E-UNIVER% ~~ EUNIVER% 1(^A,1 <~S .? MiwwtfP' | i i i i s pu r-! i 5 ^OJIW3-JO : S g LIBRARY^ i \r \\E-UNIVER% vvlOSANCElfj s ^ 3 ^OJITVD- Jtfl "% ^/OJIWD-J 4 OF-CAIIFO^ 4 OF-WUFO^ I r ,i & AN Capacity anto TO PROVE THAT THERE IS NO ORIGINAL MENTAL SUPERIORITY BETWEEN THE MOST ILLITERATE AND THE MOST LEARNED OF MANKIND} AND THAT NO GENIUS, WHETHER INDIVIDUAL OR NA- TIONAL, IS INNATE, BUT SOLELY PRODUCED BY AND DEPENDENT ON CIRCUMSTANCES. ALSO, AN ENQUIRY IJJTO THE NATURE OF GHOSTS, AND OTHER APPEARANCES SUPPOSED TO BE SUPERNATURAL. 1 Haud equidem credo, quia sit divinitus illis Ingenium, aut rerum fato prudentia major, " VIRG. GEORG. LONDON: PRINTED FOR W. S1MPKIN AND R. MARSHALL, STATIONERS' COURT, LUDGATE-STREET; DOIG AND STIRLING, EDINBURGH; AND J. CUMMING, DUBLIN. ENTERED AT STATIONERS' HALL. Stack , TO THE IMMORTAL MEMORY OF JOHN LOCKK, THE FOLLOWING PAGES ARE DEDICATED, WITH AN HUMBLE HOPE THAT THEY MAY TEND TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF THE GREAT WORK OF TRUTH, WHICH HE SO ABLY ADVOCATED. 2015227 INTRODUCTION. HAS not Mr Locke already sufficiently established the non-existence of innateness? This is the first question that will naturally suggest itself to the generality of readers ; and, therefore, before we proceed farther, we feel it incumbent upon ourselves to answer it to their satisfaction. Mr Locke's labours were more particularly directed to the sub- version, in general, of innate principles and ideas ; our work is written against a com- monly received opinion of the original supe- riority of one intellect over another. Against this doctrine, little is directly advanced by Mr Locke, in his Essay on the Human Un- A Vi. INTRODUCTION. derstanding: the following paragraph, how- ever, will be recollected in his work on edu- cation : " I think I may say that of all the men we " meet with, nine parts out of ten are what " they are, good or evil, useful or not, by " their education. It is that which makes " the great difference in mankind. The little " or almost insensible impressions on our ten- " der infancies, have very important and last- " ing consequences ; and there it is, as in the p. 1 and 2 of the Essay. INTRODUCTION. VII. Even in this passage the profound meta- physician speaks with the greatest doubt and hesitation ; he considers this as a mere mat- ter of opinion, not of proof; and unless we can believe that ten men out of every hundred are ideots, a supposition which has by no means facts for its foundation, he was not entirely an advocate for original mental equa- lity. Taking it for granted, however, that by this sentence capacity and genius had been proved to be the offspring of circumstances, the continuance of the contrary opinion de- mands that that doctrine should be supported and reiterated. In an essay upon such a subject, and in taking such a line of argument, the author may nevertheless be deemed by some foolish and trifling, and by others daring and pre- sumptuous. But whatever may be the ideas of the reader as he proceeds, I hope he will at least indulge me with a patient attention A2 VJ11. INTRODUCTION. to the conclusion, in order that 1 may not be prejudged, or condemned without an impar- tial perusal. The rather will my wish he re- garded, when I assure those whose considera- tion I shall be fortunate enough to merit, that I have not committed to paper these, I fear, too unconnected observations, with any desire of entering upon an useless argument on ver- bal distinctions, but with the most earnest ex- pectation that I may arrive at the truth, or direct others in its pursuit, at once the true tests and legitimate objects of philosophy. In this age of literature no apology will be necessary for sending another work into the world -for adding to the heap which some may imagine already too largely accumulated; the evil corrects itself; though numerous the volumes which seek the public approbation, small indeed is the number selected as friends, companions, or instructors; some are read, admired, and forgotten ; some are examined INTRODUCTION. IX. and rejected, but still remembered as the pro .pagators of principles to be avoided, or called up to contribute to the merriment of convivial societies, and to excite the spleen of the flut- tering wasps whom scandal acknowledges as her retainers; and many, too many, are suf- fered to sink unperused into oblivion. Of the last class there have been some which deserv- ed a better destiny; but time makes amends for the fault which the wide extension of knowledge has occasioned. Reason resumes the seat whence she had been thrown by pre- judice or caprice, and the work which has been sold for waste paper, or laid for years untouched amidst d&st and sermons, has been esteemed by the same public which once deemed it unworthy of its price. The author hopes he will not be of the first of the classes he has enumerated, and he would rather be thrown unheeded amongst the third, than submit to the tortures inflicted on the second. A3* X. INTRODUCTION. In the publication of this volume, fame is not his object; though when popular applause, or the kind reception of the learned, may raise an author to celebrity, who is there that can reject the laurel which is the immediate consequence of the one, or would disdain the merited panegyric of the other ? If philosophy can own such a votary, no man can acknow-* ledge him as a brother, and he must be either superhuman, or possessed of the soul which animates the meanest reptile in creation. His only desire, as he has said before, is to ascertain the truth ; to have established firmly the veracity of his doctrine or its falsity, and if this essay should gain him any portion of the world's consideration, he will not despise it, though he only seeks it as inseparable from the fulfilment of that desire. An ambition for paradoxical investigation has been stigmatised as one of the banes of true philosophical^ quiry ; but this is only a INTRODUCTION. XI. reasonable conclusion when the word paradox is taken in a sense which can never with pro- priety be assumed ; for truth, however con- trary to the modes of reasoning adopted by the world, is truth notwithstanding ; and the man who even sacrifices a life in subverting and overthrowing vulgar errors and supersti- tions, is an enemy to no part of mankind, but to those who are inimical to themselves. Some men think they do right in supporting the opinions of ages, for what has so long withstood the test of time cannot be falla- cious ; and others, from their having demon- strated the folly of one or two dogmas of their ancestors, consider themselves justified in declaring their knowledge and precepts to have been totally erroneous. Neither course can be the right one ; except that sometimes an argument may be deduced from the cus- toms or sayings of the ancients, it is best that truth should stand on its own foundation, even if all the institutions of the universe Xll. INTRODUCTION. should be hurled to the earth by its attain- ment. It is not the author's wish to consider the sentiments of the world in general as untrue ; on the contrary, he will endeavour as much as possible to reconcile them to the propositions he defends ; but if any variation or irrecon- cileable contradiction should occur, nations and individuals must declare themselves to have been in the wrong, rather than that truth should stoop to the correction of their interests or prejudices. Truth is in itself un- changeable, but the paths that lead to it are innumerable. It is hard to find, but when discovered, men are convinced that their search has been successful. If we can con- ceive a figure with sides that are almost count- less, we may imagine truth to be on one of them; every side is deceitful but that of truth, and when that is attained, no man can be long - er the creature offfeception. Thus, amongst INTRODUCTION. Xlll. the multitude of controversies with which mankind have been perplexed, the disputants on both sides might often be perceived to be converging to one common point ; as they travel, they quarrel about the propriety of their direction, and when each arrives at what he considers the place of his destination, he is astonished to meet in fellowship with his antagonist. But short-sighted mortals too frequently forget, or are blind to their con- clusions, while they waste their strength on trivial differences, with demoniac malignity,. Almost all parties allow something which is necessary to our doctrine ; but in the eager- ness of contradiction, they neglect to pursue that something to the end. Much, it will be seen, is yet to be learned in the art of remov- ing prejudices ; for the means which are em- ployed in eradicating them from some, are the foundation of the most inveterate in others. The failure of many to convince a wandering people of their errors, has been too often oc- XIV. INTRODUCTION. casioned by a neglect to consider every train of circumstances under the delusive influence of which they acted. The same medicine which will cure a violent disorder in one man, will produce it, or prolong its devastations, in another ; and therefore it is necessary, as well for philosophers as physicians, to examine the particular constitutions of those whom they expect to cure or amend. Those of my readers who reflect upon this observation, will easily perceive that it is not possible, by so short an essay, to convince those who are yet mentally the pupils of the nursery, those whom the narrowness of their information have deceived into an idea that they have examined a question in all its bear- ings, whilst they have only dwelt with attention * the side to which they were attached by origi- nal prepossessions. To weigh impartially the arguments by which any doctrine is supported, is more difficult than is generally supposed; INTRODUCTION. XV. and therefore I shall think myself particularly fortunate, if I only ensure a calm and dispas- sionate consideration of my subject. I hope I shall he found to have written no- thing without its effect, in the essay on appa- ritions. The usage of names and ideas have been repeatedly urged as arguments for the truth of the hypotheses to which they belong- ed. The appearance of ghosts has been al- leged to be certain from the existence of the word, and the devil has been confidently prov- ed to be no descendant of the great Arimanes, from the dissimilitude of his title. I hope none of my readers approach me with these idle notions ; if such have taken possession of their imagination, it would be as well that they should not meddle with discussion, for where the mind is under the bondage of such cobwebs of iron, no question can be be- neficially discussed. XVI. INTRODUCTION- It might have been expected that the hu- man mind was already so far freed from su- perstition, that such a dissertation tras entire- ly unnecessary. But it is surprising that not- withstanding all the exertions of philanthropic investigation to prove their non-existence, every country church yard has its ghost, and many a northern, not to say southern castle, which the good inhabitants thought it sacri- lege to modernize, yet possesses its haunted chamber, its flitting lights, and midnight rust- ling. The evil can only be accounted for, by the neglect of the parents, who were convin- ced, to teach their conviction to their children ; a duty which they considered beneath their own notice, and fit only to be fulfilled by those who were entrusted with the immediate care of their education. Superstitions in general are extremely fascinating from some direc- tions, though from others gloomy, forbidding, and dangerous ; and, therefore, whilst the tu- tor is endeavouring to remove them, he should INTRODUCTION. XV11. paint in colours if possible equally attractive, all the advantages of a mind undisturbed by fears of visionary intrusion ; he should shew his pupil a strong picture of the time when hu- man nature grovelled under the yoke of men- tal despotism, and contrast it with some hap- py period when it shall bear down every ob- stacle that opposes its victorious progress. Into the minds of those who may be yet un- taught, no idea of supernatural visitations should be inculcated, and instead of frighten- ing into compliance by threatening the appear- ance of a monster, the word of moderate com- mand should be made the signal of instant obedience. These hints I have thought it necessary to lay down, independent of the essays on which the reader is now entering. He who peruses them, will, I hope, think himself not unim- proved by the portion of his time they have occupied ; if not iu reading them for the first XV111. INTRODUCTION. time, in confirming what he has seen or thought hefore ; if not in believing them cor- rect, in reflecting that he has the happiness of possessing a more complete knowledge and more accurate information. These observa- tions may also apply to the essays themselves; for if in them there is nothing new to be dis- covered, the repetition of what was old from one who believed it to be in many instances entirely novel, will collaterally establish what was before dubious and controverted ; if there is any thing before unknown, the author is sufficiently gratified in being the means of its communication. The essay on capacity and genius, was sug- gested by an observation on the liberality of the sentiment, from the wife of a gentleman whose discoveries may be said to have produ- ced a new sera in mathematics ; and I hope the goodness of the intention will sufficiently excuse the indifference of the execution. INTRODUCTION. XIX. The enquiry respecting apparitions was ori- ginally written and read, but in an Unfinished and unconnected state, as a college exercise. AN E S SA Y ON CAPACITY AND GENIUS. -BEFORE we commence our observations on capacity, a few words on general innate- ness may be necessary ; for, supposing it proved that all the common powers are ac- quired, it would be absurd to argue in favor of an innate superiority. That they are ac- quired, we shall endeavour to demonstrate; but, in case our positions should be found to be insecure, we shall proceed to reason upon the superiority, as if they were innate. Considerable stress has been laid upon a difference between innate principles and ideas ; B AN ESSAY ON intended, no doubt, after the great overthrow of innatism by Mr. Locke, as an excuse for the reproduction of such absurdities. When Mr. Locke said that there could be no innate principles, because there were no innate ideas, he had great reason to consider his argument as unanswerable ; but this was not the opi- nion of those prize-fighters of literature who believe nothing incapable of confutation. They said that the philosopher had mistaken propositions for principles, and they sung their own psean without defining the prin- ciples they defended. The moral sense is one of their assumptions, which, were we disposed to investigate it from creation, we might prove to be ideal, from the difference between good and evil being discovered by Adam acci- dentally. But to proceed by another me- thod : might it not be expected that such an innate moral principle would save new-born children from an imputation of total igno- rance ? But does not the child, when atten- 'CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 23 tion is excited, grasp at the candle, the red- hot poker, and in short at every bright object, whether harmless or injurious ? Does not, then, the being burnt, or otherwise injured, constitute the original distinction between good and evil ; and if so, where are good and evil to be found, except in social intercourse ? If I tell a falsehood, it is wrong, because my neighbour of whom I told it may be injured by it in reputation ; if a man neglect going to church, his conduct is improper, because his friends and neighbours think it sinful, and in- jurious to religion and morality. And have not nations^ immense tracts of country, held customs sacred, of the impropriety of which they had no conception, but which to us would be revolting to every principle of common sense, religion, and humanity?* Nay, if a * Mr. Locke has dwelt sufficiently on this subject ; I only mentioned it here, because some of the nations have been proved to exist, which were said, when he wrote, to be nothing more than argumentative fabrications. B 2 24 AN ESSAY ON man should live alone in a wild forest, how could he know what was best or worst to be done in every action innately, when most of what is best or worst proceeds from the insti- tution and practice of society ? Still I cannot but consider Mr. Locke's ar- gument as unanswered; for can a man think without having ideas, and when he does think first, are his reflections upon any principle ? Taking it for granted, then, that neither principles nor ideas are innate, \vhat innate- ness can be possessed by the intellect ? What is mind, but the thinking principle; and what is the thinking principle, but ideas of sensa- tion, almost indefinitely modified ? My oppo- nents may alledge that this leaves no line of distinction between thought and what they may designate the principle of thinking j what they consider to be the latter, however, I call the substratum : the title of thinking principle for the foundation of ideas, must be inconsist- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 25 ent with propriety; for whatever thinks not, though it be the ground -work of thought, should never be confounded with the property of cogitation. When we speak of a man, whose greatness of mind has made nim re- markable ; are not his actions and ideas the subjects of our praise or emulation ? We never extol any hidden origin of eminence ; what is before our eyes, or presented to our minds, alone occasions our commendation or dislike. The substratum, then, is the name we give to the principle of thought, not the thinking principle ; the latter can only be the Deity, the great mover of the universe, and can never have existence in mere formations of perishable earth.* The substratum we suppose to be an internal mirror of the senses, open to every impression ; a certain number * The difference between this, and the principles for the existence of which the innatists contend, is easily perceptible. That such a substratum must exist, no one can deny ; it is only some similarity betwixt it and the ideas of which it is the foundation, that is the subject of disputation. B3 26 AN ESSAY ON of impressions form the intellect, which is modified indirectly by circumstances, and di- rectly by education. They that imagine the mind to be any thing else, must suppose the innate existence of ideas ; there are many, however, who assert, that, except that it is in a dormant state, the mind of the new-born infant is the same as when exercised ; that it is like the string of a violin, existing, though it does not vibrate. But there is something deficient in this, as, in such a subject, there must be in all metaphorical explanations. The string of any instrument is perceptible, though it be not played upon, but the mind' remains unknown till it is exerted. All that we can write upon this mysterious and awful subject, might be summed up in one observa- tion ; that man possesses, shortly after birth, an adaptation of his senses to external cir- cumstances, and that from the varieties of this adaptation, the intellect is produced.-? How it is produced, is a question which divi- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 27 uity alone could expound ; for betwixt cir- cumstances and the substratum, there is no natural connexion, and it is only explicable by a reference to the omnipotent and eternal cause of all creation. This connexion equally puzzles those who deny the possibility of innateness and those *' who are its supporters; but, however ready we might be to leave the arguments on both sides to the discretion of the reader, as the in- natists are determined, and verbose, or, as they would term it, argumentative, we feel it our duty to enter a little further upon their doctrine. One of the great arguments for the innateness of something like mind, is, that thought must have existed previous to its ex- ercise. This is an argument drawn only from comparison ; but the human mind, as Mr. Hume has said of the universe, " is an object " quite singular and unparalleled; no other " object that has fallen under our observation 28 AN ESSAY ON " bears any similarity to it ; neither it nor " its cause can be comprehended under any (t known species." I am of opinion that the mind did not exist previous to its exercise ; its existence and first exercise must rationally be one and the same. But, if man does not al- ways think, will not this be overthrown ? Certainly it cannot ; as well might it be ar- gued that the musical string was the same when it did not exist, and when it was not played upon. Am I then to be denied cre- dence to what I have advanced, and proved, as far as it is capable of proof, because the mind is incomparable? On this ground alone ought the doctrine of innateness to be totally disbelieved; for if we can find nothing to which the human mind can with propriety be compared, is it reasonable for us to bring to- gether all things incongruous, inexplicable, and absurd, for the invention of a eompari- , son? Let philosophers endeavour to explain to me the mystery of eternity ; alas ! they are CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 29 foiled, and their comprehension puzzled and confounded. They compare it to a circle; but every circle is made, every circle is begun and completed. It is true, a circle made by a painter, if it be of one uniform color and thickness, has no end to the eye of a common observer; but another painter will easily guess, from the situation of the canvas, the light. 7 o ' or the slightest variation of; the pencil, imper- ceptible to every other person, where his bro- ther artist commenced and concluded the cir- cle. Supposing, however, that the metaphor is correct, and that the rage for resemblances must be complied with, may we not consider the commencement of the human mind as cir- cular, and indefinite to all but its Creator ? That it must commence with circumstances is evident, and any argument to the contrary would prove it to be eternal. External ob- jects create attention, which by education is moulded into reasoning and memory. Thus far we have opposed the doctrine of innate- 30 AN ESSAY ON ness ; but if even that were proved to satisfac- tion, it would be necessary for our opponents to demonstrate that circumstances did not pro- duce the difference in capacity. ON CAPACITY. Supposing all mankind to possess nothing more originally than the substratum we have described ; have we any reason but from ap pearances to imagine any primary inequality ? none that I can discover ; and is it not plain from the universal care and protection of the Creator, that no man was originally created superior to another? Nothing can disprove universal equality, but arguments deduced from the existence of a particular Providence, which would at once bring us to the verge of prophanity. Mr. Locke has said that the human mind was, at its commencement, like a piece of CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 31 white paper, or a tabula rasa,* pure and with- out impression. Now, if that tablet were at * This comparison of the mind to a tabula rasa has been ob- jected to, as it does not properly explain the phenomena of the recurrence of ideas. No metaphorical illustration can be ex- pected to contribute such an explanation ; and be it observed, we scarcely ever make use of metaphors in this work, except in instances which had given occasion for them in situations much more glaring, for the purposes of the innatists, We will conceive, then, this mirror of the senses to be of a globular form, at first unmarked, continually revolving-, and always pre- senting that which the mind has had before the most fre- quently in its presence. But \ve think the objection to our first comparison, however ancient and however formidable, is re-ally premature. Human knowledge is limited, and therefore it is said the mind is limited in its pursuits ; and why is the mind limited? Because there is not an infinitude of circum- stances for the operation of any one intellect. The tabula rasa has limits, but we cannot assign them till we know that no other object will impress itseif on the imagination. In fact, its limits are the cessation of circumstances to operate. If they were more, the limits would be larger j if they were in- finite, the tablet would be unlimited. That object which makes the deepest impression, i. e. which has been the most fre- quently presented to the mind, is easiest remembered; and that which is impressed but once, except it be something very remarkable, is faintly perceptible, if it be at all an object of re- collection. Though this partakes of the imperfection of all metaphors, it will appear to every observer that it is completely adapted to our present purpose, and is less liable to objection than almost any other we could have adopted. 