tin boxes in the lower room of the National (Jallery I found ui)\vards of nineteen thousand pieces of paper, drawn on by Turner v. le way or aiiotbt-r. Many on both sides ; some with four, five, or six subjects oii each sioking anxiously towards Nor- wood in the hope that ' the loftiest moral triumph ' of the world may have been Idown away." Furs, Let. iii. 107» 21. Pope. Alexander Pope (1088-1744), the greatest satirical poet in English; lived cliietly at Twickenham ; wvoia Ehho yon GriticUm, Ji(il)i' of Ihv ljin!\ i)iniciii(l, etc. The quotation is from the Essay on Man, and, like many of ll.'s qu()tatijiiness l)y liope supplied, And eacli vacMiity of sense by pride ; Tliese build as fast a-s kuowledu? can destroy ; In folly's (•u)> still lan;;hs the bubble, joy ; One jtrospect lost, another still we j^ain ; And not a vanity is jjfiven in vain." Eumy on Ma7i, Ep. II. pt. vi. 108, 51-57. 12. mortal part — swallowed up. Seel. Cor. xv. 109, 15. ministers to pride and lust, Ic, the artists used their talents to gratify the pride of princes or to pander to their lust. 109, 23. see with our eyes- Cf. Mark, iv. 12. 108, 21. unless their motive is right. R. defines the nature of the motive in 11. 14-17, as well as elsewhere. " Have a Hxed purpose of some kind for your country and yourselves ; no matter how restricted, so that it l)e tixed and unscUish." — Lectures on Art, 109. 38- Antipodes (1^. niidpodefs, Uk. nvriKodtg, a compound of ni'Ti, against, and ~o/'f, a foot), men whose feet are opposite ours ; hence, at the [)lace diicctly op]josito us, on the other side of the world. 111, 19. kings... as grasshoppers, etc. Adaptations of Isa. xl. 22, and >iahum i. li. 112. 14. Milton's, .system of the universe. That there is a region of hell, above whieii thri>ugli Cliaos is our planetary system ; beyontl our planetary system the sphere of the Hxed stars, beyond it the crystalline heaven, and beyond it the cnq)yreau heaven, .seat of God anm, is Works ami Dttji^, ]H'rhaps the (ddest did.ictic poem in the Avorld, consisting of ethical, ])olitical, and minute economical precepts. It is homely and unimaginative in style, but }»ervaded with a solemn and lofty feeling, arising from the belitif that the gods have ordained justice among men, have made labour the only road to prosperity, and have so ordereil the year that every work has its appointed season, the sign of which may be discerned. Another poem T/i('oijuni(t, attributed to Hesiod, is pi'obably not his work. To a part of it li. refers. The Titans were sons of Urania (Heaven) and G.'ea (Earth) They overthrow their father, and one of them, Knmos, becomes king. Zeus, son of Kronos, aided by his brothers — the younger gods — waged war for ten years against his father and the older 'I'itans, until (inally tlie latter were driven down into a dungeon beneath Tartarus. 112, 23. Dante's conception. See n. to 7S, 7. 112, 30. Florentine maiden. Beatrice Ti':s. ii>r. off I fulfil, witV' of MriK.'Iaus, king of S|),artii. Meiiolaus culled upon his fellow cliifts to iivfiii,'*' the wioii'^ ; tlicy i,Mtli«T('il ;vii .'vriny hikI :v fleet, and sailing to Asia Minctr, laid siege toTroy, 'riiough Agameninon was the leader of the (ireek, the greatest warrior was Acliilles, 8<»n of king Peleus and of Thetis, a sea-goddess, who had made her son all but invul- nerahle l)y bathing hun in the river Styx. Almost nine years the siege had gone on, when pestilence broke out in the ( Jreek eamp. Achilles laid the ))lanie on Agameninon, because he had refused to give up the captive (Jhryseis, to her fatlier. Agamemnon agreed to surrender the girl if Achilles would hand over to him another captive, liriseis. Achilles consents, but withdraws his forces from the tield and sulks in his tent. The next I)attle is won by the Trojans, and the (Ireeks in alarm entreat the angry chief to return to their aid. Jle so far relents as to permit his Myrmidons to take the tield again, le]>in;f one after annrher .v/.r perfiona'fen, rlml in white rotu'H, wearinjf on their heait.f (furtands of liai/s and golden vizardx on their faces; brunches oj Imifx or piilnis in. their hunilx . . . .holdini/ the (jnrlandx oner her head; which done. .. .she makes in her sleep signs of rejoicing, ami holdeth tip her hands to heaven ; and so in their dancing theg vanish, carrying their ijurlands with them). ion NOTES. 