32 AN ESSAY ON the birth unmarked and unimpressed, even were it to possess some inexplicable embryo of cogitation, would it not be presumptuous in us to say how fine an impression it was capa- ble of receiving, or how long that impression would remain unobliterated ? Though we might form a tolerable idea of the capacity of a particular vessel when empty, till filled, its exact containing power could not be ascertain- ed with philosophic certainty. How audaci- ous then is it not in man, to assume a sort of divine authority, and to endeavour to prove that one person's capacity when he was ush- ered into the world was narrow, and another person's comprehensive ! The tolerable and incomplete admeasurement of the capacity of an empty vessel may be urged as an argument in favor of natural superiority ; but to vary the illustration : suppose two vessels left in the open air, by chance, or by no matter whom or what, both having the same dimensions, and both being apparently and really of the CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 33 same capacity, and conceive the branches of a tree to intervene between the heavens and one of them, so that one shall he filled with water when it rains, and the other shall remain comparatively empty ; surely there is no per- son so foolish as to consider the difference in the contents of these vessels a difference in capacity ! So it is, however, with the gene- rality of mankind ; they estimate the extent of the capacity by the present condition of the intellect, without considering in some ca- ses the immense impediments to improvement, and in others the numerous opportunities. Bad consequences of innatism. This is a doctrine which will lead to conclusions the most unchristian, and inimical to the exist- ence of civilized society ; it causes man to dis- trust the ability of his fellow creature, and to consider him incapable of improvement, be- cause for a while unimproved ; it has a ten- dency to relax the efforts of the preceptor in 34 AN ESSAY ON bringing to perfection the intellectual facul- ties of his pupils, because when he perceives all present means of effecting his purpose un- availing, he will abandon his task in despair. How many are there, who, taking it for grant- ed they have no capacity, pursue life in a course of dull monotony, whereas they might have been adding to their own enjoyments, and increasing the happiness of all around them ? Does not then the doctrine of capa- city being limited to particular persons, strike at the root of every human science, and de- stroy hope, the greatest blessing of which hu- man nature is susceptible. But all the dread- ful consequences of such an hypothesis have not been enumerated. By being made more susceptible of happiness, one man is made happier than another from the very com- mencement of his existence. Is this consistent with omnipotent benevolence ? It makes the Deity a tyrant, and the worst of tyrants ; and when ideas of the despotism of the Almighty CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 35 have once become prevalent, scepticism has obtained over the soul her terrible dominion ; atheism has drawn the sword of cruelty, and thrown open the flood-gates of the blood and misery of human kind. Nothing improper in our doctrine. Let no man imagine, that, because I am arguing for the position that the most ignorant rustic in creation, had he fallen into different circum- stances, might have become the poet, the orator, the statesman, the commander, or the monarch, that I mean to produce improper ideas of the conduct of the Deity, in having placed us in the spheres in which we move. If men had not various appetites and passions, no one would be satisfied ; all would be dis- organized and unhappy. It would be impos- sible long to proceed along the streets of Lon- don, if every person were going in the same path, and adopted the same pace and the same direction. I wish not, as things are, to 36 AN ESSAY ON see all men with the same inclinations, the same rapidity of step, or similarity of busi- ness; but I desire to demonstrate, that the diversity of disposition, the difference in gait, and the variety of employment, proceed not from the immediate interference, but from the secondary influence of Providence. The pre- sent artificial institutions of society render different tempers, passions, and capacities, necessary and unavoidable ; but there have been times when men were in every respect more nearly assimilated. Our knowledge is the ephemeral acquirement of a few hundred years, and our imagination cannot penetrate much farther into futurity. That society is, as it should permanently exist, it is therefore impossible to determine. Why then argue for the innateness of a difference which is but temporary and circumstantial ? Why accuse us of arraigning the actions of omnipotence, when we only connect a part of them with the eternal chain of universal beneficence? CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 3^ Those who contend that men are of different original formation, cannot go beyond the nar- row conceptions of their present existence, or the fallacy of their reasoning would he per- ceptible to themselves ; but, by the examina- tion of the doctrine we advocate, the Deity will be recognized, not as the feodal governor and wilful creator of mankind, but as the be- nevolent and necessary parent of so many emanations from his own essential eternity. Instances of extraordinary capacity?* Me- thinks I see some skilful schoolmaster sneer- ing at me, and attempting to convince me of the folly of my arguments, by what he will consider unanswerable facts, the different dispositions of his scholars. But it is not, he * We have not in this part of our essay examined any cha- racters of celebrated men, in order to show the effect of cir- cumstances in their formation. For the establishment of our arguments, a sufficient number will be examined towards the conclusion of that portion of our treatise more immediately dedicated to genius. c 38 AN ESSAY ON should remember, that all men have the same capacity, that I assert; but that all might have had, had they been placed in circum- stances equally advantageous. There are plants which, when grown in a coal mine, will have their leaves white, instead of green. But those plants are, nevertheless, of the same species and the same genus with others which preserve their health and green appearance ; and who is there so foolish or so obstinate, as to deny that they would have had the same juices and the same color, if they had had the same advantages, as those which were grown with the benefit of air and sunshine ? A story has been frequently told of a young man related to, or protected by, a gardener to one of the Dukes of Buccleaidb^ which has been said to prove beyond a doubt the exist- ence of superior natural capacity. This young person was met by the Duke himself with Newton's Principia in his hand, seem- ingly highly delighted with the work, and CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 39 appearing to understand it perfectly. The astonished Duke immediately asked him by whom he had been taught to appreciate and to become master of a book so difficult and abstruse. The reply was, that it only requi- red the knowledge of the alphabet to under- stand it !* There are parts of this relation * A schoolmaster had a scholar whom he had found it im- possible to teach even the first rudiments of language. The alphabet was to him an insuperable barrier. When every other method was ineffectual, the ingenious tutor had recourse to a singular expedient. He selected a number of boys as nearly as possible in a regular gradation in point of size, from the smallest upward. The smallest he named Artful; the next in height, Bold; the next, Careless ; the fourth, (the stupid scho- lar himself) Dunce ; >and so on through the whole. By degrees the boy became acquainted with his playmates under their new appellations ; in time he assimilated them to the characters of his horn book ; and when once he had crossed the rubicon, he met and overcame every difficulty with an ardour and ability which was as surprising as his original stupidity. This, with the gene- ral assertion that some boys are easy and some difficult to in- struct, was given me as a proof that capacity was at least liable to natural unevenness. But this falls short of success, as will every other argument of a similar origin. We have not a state- ment of the boy's early life, and I doubt not but some accident had contributed to cramp his first intellectual exertions, though when his instructor had broke the boom that interrupted his progress, he rushed into the mental ocean, eager and unimpeded. C 2 40 AN ESSAY ON which should be verified before they are be- lieved. AVe have no proof that the boy did at the time understand the hook ; he pretend- ed to peruse it ; it might have been a contri- vance to gain favor or preferment. But does the story sanction the conclusion for which it is related ? By no means is it proved that this boy, or that any person ever attained pre-eminence, without an adequate education, either from accident or design. But sup- posing that Newton's Principia, and some introductory mathematical books, had mira- culously come into this young person's posses- sion, is it not true that the difficulty in most of human transactions and attainments is not so much in themselves, as in the folly of those who imagine that they are incapable of pur- suing them, or in the prejudices of the multi- tude, who cannot conceive that to be easily acquired, which was so long and so difficult in the invention ? When not encumbered with * -' ^ : <- 'T, a weight of evidence,^ the young and uncul- tivated mind seizes with avidity on the first CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 41 object of desire, and when it mixes with the opinions of the world, it is often astonished to discover how arduous a task was that which it considered an amusement. It is not the real perplexity of any art or science that prevents genius from excelling, so much as what we have stated, and the ideal obstacles raised by the interested few who have attain- ed the goal of their desires the fences by which they keep others from the honors they would enjoy alone and undisturbed. It is impossible to give an opinion upon the foun- dations of such an anecdote as we have been relating ; or if any man could be found who would, it would be improper. If the com- mencement of the lives of celebrated men were more detailed by their writers, the false notions of innateness would disappear; for the idea of superior capacity appears to me to have proceeded from the indolence of bio- graphers, as an excuse for the want of more accurate information. C3 42 AN ESSAY ON We may be enabled to form an idea of the progress of capacity, from an exami- nation of the gradual advancement in life of two entirely opposite characters. The one is employed, when young, in affairs of husbandry, by a family, who, however meritoriously they may fulfil their moral and religious duties, rise not higher in human knowledge than is necessary for the cultiva- tion of their possessions. Accident throws a book in his way, perhaps a Newton's Prin- cipia. He sees what opinion his companions entertain of it, and rejects it as useless and superfluous. He can drink the village beve- rage, and tread the mazes of the rural dance as well as his fellow laborers ; the evening brings him to the can and rustic song, or tale of ghosts and witchcraft, and the morning restores him vigorous to his team. By and bye he marries Susan or Priscilla, procures a little farm, and carries corn to market, and cattle to the butcher, as his ancestors did be- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 43 fore him. Such a man, when he has advanced some years into manhood, is the same in every situation. If fortune raise him beyond his original establishment, the husbandman is predominant; if necessity compel him to enlist, and he survives the war, however changed his complexion or his dress, circum- stance has formed his intellect, and the rough impression of education is indelible. The other commences herd -boy in a family of the same description. A clergyman of the parish, a benevolent and scientific man, becomes the friend of a young son of the farmer, whom he considers of a good capacity, from some unthinking remark with which he happened to be delighted, and which was by accident ingenious. He instructs him, and he in- creases in knowledge. Our young herd -boy perceives the attachment of the parson, and envies the condition of his young master. He has no idea of capacity, but thinks that what one man does, another mav venture to 44 AN ESSAY ON attempt. The parson discovers him ; lends him his protection and assistance, and he rises to be a great mathematician or a profound philosopher. Or, perhaps, the farmer's son enters the army ; he follows the footsteps of his first guide in the path of knowledge ; and when he is killed, the little herd boy mounts into his situation. Here is the effect of cir- cumstances evidently displayed, but where is there any proof of superior capacity ? Those who suppose the existence of a natu- rally superior capacity, approach too nearly to the exploded doctrine of innate ideas to to- lerate what they profess to believe, if they would trace it to its origin, or follow it to its consequences. Many Use the words c natural capacity/ without connecting them with any idea, but a vague notion of something above common humanity, and if they were for a mo- ment to examine their own expressions, they would retract the absurdities which inadver- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 45 tency alone could occasion. It was singular enough that assertions so ridiculous, required to be overthrown by the erudition and under- standing of a Locke; but how must mankind laugh, or rather blush, at their own short- sightedness, when they behold that they have been supporting a doctrine that is even more monstrous and absurd than that of innate ideas. These, the old philosophers imagined every man to possess ; but the doctrine of su- perior natural capacity, pretty generally sup- ported by tbe new ones, pre-supposes that one man is possessed of a power for receiving in- formation much earlier, and in greater perfec- tion than his fellows ; taking it for granted, as we said in the beginning, that the tablet of the mind can receive a certain large and durable impression, before they have become acquainted with either its extent or its consis- tency. If this be not the case, what do the assertors of natural capacity mean by the ex- pression ? Can they say that the capacity is 46 AN ESSAY ON- great, before they have known it exercised ? If they can, then is it possible to see the faery visions of the painter or the poet, before the one has ^perase^ his verses, or the other touched his canvas ! If they cannot, then what is there to prove, that their ideas of ca- pacity are not founded upon the false supposi- tions of monks and schoolmen, who conceiv- ed some men to be favored with a peculiar power by Providence, because they knew not the circumstances which produced the actions that distinguished the objects of their admi- ration ? We say then, that all sensible children, i. e all children whose senses are adapted to the operation of circumstances, have one common capacity for receiving ideas. It is true we have seen some children receive ideas earlier than others, appear more sprightly, and exhi- bit greater knowledge of the circumstances of which they are spectators : but there was CAPACITY AND GENIUS. a prior period, at which all children were alike. There is considerable difference in the rapidity of receiving ideas, in the first few years after birth ; but it must be recollected that there is scarcely an instance of any two children, from the moment of their percep- tion, having the same objects before them. The difference of objects occasions a differ- ence in their minds, and in the force and ar- rangement of their conceptions ; but when- ever a number of children have for any length of time been accustomed to congregate, to hear the same conversations, and to be the spectators of the same transactions, in pro- portion to the time they have remained, or as they have been of the same age when they came together, so will their ideas become more nearly allied, and their whole conduct be more nearly similar. Familiar phrases, singular trains of ideas, and eccentric habits, are often acquired by boys at school in such a manner, that persons have perceived that 48 AN ESSAY ON they were educated under the same master, though perhaps they never before met or as- sociated. IF hat is capacity? Capacity, then, is an assistant qualification to genius, in ge- neral, the faculty of acquiring that mental nourishment which genius knows only hoAV to apply. We shall find, on examination, that there is no extraordinary capacity, falsely called innate, but that which is produced by a peculiar union 'of the faculties of rea- soning and memory. These faculties are pos- sessed by every man to whose education com- mon attention has been paid ; exercise alone is required to produce that peculiar union, and to bring them to perfection. One of these collects the principal or the whole of the ideas which are presented to the mind ; the other arranges them, rejects those which are not worth preserving, and treasures up those which are useful or uncommon. Nu- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 49 inerous instances might be cited of persons who have had the faculty of memory to an ex- traordinary degree, and have been remarkable for nothing else but the prostitution of their powers to unworthy purposes. It will be in the recollection of many of my readers, that this man could count all the words spoken at a play, and could enumerate all the letters in a book, sometimes all the figures in an arithmetic, or that that could read all the signs in a street, and then detail them in regular succession. Yet such a person could not perhaps have pe- rused a single page with pleasure or improve- ment ; or could leave the performance of a Garrick, lamenting only that he failed in the enumeration of the notes which issued from the orchestra !* Such men, however from long habit they may have brought their me- mories to a surprising exactness, cannot be said to have a capacity different from the most * This is said to have happened to Jedediah Buxton. 50 AN ESSAY ON common intellects, because their reasoning faculties remained comparatively unexercised. There are other persons to whom capacity may he said to be equally a stranger, who have no memories. Their mnemonic powers hav- ing been through life unused, have been through life altogether imperfect; and if they attempt to argue, they generally reason to their own confutation. That any man, then, can have a good me- mory, or any memory innately, seems to me a palpable absurdity ; for, no man when he is born can recollect any thing that happened previous to his existence ; and how can that, with any propriety, be called innate, which was not manifested, till circumstances, by their repetition, caused in the mind of the in- fant, their own recurrence to himself, and those around him ? We might here enter at considerable length CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 51 into a consideration of the phenomena of at- tention ; but they are so plainly the result of circumstance or education, accidental or de- signed, that it can detract nothing from our arguments to leave them to the examination of our readers. But what need can we have to attribute to the immediate interposition of Providence the faculties of reasoning and memory, which may have been produced by a collision of cir- cumstances not singular in themselves, though perhaps strange in their appearance to the mirror of the senses affected by them, and re- markable in the order of their succession ? The universe is not governed by partial laws, or regulations which are different i n different situations ; all capacity, i. e. all memory and all reasoning, is given by nature, or it is the consequence of circumstances ; it cannot pro- ceed from both ; and if we find no evidence that it is the gift of nature, and have fair and 52 AN ESSAY ON presumptive proof that it is the offspring of circumstance and education, common sense must point out the road to truth, from which none can be led astray, but by their own thoughtless folly and prejudices, at once ob- stinate and unreasonable. Let us suppose a few children secluded from the world, and preserved alive by mere instinct, in a state of total ignorance ; let us consider them running wild in the forest, their only provender the scanty berry, and the raw limbs of the animals their swiftness may outrun. What have been found to be the dreadful consequences of such seclusion ? Godlike reason cannot exercise the functions she has never fulfilled ; the fear and ferocity of the brute and the savage are combined; the music of human speech is horribly sup- planted by the yell of the hyaena; nay, in some few instances, the upright dignity of man is exchanged for the posture and actions CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 53 of the bear !* Is not this too true a demon- stration of the feebleness of man when unas- * " In the year 1774, a savage, or wild man, was discovered by the shepherds who fed their flocks in the neighbourhood of the forest of Yuary. This man, who inhabited the rocks that lay near the forest, was very tall, covered with hair like a bear, nimble as the hisars, of a gay humour, and in all appearance of a mild character, as he neither did nor seemed to intend harm to any body. He often visited the cottages, without ever at- tempting to carry off any thing. He had no knowledge of bread, milk, or cheese. His greatest amusement was to see the sheep running and to scatter them, and he testified his pleasure at this sight by loud fits of laughter, but never attempted to hurt these innocent animals. When the shepherds, (as was frequent- ly the case,) let loose their dogs after him, he fled with the swift- ness of an arrow shot from a bow, and never allowed the dog* to come too near him. One morning he came to the cottage of some workmen, and one of them endeavouring to get near him and catch him by the leg, he laughed heartily, and then mads hi escape. He seemed to be about 3O years of age. As the forest in question is very extensive, and has a communication with vast woods that belong to the Spanish territory, it is natural to suppose that this solitary but cheerful creature had been lost in his infancy, and had subsisted on herbs." Memoir sur les tra- vaux dans les Pyrenees par M. le Roy. Paris 1 777. " Peter, commonly known by the name of Peter the wild boy, lies buried in this church yard, opposite to the porch. In the year 1725 he was found in the woods near Hamelen, a fortified town in the electorate of Hanover, when his majesty George I. with his attendants, was hunting in the forest of Hertswold. He was supposed to be then about 12 years of age, and had sub- 54 AN ESSAY ON sisted by the species, or by those circum- stances which are inseparable from civiliza- sisted in these woods upon the bark of trees, leaves, berries, &c. for some considerable length of time. How long he had con- tinued in that wild state is altogether'uncertain ; but that he had formerly been under the care of some person, was evident from the remains of a shirt collar about his neck at the time when he was found. As Hamelen was a town where cri- minals were confined to work upon the fortifications, it was then conjectured at Hanover that Peter might be the issue of one of those criminals, who had either wandered into the woods and could not find his way back again, or being discovered to be an ideot, was inhumanly turned out by his parents, and left to perish or shift for himself. In the following year, 1726, he was brought over to England. ***** Notwithstanding there appeared to be no natural defect in his organs of speech, after all the pains that had been taken with him he could never be brought 'distinctly to articulate a single syllable, and proved totally incapable of receiving any instruction." (North Church parish Register, Hertfordshire.} The register proceeds to give a long and particular account of Peter's being put under the eare of various persons. He appeared to have been unable to speak to the very last, though every endeavour was made for his instruction. He danced to music, however, and could hum a tune. For a further description of this singular being, who lived till the age of 72, I refer my readers to the parish Regis- ter, to the Annual Register (Dodsley's) for 1784 and 5, and to all the other periodical works and miscellaneous collections of that period. It freeuns that he was generally considered to be an ideot, though his countenance bore not that appearance. There is no reason to believe that he could speak \vhen he was CAPACITY AND GENIUS. i>3 tion ? How striking the contrast ; how dreadful the degradation ! Where are all lost, and his being left in the woods, or lost there, before the organs of speech were exercised, will account for his never ar- riving at a distinct utterance of the simplest expressions. That he danced when he heard a tune, till he was exhausted with fatigue, can easily be accounted for, and it proves him to have been no ideot. This is further evinced by the account of a Mr Burgess, transmitted to Lord Monboddo, and inserted by him in his an- cient Metaphysics, by which it appears that Peter could count twenty, and answer various questions distinctly. Payne's Geo- graphical Extracts, p. 507. " In the year 1731, as a nobleman was shooting at Songi, near Chalons, in Champagne, he saw something at a distance in the water which he took for a couple of birds, and at which lie fired. The supposed birds avoided the shot by diving in- stantly under the water, and rising at another place, they made to the shore, when it appeared that they were two children about nine or ten years of age. They carried ashore with them several fishes, which they tore in pieces with their fore- teeth, and swallowed without chewing. As they were going from the shore, one of them found a rosary, probably dropped by some traveller, at. which she testified great joy by scream- ing and jumping about. In order to keep it to herself, she covered it with her hand -, but her companion, who perceived this, gave her such a blow upon the hand with a sort of club, that she could not move it. With her other hand, however, she struck her companion in return such a blow upon the head with a similar club, as brought her to the ground with a loud shriek. The victor made herself a bracelet with the D2 56 AN ESSAY ON your innate ideas and capacity from nature ? Did ever a man, or a creature like these, be- rosary, but she still had so much pity on her companion, that she covered her wound with the skin of a fish which she strip- ped off, and bound it up with a slip of the bark of a tree. They then parted. The girl that had been wounded returned to the river, and was never after seen; the other went to the village of Songi. The ignorant people were frightened at her singular appearance, for her color was black, and she had on a scanty covering of rags and skins of animals. They set a great dog at her, but she waited his attack without stirring from her place, and as soon as he was within reach, 'gave him such a blow on the head with her club as laid him dead on the spot. Unable to gain admission into any house, for every door was shut against her, she returned into the fields, climbed up a tree, and there took her repose. The Viscount d'Epi- noy, who was then at his seat at Songi, offered a reward to any one who would catch this wild girl. As it was supposed she would be thirsty, a bucket of water was placed under the tree to entice her down. On awaking, she looked cautiously arouud, came down and drank, but immediately ascended to the summit of the tree, as if she thought herself not otherwise secure. At length she was allured to coma down by a woman, who walked under the tree with a child in her arms, and offer- ed her fish and roots. When she had descended, some persons l)ing in wait seized her, and conveyed her to the Viscount's seat. At first she was taken into the kitchen, where she fell upon some wild fowl, and ate them up before the cook missed them. A rabbit being offered her, she immediately stripped off the skin and devoured the ilesh. An opportunity of observ- ing her with more ease was now obtained, and it was found CAPACITY AND GENIUS. come in the woods where he existed, a poet or a philosopher? It is true, perhaps, that that the black color of her skin was accidental; for, after she had been repeatedly washed, her naturally fair complexion ap- peared. Her hands were upon the whole well formed, only the fingers, and the thumb in particular, were uncommonly strong, which was undoubtedly asci ibable to her frequently climbing 1 trees, as she would swing herself from one to another like a squirrel. The Viscount d'Ep'noy delivered her to the care of a shepherd, recommending him to be extremely atten- tive to her, under a promise of paying him well for his trouble. On account of her wildness. she was commonly known by the name of the shepherd's beast. It cost a great deal of trouble to render her a little tame. She was very dexterous at mak- iug holes in the walls or roof, and would creep through an aperture so small, that an oye-witness could not conceive how it was possible. Once she eloped in a severe frost, during a heavy fall of snow, and after a long search, was found sitting on a tree in the open fields. Nothing was more astonishing than the swiftness and agility \vith which she ran. Though, latterly, long illness and want of exercise diminished her speed, it was always surprising. She did not take long steps like other people, but her run was rather a flying trip, which was more like gliding than walking. Her feet moved with such quickness, that their motion was scarcely discernible. Several years after she had been caught, she was capable of outstrip- ping wild animals, as she proved to the Queen of Poland in 1737, for being taken out on a hunting party, she ran after rabbits and hares that were started, caught them presently, and brought them to the Queen. The quickness of her ej AN ESSAY ON case of one man murdered from an ambush, and ten thousand slaughtered on the field of hattlc.