'I I Kiit/i.: Sjirits of pcswc, wlu-rc art- \c? An- ye all vnnv '< And li'ftvr lilt lien- in sMtliludiicss licliinil \u? Grijiith : Miwhun, wu iiic Irio. Kath.: It is not >ou I cull for : Saw ye none enter, Hiriw I slept '! (IriJIith : None, madam. Knth.: No? Saw ye not, even now, a Jtlc'ssed troop Invite me to a baniiuct ; whose t)ri;,'ht faces Cast thousand beams iijion me, like the sun V They promis'd me elernal hapi)iness ; And hro\ii,'ht me jjarlands, (Jritlith, which 1 feel I am not worthv yel to wear : I shall, assuredly. 114, 38. the great soldier king. Hcmy V. The scene referred to is llcnrij V., Act iV., su. viii. King: Where is the number of our Etitclish dead '! (llernUl prcufnta (inntlwr pcijH'r.) Edward, the duke of York, the earl of Suffolk, Sir Richard Ketly, iJavy CJam, estpiire : None else of name ; and of all other men, But five and twenty. () (!o,'reat and little loss. On one part and on the other? Take it. Lord, For it is only Thine V Exeter : 'Tis wonderful ! King : Come, iio we in procession to the villa;,'e Aufi be it death proclaimed throuj,'h the host. To boast of this, or take that i)raise from Gofl, Which is His only. Fhicllen : Is it not lawful, an please your majesty, to tell how many is killed V King : Yes, captain, l)ut with this acknowledy:ment, That God fouL'ht for us. 1 15, 7. valley of the shadow of death. 115, 9. " The gods are just." Cf. Ps. xxiii. 4. The ffofls are just, and of our i)leasant vices Make instnunents to scourye us. King Lear, Act. V,, sc. iii. 115, 11. resolved arbitration. An older sense of 'ar})itra- tion,' here denoting tlie spont;uieous decivt's of the Fates, who are appointed to decide (arbiters) human life and action. 115, 14. our indiscretion — divinity. Our indiscretion sometimes serves us well, When our deep plots do fall ifailj ; and that should teach us, There's a divinity that shapes oiu' ends. Rough- hew them as we may. Hamlet, Act V., sc. ii. 115, 33. men — who weigh the earth, cf. Job xxvi' Is. xl. 12 ; Prov, xvi. 2 ; Va. Ixii. i) ; note U.'s inuendo, -forcing a parison of the scientists with God. NOTE^. 107 e scene 'paper.) s killed ? ii. 4. «•. 111. bitra- u) are ic. n. 116, 1. though no poet. <'f. Intio.l. p. i.V). 117,31. The child is father to the man. Vwm Wonla- wortli's puein : My lieai'l leauH u|> whon I behold, A riiiiiliow in the sky. So WHS it when my life he^jan ; So is it, now 1 am a man ; So ije il when I nhall >,'ro\v old Or let me die ; The child is father of the man ; And I conld wish my days to he I'ound ea(;h to each hy natural piety. 118, 12. These, hewers of wood. Here 11. joins hantU witli Ilia * niaHter, Cailyle,' wliose belief in work was a religion : — " All true Work is sacred. Adniirahle was M'at saying of the old inoiikH, ' idhorare est orarc ! ' I.ahour wide as the earth has its iipiimit in Heaven. Sweat of the brow ; and up from that to sweat of the brain, sweat of the heart ; which includes all Kepler caluiilations Newton meditations, all Sciences, all spoken Epics, all acted Heroisms, Martyrdoms, — uj) to that * a>,'ony of bloody sweat ' which all men have called divine ! O brother, if this be not worship, tlien I say, the more pity for worship ; for this is the noblest thing yet discovered under God's sky. Who art thou that complainest of thy life of toil'.' Complain not! Look up, my wearied brother; see thy fellow Workman there, in God's eternity ; surviving tliere, they alone surviving ; sacred Band of the Immortals, celestial Hody-guard of the Empire of Mankind 1 Even in weak Human nienory they siu'vive so long, as saints, as liuroes, as gotis ; they alone survivint; ; peopling, they alone, the unmeasured solitudes of Time I To thee, Heaven, thou^fh severe, is nitt unkind; Heaven is kind,— as a noble Mother ; as that Spartan Mother, saying, while she gave her son his shield, ' With it my son, or upon it 1 ' Thou, too, shalt U-turn home in honour ; to thy far distant home in honour, doubt it not, — if in the battle thou keep thy shield." Carlyle, Pant and Present, III. 12. 