* When he has shown us this, we will ask him if the soldiers who slew, and the sol- diers who were slain, had any more murder- ous organs, if we except their muskets and their cannon, than those which are possessed by millions of sober citizens ? Is it true that every man possesses such an organ when a whole nation rises in defence of its rights, and for the preservation of its liberties ; when * I am fully aware of the arguments which have often been advanced to prove that the slaughter of war was less criminal than the murders committed by banditti, whilst the latter were comparatively innocent in their consequences. Throwing these out of the question however, I think, supposing the determi- nation to kill to be allowed, the argument against the system is unanswerable. The word of command is given undoubtedly before they fire or charge, but soldiers must have contemplated bloodshed before they assumed the musket, and it would be no defence of a murder to produce an order for its perpetration. [It will be easily perceived that this observation was written on the supposition that the murdering propensity was a distinct faculty, as Dr. Gall supposed, and not the excessive exercise of one, as Dr. Spurzheim has since determined : the observations here made, are still applicable, however, to the general doc- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 77 they swear on the swords of their independ- ence, that they will destroy the disturbers of their peace ? Have all the Arabs of the de- sert the thieving organ, which seems neces- sary to enable plunderers to be successful? Are the thieves and other criminals who are discharged from the public prison of Pennsyl- vania as reformed, and capable of becoming worthy members of society, relieved from the oppression of the indention which carried them into bondage ? Though we do consider that accidental al- terations in the organization of the senses may intercept the mind in its progress, and turn it into a different direction, we can never for a moment entertain such a ridiculous opi- nion, as that any organization of the unexer- cised faculties can take place in the womb, still less that such an internal organization could direct a man through an ocean where he is the fool of circumstance, liable to be 78 AN ESSAY ON overwhelmed by every wave, and borne away by every hurricane. A thousand accidents might change the arrangement of the organs irrecoverably. A person who appeared to pos- sess every qualification for an accomplished mu- sician, might be suddenly disappointed in his views by a deafness, unforeseen and unavoida- ble ; and he who had acquired the eloquence of Demosthenes, might lose his voice in the per- petuated huskiness of a cold. But what would become of the organs of the musician and the orator, if these misfortunes suddenly meta- morphosed them into a surgeon and a mathe- matician? Perhaps the doctor may here con- descend to inform us, that his system enables the student to discover prominent features in the character, as wit, courage, and sprightli- ness, but he seldom descends to describe the profession, by marks on the occiput, or the forehead. We shall imagine, then, a man of the greatest possible depth of thought, (and surely this is general enough for the method CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 9 of indention ;) we shall conceive him to be 'fore all the world, like Godwin's Mr. Falk- land, learned, generous, and jealous of honor, like a knight of the days of chivalry. Sup- pose that this gentlemen should commit a murder, and, after some time spent in remorse and regret, should lose his reason through horror at his crime ; where then is the inden- tion that signified depth of thought ? Is it succeeded by one indicative of insanity ; or does it remain unaltered and uneffaced ? It may be the doctor's opinion, that a madman can think deeply; but, though he may have done so in some few remarkable instances, it would be impossible, I fear, to persuade the world in general, that a man totally deprived of his reason could argue well, even in favor of the system of craniology. The doctor has collected a number of the skulls of animals, which he describes as having possessed various properties whilst 80 AN ESSAY ON living, such as thieving, ferocity, &c. ; now, we should be glad to be informed, whe- ther mad dogs have the indention of ferocity, and whether magpies and cats have the marks which designate thieving and rapine ? If the latter possess the indentions which the doctor thinks demonstrate their qualities, will he point out to us the difference betwixt a cat or a magpie taking any thing in their way, and a rational being handling his own property. Can the doctor, even with the help of all ima- ginable German gravity, call that thieving which is the consequence of instinct ? If he do, he would try and condemn an ideot for picking his pocket, or pulling down his fence.* But these indications of various properties and mental qualifications have no better support, * The thief is only made criminal by the regulations of so- cietr ; in fact, where property belongs to no individual, it is equally accessible by all, and where no law threatens, no action can be offensive. If the doctor then can prove a mac-pie a thief, he may prove the cat a murderer, and then his system will be something nearer a firm establishment than at present. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 81 than had the dreams with which Lavater in- toxicated himself, and puzzled his disciples. On what does the Gallian philosophy depend? Is it not on the separate and distinct existence of the organs of the hrain ? If these organs find a place in the brain of Dr. Gall, I am sorry to say that they are possessed by no head but his own ; anatomists and probability equally deny their existence, and every at- tempt at demonstration on such a subject, is the iirst step towards defeat.* Thus far I had proceeded in making a cur- * If Dr. Gall can consider that a person who makes an al- teration in his intellect, effects it by an indention such as he has every where described, he would surely allow the efficacy of bandages on the heads of children to form their minds as the person wishes by whom they may be bound. Now, we are well certified of a disciple of the doctor having bound the heads of his infant children so as to resemble those of some of the greatest heroes and philosophers of antiquity ! Will the doc- tor admit this as a proof of the truth or fallacy of his doctrine ? If he will; the result, if favorable, will be published to the world ; but if it be not published, we may fairly suppose the doctor defeated, and his system " a rhapsody of words." 82 AN ESSAY ON sory investigation into the original system of Dr. Gall ; what examination I have room and inclination for, I shall now pursue upon the last view of the system hy Dr. Spurzheim. The doctor founds the system upon as- sumptions relative to innateness*; these, there- fore, it is necessary that we should first con- sider. In answer to Helvetius, or with an in- tention of answering him, he exclaims, with a confidence which is not new to the supporters of such doctrines, " how many children are *"' exposed to the same influences without ma~ " nifesting the same energy of faculties r"f The answer to this question is so plain, that I need scarcely silence it by a negative. Does the doctor give us any one instance, where a child was exposed, as he calls it, to the same influences with a poet, philosopher, or histori- * So does Dr. Gall ; but we have mentioned the former ex- clusively, as we are, during the remainder of our observation* on craniology, solely occupied with his view of the system. f See page 62 of the system. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 83 an, without becoming, in his turn, a poet, his- torian, or philosopher ? Will he call to mind the truth which may be controverted, but can- not be overturned : " that no two children can receive the same education,"* and its conse quences, that no two children can be exactly similar in disposition, genius, or ability ? Though many boys are educated in the same school, there may have happened circumstan- ces before their arrival, which have given a turn to their disposition, and to the manner as well as matter of their studies ; and even if that were not the case, there is always some mark of favor and affection, or repulsion and dislike, between the master and the scholar or his fellow pupils, and the action of such favor or dislike on the temper and inclinations of * Helvetius. I must intreat pardon if I am thought in any way to have imitated the work of that philosopher ; it was not till I had arrived at this part that I knew the course he had taken. I have since examined his writings, and think it will be perceived, that, however we may in some points agree, I am not indebted to him for any of my positions. 84 AN ESSAY ON youth is almost incredible, were it not fully known and acknowledged. The effect of re- pulsion from some party, and affection to- wards a rival, or of parental indulgence, or indulgence at home by some person, was evi- dent in the anecdote we related of the boy who had been unwilling, rather than unable, to learn his alphabet. Let us imagine an in- stance of similarity of education, for the sake of argument, which never, as far as I have known, came within the sphere of probability. Let us suppose that two twins were educated in the same academy, and received with the same degree of favor by the master and the scholars, and yet that the one should be far superior to the other in intellectual vigor and literary attainments.* To what circumstance, then, are we to look for the inequality of in- * Our readers will sec that this case is impossible; for the least accidental shade of difference in learning, causes a dif- ference in reception from the master, frequently imperceptible to himself. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 85 tellect ? To the nurse ? They were nursed by the same woman ! Yet, even in this case, which cannot possibly exist, I defy Dr. Gall, and all the innatists that ever lived, to prove that the degrees of intellect and information might not have proceeded from accident, and from that only. The doctor has mingled the proofs of his doctrine in such a manner, that we are some- times at a loss to conceive what he would support by his arguments. He insists, with considerable energy, upon something like na- tional analogy, which he calls constancy of the human character. His assertion is, that human knowledge is limited, and that, though " the chief is crowned in some countries with " feathers, and in others clothed with pur- t{ pie," the manners, and of course the minds of all nations, are essentially the same. No man, he says, has acquired any new faculty, nor can he lose any which he has acquired ; F 86 AN ESSAY ON but will this be considered an argument less favourable to my doctrine tbau to bis ; is it likely to happen sooner, the mind being in- nate, than if it were the production of cir- cumstances? Is it to be expected that any new faculty can be acquired, when we know that every human faculty of which we can have any conception has already been deve- loped ? Is not every thing new that we dis- cover, only a novel mode of exercising powers almost coeval with creation ? If mankind at- tained to perfection in the art of flying, would tlie doctor call it a new faculty ? Mo- tion is a faculty, but flying is only its adapta- tion to an uncommon purpose And why have mankind continued so many ages almost stationary in their progress towards happiness and perfection ? Is it because they are in- nate, that our faculties are uniniproveable ; 9r is it not rather that we have continued the same, circumstances being similar; that we have not altered, because no new situation CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 8*? has offered for our adoption ? By the gene- ral analogy of nations, the doctor, like the defenders of the slave trade, seems to con- sider the human faculties unchangeable, he- cause for a considerable period unchanged.- But is there not a likelihood, at some glori- ous sera, of our breaking the shackles that bind us to the circle in which we move, and rushing forward in a straight line towards that advancement in every thing which can make life desirable, and which will demon- strate that the human mind is as unlimited as eternity ? As I consider all capacities as equal at the birth, and believe superiority of genius to be a wall by which the learned have selfishly surrounded the talents for which they are admired, I do firmly expect that some spirit us mundi, as I may call it, some mighty effort of universal genius, improved by the increase of population, the advancement of civilization, and the consequent addition to favorable circumstance, will set us all forward F2 88 AN ESSAY ON on the boundless expanse of science, and prove at once the fallacy of the doctor's opi- nion, which would set limits to our know- ledge, and reduce us to a level with the ba- boon, or the quadruped we employ. Are mankind to be always the same, because they have been so for a few hundred years, as far as we can retrace ? Presumptuous insect ! darest thou to compare the circumstances of a moment with immensurable and unknown eternity? Look around thee into the im- mensity of time; and think how foolish and how imbecile thou wert, to call that constancy which was but an instant of mutability ! The doctor then proceeds to examine the powers of various animals, and one would al- most imagine he had been studying with great attention that curious system, which would prove, if it could, that all beings were but modifications of one another, and that the hyssop on the wall might in time become CAPACITY AND UENIUS. 89 a naturalist, like him who was so fond of investigating its properties, so constantly does he perplex us with strange and unex- pected comparisons and deductions from dogs, cats, sheep, and every animal, domestic or otherwise, with a wise intention of proving the origin of their actions to be organic, as he makes those of the human species. A few observations will sufficiently show the singu- larity of his mode of philosophizing. "A " dog," he says, " cannot hunt if it be shut " up, but its deshe of hunting is not produ- " ced by leading it into the fields !" By what, then, is the desire of hunting created ? Does the doctor abandon a good and reasonable cause for none at all ? By this method of reasoning, a child does not wish to run after a butterfly because he sees it, but because there is in him an innate propensity for fol- lowing such an insect ! Probably it is in- tended that we should imagine the hunting of either hares or butterflies to be a separate or- F3 90 AN ESSAY ON ganic propensity ! Dogs, it should be ob- sei ved, do not hunt when they are first taken into the fieid, hut require considerable train- ing ; it is true they run up and down, and it might happen, if they were to start a hare or a rabbit, that they would bound after it ; but they have as little a natural propensity for hunting, as there exists a natuial antipathy between the horse and his driver, or the land- lord and his tenant. The kitten, when young, gambols after a ball of thread, and if a mouse were to come in her way, she might toss it about in the same manner as she did the clue, but it is well known that a mouse does not endanger its life by running into the path of a kitten in her playful moments ; if it escape not, it may receive a tumble or a disagreeable squeeze; but kittens have, in my own obser- vation, been as murh frightened of mice, as mice were eager to avoid, not what were na- turally their enemies, but what they were afraid of, because they were larger, and of CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 91 course more to be feared than their own spe- cies. The ass has sometimes, he says, im- mediately after birth, approached the food which was best adapted for it, in preference to other plants by which it was surrounded. But is it true that there is one species of food particularly ordained for one kind of animal ? Certainly when animals are in a wild state, they generally have, according to their spe- cies, a particular method of procuring their subsistence ; but we read of instances of ani- mals which have fared in a completely differ- ent manner from their species, with different climate and situation. The dogs of Otaheite lived entirely upon vegetables, and formed a principal article of provision for the islanders;* * " \ cannot much commend the flavour of their fowls ; but we all agreed that a South-sea dog was little inferior to an English lamb. Their excellence is probably owing to their being kept up and fed wholly on vegetables " HmokeswortlC i Voyages. This passage would seem to infer that the animals were com- pelled by confinement to feed on vegetables ; but I have another paragraph in my recollection which confirms me in the opinion 92 AN ESSAY ON and a cat may be brought up without the least gratification of its carnivorous propen- sity. Can it, then, be believed, that animals will proceed naturally, and Immediately after birth, to a particular plant for nourishment ? If such were the case, they would perish sooner than have recourse to any other ve- getable. But if we admit that this fact is true and authenticated, the doctor will be driven in the end to allow that the animal which is thus perceived to run towards its natural provision, is unconscious of its action, that it follows the direction of an unintellec- tual instinct, and that its motions are alto- gether automatic and involuntary;* and if that all the dogs in the island, in whatever situation, were her- bivorous. I am sorry I cannot immediately refer to it, as it likewise attributed to the dogs an European origin. It is plain, however, by this quotation, that dogs can be fed on vegetables, which at least implies that flesh is not their exclusively natural provender. * I am in great doubt respecting the fact of animals having preferred the food generally used by their species, to any other CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 93 such actions are performed without thought, what connexion can they have with organs which might be presented to them. In a wild state, an expe- riment to prove such a fact is scarcely practicable; and to ani- mals domesticated, great art might be employed to cause them to 'make the attributed preference. They might be brought forth into, or trained up in the neighbourhood of some particu- lar vegetation. Poisonous plants t do not consider so much pernicious by nature, as they are discordant with the vegetables on which the animals they injure had been accustomed to be fed. When wild, there is scarcely any inferior animal which the carnivorous species will not eat, and the exceptions are only such as are offensive to some of their senses. Experiments on the modes of living of domestic animals are extremely deceitful; those who have the care of them, seldom permit them to have food different in any way from that which is given to them ac- cording to the general treatment. When they do by accident eat vegetables to which they are not commonly accustomed, effects directly contrary to the conclusion that would be drawn by the philosopher have frequently resulted. Horses often eat hem- lock without apparent injury; and Linnzeus has, I think, erro- neously made this a characteristic of the species. It is my opinion, that any race of animals might be taught to live oa any food whatever, and no man ought to be so presumptuous as to declare any one plant or animal to be the aliment of a particular species, unless he could show, from indisputable evi- dence, that the race has from creation subsisted on that plant or animal, and has not been driven by circumstances to adopt a provender different from that with which it was originally provided. There are many well-authenticated instances on re- cord, of men having lived and fattened upon drugs which to 94 AN ESSAY ON which, from the doctor's system, arc cither* the causes or the effect of cogitation ? Why others were deadly poison, and their extraordinary constitutions bore evident si_^ns of having been produced by the singular cir- cumstances into which they had thrown themselves. And yet, if fifty men should be discovered almost, su I >sist ing on corrosive- sublimate for (ifty generations, no one would be foolish enough to say that that was their natural food, or their natural beve" rage, because they used no other ! I have said that animals of the carnivorous kind devour in general everything they can master. I believe it is sufficiently well authenticated, that the line, " the tiger preys not on the " tiger brood," is erroneous, and that tigers destroy their own species whenever they are by disease or accident unable to de- fend themselves. Cats do not catch mice naturally. The mo- ther has been frequently observed to teach the kitten how to hunt, and to accustom it to the food to which she herself had early been accustomed. There are many cats which will kill mice, but. do not eat them, because those in whose houses they li^e, give them provision in itself more delicate, and in its at- tainment less troublesome. Mice have been found in the traps torn to pieces, when no cats could be near, and the laceration could only be attributed to rats or their own species ; and there was less probability of the former than the latter. It is strange that men should have often overlooked such plain proofs that mnny of the actions of brutes are produced from circumstances solely, as are every day before their eyes. I could tell Dr. Gall and Dr. Spurzheim many instances of cats ha\ ing been brought up without their mothers, which, in the words of some to whom they belonged, " were good for nothing." Their limbs had not that pliancy which kittens have that have CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 95 is it, then, that he so curiously mixes the Ac- tions of men and animals ; that he so ridicu- lously confounds genius, which can never be discovered till reason shines high in the in- tellectual horizon, with instinctive actions, with which reason has no connexion ? I am satisfied that the child, almost immediately after birth, seeks the breast, which is for a time its natural nourishment. All mankind, all the animal creation, possess these instincts; but, in the name of God, let not the meanest actions of the meanest reptiles be compared with the grand exertions of humanity. What the doctor has observed in this part of his subject, it is plain, can prove nothing been kept near the parent cat ; -they could not catch a mouse or a bird, and seemed ignorant of the intention of Providence in their creation. I have only here enumerated a very few facts, which have nearly all fallen under my own observation ; others I could re- late, but these are sufficient at present to show how ridiculous a man must make himself by asserting that animals have a par- ticular food assigned to them bv nature. 96 AN ESSAY ON further than the existence of instinct; it is impossible for him to establish the innateness of any actions, but those which appear to be automatic ; for all the rest, he must seek an origin in education. We might have expect- ed opposition in this assertion, if we had not discovered that it is the doctor's own opinion. " The actions of animals are not confined " solely to what their preservation requires ; " they are susceptible of several modifications; " they modify their manners according to the "position wherein they live ; they are suscep- " tihle of an education beyond their ivants!"* What are we to understand from this sen- tence ? Is not the only just inference, that no animal is susceptible of any modification of its actions, but what is the result of education ? Thus does the profound craniologist, by his words, disprove the probability of innateness, and establish the effect of circumstances that he denies ! The system, p. 69. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 9? Before we leave this part of the subject, we would ask the doctor, why, if he wishes to es- tablish his system collaterally by an examina- tion of the faculties of animals, he has been almost totally silent on the inhabitants of the waters? The only passages in which I can find fishes particularly mentioned, are those in which he gives an incidental notice on the cuttle-fish, and erroneously denominates the whale the monarch of the deep. In nume- rous instances, fish have determinate charac- ter enough to claim a place in the volumin- ous and entertaining developement of his theory. Does he find that fish have no pecu- liar capital indention, or what is the reason that they deserve no particular notice ? The reason, I imagine, will be found in the impos- sibility to reconcile many of them to the sys- tem ; for they are little distinguished from each other, except by their destructive or be- neficial properties, which are no greater evi- dence of disposition, than the claws of the ti- 98 AN ESS A I ON ger, or the trunk of the elephant, are of the sagacity or fierceness of their respective pos- sessors. The doctor says, that revolutions do not produce faculties or genius, but " offer oppor- " tunities and subjects necessary to the facul- " ties." But let not this be said, when it is re- collected, that the downfal and the erection of empires have been caused by the very great men whom the doctor has described as acqui- ring celebrity and improving their faculties by revolutions. Is there any t new faculty eli- cited by a revolution ? Why is it that the doctor believes the propensity for revolutioni- zing to be innate ? Can he show that a revo- lution ever took place, without being produced by a long concatenation of political circum- stances, which rendered it inevitable? By what reasoning, then, can he prove, by what fact can he establish the assertion, that a great man, who effects a revolution, was born CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 99 to do it, any further than because circumstan- ces threw him into a peculiar situation, and he effected it with success ? The doctor will say, that the faculties such a man exercised, existed before the revolution he occasioned, but an opportunity was never till then offered for their manifestation. Where is the proof that they ever before existed ? If Buonaparte had died before the French revolution raised him into eminence, would not the man be considered insane, who should say that that person possessed such and such extraordinary powers, but they were never brought into ac- tion ? Such a line of argument would prove, if it could prove any thing, that the most mi- serable fanatic, the most pitiful enthusiast, who said he would bring about a revolution in government or religion, had the ability to ef- fect those purposes, but he was never allowed an opportunity ! Such an argument would change the mad Brothers into Mahomet, Dr. Gall into Locke or Sir Isaac Newton, and the 100 AN ESSAY ON King of the beggars into the Emperor of China!* The doctor has asserted with great confi- dence, that the social faculties are not at all the result of society. Man may be better adapted by a long course of years to society than retirement ; but I do not think that the institutions of society could arise from any thing but circumstance. The mind is mould- ed entirely by contingencies ; and there is a sufficient number of instances of hermits, to prove that the sentiments called social, are ac- * It may seem necessary, whilst I am ridiculing the idea of any man's possessing faculties which he does not exercise, that I should remove from my own doctrine the stigma I am casting on another. The argument on which I found my essay is, that, opportunity only is necessary to make any man what favorable circumstances have made his neighbour. It is only, therefore, against the occult faculties that I am arguing. Dr. Spurzheim, in this passage, throws himself dreadfully open; if he mean that every man has hidden powers which it only requires opportunity to exercise, he must be of my opinion as to the universality of original genius j it is only on the ques- tion of innateness that we differ ! CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 101 quired in society. The regret at leaving a populous city, or a well cultivated neighbour- hood, is only produced by long custom, and the cessation at once of numerous actions which man in society requires from his fellow, but which are in solitude superfluous and un- necessary. If society were our natural state, why did we not always live in cities ? The question of man being social, is ridiculous ; and impossible to be decided. Till we can arrive at a decision, therefore, we shall con- sider mankind as social or solitary, as circum- stances make him.* " If society produced,'* says the doctor, " any number of the faculties " of man and animals, every kind of social " animal ought to possess them/' Why is this ? Did ever metaphysician use a sophism so palpable? Because human society produ- * The word social comes from society, not the latter from the former ; and when we say, a sunny hank, a red rock, or a social man, we do not say that these are naturally and innately what they are, but allow, when we mention them, that circumstances might have made them otherwise. G AN ESSAY ON ees the social faculties of man, is it a neces- sary consequence that bees or beavers, which exist in societies separate from man, should have the faculties which he possesses ? Are not the actions of bees and beavers evidently instinctive? Why again confound instinct with reason, till we are perplexed in a laby- rinth of sophistry that we would burn sooner than unravel ? Is there any faculty that so- ciety may not be said to have produced ? No; the fact is proved from the doctor's own in- stance of the girl of Champagne, already re- lated* * Ste note, page 55. If the story of a girl found in Cham- pagne, which we have given, be the story to which he alludes, (see the system, page 74) I think it is plainly established that the mind is nothing without society : indeed, the doctor seems to acknowledge this in his own observation in the page pre- ceding (73 ) " However, if a well organized individual, who has " escaped in his infancy, be discovered in a forest, though he can- " not be acquainted with our manners and delerminate educa- " tion, yet he will manifest the essential and characteristic facul- " ties of mankind j and such an individual living in society, will "soon imitate the manners and receive the instruction of other '*. ' ' The girl of Champagne proves this. 1 ' We wish to know from CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 1 03 Much of what we have said, and indeed almost all our arguments relative to Dr. Gall's system, are in a great measure connected with genius, as well as capacity. Those which we have used, we considered as indispensible in this part of the work ; but there are others which have been suggested by the system, of which we shall postpone the consideration, the doctor what essential and characteristic faculties were manifested in this instance, that had any connexion with, and had not been produced by society ? It was evident from her own conversation, when she was able to talk, that she had been in other situations ; and there was no reason to assert that she exercised any other faculties than those she had acquired from former recollections, for her own defence : indeed, the very ne- cessity for defence might have produced these faculties. If these wild people are ideots, how is it that they have ma- naged to subsist themselves, when the doctor has said, (pago 65). "the ideot makes no effort in order to prevent the injuries of '' the air, and to preserve himself." It has been generally doubt- ed, whether the persons supposed to have been secluded were- ideots, or men who could in time be made rational beings. For, say one party, if a man were to be left in a wood before he could speak, how did he preserve life, even if in other circum- stances he might have in time become rational ? If an ideot, how he could procure himself clothing and subsistence, becomes still a question of considerable difficulty. We cannot imagine that mar, would, in a state of nature and seclusion, be incapable G2 104 AN ESSAY ON till we arrive at that part of our essay which relates more particularly to genius. At pre- sent, we shall confine ourselves to a brief ex- amination of the organs, which, however de- ficient it may seem in the eyes of a surgeon, will he quite sufficient for our present purpose. The organ of amativeness is said to exist in the cerebellum, and the doctor's proof for of procuring himself food such as came iu his way, without de- nying him the faculties vre allow to the brute creation, when only instinctive and automatic motions are perceptible. As to the girl of Champagne having been in part covered with skins, it is well known that the principle of imitation has been per- ceived to operate before a child was able to utter distinct sounds, or any thing like words ; and the girl having crossed the sea, may have adopted almost unconsciously the covering, or some- thing like the clothing, used by the people of the country whence she came. It has been said with respect to ideots not coming for their food, or paying any regard to external covering, that such is the conduct of those who have been accustomed to be called to their victuals, or have been clothed without having any occasion to pay attention to their necessities ; but it is hardly to be imagined that any ideot would seek food uncalled to it, whilst he would not seek it in situations- where there are constant opportunities afforded him of learning when it is ne- cessary ; though at every meal he is still as ignorant as on the first day of his ideocy or his birth. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 105 its existence is, that men, and male animals in general, have their cerebella larger, while they are more addicted to venery than the fe- males. We believe it contrary to fact that men have larger cerebella than women, but if it be true, it is entirely contradicted as far as relates to the doctor's argument, by the actions and conduct of the latter. Cats, when caterwauling, he says, have the neck much larger than commonly, and much heat- ed ; I know, on the contrary, that the necks of cats have been felt, when the animals were caterwauling, no larger than at other times, and perfectly cold ! The organ of phi-lo-pro-ge-ni-tive-ness comes next ; it is a hard word, but the doctor gives us sufficient reason for its adoption. The account of this organ is as amusing as the rest of his work ; but, by some singular and unaccountable neglect, we are not in- formed that the animals possess it, which he G3 106 AN ESSAY ON instances as endowed with the qualities it is supposed to engender ! From partial wants or total deficiencies in these organs, we ear- nestly recommend the doctor to endeavour to establish a system explanatory of the pheno- mena relative to impotence and sterility ; it will brighten the fame he has already made immortal. Dr. Spurzheim contradicts the opinion of Dr. Gail, that the want of an or- gan can produce an opposite temper to that of the persons who possess it, and contends, that to enable a man to have an opposite character, it is required that he should have a positive organ of a contrary tendency. This means, if we can understand it, a kind of negative-positive organ. If there is any truth in the arguments of either, however, we consider the original system to be right. But how an opposite alteration can take place in a character, and the person can he all at once a murderer of children, who had the greatest affection for his own and for those of other CAPACITY AND GfcNIUS. 107 people, we have no satisfactory information- Such cases have happened, and as both the learned doctors seem to imply that an abso- lute change in the skull from one organ to another is impossible, and that the peniten- tiary keepers may labor all their lives but they never can properly and completely re- form a thief, we are left in a difficulty from 'which none but two such profound German philosophers can extricate us. Supposing that a gentleman has a friend to whom he is enthusiastically attached, and that that friend nearly ruins him in property, and destroys his character, hitherto unblemished ; he is naturally tired of the world which had so glaringly exhibited its perfidy towards him, and he retires to some remote corner of a dis- tant country, far from the habitations of de- ceitful man, unknowing and unknown. Does such a person retain the organ of adhesive- ness or friendship, or does it gradually di- 108 AN ESSAY ON minish and finally disappear. If it remain, I suppose the doctor would say it was exercised by an attachment to retirement ! If this be the case, have all men the same organs ori- ginally ? or, how happens it that they have such a variety of application ? For, if all men have not the same organs, then almost all are attached to some object animate or inanimate, or to some particular pursuit ; al- most all are fond of some dear wife or mis- tress; of a pleasant habitation, a beautiful horse, or a favorite tree which the owner's infant hands have planted; and if an ad- hesiveness or friendship is shewn without the possession of the organ, an organ for such purposes is useless, and we must deny its ex- istence. But if such an organ do exist in the heads of all men, it remains with the doctor to show how it could vanish as soon as the poison of hatred took possession of the mind, instead of the balm of friendship, which was before predominant. I do not give him the CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 109 liberty of proving a gradual disappearance. It must be demonstrated that the organ had begun to he less prominent before the change of disposition, or that change becomes the cause, and not the effect, of any alteration in the skull that may be occasioned. The doc- tor is remarkably prudent in saying that for this organ there is little evidence ; for if it do exist, it will involve the system in consider- able perplexity. Every man must possess it, whether his talent be for music, for painting, for horse-racing, or craniology ; and the or- gan of language, and all the other organs which imply any attachment to object or pro- fession, are only circumstantial modifications ! It was, no doubt, with triumph, that the doctor discovered that weak little boys were fond of fighting, and strong ones desired peace. He searched for the organ of confc- hativeness, and he joyfully perceived that it existed in the boys who fought, and it was 110 AN ESSAY ON not in the heads of those who were averse from fighting. It is more than probable that the differences in the skull were occasioned by the differences in conduct, and those being consequent upon circumstances, they cannot be produced by organization. Had the na- tions of Lacedsemon and Scandinavia, who were educated for the sword, and had no minds but in the contest, the organ of com- bativeness, on which the doctor so strenuously insists ? If they had, were their dispositions formed by the predominance of the organs, or by the peculiar circumstances which obli- ged them to become military to preserve their independence ? Respecting this organ, I shall trespass no further on the patience of the reader, as I am well persuaded a private ex- amination of its merits will sufficiently prove it neither to exist nor to be necessary, f It is incumbent on the doctor to prove that the boys who have pulled their toys to pieces CAPACITY AND GENIUS. Ill when young, to see what was within, or how they were constructed, were possessed in their infancy of the organ of destructivene^s, but afterwards lost it in the organ of construc- tiveness, when they became ingenious mecha- nics. The doctor may contradict us, and as- sert that a man can possess at the same time these two discordant organs, and both can be prominent, and visible to common observation ! One must be predominant, or both must be in equal and contradictory action. If the latter be the case, the system is absurd ; if the for- mer, it is contrary to common sense, because the organ which is dormant is as strongly per- ceptible on the outside of the skuil as when it is in exercise. If this be true, and it is a con- clusion fairly drawn from an impartial exami- nation of the system, where is it possible to find any proof of a person's being prompted to a particular action by any one exclusive and distinguishably separate organ ? The man that has the organ of rfestructiveness, may be 1 12 AN ESSAY ON constructing from its direction, and the doctor may he entirely mistaken in the seat and disposition of his organs. The organ of fear, which caused people to run away from a boxer, may have been really the organ of coinhativeness in a dormant state ; and that of combativeness, nothing else but the want of that of fear. A man that was courageous in one instance, will flee from one by whom he suspects he will be beaten ; and if he have two organs, how will it be proved which caused the trepidation, and which occasioned its possessor to stand undaunted against his an- tagonist ? Suppose that a man has three or four organs tolerably developed ; that the or- gan of combativeness, one of the number, is more evident than the rest, and that he, being of a combative disposition, in a quarrel kills one of his fellow creatures ; is the death of the man the consequence of the exertion of the organ of combativeness? or, does not that organ, with the celerity of a harlequin, give CAPACITY AND GENIUS, 113 place to his destructive brother, who steps in without a moment's warning, and performs the office assigned to him by Dr. Gall ? But move out of the way, Messrs. Assault and Murder, there is another gentleman organ desirous of preventing himself from becoming useless. The organ of covetiveness stops the exercise of the other organs, sends them to sleep without a soporific, and directs the man's fingers to the pockets of his fallen an- tagonist. This organ is then upon the full stretch for a purse, or something valuable, but, to its disappointment, nothing is dis- covered but a piece of biscuit. The organ of hunger is instantly put in motion ; but that is nothing, on a minute investigation, but the eldest son of the organ of covetiveness ; the organ of eating does its duty, but what can it be but a child, or perhaps a modification, of the organ of destructiveness ! How are all these contradictions, interpositions, and inter- ruptions Of organs to be accounted for ? or, 114 AN ESSAY ON rather, is there any end of them, but with the last page of such a system ? Twenty organs may be in exercise at the same moment, and who is to decide upon their situation but Om- nipotence ? Improve our knowledge ! The doctor may do so, but it is in vain to attempt it by the theory of craniology; he may increase our information by improving and arranging our original ideas, but he cannot advance one step nearer towards perfection, by creating a motley mass of disorganized confusion. If a man kill a rat, he must have the organ of destructiveness ; nay, without such an or- gan no person can comfortably eat his dinner! I am of opinion, likewise, that all men must be possessed of the organ of language, for we are not informed that it did not exist in the heads of the wild men whom we have already enumerated. If it should be found in the heads of such men, then it had no connexion with language in those who have the power CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 115 of utterance. If it were not found in their heads, however, there is a fair inference that circumstances occasioned its absence, and that it would have been there if those unfortunate people had been born and educated in a civi- lized country.* Let any rational and candid person then, after having, made an examina- tion of the system of Drs. Gall and Spurzheim, say if all men have not the organs of covet- iveness, adhesiveness, combativeness, destruc- tiveness, constructiveness, and language, as well as almost every other organ enumerated or hinted at ; f and if he come to this conclu- sion, which to us appears inevitable, how happens it that scarcely any two men have their heads exactly similar in conformation, though the extraordinary exercise of one organ * The doctor, it is evident, means to imply that eveiy per- son but those who do not speak have the organ of language, for he attributes the silence of monkies to their want of that organ, and he relates instances of women who could not speak when they had such an organic deficiency. 116 AN ESSAY ON over another very seldom, if ever, produces an extraordinary developement. It is plain, from this circumstance, that there is scarcely a possibility of perceiving any particular disposition by a mark or marks on the skull of an individual. If the doctor examine the head of a county gaoler, who is also the county hangman,* and find a part of the skull manifestly protruding beyond the or- dinary distance, he may conceive that protru- sion to be the organ of destructiveness, but may not that as well be considered to be the organ of covetiveness, till he shall have made A story is told of a gentleman who went to see Cacler Idris, which will give a reason for my assuming such a charac- ter as an illustration. As the gentleuur.i and his guide were proceeding up that mountain, the former being behind, per- ceived on the hinder part of the guide's head the organ of mur- der ! He took to his heels, and did not stop till he arrived at the place whence his guide and he had gone out. On enquiry, he found that the person by whose formidable skull he had been so much terrified, was both gaoler and hangman to the county ! A glorious instance of the efficacy of the system of craniology ! CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 11 7 such inquiries, as to him might be supposed hardly possible, to prove that other men, whom he suspects to have been murderers, or in some way or other destroyers, were not also avaricious. And if they should not all be found to be avaricious, who appeared pos- sessed of that organ, still it might happen to be the organ of covetiveness in a dormant state; for the doctor himself allows that thiev- ing, which he includes in the same organ, may not be practised, even though the posses- sion of the organ may have occasioned a con- siderable predominance. If a man may be a thief in organ and none in practice; if a man have no mental propensity to picking pockets, though his head would contradict him ; what reason is there why a person should not pick pockets and rob orchards, without any organ ? And if it should happen (and it must happen, from the doctor's own allowance) that organs exist without their effects being perceptible? where is the proof of tlieir existence at all ? H 118 AN ESSAY ON If a man take a fancy for killing calves or oxen, he is not to imagine, when he feels a strong organ at the back of his head, that that is the organ of destructiveness ; for there may have been some other propensity to which that organ belonged, which has long ceased to have sovereign sway over the intellect ! The organ of destructiveness may be in some other quarter; the organ to which the particular indention at the back of the head belongs, may have become dormant, and he cannot show that the propensity for killing proceeds from that indention, till he has demonstrated that every man who adopts the trade of but- cher from choice, has likewise the organ sup- posed to be that of destructiveness, almost, if not quite as considerably developed. Till the doctor prove that the organ of destructiveness is possessed by all butchers who are fond of their business, we shall not be convinced that the protuberance on the head of any one man who is an amateur in the trade of killing, is CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 119 the organ which first incited him to aspire to the honors of the knife and cleaver. And when he has proved that all butchers have that organ, if every head he not developed according to the number of cows or other animals the possessors have killed, then the organs have had little effect in forwarding the destruction, and the destruction has had very little power over the developement of the organs. So completely without proof is this part of the system, that I believe it might be possible for a man to be found, with tlue or- gan of destructiveness developed with as much force as in the head of any butcher, who would tell the doctor that he had never killed any man, any beast of magnitude, or any creature or number of creatures, to authorize his saying that his propensity for destruction had proceeded from any uncommon organiza- tion. This might be gathered from the doc- tor's own allowances ; and if he can find two men having equal organs, without any thing H2 AN ESSAY ON remarkable having occurred in the conduct of one of them, though the other has performed some wonderful action, we have to explain more inexplicable propositions than that two and two make five, or that two things which are equal to the same thing are not equal to one another. Dr. Spurzheim says it is impossible to reform a thief, and yet in ano- ther passage he allows the possibility of sup- pressing evil propensities ! But if the latter were allowed, there is something singular in an organ first exciting a person to commit an evil act, and then submitting to be controlled. Is it at all reasonable or probable that a man should first be directed by an organ, and all his life after should be his own organic direc- tor I Has a man the government of his or- gans, or is he under their despotic dominion ? or, is the life of man a continued scene of pull man, pull organ ; pull organ, pull man ? or, how are we to get clear from the eddies of this Charybdis of absurdity ? There seems CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 121 to be some power above the law ! There is no longer a sovereign dominion vested in the brain, and a man's head and his conduct may involve the Gallian physiognomist in a laby- rinth of mysticism, from which he cannot be extricated even by the inventor. Zopyrus told Socrates that he was by na- ture lascivious, and yet he had conquered his propensity, and his disciples were enraged at the slander of the physiognomist. One wouljl have thought, from the doctor's system, that there would have been a tincture of lascivi- ousness in every thing that Socrates did, and yet history leaves us no authority for such a supposition. But perhaps there may be two sets of organs ; one capable of reformation, and the other incorrigible. This, however, will make the organic analogy defective, and and the system will become subversive of itself. If no evil propensity be capable of reformation, the arguments by which the doctrine is sup- H3 122 AN ESSAY ON ported are contrary to fact.