118, 32. Even Reynolds. Between the foundation of the Royal Academy, in 1 70S, and his death, in 1792, Reynolds as President delivered iifteen annual discourses on art. R. criticises them adversely in Modern Painters. WO, 6. Gustave Dor6 (1832-1883), a Erench artist, famous as an illustrator of the Bible, and of works of Dante, Milton, Coleridge, Poe, Tennyson. The reasons for R.'s condemnation of Dor6 may be seen in the following: — " Your friend is wrong in thinking there is any good in those illustrations of Elaine [hijlUs o/ the Kinn]. I had intended to speak of them afterwards, for it is to my mind quite a significant— almost as awful— a sign of what is gting on in the minds of us, that our great English jioet should have suflfered his work to be thus contaminated, as that the lower Evangelicals, never notable for sense in the arts, should have g it their Bibles dishonored. Tliose Elaine illustrations are just as impure as anything else thaf Dore has done ; but they are also vapid, and without any one merit whatever in point c ^he taint of the charnel- house on them besides." Time and Tide, Let. xvi., p. 71. 120, 10. Furies. The goddesses Alecto, Megjura, and Tisiphone, fearful beings who, according to the Greeks, punished the crimes of mortals. 120, 10. Harpies. According to Greek mythology, the harpies had the heads ami breasts of women, and the bodies of vultures — hideous F i i a< 198 NOTEH. monsters with wings, of fierce and loathsome :i8|)ect8, with tiieir faces pale with iuinger, living in an atmosphere of iiltli and stench, contami- nating everything they ai)[troached. 120, 18. Madonnas of Raphael. Paintings of the Virgin and her Holy ChiUl. One — the Madonna di 8an Sisto — hangs in the Hoyal gallery in Dresden ; another — the Madonna of the Chair — in the Pitti Palace, Florence. Raphael (1483-1520), an Italian painter of the highest genius. He decorated many puhlic l)uildings and palaces in Kome. 120, 19. Sybils of Michael Angelo. These were majestic female ligures painted (m the 8istine Chapel at Rome, Michael Ang'elo (147i)-l.")(53). He was an Italian ])ainter, sculptor, architect, and poet. Hi'j hest works are the decorations of the Sistine Chapel, the converting of the baths of Diocletian into the church of 8te. Maria degli Angeli, and his statue of Moses. 120,20. Angelico- (Jiovanni da Fiesole, or Angclico, (1.387-1455) was a Tuscan paniter. He decorated the l*oi)e's private ch.ipel in the Vatican with illustrations of tlie life of St, Lawrence. In the (Jallery of Florence hangs his j^ictui-e on the birth of John the Baptist. " Angelico was the guide of his age," said I.an/i, " because of the super- natural beauty of his heads of angels and saints." — Jiioijraphie Unii'tr- sdle. 120, 21. Cherubs of Correggio. The reference is to the beautiful faces of winged boys in such panitings as the "Mght," which represents the infant Christ with cherubs hovering above. Correggio (1494-15,34), an Italian painter, 'the first among the moderns wlio displayed that grace and general ])eauty and softness of ett'ect, the combined excellences of design and colour with taste and expressifm, for which he is still unrivalled.' 120,35. passions of myriads. It. elsewhere expands this conception. Kead the note to 34, 19, and continue : — " But also remember that the art-gift is only the result of Ihi; moral character of {fenerations. \ had woman m.a.v have a sweet voice ; hut that sweetness comes of the past morality of her race. That she can sinj,' with it sit all, she owes to the (le*^"rmin- ation ot the laws of music by the morality of the past. ICvery act, every impulse, of virtiie aiul vice, affects in any creatuie, face, voice, ner\()us power, aiios.>4ible to the man who did the symmetricr' ~t:, el— the world is keyless to him ; he has built a cell for himself in whi<'h he must abide, barred up for ever — there is no more hope for him than for a sponge or a madrepore [coral insect]. The Two Pathn, pp. 21-2;'.. The lecture since published was entitled T/ic Diftrioratin- Power of i ontrtitionnl Art orer Xdtion.'i, ami form.s tlie tliird of the live lectures iit The, Tivo Paths. 121, 35. missal-painter. The missal is a book coiitaininj^ the prayers used iu celebrating the mass, Ik'fore the invention of printing, the missals were copied by hand with marvellous beauty and accuracy, and adorned with elaborate initial letters. 123, 16. inflame the cloud of life. Life is a vapour that love often illumines with the an[;iii.sh of itassion. 123, 24. law of heaven. See (Jon. iii. lU. 123, 28. "Whatsoever thy hand." See Ecel. ix. 10. 124, 1. dead have yet spoken. <'f. n. to lu, 18. 