* If one man at- tempt to commit a rape, and afterwards re- form ; and another, after having endeavoured to perpetrate the same crime, continue in- flexible to every idea of reformation, how can the doctor escape from the anomaly ? We have hefore mentioned the strange cir- cumstance, that the head remains the same, however changed the possessor; and we now ask the doctor, supposing the head to he al- ways similar externally, is there no difference in the hrain when the organ is dormant and in a state of activity ? If the hrain can he modified as the possessor chooses ; if a man can lay an organ asleep and instantly set another to some employment ; in other words, if a man can go from one pursuit to another, * The doctor says thai attempts .to reform criminals " never " do and never can succeed." From this it might be proved, by a careful examination of every organic connexion, that it was impossible any alteration could take place in tht organs, from the very commencement of life to its conclusion ! CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 123 and recover the mental vigor by variety which sameness had destroyed, how can it he proved that two such organs are in different con- ditions ? Is there a difference in fibre be- tween an organ asleep and an organ awake ? or, is not there some intellectual eye which the doctor's microscopic penetration can easily discover, as it shuts and opens, when it meddles with the world, or leaves its con- cerns to be attended to by others less weary and less inclined to be drowsy than itself! Now that we talk of weary organs, how is it that a man can steal for a life time, and be the more inclined to the practice than he was before he last picked a pocket or committed a burglary ? If one organ can be weary and another can be refreshed by excessive exer- cise, there must be some essential difference in the organic constitution ; or, if not that, there must be the assent or dissent of some over-ruling mental power, entirely separate 124 AN ESSAY ON from and superior to the organs, however constituted. If there be such a power, then, it is not the organ which excites the man to any pursuit, but the man who excites the organ, and, as we said before, the doctrine is com- pletely inverted and preposterous. This over- ruling power, to suit the system, must have some organ for its seat, some cerebral throne, where it sits and gives directions to the at- tendants on its court. But we are afraid that this power will stand isolated, invisible, and unembodied, till the doctor make a further progress, and find organs in recesses so secret that they have hitherto passed unnoticed. If the mind be set against them, all the organs together may exercise themselves in vain. But what is the mind ? In this passage it signifies the will, a thing which the doctor has by no means explained as connected with or separate from the organs. He does not inform us whether the will has an organ, or fvcry organ has its portion of the will. One CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 125 of these must be the case, for will and its phenomena are so constantly occurring in every transaction, that if the actions are or- ganic, the will must either be organic or non- existent. This examination of the organs we shall conclude, after stating another instance of conduct inexplicable by the system, in addi- tion to those already enumerated. Those people who are generally most sanguine, some- times abandon themselves soonest to despair. Very sanguine persons must possess the or- gan of hope to a remarkable degree ; now we will suppose a sanguine sailor, who had been all his life in expectation of finding the north- west passage, all at once to despair when he perceives that he is going down in the vessel in which he had sailed so long and so vainly. Will the organ of hope cease its operation in- stantly, and the organ of despair take posses- sion of its situation or its functions ? Whv 12(5 AN ESSAY ON does the organ of hope no longer fulfil its of- fice ? The protuberance or indention remains on the head as it always lias remained, and \ve have no reason to believe that the brain has received any new conformation. Indeed, the action of the brain, if it act at all, as it is supposed to do, as connected with the affairs of life, is entirely hypothetical and unknown. We shall not examine with minuteness that part of the system which the doctor may call, ifthe chuse, its foundation on analogy, for we deprecate the method which lie has every where adopted, of comparing all species and genera of animals, however separate, with the single and distinct species homo ; not only do we find fault with the matter, but with the sophisticated manner of his comparisons, none of which are altogether satisfactory. They are labored, specious, and end in nothing; for the doctor allows that all animals, except for education, have only such actions as are necessary to their wants, and, therefore, all CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 127 belonging to one species being instinctively and intellectually alike, if the heads of that one species are dissimilar, the system cannot stand ; even the firmest foundation is too weak for such a fabric. Now, when approaching the conclusion of our investigation, we ask a question which we put in the commencement, where is the proof of the existence of the or- gans ? Because a man has an inequality in his skull, there is under it an organ which in- dicates, nay produces a faculty conducive tnus leaving the subject more doubtful than it was before ! Our read- ers will judge whether it is better to know in error, or not to know at all ; or rather, to know in what one man calls error, and a thousand truth, than to be left in total ig- norance. True genius, he says, instead of being confined to invention, is "often conspi- " cuously displayed in the opposite and less " dignified walk of imitation ;" and he in- stances the translation of Homer, by Pope, as a proof of his assertion. This is an erroneous mode of reasoning, however ; for had Homer written in English such as that of which our L3 AN ESSAY ON author says Hobbes's translation was compo- sed, and had Pope translated him, or imitated him, there would have been very few who would have bestowed the praise of genius on the imitation. What genius did Pope mani- fest in his imitation of the satires of Dr. Donne ? The author's position on this subject is so singular, that his words deserve to be quoted : " Had the Iliad of Homer been as destitute " of poetical fire as the burlesque, though " literal, translation of Hobbes, should we " have scrupled to stile the beautiful transla- " tion of Pope a work of far superior genius " to the original ?" We may answer this by another question Had Homer been writ- ten in such language, would Pope's transla- tion ever have existed ? The most probable reply would be a negation. As to genius in the translation of Pope, those who know how to appreciate the original will say that there CAPACITY AND GENIUS. is none, or that its rays " are few and far be- " tween."* They are only in general Eng- lish readers who cry up translations from the classics, and they blaze abroad their merits, because, knowing no language but their own, they are to them what original works are 'to others. To form any argument at all, there- fore, on this subject, the work imitated must be in the language of the imitator. We have proceeded thus far in defence of Dr. Gerard; and the definition of genius we have adopted, which, though not the most convenient for our purpose, we consider the true one, inasmuch as we have not as yet dis- covered a better substitute, and as it embraces all possible cases which have yet been inves- tigated. * On a careful examination, it will be found that in an imi- tation no genius is shewn, except where the invention of the imitator predominates. 37- AN ESSAY ON 1/iis definition inconsistent with innate- ness, which Mr. Belsham defends. The de- finition which we have been considering, if definition that might be called which defi- nition was none, will plainly be perceived to be inconsistent with innateness. Innate- ness supposes something superior in the com- mencement, but this " definition" shews that genius does not manifest itself, " till capacity " arises to a certain degree of superiority *' above the common level ;" so that it may be easily proved to be a creation of circumstances. But this definition could never be supported; for there have been instances of boys who have shewn genius at two years old, when their capacities could not even have attained to the common level. We have, then, a lit- tle of the unqualified assertion of the innatists: " No experience, no application will either " conceal or compensate an original deficien- " cy of genius." (p. 460.) How are we to know that any man possesses an original de- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. ficiency? " Poverty of genius in reality be - " comes only the more conspicuous, by an ar- " tificial conjunction with extensive knovv- " ledge or "profound learning." Poverty of genius becomes only more conspicuous ! If any individual whom you should chance to meet, should manifest a poverty of genius (which here, by your own allowance, must signify a poverty of invention,) and he has be- come learned, and has studied all his life, will you take for granted that that person had no genius originally.* You may, if you choose, suppose it ; but to say that any man had an original poverty of genius, is as rational as to tell me that the goose which was roasted to a cinder had an original dryness, which was only rendered more conspicuous by the burn- ing of the animal ! * No man, by our own argument, has either genius or poverty of it, originally, My meaning here is, can Mr Be'sham prove that any man had a formation of mind originally tending to .genius or poverty of it ? 174 AN ESSAY ON The train of reasoning which has produced the definition of genius as a power of inven- tion, is worthy of our observation. Suppose a person considering the suhject for the first time, what would he the train of reflection ? There is some thing or property which the world consents to call genius. What is the effect of that property ? The production of things, or modifications of ideas, unknown before. What is that denominated ? Inven- tion. What then is genius ? A power of in- vention. We cannot judge of any power, but from its effects, and invention is the only known consequence of genius. Where, then, does the faculty reside? Dr. Gall will tell us, in different compartments of the brain. Others, less bigotted to system, will inform us that it exists in the mind. An acute, plain, unphilosophical man will not be satisfied with this, but he will ask, what is genius separate from the mind ? A metaphysician fond of in- natism will answer, all men have not genius, CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 175 though all are possessed of mental powers But is genius, in fact, any thing distinct from the intellect ? When a man invents, does he exercise any other power hut that of thought, in order to complete his invention? If this be true, and no man invents when he first thinks, then the cause of invention must be sought for in something that happened after his first thinking. M. Montesquieu has given us a more sin- gular explanation of what genius is, than could well be imagined from a person of his clearness of intellect and carefulness of ex- pression. " I call genius a secret gift of the " Deity, which the possessor displays unknown " to himself."* If it be meant by this, that a person does not know that the power he is exercising may be called genius by the world, this may happen, and not unfrequently ; but * See a number of maxim^ jiublished amongst the President's posthumous works. 1/6* AN ESSAY ON if the President intended that a man who had a fine genius for painting, did not know that he possessed that power, even after he had made considerahle progress, and had heen ap- plauded for its exercise, who is there that would listen for a moment to an assertion so ridiculous ? And why a secret gift ? Genius must be known to a great part of the world, or at least to some number of persons, or it does not exist. There must be a knowledge of such a power some where, or it is degraded into a mere animal instinct, which is supposed to be entirely automatic, and exercised without consciousness. M. Montesquieu imagined ge- nius to be, in many respects, like instinct, and his opinion was not unfounded. There is con- siderable resemblance between the powers, but they are, nevertheless, entirely unconnected. Besides, it is a very small portion of instinct that is unconscious. Unconscious powers, if the solecism can be pardoned, are always uni- form, and never vary, except when the func- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 177 tions which perform them are different. But unconsciousness is equally inconsistent with the affection of domestic animals, the variety of genius, and every thing we know of the goodness of divine Providence. No person can be a man of genius, without being consci- ous of his superiority, and acting accordingly.* Difference between genius and capacity. We may have been supposed to have unneces- sarily separated genius from capacity, by our definition of the latter, which we considered to be compounded of reasoning and memory ; for how, it will be asked, can genius be exer~ cised without these powers ; and are reason- ing and memory divided into distinct species ? * I have not disgusted my readers with any of the fulsome bombast of M. Rapin and many French writers on this subject. Their canting ignorance is too well known to be commented on or transcribed. Genius, by their accounts, supplies the want of every mental power, but we are not informed of the precise difference betwixt the mental powers and some gift of the Deity which performs their office ! AN ESSAY ON We should have premised, but it is not now too lute to mention it, that genius begins, where capacity is generally supposed to con- clude. If a man continue for some conside- rable period undirected to any pursuit, and if he show himself knowing and skilful, and in some degree superior to the rest of mankind, inasmuch as his superiority is general, he ma- nifests extraordinary capacity ; but as soon as ever his knowledge is particularized, and all 1 . i "^ S* a S< 'ri f~ >- / fet- 1 X. his attainments centred in one object, he t ought no longer to be mentioned as possessed of a superior capacity, for his genius is pre- dominant. Capacity may exist without geni- us, but genius, with some few exceptions, pre- supposes capacity.* By the intervention of circumstances at a very early period, as far as * The exceptions, are all cases where the miud of the person who jxwsesses the genius, is too young to have any knowledge but that which relates to the subject on which his mind is exer- cised. Young Crotch of Norwich is an instance of this. We shall give his remarkable genius sufficient consideration to- wards the conclusion. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 179 relates to general attainment on the one hand, and particular on the other, a man may, at the same period, have a genius and an extra- ordinary capacity. It is more general, how- ever, that the latter precedes the former. It may be observed, that I do not mean, by ma- king a separation between genius and capa- city, that they are separate faculties or quali- fications of the human mind. They are mere- ly the application of the mental powers to ge- neral literature, or arts, and to particular branches ; and I should not have made this distinction, had it not been already common, and had I not desired as* little as possible to break through general acceptation. , Men of genius different from other men ! It has been asserted that men of genius have little in common with their fellow-creatures ; that they are in fact a naturally and innately distinct class of society. This assertion brings us to the principal question in discussion the 180 AN ESSAY ON innateness of genius. That men of genius have their frailties, which render them in some measure distinct, cannot be denied. But these frailties are owing to the confiding and generous spirit produced hy their pur r suits ; when young, they are in nothing to be distinguished from others, who, when they grow up, become stupid and common-place ; whilst they, by being driven along by a differ- ent current of circumstances, are raised into eminence by their learning or exertions. And even in the highest situations they are in many respects the same as other men ; their bodies are subject to the same calamities, their minds are open to the same feelings, except when steeled against them by philo- sophy or misfortune. Those who take upon them to contend for this difference between men of genius and others, will not only find it necessary to prove that there is an innate faculty for each particular pursuit, or an in- nate general genius, but that there is an in- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 181 nate difference separate and distinct from the innateness which directed to or caused excel- lence in any particular profession. For though, from their mode of argument, innate- ness may have directed to their pursuits, their avocations cannot have caused the difference hetwixt them and the rest of mankind, or it is only circumstantial. They must prove that there was a marked and essential differ- ence, hefore men of genius, as such, became publicly known and admired. But I cannot find that John Ludwig, or Professor Du Val; that Robert Burns, or Dr. Johnson, showed any difference, except as far as their profes- sions were concerned, or circumstances ope- rated. Men designed lij nature for a profession. Great stress is frequently laid upon an opi- nion that many men are designed for a par- ticular sphere by Providence, and this is the reason, we are told, why we sometimes see M 182 AN ESSAY ON people reject the profession marked out for them by friends or relations, to follow the " bent of their genius/* It appears to me to be somewhat singular, that there should be so many persons designed for no profession, and that those gentlemen who have the good fortune to be born to considerable property, should be fitted for its enjoyment, without being troubled by the interference of awk- ward, natural propensities, to become joiners and cabinet makers, to sole shoes, or to sweep chimnies ! Some may inform us, that those who are born to no profession, are not al- ways the sons of gentlemen, but that such cases frequently occur in common life amongst people of low condition, and that the reason why men appear so dull and ill-informed in the common trades, and in the lower branches of the fine arts, is, that they were lorn for nothing, but instructed in that profession which seemed most convenient to their friends or to themselves. This is saying, in other CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 183 words, that one man was born for a profes- sion in which he excelled, and that another was not born for that in which he appeared stupid ! If a man were born for a profession, one would imagine that he had no occasion to learn it; and the man that was born for nothing, might be supposed to be guilty of sacrilege, or profanation, or some dreadful crime, for contradicting the will of Provi- dence, by doing something ! It is a very sin- gular fact, that those who are born for no- C5 ' tiling, generally acquire the rudiments of any profession sooner than those who excel in it, and consequently must have been born to it ! I remember having seen somewhere, that Sir Humphrey Davy, who had added so much to the knowledge of modern chemistry, was " intended by nature for a poet." This is fc a most remarkable circumstance ; that a person who was born for one profession, should pur- sue and excel in another, so distinct and un- connected! The advocates of the doctrine of M2 184 AN ESSAY ON necessity will contend that a man is born for the profession that he follows. Surely there requires no argument to support so plain a truism. He was born to be thrown into such a train of circumstances as would bring him to that profession and no other, inasmuch as he was thrown into that train of circum- stances. There is no necessity for any in- nateness to prove this, and the man that con- tradicts it would deny his own existence. But'how a man should be born for a profes- sion and should follow it, and another man should follow the same profession, though born for nothing, is a question that will puz- zle the most acute as well as the most unrea- sonable metaphysician. The excellence of one man, and the stupidity of another, are the proofs of this different innate conforma- tion ; but it is plain, that, besides being born to it, there is some other cause for excellence in a profession, and if it can be found in the steadiness of application, in the great exer- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 185 tions of teachers, the choice of books, imple- ments, or materials, then there is no occasion for two causes, and the most probable must be taken to the overthrow of that which de- pends entirely upon improbable conjecture, and the hesitating, cause-seeking minds of those who think themselves bound to give ex- planations to inexplicable phenomena. Mr. Dugald Stewart has said, that the want of at- tention to, and the difficulty in some persons in receiving, truths made apparent by others, was a proof of genius. It may also happen that it is a proof of stupidity. It is considered that this evinces genius, because it is imagined that such as manifest this want of attention, are occupied in the contemplation of ideas which their own innate perfections have oc- casioned. Even if this be not the case, the neglect of the advice, and the tuition of others, can never be an evidence of genius, though it may sometimes appear as its companion : It can never prove any thing ; it may have ori- M 3 186 AN ESSAY ON ginated from such a multitude of causes, se- parate or concurrent. It is by arguing upon this want of attention that the innatists would prove, if they could, that a person who did not learn the rudiments of a profession with facility, was born to practise it, because his mind \vas filled by his meditations on the vast improvements which his invention would afterwards produce ! That no man was ever fitted by nature for any pursuit, must be the natural conclusion of every person capable of serious reflection. Any man is best fitted for that for which he fits himself, and if he re- main idle, and waiting till he can be informed by some miracle for what profession he was designed, it will too often happen, except for some lucky circumstance, that he was Lorn for nothing, merely because he had not applied himself to any thing. We have already had occasion to suppose children abandoned in deserts, under various CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 187 circumstances. The argument of the effect of abandonment will have peculiar force in this part of our subject. If a person be left where no art or science is cultivated, he will learn no art or science, and for none will he have a genius; but if a ship should carry him to some civilized country, where he should become a famous painter or a musician, will not circumstances have made him what he is, inasmuch as he would have been nothing but for the vessel's accidental arrival ? What need is there for a hidden power, and for se- cret propensities, when all the phenomena of the human mind can be better and easier ex- plained without them ? This seeking after something innate, which prompts a person to any pursuit, is in direct contradiction to the very first rule of philosophizing laid down by Sir Isaac Newton that no other causes ought to be admitted but those which are true, and are sufficient for explaining the pheno- mena. If genius, or any other phenomenon 188 AN ESSA1 ON in mental philosophy, cannot he submitted to this, I shall have nothing more to do with it, and shall think the study unworthy any man'> consideration. Many persons, it is said, have all at once hurst forth, as it were, into a sur- prizing genius for a particular art. This is the general assertion ; but it is not the fact. It is true, people originally dull, frequently hecome more perfect in any profession to which they apply themselves, than others who have appeared more sprightly, active, and well-informed. But the difference in their first temperament was the occasion of the variety in their proficiency. The sprightly, active, bustling, all-knowing man, when he began to concentrate his knowledge, would be confounded by the opposition of a host of useless and unconnected acquirements, and wlKin Irc expected them to come forward as friends to his assistance, they would meet him as enemies to his advancement ; the dull man, on the contrary, if he should advance without CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 189 an army of accomplishments, moves without the inconveniences hy which others are per- plexed, and attains the summit of genius in his profession, whilst those, who hoped to pass him in the race, gaze after him far be- hind, and wondering at the failure of their exertions. The existence of genius in almost every si- tuation, is a great argument in favor of its innatencss, and that it is not confined to any period of life, proves, it is said, the inefticacy of circumstances in its production. Genius, 1 allow, hreaks forth at a thousand different periods, and in innumerable situations. Some- times it emanates from its possessor, almost at the commencement of his existence ; some- times in the meridian of life, and, frequently, as years are bringing him gradually to the tomb of his fathers. Sometimes it dazzles a country from the gilded mansions of affluence, and often it dignifies with it^ glory the hum- 190 AN ESSAY ON ble cottage of the peasant ; it mounts super- eminent amidst the grandeur and luxury of civilization, and it rises like a god from the wigwam of the hottentot, and the miserable habitation of the slave ; it beams from the heavenly face of the patriarch, or the mo- narch who is the father of his people, and it corruscates like the midnight meteor from the gloomy mind of the murderous assassin ; it decorates the spangles of the ball-room, and animates the eloquence of the senate ; it asto- nishes the rude inhabitants of a village, and enlightens and electrifies the universe. But genius is not the same power under every in- fluence ; that it is, is a mistake which has led the inconsiderate to defend it as innate and unattainable. Though extraordinary men gain the applause of multitudes in far differ- ent circumstances for the " genius" they pos- sess, their powers, however named, are entire- ly dissimilar. If their actions are unlike, there can be no resemblance in the minds CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 191 which produced them ; and no innateness can be proved to exist, if every action is charge- able on contingency. The reason why genius rises at different periods of life, is only to be sought in a complete acquaintance with the trains of circumstances by which it is produ- ced; and as they act in quick, or dilatory, in lucky or unfortunate succession, the man is educated into a genius or a blockhead, a he- ro or a villain. Have not the trains of cir- cumstances created the difference between the African and the European, between the na- tive of one of the five nations in North Ameri- ca and the subject of Great Britain? Circum- stances produced the national difference, and circumstances occasioned individual distinc- tion. When Henry VIII. in a passion with the see of Rome, made himself pope of Eng- land, many men became famous as reformers, who would otherwise have been treated as heretics ; many were praised who would have been detested, and in the cause of reform a- 192 AN ESSAY ON tion, many were called men of genius, who would have heen regarded as senseless vision- aries, or villainous innovators, to whom the name of genius would never have been given but ironically. And what is this but circum- stance? Circumstance, that rules supreme over the fortunes of every created being ! Let us conceive a country discovered by accident, and colonized by the discoverers; and let us suppose the colony to grow into a nation, po- pulous, rich in resources, and fertile in ima- gination. Rank and difference in circum- stances, and of course in intellect, gradually increase, and what is called genius is the re- sult. Now, if the people who colonized the country had sunk to rise no more, where would have been all their descendants, where all the genius the nation afterwards displayed? " In the deep bosoni of the ocean buried/' And yet there is no woeful lamentation, no universal mourning for the seeds of the na- tion destroyed ; for the hope of the world an- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 193 nihilatecl. There were no heads of those who perished, encircled hy glories, which foretold what might have been their destiny ; for the thinking mind perceives, that as circumstan- ces guided, they might have become the foun- ders of a mighty empire, or the daring lead- ers of a band of buccaniers. Wherever a genius rises, he carries along with him the peculiarities of his country, his climate, or even sometimes a tincture of the manners of his particular family or district. What is this but circumstance ? Genius is in general bright only by comparison. The man who is consi- dered a prodigy by his native village, would be regarded as a pedant or a blockhead by a populous city : the man who is the god, the polar star of his family, may be the dunce and the laughing stock of his college : the pastor who is the apostle of his own congregation, may be sneered at and despised by the people of a more enlightened diocese. The lamp which enlightens a small apartment, shows 194 AN ESSAY ON but a dim light in a lofty hall : but the fire of genius has the happy property of expand- ing by situation ; and the mind that commen- ced by a partial illumination, often fills with its glory, even the high concave of heaven. But what is this but the effect of circumstance? There are singular infatuations by which the idea of innateness has been considerably assisted, if not produced. When a person places himself in a situation so conspicuous as to be gazed at by all around him, there is a kind of mist which magnifies his intellect and his actions. When, by the greatness of these actions, and the glitter of his conduct, he has become celebrated and admired, every line he writes, every step he takes, is blazed into something extraordinary. The most foolish saying, which was yesterday condemned or overlooked, is to-day repeated and extolled. The people deceive themselves : they expect something wonderful, and their own folly ful- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 195 fils their expectations. Nay, some, whose senses were more conversant with their judg- ment, have suffered themselves to be the dupes of the deceived, rather than become the ob- jects of their mockery. Though unable to see the wonder, sooner than be considered singu- lar, they have confessed that they were asto- nished ; like the countryman who allowed that he saw the man in the moon as well as his neighbour, to save himself from the imputa- tion of stupidity. In time, the person whose actions have been extolled, becomes himself the deceived party ; he imagines that his eve- ry action is as great as it has been represent- ed ; he believes he is worthy of more appro- bation than he receives; and then arises the supposition that he is so much superior to his fellow creatures, that his qualifications must have proceeded from the Deity direct; that he is a favored child of Providence, and, there- fore, should enjoy a larger portion of his mu- nificence. 196 AN ESSAY ON As another proof of the influence of cir- cumstances, we should observe that men are not geniuses when all around them are wrapt in darkness and chaotic ignorance. A nation must have made a certain progress before any great genius is perceptible in it. There may be certain circumstantial differences in intel- lect, in assemblies of the rudest savages ; but it is not till a people has attained a certain population, and till the intellect has made considerable advancement, that, from the phalanxes of mind, an intrepid few rush for- ward from advantageous situations, to seize the meed of their exertions. As we see that great genius shows itself after a certain de- gree of civilization ; we may also observe, that, as favorable circumstances increase, it increa- ses in variety. The farther a man proceeds in this investigation, he will find less cause for the interference of innateness, till he will blush at his own folly that sanctioned the introduc- tion of such a power, without an iota of evi- dence to support it. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 19J" There are some common expressions with which we frequently meet in the memoirs of men of genius : "he soon excelled his teach- " ers;" "he was so attentive to his studies, " that he soon left his able master far be- " hind;" and such phrases are given us as the greatest possible proof of an innate supe- riority. Yet to excel a teacher seems by no means a qualification exclusively possessed by genius ; on the contrary, from the argument of Mr. Dugald Stewart, it appears that many men of genius cannot attend to the common business of being taught, from the originality of their conceptions. When we see a young mind, of a fixed attention, attracted by the novelty of a pursuit, we may fairly conclude that it will acquire all possible knowledge by its application ; and it is muclrless like in- uaieness of genius to see such a young mind exhaust the information of a man who has followed his profession for many years in a beaten track, than it would be like innateness N 198 AN ESSAY ON of stupidity to behold a young man endea- vouring in vain to surmount difficulties which had existence only in his imagination. And yet there is always some circumstantial cause for the latter. We must come to the conclusion, then, that no man has genius innate, for no child has at first the power of invention ; children must learn first the steps on which invention is founded, and if it can be proved to me that any one infant invented these steps, I have done, and genius is innate and cannot be ac- quired. No two geniuses are alike, say the inna- tists ; therefore genius is innate, for circum- stances that happened to the most opposite geniuses were often similar. If there never were two geniuses alike, I reply, then, the trains of circumstances were never the same which produced the powers of genius, though CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 199 individual circumstances were similar; and wherever similar individual circumstances oc cur, they always create a partial resemblance between the geniuses. We may show the ab- surdity of this argument for innateness by extending its influence. Scarcely two men think alike ; but are we to conclude from this that no two men are alike in their original conformation? This is making the omnipo- tent Deity an attendant on the nursery. But, supposing all men originally created with an equal mental difference, then genius or intel- lectual superiority is circumstantial. But if all men are originally constituted alike, then all afterwards differing, if common differ- ences are not innate, we have no reason to argue for the innateness of extraordinary dif- ferences, which are only an extension of common ones. If the original difference be not equal, then we come to the absurd doc- trine of a particular Providence, which can never be true, unless there are two distinct N 2 200 A:N JESS AY ON natures in the one living and true God. (See Appendix.) The innatists support their doctrine bj strenuously insisting that genius is an innate propensity to one art or science, rather than to another or to none. We have already, however, denned genius to be a power of in- vention, and we cannot reasonably and phi- losophically have two various definitions of the same property. But may not there be two stages of genius, the one of its com- mencement, and the other of its progress ? If there be a sort of first stage, which is the innate prompting to any particular art on which the genius is afterwards to be exer- cised, how happens it that a man sometimes chooses a profession, and afterwards changing it, shows what the world calls genius in some other far different acquirement ? If there ex- isted a prompting to the profession in which the man afterwards excelled, why was he first CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 201 prompted to a profession in which he could not succeed ? If there existed no prompting to the second subject of his application, when he was misled hy adhering to the first, then surely that prompting when it did come could not he innate, there having been a pre- vious period of existence when it was not re- cognized. Wherever there is a power of ap- plication, or prompting to any particular art, without the power of invention, there can be no genius ; but if genius be produced by con- siderable application, and may be nevertheless innate, that which is innate is consequent upon something which is accidental, the result of uninterrupted leisure, or of the particular care and anxiety of parents or in- structors ! But may not genius be innate, even as a power of invention ? It is impos- sible to invent an idea, or to make any new combination, without having previously ideas to compare or to combine, which are produ- ced by external objects and circumstances ; N3 -0- AN ESSAY ON and, therefore, from this mode of reasoning, we should again find genius to he something consequent upon accidental acquirements! Difference of sex. The difference which is observahle between the sexes, has been trium- phantly held forth in favor of the innateness of genius, and of the other faculties, if genius can properly be denominated a faculty. For, it has been said, there must he some innate difference between the sexes, as every person will readily perceive ; and, if there be, why is it not reasonable to suppose that the Deity would make the genius innate, as well as the difference between the sexes and geniuses ? The sophistry of such reasoning is easily per- ceptible ; it supposes innate mental difference to be the same as innate bodily difference. From every consideration, I am convinced that there is no difference but from circumstances. The circumstances of parturition and various *exual situations may produce some effect AND GENIUS. "203 xipon the intellect ; but if a woman have her mind weii formed before the time when such circumstances prove effectual, her intellectual powers will receive little or no alteration. We have had instances of women who have become famous as warriors, rulers of states, and mathematicians, and they had every faculty perfect that could demonstrate the variety, the grandeur, and extent of the human capacity. The reason why we have comparatively so few celebrated women, is, that they have had comparatively a meau and unsatisfactory education. In all coun- tries, excepting those in which the woman is considered the superior personage of the family, much less care is taken of the fe- male than the male. The one is confined to domestic economy ; the other is more nobly occupied, and is more connected with the bu- siness of political life. In those parts of the world, however, where the woman is the su- perior personage, the man is confined to tho 20 jf AN I!SSA\ ON household concerns and trivial affairs,, which so generally in other countries engage the attention of the female. If there existed any innate mental difference, one would think that it was in strength ; but this is not the case, for we have had women, the Donna Agnesi for instance, whom I have hefore mentioned; the daughter of Sir Thomas More; Angelica Kauffman ; Joan- na Baillie ; a daughter of Dr. Hutton the mathematician, not to mention the innumera- ble instances of ancient history, in times when women were educated with equal attention with men, and sometimes more, who showed that they were possessed of strong powers of intellect, nnd famous would have been the. man who could have excelled any one of them in her particular department. In what then lues the mental difference consist, if it be not. kn>^. If women have not weaker minds than. men innately, and there is an innate dif- ference, it is plain their minds must, be strong- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. '2\)i> er than those of the other sex.* If there he u difference, however, in general, and that ; in the torrid zone of America more than * " Not to mention the natural effects of the relaxation of heat, or the bracing of cold, on the nourishment of the body; iJ H sufficient to observe, that the profuse perspiration that takes place in southern latitudes, carries off the oily with the aqueous parts, and renders the constitution thin; but a frigid climate, by obstructing the evaporation of the oils, condenses them in "a coat of fat that contributes to preserve the warmth of the animal sjstem. Experience verifies this influence of climate. The northern tribes which issued from the forests of Germany and overrun the southern provinces of the Roman empire, no longer retain their original grossness and their vast size. The constitution of Spain and of other countries in the south of Europe is thin; and the Europ ans in general hsue be- come more thin by emigrating to America. Here is a double experiment within the memory of history, made on entire na- tions." Dr S. S. Smith on the causis of complexion andfgure in the Innnan species, p. 178-9; Philadelphia printed ; Edinburgh re- printed. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 221 *' two centuries, and yet even that length of " time has not familiarized them to the cli- " mate." His lordship, in this passage, evi- dently expected the effect upon a colony in two hundred years, which it would require several thousand years to produce, an ex- pectation most unreasonable, and unworthy of the author of the Elements of Criticism. 11 The natural productions of each climate " make the most wholesome food forthepeo- " pie who are fitted to live in it." (p. 18.) Certainly ; was it likely that food w r ould dis- agree with any people when they had been accustomed from their birth to feed on it ? A mixture of animal and vegetable food 'is hest for a temperate climate, and it is accordingly easily procured in such a climate ; but what does this establish ? That such an harmoni- ous arrangement subsists in nature as to pre- vent the world from falling asunder or be- coming suddenly disorganized ; that man can adapt himself and every thing around him to 222 AN ESSAY ON circumstances ; or, that lie procures and na- turalizes whatever he finds necessary for his every situation ; but not, surely, that man is of different species. The man and the plant grow to the climate ; and not the climate, the man, and the plant, always for one another. The plant of the same kind is hardy in one soil and with one kind of weather, and is ten- der with another soil and another climate; under a genial atmosphere it flow r ers, and fruit in full perfection follows ; hut under another atmosphere less agreeable, because it was less accustomed to it, it is stinted in growth, and scarcely shows a vestige of its former bloom and verdure. And yet there are plants thus singularly metamorphosed, which naturalists arrange under the same ge- nus and the same species ; and man, without evidence, is to be classed under heads which no one has yet had the hardihood to enu- merate ! CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 223 His lordship allows (p. 19.) that the lo\v stature and ugly visage of the Laplander is owing to climate, and, with that concession, there can he no difficulty in declaring and be- lieving that the same occasioned the peculiari- ties of the Esquimaux.* I need not examine what he says about, the smooth chin of the Americans ; that has already been proved to be occasioned by a peculiar method of extract- ing the hair. "The black color of negroes, " thick lips, flat nose, crisped woolly hair, and a rank smell, distinguish them from every other race of men." (p. 20.) But, because they are at present distinguished, were they forever so distinct ? This is a question that no one can answer, but by conjecture; and the only rea- son why it appears to some that they are an originally separate race of men, is, that all the * .See Researches into the Physical History of Man, by James Covvles Prichard, octavo, 1813. The anther [shows that the Esquimaux and the Skrosllingcrs of Greenland were of the same race, the latter being derived from the former. 2*24 AN ESSAY ON differences are not considered capable of be- ing accounted for to satisfaction! But this is mere assertion. They have been accounted for. Is not the negro complexion the conse- quence of excessive heat with iittle shelter? What is the negro countenance, but the un- cultivated form and inexpressiveness of ex- panded infancy ? If we hold dark hair to the lire, will it not curl into the form of that of the African, and will not the hair of the Afri- can become smoother and gradually lofse its unpolished woolliness in a state of civilization :* " There is no such difference between Abys- " sinia and Negro-land as to produce these " striking differences" between the inhabi- tants. The differences, which are great, he had not been able to trace to the different states of society, or to the variations of cli- mate, which, if he had not depended on some Rasselas-like account of the country, he would * Dr Smith proves this of negroes in America, who seem to have come under his own observation. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 225 have found to be considerable. If he had re- ferred to the best authenticated descriptions of Abyssinia, he would have discovered, that, as they are in other countries, where the climate is colder or hotter, there the natives aie whi- ter or darker ; or, that all variations from this rule are occasioned by the different degrees of covering and civilization. Whilst he is ma- king every effort to overthrow the position, that color proceeds from climate assisted by circumstances, his lordship has given us a por- tion of a sentence with a directly contrary tendency. "The southern Chinese are white, " though in the neighbourhood of the torrid if zone ; and women of fashion in the island " Otaheite, who cover themselves from the " sun, have the European complexion!" (p. 21.) " The people of Zaara, &c. though " exposed to the vertical rays of the sun in a " burning sand, yielding not in heat even to " Guinea, are of a tawny color." The italic- part of this sentence is false, and the reason 226 AN ESSAY ON why the people are not so black as might have heen expected, is, that they wear pantaloons and turbans or bonnets, for their protection from the heat, and, in their manners, are as distinct as possible from the negroes. His lordship asserts, that races of people have pre- served their complexion long after they had emigrated to different climates, and instances the Moguls in Hindostan. The Moguls in Hindostan have tried every means to preserve their complexion, and, in spite of all their en- deavours, they have undergone a partial alte- ration. . Much of this discourse, so celebrated amongst the advocates of a number of species, is occupied by proving the variety of species, from the difference in manners, customs, &c. in fact, in national genius. This is consider- ing national genius to be innate, and not cir- cumstantial. Now, to prove any thing, na- tional genius ought to have been shewn in- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. controvertibly innate ; and then, that nations having possessed one train of manners and customs, and one species of religion from the commencement, they were of course distinct in species. It is true, upon a careful exami- nation, that the circumstances of most nations are produced by their particular genius ; but it is likewise incontestibly ascertainable, that the genius of each particular nation was pro- duced by circumstances. Buffon, and his adherents, set out by de- fending the position that men were all origin- ally of one species ; that the hair, the .color, the countenance, Sec. were only changed by the operation of the climate, and other assis - tant causes, secondary, but nevertheless impor- tant. They said, that the more we approached to sultry climates, the darker was the com- plexion, and the farther from them, the lighter. They traced the gradations of color, and wher- ever they did not entirely agree with their ori-^ 228 AN ESSAY ON ginal position, the circumstances of civiliza- tion, or peculiar customs, will be found to have interfered. The advocates of different species say, that the sun dfd not produce the difference in color and appearance.* Now, *jSr Prichard, in his work on the Physical History of Man, in many instances seems to deny the effect of the sun upon the hu- man body, though he allows the effect of civilization in changing the color. His arguments are particularly intended to prove that we were originally from one stock, but that we weie primarily negroes. In the first place, he shows us that a great number of nations have different gradations of color under one climate, with an intention, no doubt, of disproving the sun's effects ; but during the whole course of this part of the investigation, from p. 174 to p. 194, he does not appear to have taken civili- zation into consideration, tliough afterwards he gives it its due weight. He seems first to have denied the effect of the sun, and next to have attempted to prove that civilization has the greatest force. Much of his reasoning is very conclusive j but he might have at least told us what pantaloons, hats, clothes of any description, victuals, &c., the different nations used, who were of such various complexions. It is true that, if we look back to records of former times, or examine collections of ancient portraits, we have reason to be- lieve that all who were less civilized than ourselves, were less fair and more uncouth in their appearance. Indeed I myself re- member having seen several negroes, who, after wear ing clothes for some time, and becoming more accustomed to the manners of the country, have turned paler where the body was not ex- posed, and have by civilization acquired a nobler cast of counte- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. has the sun any power on the human body ? Its effect will be manifest, on examining the nance. The sun, however, and climate, may still be allowed their effect, for however black or otherwise our first parents were, it is plain that. Noah and his descendants were consider- ably civilised, yar Prichard says, in a note almost at the end of his work, " Perhaps some persons may think it scarcely con- sistent with the skill displayed by Noah in building the ark, to represent his posterity as savages. But this was altogether a su- pernatural event, and was doubtless brought, about by uncom- mon means. And whatever improvement might have been ac- quired by men in the ten generations which hud passed before the flood, it must speedily have been lost, from the destitute condition of the earth immediately after that event." Now, before the flood, we hav- Enoch building a city, we find '-such as handle the harp and the organ," and the instructor "of every artificer in brass and iron/'' This is a slight view of their know- ledge in the "generations before the flood, Sufficient time was given to Noah to build the ark. No miraculous interference hastened its construction ; and the instructions which were given him to build it, show evidently that an ark was nothing new, but that such a thing must have been common. Noah must have carried with him all the knowledge of his fathers, and it is plain that it could not be lost during the time when he was confined by the waters of the deluge. If the knowledge were lost, from the destitute condition of the earth, it must have been lost after considerable migrations from the main family, and after some long period had elapsed. Will r Prichard then allow that the sun made Noah dark, and his descendants P 230 AN ESSAY OK face and breast of a common laborer, after toiling under the heat of a single English sum- mer. And yet it is said, that in several thou- at length black ; for that they were civilized when they enter- ed the ark, no man can express a reasonable doubt ? If they were civilized, from his arguments they must have been white; -onie cause must have made them afterwards black, and what cause but the effect of climate and society ? If the sun, from which, in a savage state, men were sheltered, and the rude man- ner in which they lived, made them black ; and civilization and a careful guarding of the complexion from his rays, made them white, or lighter, what need is there to attempt any argument as to the complexion of our first parents ? I have said that I had known negroes who had turned much lighter in a more tem- perate climate and when they were clothed. Their countenan- ces in some cases bore a singular appearance ; the white com- plexion seemed peeping through the black, as if the latter were gradually wearing off. This may frequently be observed, especially in old men. If *9r. Prichard allow that the deluge ever took place, per- haps he will have no objection to allow the cause for it assigned by Scripture, the vices of the world. If he consider this, he must be well acquainted with the fact, that wickedness, com- monly so called, is never very great, except in the decline of nations. Luxury, debauchery, and irreligion, never show them- selves, till civilization has gone as far as, at the time, it can be conceived capable of going. In this case, he must allov. Noah to hare been white, as well as his descendants. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 231 sand years a race of men would not be turned black, who were originally white ! Ridiculous objections to the unity of the original species, are made from the circum- stance of the peculiarities of each race being propagated. But, that the offspring is paler than the parent, by the copulation of a black man with a v. bite woman, will prove that a difference in color may be produced, which, by a constant mixture with white, will, in time, almost entirely disappear.