124, 12. Forest Cantons. The country now called Swit/.er- lanil formed until the beginning of the fourteenth century a part of the German empire. The lea«ling towns and the people of the Forest Cantons of Uri, 8ehwyz, an2 the three Forest (.'antons, with Lucerne, Ziirich, Zug, Berne joining in a perpetual confederacy, which ill l.lia, on the adhesion of Hasle, Seliaffhausen, and Appenzell, became the real Swiss confederacy as we now know it. When the Heformation, through the preachings of Zwingli, spread 200 NOTES. i over tlie northern cantons, the Forest Cantons remained attached to the ohl faitli. 124, 13. Vaudois valleys. Among tlie vallejs of tlie Cottiau Alps in Northern Italy lives a Christian community holding I'rott'stant doctrines. These Walilenscs (Vaiulois) hold that their Church is directly connected with the Ajmstles, anine valleys. See note to 4."), (5. 124, 24. Garden of the Hesperides. The Hesperides, children of Hesperus in ancient fable, were sisters wlio, aided by a sleepless drag<»ij, guarded the golden apples be.stowed upon Juno at her wedding by ( Jiea (Karth). Where the garden Mas. the fables do not agree. But certainly it was in the West, amid the radiance of the Betting sun. One tradition has it that near Mount Atlas in the once fruitful land of north-western Africa, the apples were [(reserved, — " Amidst the ^'ardews fair Of Hesjierus and hisdaiiH:hiers three. That sinj,' aliout the j,'olden tree." See note to Milton, CmnuK. famine at Orissa, 124, 24. perish of hunger. 70, i!». 124, 27. honoured of — heathen women. See note to Athena, (iO, ; 80, G, and to Penelope, ~\), 'J.*?. Cla.ssieal literature ctmtaius many allusions to the art of weaving, in descriptions of M'ojuen such as Creusa and Ii)higenia. 124, 29, wisest king. Solomon. See Prov. xxxi., 10-.31. 125, \. tapestry. Woven stufls for the decoration of Malls and furniture. One of the most famous of manufactories of tajjcstry is the (iohelins in France, where M'ork that rivals painting is still produced. 125, 7- cast clouts. Cf. Jerem. xxviii., 11, 12- 125, 15. •! was naked." Cf. Matt. xxv. 4.3. 125, 34. atoms of scarcely nascent life. The coral insects, which are very 1(»m' in the scale <»f animal life. 125, 35. ridges of formless ruin, of Habylon, Mr. Savce lias said : " The numerous remains of old habitations slu)W how thickly this level tract must once have l)een peoi)led, though now for the most part a M'ilderness." Further references could be made in support of the text to the Aztec civilization of Mexico, the Carthaginian empire of northern Africa, etc. NOTES. 201 126, 2. I was a stranger. See Matt, xxv., 35. 126, 7. as a fig-tree. Cf. Kev. vi, 13. 126, 19. glory of gray hairs. Cf. I'ro. xx., 29. 126, 27. imaginations of our evil hearts. Cf. Jerem. xxiii. , 17. 126, 30. " as a vapour.'" See .fas. iv. 14. 126, 38. whither they go. Modelled on Eccl. ix., 10. 127, 8. days are numbered. Cf. I's. xc, 12. 127, 17. " He maketh the winds." I's. civ., 4; Heb. i., 7. 127, 33. Dies Irae- ('/' '"••< * re), Day of Wrath. The uamc of a famous Latin hymn on the .Tudgnient Day, probably written by an Italian, Tiiomas ot" Celano, who livetle iuid submissive ))ersons, who might else by their true patience, have alloyed the hanlness of the conunon crowd, and by their activity for gooe wliat he shall read next, I have told him, Wai^erlcji, with extreme care. Read your Wacetieij, I repeat, with extreme euro ; and of every important jH-rson in the story, consider tii*st what the virtues are ; tlien what the faults imnitahle to them l)y nature and breedinjjr ; then what the faults they mijiht have avoided ; then what the results to them of their faults and virtues under the ai)|)ointment of fate. Do this after reading' each chapter; and write down the lessons which it seems to you Scott intended in it ; and what he means you to admire, what to despise."— Huskin, Fum, Let. Ixi. i ) 200 APPENDIX. Study of Dehcription. Scene From Social Life.