* It is well known that almost any peculiarity may be propagated, however originally produced ; this, therefore, can be no objection to the pri- * There have been too many instances of so complete a mix- ture as to prevent the possibility of a difference being recog- nized between the people of a nation and strangers who have gone amongst them, to make it necessary for me to dilate o:\ this subject. The alteration in the complexion and general ap- pearance of a colony of Portuguese at Congo, is stated and al- lowed by Lord Karaes liimself. Victory is made ten times more glorious, ivhen the enemy puts the weapon by which he is to be overcome into the hand-; of his antagonist. P2 232 AN ESSAY OX nlary unity of species. Have any objection* to Buffon's arguments destroyed the rule ? Have there been established any but trifling exceptions, not only not inexplicable, but, when explained, confirmatory of the hypothe- sis ? Is there any fact relating to color which has been alleged as a proof of different spe- cies, that cannot be explained by a careful examination into the minute differences in so- ciety, or in situation ? The negroes have been mentioned. What is found in them so ex- traordinary ? Are they not men ? Have they not minds ? Have they not shewn themselves equal in action with Europeans, when they had equal opportunities ? If it be argued that the sun did not make them what they were, how will it be proved that it did not ? Can any man shew a race of men existing in simi- lar circumstances for an equal period, who were not equally black ? The Egyptians were negroes ; civilization changed the complexion of their descendants ; and if time can mingle CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 233 th'em with others, till at length they are un- distinguishable, who will say where the line of species is to be fixed ? Had we lived a few centuries later, we might have been fortunate enough to have seen the gradual alteration taking place in the natives of the new king- dom established in St. Domingo ;* but I hope * The following extract is from an Hayti paper, and as it contains an appeal to humanity on the subject of -the unity of species, it is hoped it will not be irrelevant. " Que de sentimens de reconnaissance que tout homme de la race noire doit avoir pour ces venerables et illnstres philantro- pes de 1'institution Africaine ; jamais societe ne s'est vouee a la defense d'une cause plus sainte et plus juste ; jamais de vrais Chretiens n'ont defendu avec plus de charite, de.bienfaisance, do zele et d'ardeur la cause del'humanite, celle de I'hnmme-comma 1'ont fait nos illustres protecteurs j que de crimes et de forfaits vont etre bannis sur la terre, par 1'Sntervention, les veilles etlea travaux de ces hommes genereux ; 1'Afrique desolee, ne verra plus enlever de ses rivages, ses infortunes enfans ; ils ne seront plusarraches des bras de leur famille partoutes sortes d'artifices et de crimes, pour etre plonges dans un perpetuel esclavage sur un sol etranger ! les Brakes ces monstrueux navires negriers n'existeront plus ! nous ne veiron plus ces receptacles de crimes, dont 1'aspect fait horreur et parle a r.os cceur, plus que pourrait le faire le livre de plus eloquent ! nos frcrcs, ne seront plus en- tasses dans ces cachots ambulans, charges de chauccs ; abrc-uvcs dans la douleur. . . . Je m'arrete. . . . J'ai bcsoin de respirer. . . . une foule de sentimens d'indignation, de piti, et de P3 234 AN ESSAY ON that there will he some person as ardent in the cause of truth as myself, and far more able, who will hereafter state their change in appearance as a convincing proof that man only requires similar circumstances to he like his fellow man, however singular his forma- tion. sance sout couk-r mcs larmes- ! Homines bienfaUans! Hom- ines vertueux ! Continuez la tache que sous avcz si glorieuse- ttient enterprise, voua portez dans vos coenrs la recompense dt ros bonnes actions. "Unenouvelleere s'eleve pour 1'Afrique, sous 1'cgide proti-c- trice des philantropes, ses liabitaus pourront rcpirer dans la sein de leur patrie 1'air pur de liberte ; ils pourront jouir des douceurs ct des avantages de la civilisation en selivrant a la cul- ture des terres, au commerce, aux sciences et aux arts ; nous es- perons qu'ils feront revivre par leur travaux le souvenir de nos illustres ancetres. "Dans la marche irresistible des evenemens de ce monde, tout retrace 1'instabilite de choses humaines, des empires sVle vent, d'autres s'ecroulent, les lumieres suivent 1' impulsion dt-s revolutions et parc-ourent successivement la surface du globe : la Grece, lesGaules, la Germanie, n'ont pas ton jours etc les foy- ers des lumieres j nos detracteurs feip;nent d'oublier ce cju'etai- ent les Epyptieus et les Ethiopiens, nos ancetres ; la Tharara di- 1'ecriture, ce puissant monarque qui faisant trembler lc Assy- riens, vint de 1'interieur de 1'Afrique jusquilux colonnes ! i'aiitiqi'it.' CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 235 We shall proceed to observe for a short time longer, on Lord Kames. " As far back * ( as history goes, or tradition kept alive by his- ' ' tory, the earth was inhabited by savages divi- " ded into small tribes, each tribe having a lan- "'* guage peculiar to itself. Is it not natural to " suppose that these original tribes were dif- " ferent races of men placed in proper cli- confirment ces fait j des preuves bien plus recentes deposent eu notre faveur, et nos ennerais par une insigne mauvais foi, feig- nent de douter, pour conserver 1'odieux privilege de torturer et de persecuter i leur gre une partie du genre humain. " Ces faux Chretiens, ennemis de dieu et de 1'lmmanite disent que nous sommes inferieur aux blancs j plusieurs d'entr'eux ont eu 1'impiete denier 1'identite de 1'espece humain, et ile out eu 1'absurdite d'afHrmer que uous sommes au niveau de la brute, prive des facultes morales et intellectuelles. " Nos amis, les vrais Chretiens, soutiennent que nous sommes pourvus de 1'intellect, que nos capacites sout bonnes, et quelles seraient egales a celles des Europecns, si nous avions les memes avantages; ils nous considerent comme leur freres ; car dieu a fait naitre d'un seul sang tout le genre humain pour habiter sur toute I'entendue de la terre," The article concludes with a most affecting appeal to the whole race of Africans to prove how falla- cious are the assertions of their enemies. Gazette Royale d' Hayti, Jan. 2,5th, 1816. For a translation of the article of which the above forms a part, see " Hayti Papers/' lately published by authority. 236 AN ESSAY ON " mates, and left to form their own lan- c< guage !" We cannot exactly tell what tra- dition kept alive by history is intended to sig- nify, but in the meaning which is commonly given to that word, it cannot be contradicted that in almost every nation in the globe there is a tradition that we proceeded from not only one race of people, but one couple : I care not where this tradition is sought ; it is the same at Pekin, at Grand Cairo, and at Delhi ; equally prevalent in modern Hindostan, and in ancient Rome. Are not the differences in men too trivial to constitute species ? Do we not see white hares and white mice, white dogs and black cats, "all classed under the same species with animals of a thousand various colors ? Color is one of the least peculiarities of species, and ought never to be a means of distinction. Is the horse less a horse, whether he is grey or brown ? Is the cow less a cow, whether she CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 23/ is white or pye-balled ? 1 know the answer that may be given to this argument most of these animals are domestic, and the breeds have been crossed to produce the color. But is this an answer? All I ask is, does color generally change the species : and every ra- tional naturalist will answer me in the nega- tive. Has any race of men only four toes upon each foot, or only three fingers and a thumb upon each hand ? If so, we may be- lieve them to be a distinct species. If the one- eyed men, the Arirnapsi, and a thousand others, which the elder Pliny mentions, exist- ed ; if the "men whose heads do grow be- " neath their shoulders," had their being in any other place than the imagination, they would have made a different species ; if a race could be proved to exist, who, in their own defence, vomitted fire, or emitted a most pes- tilential smoke and effluvia from their nos- trils, then we might declare in favor of a dis- tinct-species; but none of these exist, and we 1238 A> ESr^AY ON may he grateful that they do not; and till such as these do show themselves, from amongst the fiery inhabitants of the dog star, or the genii who live comfortably in the cen- tre of the earth, we shall be satisfied to con- sider all mankind as one great family. Before we leave this part of our subject, we shall state a few questions which will concentrate it, and enable any person more readily to consider the arguments by which both sides support their positions. 1. How many were the original species; can they be distinguished ; how many exist at present ; how many have become extinct ? i2. Has not the sun a power of changing the complexion, which, after an exposure of some thousand years, would turn it from white to black? And do not circumstances, such as food, clothing, high, or low situation. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 239 hardships, or particular customs, as unctions, &c., or diseases, materially assist in accelera- ting or retarding such transformation ? 3. May not the difference in color he ow- ing, in a great measure, to the difference in the time of the separation of nations from the main body, to which they originally belonged ? 4. Are not all objections to the unity of species drawn from the distance of migra- tions, the scarcity of provisions during those migrations, and, indeed, the impossibility of such migrations ever taking place, rendered nugatory by the impossibility to prove that the main body or original nation was station- ary, where its station was, and that the earth is now as it was several thousand years ago ?* * This may be taken by those who are advocates for a dif- ference in species, as an argument in their favor. They may say, because you cannot prove where the original species first existed, we will assert that there is no one original specie?. This is answered, however, by the impossibility of proving 240 AN ESSAY OX 5. If there were twenty thousand species of men upon the earth, allowed to he species by all naturalists, would it be at all an argu- ment that they did not proceed from one ori- ginal stock, as long as there remained any thing like evidence that man had been created in the simplest possible manner, which is al- ways the method pursued hy nature? 6. Are there any traditions, oral, historical, or mythological, which favor the assertion that there were originally more than one spe- cies of mankind ? 7- Is any man, or race of men, adapted for any thing but by custom and circumstance; and how could they be otherwise; for, if a race were fitted by nature for a particular where any number of the primary species existed, if there were more than one ; and surely where there were more original stocks than one, it would be very easy to show the place of the tisst settlement of one or two at least. CAPACITY AMD GENIUS. V 241 climate, would not the descendants of that race, preserving the peculiar fitness of their ancestors, perish" on a change of climate, which circumstances would render inevitable?* 8. If there are different original species, how are they to he distinguished from those races of men who have colonized a country differing in climate from their own, and who, of course, became completely distinct from the nation whence they proceeded ? 9. Is it not common to say, " the human " species/' "the human race/' &c. and is * The " fitted by nature," means that each species was fitted at its creation for a particular climate. A man born in any climate in which his ancestors have lived some time, is not fit- ted by nature to the country, but fitted because of his ancestors' residence in it ; therefore, in case of a change of climate in a country, though the inhabitants become accustomed to the al- teration, if it approaches gradually, they could not be fitted by nature, except by a new creation. '242 AN I->SAY ON not this a sort of traditional proof in favor of the original unity of the species ?* I think that almost all that can he said upon this subject is reducible to one or other of these queries. The reader that wishes to be satisfied upon the question, had better alter them into heads, of chapters, or pages, and after adding such heads as I may have omit- ted,, he may set down under each all the facts lie can collect belonging to it ; thus he will come to some conclusion, and I am persuaded * It m.:y seem Miiguiar that after I have ridiculed i\\e mode of urging common sayings, such as " it. is my nature," as argu- ment, I should support one in my own favor. There is a dif- ference, however, in those common expressions: some are sup- ported by evidence which is deceitful, and on examination un- true; and others, ifsup]x>rted by evidence at all, cannot be dis- puted. Such expressions as " it is my nature," could never in one age be more correct than in another; this of the " human race," however, may have been handed down from language to language, from some period before the original species sepa- rated. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 243 it can be to no other than that which I have been supporting.* National genius. Does language prove any thing like innate differences? If genius were innate, it might have been expected when language was first used amongst na- tions, that some nations would have a lan- guage in' despite of circumstances, as different as possible from every other. On the con- trary, we find circumstances as predominant in the formation of language, as in every other particular relative to human society. Language could not have been the invention * I leave to others more versed in the medical science. than myself to decide by what vascular organization the change of color from white to black, or from black to white, is occasioned. It has been long a matter of dispute, whether it was produced by an effect upon the bile. There arc disorders which accom- pany an alteration of the bile by the sun, however, which are not always possessed by negroes. The difference in tiolor is caused upon the rete mucosum, but whether it is by a simple transformation, or by an elaborate process, that the sun, situa- tion, &c. effect the alteration upon it, has never been com- pletely ascertained. 244 AN ESSAY ON of one superior mind ; it must have become gradually general in the natural advancement of society; and as its adoption must have been necessary to any set of men, or any na- tion, placed in similar circumstances with the first, so it could not with propriety be said that those who did first adopt it, showed any innate superiority of intellect. As languages, according to our former arguments, must have in the beginning proceeded from one stock, we might have concluded this part of our subject by asserting the necessary conse- quence that all differences in language must be circumstantial. But supposing this not t9 have been the case, 'and that the question re- mained as yet undecided, let us see if there is any evidence for such circumstantial differ- ences having been occasioned. I believe there will be found no known language in which there are not some words exactly simi- lar to some one other language, and circum- stances not generally creating minute verbal CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 245 similarities, these resemblances in words can only be accounted for by the languages to which they belong having been derived from one common root.* Of languages as spoken, the circumstantial differences may be con- sidered two-fold ; in idiom, and in genins. Thus, in idiom, all the European languages bear a considerable resemblance to one ano- ther, but they materially differ from the east- ern languages, amongst which is supposed to be the root or original tongue. In genius, the difference even amongst the languages of Eu- rope is easily perceptible. Thus, the French is the language of conversation, and fashion- able politeness ; the English appears to be best adapted to scientific purposes, - the expression of majesty or sublimity in poe- * Such minute similarities are even' observable between the Welch and the Greek. Aij, truly in Greek, is in Welch, De ; Iva, that in Greek, is in Welch, Yna; Oiw, to think, in Greek, is in Welch, Oio. The Sanscrit has been found to resemble the Greek most materially. By a reference to the Classical Journal, a vocabulary of similar words of several pages will be found. Q 246 AN ESSAY ON try ; and the Italian, for pathetic poetry, or harmony. The minor difference amongst European languages in idiom, is, that some are transpositive, and some are what gram- marians call analogous ; the living languages are chiefly of the latter, however, and the for- mer is scarcely used, except in versifying. This difference appears to have been entirely accidental, though history gives us little ac- count of the way in which it originated. The transpositive, which appears in most instances to be transpositive only in its being so differ- ent from our own, is, in my opinion, the most natural idiom,* and the original variation may have been made by the secession of a party from the main body, which, in the pride of independence, would be eager to discover some means of establishing a distinction. The difference in genius need scarcely be traced, * Though we may guess at the original language, the idiom and the dialect which were first used or spoken, can only be knowa by conjecture. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. its causes are so evident. Wherever nations are established amongst rocks and wild sce- nery, the language becomes strong and poeti- cal; by war, it is made commanding and energetic ; by a mercantile life, it becomes mixed, and capable of a number of successful applications. When a country has a despotic government, the language will in general be- come, after some time, crampt, inasmuch as the means of using it are in a great measure prohibited ; in a republic, however, as writing and speaking are allowed to their full extent, improvements, as well as eccentric licenses, will necessarily ensue.* * The Chinese language has been considered a singular excep- tion from all others, and has by many been deemed incapable of comparison. Expert philologists, however, have found that the original Chinese, not the court language, which is at pre- sent prevalent, was apparently derived from the Hebrew. The hieroglyphics of the Egyptians, and some of the Chinese charac- ters taken from animals, bear a close resemblance to each other, but it is probably only occasioned by a similarity of circum- stances. Q2 248 AN ESSAY ON Languages, as written, have singular and at first sight unaccountable differences. These may be explained, however, by sup- posing that mankind were dispersed before any method had been required, and of course employed, for transmitting intelligence, or for communicating thoughts; or that they had established a mode of communication by means of the rude figures of the animals of the land which they inhabited, and conse- quently the emigrants, wherever they settled, pursuing the most simple method, made a far different written language in the country, the animals and appearances of which were novel and peculiar. It is not very probable that when all the people in the world were assem- bled in one place, they would be very nume- rous, and therefore it can scarcely be sup- posed that they would need any writing or hieroglyphic. If nations did not use any mode of writing till they separated, they would require some means of communication after- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 249 wards with the main body, or that portion which remained in the station which it had occupied. This would be confined, perhaps, to verbal messages; but if the distance was considerable, the intelligence might probably be transmitted by instruments, or small ani- mals, such as were employed by the barba- rous Scythians, and such as were well known by those to whom they were transmitted* By degrees, hieroglyphics, or rather emblematic writing, for it would be known to whole na- tions, and not confined to priests or privileged classes, would give place to characters which were signs of words not immediately drawn from external objects, and, however slight the difference at first, a constant separation of ideas and interests make differences in every thing ; and the writing of one nation would be more arbitrary when it was neces- sary to be expeditious, whilst that of another would be more nearly approaching the ori- ginal standard, because less employed and less Q3 250 AN ESSAY ON open to comparisons and innovations from other bodies of people.* We forbear to make any attempt at tracing the origin of characters. Many of those of particular nations are easily explicable, but the necessity in such an investigation of knowing the first characters used, and the impossibility of exactly acquiring such know- ledge, render the subject extremely hypotheti- cal. That writing was a necessary art, no man can deny ; and consequently no man can reasonably assert the divinity of the invention. Man was so placed as to become an imitative animal, and he imitated nature, that he might communicate the ideas she produced .f * In the present state of things, it is impossible to consider the course of circumstances in the formation of writing. It is most probable that, however formed, they were drawn from the simplest sources. This is manifest by our common hand writing, which schoolmasters tell their scholars is all derived from the letters d and j. t Amongst all nations a sort of painting was the first mode of expressing ideas. That of the Mexicans is a poiUhpd ex- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 251 The difference of national character. The causes of this difference, which have been al- leged by some as innate, are easily perceptible on an examination of the conduct of islanders. All the island nations which have been men- tioned as opposing the landing of voyagers, were adjacent to continents near other islands, had been visited and ill-treated by Europeans, or had some other good cause for being warlike; and warlike nations, which are watchful for their own security, are hostile to strangers, whose motives for visiting them are unknown. All islanders, however, who are confident that no power, whatever be its in- tention, can readily destroy their security, are friendly to strangers. Many islands, when adjoining, are continually at war with each ample of what we may imagine was formerly prevalent in a rude state. There appears to be a more natural connexion by association between colors and sounds than has generally been observed, and the Peruvians, in many instances, have attended to it. Thus, black seems symbolical of o, and all deep tones : blue of lighter sounds ; and e or r t , of white, &c. 252 AN ESSAY ON other; and others, though nearly in similar relative situations, are friendly both to one another and to foreigners. This is easily ex- plained. One or two nations have perhaps heen quietly settled for some eonsiderable time in a series of islands, v. Inch they occu- pied by turns, as convenience or inclination prompted. A set of islanders from some other quarter, however, having a desire to change, might migrate to some of the series not at the moment inhabited. Those who considered themselves their rightful possessors, would return, as they frequently do, at stated periods, or to perform particular ceremonies, and eternal contests are the consequence of the establishment of the new inhabitants in their usurpation. Those islands, on the con- trary, where a constant friendship is observ- able, have been entered by one family, or, by treaty, by some different races. Those islanders who have had no arms or hostility when visited, it is evident had never had oc- casion for them. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 253 When the conduct of any nation is variable, what argument can prove its innateness ? That the actions of all nations are variable, I believe no doubt can exist in the minds of all sensible men ; the conduct of civilized nations in particular is plainly traceable to circum- stance, and surely no proof of innateness of conduct can exist amongst those races of sa- vages who have been found so different at dif- ferent periods, that voyagers have considered them quite distinct from those visited by their predecessors, though they had strictly follow- ed their lines of discovery. Peculiar qualifications of nations, Some nations are said to be innately inclined to war; some to music ; and some to painting. Why had a uation a genius for war ? Because it was fitted for it ! Certainly, hut by what ? By nature originally! The proper and ra- tional answer to such a question is, by nature, inasmuch as the circumstances into which it 254 AN ESSAY ON fell were natural to nations. And whence comes national music, and whence proceed national modes of painting? The former most commonly proceeds from the situation of the country in which it arises. Whatever sounds most advantageously in the mountain- ous regions, is always found there to have the predominance ; and there is every reason to helieve that many musical instruments were invented to suit the district in which they were found to be most admired. Thus, a Scotch bagpipe, which, however it may bring pleasing recollections to the native, is general- ly considered on the plains as far from melo- dious, amongst its pristine strong holds is known to be the most harmonious instrument. Association may, in a great measure, produce the idea of its harmony, but certainly the si- tuation materially assists in mellowing the sound. National music sometimes has been much modified by one or two great masters, whom circumstances led together, but wher- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 255 ever these have been absent, the music of the country has been adapted to its situation, the situation, in fact, forming the music. The Flemish and Italian schools of painting have very generally borne in their works a kind of similarity to the climate, but, though that might have some considerable influence [upon their labors, such schools have most common- ly been formed from meetings of painters, who assembled together for their general and individual interest. The different societies of painters gradually acquired a manner of their own, which is naturally to be supposed from the aggregate peculiarities of each man gra- dually introducing themselves into their paint- ings. As we said of music, this national painting has frequently proceeded from one person who had a number of disciples or contemporary imitators, who by degrees com- municated his manner to the whole country. In the same manner, Dr. Johnson and his contemporaries produced, or completed, a re- 256 AN ESSAl ON volution in our language, as may be seen by a comparison of the writings before his time, and after he ceased to write. Yet no man of sense would say that there was an innateness in the performances of the particular compa- nies of men, ia their general conformation, or in their individual intellects. Governments. Many who have well con- sidered the question, Under what government does literature most flourish ? have supported the doctrine of innateness, and yet those very persons have given so many instances of the effect of circumstances and situation, and have so ably argued upon them, that one might imagine they had been writing against that doctrine. Indeed, if they had descended in their arguments to individuals, of which they did not appear to know that nations were composed, they would have seen that they might retract their positions, or oppose the darling doctrine taught them by their grand- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 257 mothers, that some men have innate extraor- dinary powers. As confined circumstances operate upon one man or one family, so gene- ral circumstances, as government, operate upon a whole nation. In one country we see literature weighed down by every species of in- quisitorial oppression ; in another, enjoying all the self-supporting dignity, all the grandeur of diction, and force and elegance of imagina- tion, which a republic only caa confer. Ta- king all circumstances into consideration, is there not more genius in a republic than in a monarchy? Where there is more personal equality, will there not be more attempts at literary or mental equality ; and when so ma- ny join in the glorious race, is it likely that those who wish to excel, will occupy them- selves on common subjects ? In a monarchy, literature and arts subsist more by toleration, than by any wish to promote happiness through their influence ; they are revolutioni- zed and degraded at the nod of a sovereign, 258 AN ESSAY ON and are patronized according to the degree ia which they minister to his pleasures. In a republic, on the contrary, they rule unlimited ; patronage is less a mode of gaining popularity, than a means of raising merit into notice, and when it is the former, it is only from the ge- neral appreciation which is instantly made of deserving individuals.