— Examining the description of Tully-Veolan in cliap viii. of Waverley^ we find that Scott portrays tlie village in the following nianner : — He states ihe theme: Captain Waverley in Tully-Veolan. He gives a (jeneral Straggling village. Houses miserable, con- outline of the place : trasting with English cottages. He enumerates the de- Houses stjvnding without regularity, tails of the scene : Streets unpaved. Children playing on the streets , often res- cued from danger by their grandams. Dogs yelping after the traveller. Here and there an old man gazing curiously at the stranger. Girls, slightly clad, returning with pitchers or pails on their heads from the well or brook. He giVQS a conclusion: The general appearance of the village and villagers to the eye f)f the keen observer. In the first place we must notice, therefore, that this descrijjtion involves a methodical presantdi io7i of the scene following the scheme of Theme, Ge)ieral Outline, Details, Summary. The Statement of the Theme. It is a great advantage to a writer to put clearly before himself the theme of his disc<)ur8e. It guides him rightly in the selection of details, for irrelevant circumstances will not occur to him, or if they do occur they will not be admitted. What he composes will therefore most likely be unified and compact. The reader finds the statement of the theme a great advantage, as well, for he is able from the stated theme instantly to understand the general drift of the writer's thought, and to grasp his sub8e<{uent statements in their proper relaticmship. Rule 1. — State at the outset (unless you have good reasons to the contrary) the theme of your description. The General Outline. It is also advantageous to a writer to have before himself the general outline of the scene he is about to describe. With it the details he brings forward tend naturally to AfPEyoix. 207 ship, the fall into place. Without it they would tend t( become confused. When the reader has this general outline before him, as is generally the case, he is enabled most easily to grasp the general character of the scene, and to arrange all the details in their proper con- nection. Rule 2. — Where possible, let a general outline of the scene you descrihe precede the detailed description. The Details. In the description of TuUy-Veolan outlined above, we find no details of the interior of the houses — furniture, decor- ations — or of the customs, superstitions, history of the villagers ; no details, in short, except those that are revealed to the keen eye of the observant traveller as he passes through the streets. A descripti«)n is therefore not a mere mass of details. It is a present- ation of debvils selected and arranged according to a plan. But what plan ? The details are selected with reference (i.) to the point of view from which the author cliooses to describe the scene. In the pas- sage referred to Captain Waverley is represented as viewing the village from horseback as he passes up the street. All details not naturally unfolding themselves to him at his point of view are excluded. We have therefore a third rule : Rule 3 — Choose your point of vietv, and select the details that harmonize with it. (ii.) Again, think of the mass of details that could have been brought into the picture — the form and material of the houses, their age, delapidation, etc.; the dress, in colour, sliape, quality, etc., of the villagers, etc., etc. Out of that possible mass of details, Scott selects the most striking, and rests content with them. A mass of details would have been confusing. Rule 4. — It is better to present a few of the most churactcristic features of the scoie than a mere m(tss of details. (iii.) There is rational arrangement of details. They are grouped in a natural order, such as they might present themselves to the traveller as he advances through the village : First, the general appearance of the houses, then the streets, then the inhabitants — the children, grandams, dogs, old men, girls. Rule 5. — Let there be a natural sequence iii the arraru/ement of the details of the scene. 208 APPENDIX. The fftct tlmt the details of the village scene above are revealed gradually to Capttiin Waverley, as he passes up the street, shows that the point of view may shift. This shifting point of view — called the trdveller's pitint of view — is best employed where we wish to give a sort of panoramic view of the scene, to present details that W()uld not l)e reve.-ded at any fixed point. Study slmuld be made of description fr«>m the Hxed point of view. (See the descrip- tion of Flcjra at the fountain.) The Su that it forth by MMAllY presents e de the to the tail advantage ider the gt s, and so far to neip summary, or conclusion, is neral effect designed to be called Ip him gather the significance of the picture w'ithout the tn)uble of original thought. Rule 6. — 'There should (in general) be a co^wlunion ivhii.'h will ■ '.e the details of tlte descriptian. Character Sketches —We have analyze*! a descripti(jn of a scene fr«>m social life. Let us look at a character sketch — that of Mr. Bradwardine, as described in cliai)ter x. and elsewhere. Theme General Outline. The api)earance of the Barctn of Bradwardine in [»erson. 'External ajjpearance Education : Disposition, etc Tall, thin, athletic in figure, care- less in dress. Bred with a view to the bar, l)ut, involved in the rebellion of 1715, he became a soldier. Military pedant. Prejudiced by birth and training. Ar))itrary, though not cruel. Scott, having given us in the rough a picture of the Baron, leaves it to the narrative to present to us more forcil)ly than mere description could do, the various traits of this remarka})le person- age. In writing, theref<»re, ourselves a description of this person- age, we shall have t«» foHow him through all the incidents of his life, and select and group our judgments in accordance with the laws stated above. Details : Warmth of his friendship to Sir Everard Waverley (shown by his greetings to Waver- ley). Al'PENDIX. 209 vMl General Comment Fondness for stories and ([uotAtiuns, especially from Livy. Hospitality. Conviviality. (Episode of the Banquet, chap- ter xi.) Sense of honour. (Kpisode of the Duel.) Dry humour. Taste in literature. (Chaj). xiii.) Coura<^e and family pride. (Cha[). xv. and elsewhere. ) Jacobite loyalty. (Chaps, xiii., xxviii., xli., xlviii.) Loyalty of his pe()ple to him. (Chap. Ixxiii. and elsewhere.) His atlection fd.stji flidf ihc Inh'rcst cuhaiuatea vlwn Ll'i' irnch the y t;xanii)les,* as — («») hright accounts of traveU. {!>) clever li's \h only oiic of luaiiy forms. In Sinftnif (p. Hit), for iiistaiice, wi- have anotlior form. KiiMk'i;, wishiiiir to illustratt- I In- thoiiifht that faKe work will liroed false emolioiH, compares 'he plea>iiiris of Kiiula'nl with the L'uilty pleasureH of idolatrous Jews. This latter form of ex|iOHition is Kxposition by Illustration. » 214 APPENDIX. 1 HI ters by referunco to examples — travels, novels, histories, etc. These he tolls us are not true books (the obverse proposition). The statement of what a true book is not, brings us to the state- ments of what a true book in. The various characteristics of true books, thus stated, make up the definition the author seeks to have us grasp. Writing of this kind is no succession of events; it is not narrative. It tolls us nothing of any particular book ; it is not descriptive. It seeks to set clearly })efore u.s the true nature of a thing — or it may be the true nature of a principle — wliich kind of composition is called Exposition. Laws of Exposition. — Briefly stated the laws of Exposition are as follows : — 1. The treattnent nmd he Ingical, a true chain of reasoning autil the conclusion is reached. 2. The treatment miist he clear, and if possible simple. Examples and illustrations are great aids to simpHcitij. 3. The ordinary laws, as to Introduction, Proposition, Visnission, Conclusion, hold good. SruniKs ANi> Tukmks in Exposition. jfVu; Truth in Things (J hjinition):— 1. True Books, (pp. :L> it) 2. True Heading »»f Books, (pp. US-oO.) 3. True Educati<»n. (p. 2H tl".) 4. Vulgarity, (p. 40. i 5. Charity (pj). 51)-()4.; (). True ln. (pp. (i.'M.) 7. The Sphere of Woman. [Cmnpare hfr sphere with the sphere of man, and use the lestimogy (tf Sliake- si)eare, Dante and Scott (pp. 72-H4.)] 8. The Education of Woman (pp. H4-<»a). (a) |»hynical. (/») scientilic. (<•) literary. (d) artistic. (»') her teachers. ( f) her surroundings. 0. The Itelation of Women to the State (pp. 94-101). APPENDIX. 215 The Tnitk of Principles : — 10. IdlenesH and cruelty are the only two faults of any conso(iuence. 11. Life is too short to waste its few hours in reading V ilueleas books. 12. Books that are worth reading are worth having. 13. Books are our best friends. 14. Only noble natures can understand true books, (pp. 54-06.) 15. Books are the Sesame, which opens doors ; — doors, not of robbers, but of Kings' Treasiu'ies. ( — p. 71.) 1(>. Most men live without motive as to the future — the first mystery of life. 17. The greatest and wisest of men (Dante, Milton, and Shakespeare) give us no true teaching as to the future : the 8econur that passeth away. ' 21. To fee(l the hungry, clothe the naked, lodge the home- less—there is the only infallible religion. Gemntl Themes : — 22. The stJite ()f the Highlands in 1745. (Macaulay's History of EiufliitKl could be coJisulted with advant- age). 23. Scott as a novel ist. 24. Rnskin as a writer. the laku-