* If, then, literature, * The following observations, exactly applicable to this sub- ject, will agree with the sentiments of all parties : " It is certain that if you restrain genius you presently depress a whole nation. What was England before the reign of Eliza- beth, when power was exerted to enforce the pronunciation of the letter epsilon ? England was then the last of all civilized nations with respect to useful and agreeable arts ; without any good book, without manufactures, neglectful even of agricul- ture, and extremely weak in her marine j but as soon as they indulged the liberty of genius, England produced Spencers, Shakspeares, Bacons, and at last, Lockes and Newtons. "It is evident that all the arts are allied, that each serves to illustrate some other, and that one general brightness results from the whole. It is owing to" these mutual aids that the ge- nius of invent ion has communicated itself from one point to another ; it is to these, in short, that we are indebted for the as- sistance which the philosopher has afforded the politician, in open- ing new prospects for the improvement of manufactures, the fi- nances, and the building of shipping. It is owing to this, that 1he English have arrived at the greatest perfection in agricul- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 259 arts, &c. and every thing that can exercise ge- nius, flourish best in a state of equality ; if the human mind be more cultivated in such a ture of any nation whatever, and have enriched themselves as much by that means as by their marine. The same enterpris- ing and persevering genius which enables them to work cloths stronger than ours, makes them write more profound treatises of philosophy. .The motto of Walpole, the famous minister of state, "fari qua sentiat," is the motto of the English philoso- phers. They proceed farther, and tread with greater firmness than we do in the same track ; they dig the soil an hundred feet deep, which we do but graze. We are surprised at the boldness of French composition, which would appear to be written with timidity, if contrasted with twenty English authors on the same subject. Why has Italy, the mother of arts, from whom we learnt to read, languished for nearly two centuries in a deplorable de- cline? The reason is, that Italian philosophers have not been permitted to look at truth through their telescopes ; to insist, for instance, that the sun is the centre of our planetary system, and that corn does not rot in the earth to germinate there. The Italians have degenerated from the time of Muratori and his illustrious contemporaries. These ingenious people are afraid to think; the French have thought but half way ; and the English, who have soared to heaven because their wings were not clipped, are become the preceptors of the world. We are in- debted to them for every thing, from the primitive laws of gra- vitation, [the account of infinity, and the precise knowledge of light, so vainly opposed, down to the newly-invented plough and the practice of inoculation, which are still subjects of controver- sy." Voltaire on the Liberty of Genius in a Nation. 260 AN ESSAY ON state, is it not a very natural inference, whe- ther qualifications be innate or not, that equa- lity is the natural mental condition of all mankind ! * There has been much said upon the pro- gress of literature and arts from one country to another in a westerly direction, and on a first consideration, it is somewhat singular that they should proceed in such a constant course. Mrs. Barbauld, in lier beautiful poem of "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven," has imagined that " there walks a spirit o'er " the peopled earth," as if there were, in re- ality, some genius that flew from one country to another, and lighted up" a flame, for which the natives only collected the materials. Beautiful as the idea is in poetry, it is evident, * It is often argued, that the fear of ik-structipn at the time of death is a natural proof of the immortality of the soul. Fol- lowing this mode of reasoning, I see no objection to our arguing that the love of equality, which all minds appear to possess, is a proof of the equality of the intellect. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. upon a close examination, that there is no- thing supernatural or extraordinary in the progress. As things are, the motion of civi- lization must he constant, and it appears much more natural that it should move in one direction, than that it should move to one na* tion, and afterwards return to that it had lately abandoned. If it moved in one direc- tion from the main hody, which our argu- ments make necessary, it would have to move forward in the same direction, rather than hack to the main body, where it would in fact be needless; for, in the first instance, we suppose the same civilization existed in the second or third migrating nation, which the principal had acquired. Suppose, then, that the second or third migrating nation should transmit what it had acquired, to the first or second, which would be at about the same distance from k as it was from the parent nation, the first colony, or one which the first had sent forward, would receive in time R 26:2 AN ESSAY ON what its parent had received ; and as coloni- zation gradually proceeded, civilization would find its way without any miraculous interpo- sition. Great exceptions, from literature and arts following in the train of colonization, may be made when we advance farther into the world ; but that this was the case with what little there was, originally, I think no doubt need be entertained. Why, then, need we express wonder, or create some superna- tural agency on the subject of this progress ? If we saw a nation of North American In- dians studying mathematics in their native woods and pristine nakedness, we should have reason to be astonished. But as science pro- ceeds from one nation, which is perishing through excess of refinement, to another, which is just entering the pale of civilization, we have only a progress, necessary, from causes that are inevitable. That science goes to a nation fitted for it by circumstances, is evident, or it would not go at all. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 263 Genius for particular arts or sciences. Painting. We now proceed to consider par- ticular genius more minutely, and as this kind of genius more peculiarly belongs to the polite arts, we shall commence with painting. We will suppose that a particular person in- vented painting with oil. Had he a genius for it ? Was he not at first as weak a child as any of his brethren of imbecility ? If a man possess a genius for painting, why does he go to Rome ? To improve his genius ? Then Rome must receive the praise of his after excellence, and not his innate powers. When a man shows invention in painting, it is called genius ; and it is a singular fact, that if a painter imitate a great master, in expression and disposition, and not in mode of coloring, he will produce a manner of his own. If a man paint rabbits and other ani- mals in a curious and unexampled, though natural manner, he is, of course, according to the innatists, an innate and original ge- R2 264 AN ESSAY ON nius ! Perhaps an interposing tree, the set- ting sun reflecting upon a chalky rock, or some other circumstance, threw a peculiar light on the first animals he saw or painted. He copied this light, and the consequence was, his peculiar mode of painting, for the same light might never have been observed before. An artist, whosfe painting was pro- duced in this manner, could owe nothing to innate power, or to invention, for he only imitated with common colors a lucky and singular disposition. Was not painting the origin of written lan- guage ? This has been so often proved, that there is no need to dwell on it ; and as paint- ing was first employed by the necessity of circumstances, it could not be innate; it could onlv be natural. 9 Poetry. As painting was the original of written, so was poetry of spoken Ian.- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 265 guage.* We have a very old saying, how- ever, which defends innateness on this sub- ject, and as proverbs generally take the place of arguments in such a cause, it has been up- held as sacred ever since it was uttered, " Poeta nascitur, orator Jit." It might as well have been said, poeta et pictor nascuntur; for though the real mechanical art of paint- ing canvas may be taught any where, as well as that of making rhymes, neither the spirit of painting nor poetry can be taught, as is common in the schools, by way of task or re- petition. Did any man ever hear of a child being brought up to poetry ? No ; but still it may be taught, as it is taught every day, by circumstance and situation. Let any * Dr. Johnson has said on some verses of Denham, (see Lives of the Poets,) " and if there be any language which docs not " express intellectual operations by material images, into that " language they cannot be translated ! " This is impossible. The sentence is one of those which men, like Dr. Johnson, who pay rather more attention to their words than their ideas, are disposed to consider philosophical. R3 266 AN ESSAY ON child be taken from the nurse, and conveyed to a wild and beautiful country ; let his young mind be tutored by degrees to an imitation of the beauties which surround him ; as he is required to be poet or painter, let his mind be directed to the pen or the pencil, to the book or the landscape, and he will become, by skilful management, a noble, energetic, god-like artist. The words " Poeta nascitur" have been entirely misunderstood ; they mean, not that there is any thing in the mind which would direct, in spite of every thing, to poe- try, but, that it requires a peculiar situation for the inspiration of his mind ; and, on the contrary, that in any situation an orator may be produced, though particular situations will make a man a metaphorical orator, like Ci- cero, or an energetic, action-moving orator, like Demosthenes. Ts the genius for poetry any thing else than a bias given to the whole mental power ? If CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 26J it be any thing distinct from the application of the complete mind, those who assert the distinction, are advocates of craniology, an imputation to which, I am persuaded, they would rather not he liable. If, however, the whole mental power possess a bias to a parti- cular pursuit innately, how happens it that that bias is never manifested till the mind re- ceives another from circumstances ? Perhaps the answer to this would be, that the mind was naturally endowed with a propensity to receive a bias for a particular art or science ! A poet is a child of nature, inasmuch as it is impossible for him to be a poet, unless nature shall have first very forcibly imprinted her image upon his imagination. But it should not be supposed, that only those are poets whose works have met the public eye with apr probation. It only requires particular trains of circumstances, which occur- in the lives of thousands, to constitute poets, and yet very few are there whom the world dignify by that 2G8 AN ESSAY ON appellation. A poet's mind should bend be- fore every blast, like the willow ; his heart should vibrate musically, like the strings of the Eolian lyre, responsive to every breeze. It is an early affection for nature that produces the poet's enjoyment. All nature forms the kindred of his soul ; without her, all is void and chaotic. All men would be poets, if they would give up their minds, uncramped by the world's folly and opinions, to the early con- templation of the works of the Deity they adore. Poor, foolish worldling ! a poet is not the creature of the study, the slave of the press, the dependant on the public he despises. His mind is not words ; it is feeling, the feel- ing of happiness and harmony, of which a poet only can be conscious. And yet the De- ity only destined a few of us to such feelings ; few, indeed, are the number whom he has marked out as his elect -for such happiness ! Infancy is the bright dawn of poetry, because then the mind is open to every impression, and CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 269 Free from every care. Children are all poets, till the dark clouds of poverty hide the beams with which the world is, too prophane to be illumined ; till the frosts of hardheartedness have nipped the flowers in the bud, that would have perfumed every gale, in our progress through this region of mortality. The ear for music. This is one of those properties which is most of all considered in- nate, and \rith least reason. All men have ears, but, it is said, all men have not ears or- ganized with equal delicacy by nature. This is said, but it is not proved ; and if we have reason to believe that circumstance is the power that forms this organization, on the side of circumstance stands the only proof that can be produced. Children grow up without any particular attachment to music, who have not early in life been accustomed to hear it ; and those who have been often where it was to be heard, have had ears natural hf 270 AN ESSAY ON adapted to the concords. Music was, in Greece, made an object of education, and he who did not understand it, was not politely educated : the same attention to music was paid in the 16th century in England; and there is yet, I believe, extant, a book which belonged to Queen Elizabeth, which our most skilful musicians would not play from without considerable study. That all men of polite education can be taught music, as all have at some periods been taught it, cannot be denied. Had all those nations in which music was a part of education, ears for the science innately ? or, is it not more probable that all men could be taught it, and all men can, whenever fashion makes it indispensible ? Vocal music was most probably produced hy accident; perhaps from the emission of a sound in an uncommon exertion of the voice, which, happening to be pleasing to the ear, was repeated, and modulations formed from CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 271 it. I shall be told, that if it did appear acci- dental, that person may have had an ear who discovered it, and it might not have been dis- covered, had not the sound occurred to him, but to some one without an ear. Lord Mont- boddo, with the singularity which attaches to every part of his writings, has said that men originally sung their words!* Now, if this * His Lordship has first stated, that in all countries whence man and civilization proceeded, there was more musical talent than in those to which they went. After giving a variety of instances of languages, more or less musical, as a proof of the truth of his arguments, he refers to the Chinese. " The question is, whether they first learned to articulate their monosyllables, and then learned these musical notes by which they distinguish them one from another ? Or, whether they first practised music, and then learned articulation? And it appears to me very much more probable, that, having first sung, whether by instinct, or having learned it from the birds, and after that having learned from some nation, with which they had an intercourse, to articulate a few words, they still continued to sing, and, as it was very natural, joined their musical notes to their articulate sounds, and so formed a musi- cal language." See Jllonlboddo on the Origin and Progress of Language, vol. vi. 1792. Whether all men originally sang or not, it is plainly a great argument against innate musical ears, that every native of China, by the nature of his language, must be in some degree a vocal musician. AN EbSAY ON were true, we have only to consider all man- kind placed in similar circumstances with the first race of men, and all would he vocal mu- sicians without innateness. If all were not vocal musicians originally, how will it be proved that the man to whom accident first discovered vocal music, was organized differ- ently from the rest of mankind ? Instrumental music has heen deduced from vocal, but it appears to me, that accident had the greatest share in its production. We will suppose a person forming an instrument of hollow metal, the sound of his hammer upon its side might attract his notice, and to vary the tones, he might construct several similar vessels.* Thus might originate the invention of bell music. A man, in blowing his arrow through a tube, might perceive a whistling noise, which some crevice in the tube had oc- casioned as his breath passed through it ; he * M. Reaumur traces the invention of bells to this source. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. would repeat the experiment ; his neighbours would modify, and hence might he produced >A the wind instruments of the flute kind. In corroboration of this, it may be observed, that most of the flutes discovered amongst the sa- vages, whose manners approach nearest to the original men, are blown from the end, and not side-ways, as is common in more civilized countries. The original thread for sewing to- gether garments, &c. was formed from the slit sinews of animals, and it is most probable that stringed instruments might be made from some of these, after a sound had been acci- dentally struck from them, whilst under the operations of stretching and drying. All mu- sical instruments may be accounted for from some accident ; and why, if the original music and musicians are accidental, are all future musicians to be considered as formed so 'by the Almighty from the womb ? It seems as if the innatists wished to make the Deity pro- fit from the inventions of his creatures, as no 274 AN ESSAY ON man was an innate musician till after music was invented ! M. Buffon and other writers have investiga- ted the anatomy of the ear, in hopes of coin- ing therehy to some explanation of the ear for music, and the attachment which some ani- mals appear to show to the tones of instru- ments. These phenomena they have endea- voured to explain by an equality in the recep- tion of sound by both ears ; but this, I think, depends entirely on conjecture. Tkat the tars must have some particular minute differences in conformation, in order to be different in their mode of receiving sounds, is evident ; but it is also evident, that that conformation, whatever it may be, is the consequence of cir- cumstance ; thus, a dull ear must have been made dull by being unaccustomed to sounds, and a quick ear, quick, by having been accus- tomed to them to a remarkable degree. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 275 Dogs, in a domestic state, in general howl at the sound of a musical instrument, and make such a noise as to induce spectators to imagine they are imitating the tones they 'hear; this, however, is only circumstantial, for a pack of harriers, or fox hounds, when they hear the hunter's horn winding, instead of howling, will come all silent and ohedient to be coupled hy the huntsman. War horses are pleased with the sound of the trumpet, whilst those less accustomed to it would ma- nifest every possible symptom of displeasure ; and horses in a circus, as those well know who have them under their care, are fre- quently enraged when the tunes to which they have been taught to move are discon- tinued for others. If brutes, then, which from their less acute senses seem to require more the interference of Providence in their favor, acquire their attachment to particular pursuits of men circumstantially, what reason has man, who is so much better endowed, to V 2JT6 AN ESSAY ON assert that before his hirth he was an object of his Creator's peculiar protection? So circumstantial are our ideas of music, that I will venture to assert, if a man were to he educated in the hearing of catcals, geese, Host's, and hogs, as encouraging or animating music, as the drum and fife and trumpet are now considered to be, he would consider the latter as most discouraging and disheartening, as being concords, and of course opposite to the other, which was most discordant. Dif- ference in associations produces such differ- ences in ear almost daily. The creaking of a door may affect two men in an opposite man- ner. The one might consider it disagreeable, because it reminded him of the door of a pri- son in which he had long been immured ; the other might imagine it pleasing, because k brought to his recollection the door of the habitation in which had been spent die hap- piest years of his childhood. The war whoop CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 2/7 of the North American Indians is considered by themselves as most spirit-stirring, while to an European, a more horrible combination of discords could not have been invented. If our ears for music are not formed by circum- stance, men have yet to learn that they ever received any education. We have now considered all kinds of ge- nius that are generally supposed to require the assistance of innateness to bring them forward, though circumstances alone can ad- vance them to perfection ; and, in support of our arguments, we now proceed to examine the commencement of the lives of several per- sons who have been considered remarkable for their extraordinary geniuses and capacities.* * On commencing this examination, I refer my readers to an Essay of Mr Bigland, on the influence of circumstance on character. Bigland's Essays, 2 vols, octavo; printed at Don- caster. 278 AN ESSAY ON ^ Political characters. There are no very remarkable circumstances extant which di- rected Demosthenes to 'make himself an ora- tor, but those which we know were sufficient to have a very considerable effect. The con- duct of his guardians deprived him of his estate, and, in a place like Athens, this was a dreadful privation amongst those who might have been his equals, but who considered him far their inferior. The recovery of that was sufficient to influence a man to immense exer- tions, where none would exert themselves for him without emolument, which he could not bestow. When he declaimed in public for his property, every person who had become acquainted with the circumstances of his case, would applaud perhaps the matter, and the occasion of his speaking, rather than the manner and the execution of his speech. By a favorable decision, seeing himself at once in possession of all his former affluence, his whole soul was fixed upon befriending the CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 279 state which had done so much in his favor. His exertions to become eloquent, and his consequent success, are too well known to re- quire comment. The only question is, did his exertions form an adequate cause of his success ? And who can imagine that a man who underwent such fatigue in curing him- self of stammering and awkward gestures; who retired night and day to a solitary cavern to imitate and transcribe the best authors and orators of his time, and to form a manner of his own ; who in fact had RESOLVED to be an orator, would return from his labors, la- menting that he had no "genius," and that without " capacity" every effort was unavail- ing ! He knew that exertion would produce what innateness could not effect ; that a mind which he had made strong, would shew its strength; and that circumstances alone had produced the resolution of which the state would reap the benefit. S2 280 AN. ESSAY ON John Sobieski, the patriot-king of Poland, was horn in an advantageous situation ; edu- cated for a statesman and a soldier, and his genius broke forth, as the innatists would say, by the accidental examination of a tomb- stone. He exerted himself; and his brothers and relations were not so famous, because they did not fall into trains of circumstances equally fortunate.* The famous Prince of Conde was attended by domestics who were chosen for their vir- tues ; his tutor and assistant were equally worthy and learned; and unremitted atten- tion was paid to his daily exercises, bodily and mental, and who will say that this did not form the character so equally famous in the cabinet and the field.-)- * Palmer's Life of John Sobieski. t His infant education was entrusted to citizens' wives, in- stead of ladies of the court ; and he was brought up in the pure air of the country, instead of Paris. See his Life by De- formau.r ; Paris 1767. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 281 Christina, Queen of Sweden, and daughter of Gustavus Adolphus, when very young, on occasion of a salute of cannon having been given to her father, clapped her hands and exclaimed, "more, more!" This is, no doubt, a proof of the innateness of courage which she had imbibed from her father! The fact requires some explanation. Child- ren, it should be recollected, are naturally fond of noise, and are only frightened at those objects at which they see others express fear. No child is afraid the first time it rides in a carriage, till it sees its mother or nurse afraid of the unevenhesses of the road. When child- ren shew that they can stand undismayed within hearing of a dreadful noise, or within sight of a terrible object, it is not courage that they display ; it is insensibility to danger, for they are unacquainted with any dangerous consequences from either the noise or the ob- ject. The brave man shows himself fearless in the midst of danger, but he knows and S3 282 AN ESSAY ON appreciates the evils by which he is sur- rounded. Mr Pitt is a singular instance of the effects of an attention to any particular accomplish- ment. Born with a thousand advantages, the greatest possible care was taken to fill his mind with political knowledge, and to grace it by elocution ;* and with a strict application to every thing that ould advance him in these attainments, what need is there to won- der that he excelled. But a more singular instance of circum- stantial education than any yet mentioned, because more prominent and universally ac- knowledged, is the progress of Napoleon Buonaparte to the throne of France. The son of a man of respectability, who had shewn himself brave under General Paoli, and born * Clifford's Life of Pitt. See also an excellent sketch in Rees's Cyclojxidia. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 283 in the very crisis of his country's fate, the circumstances of his birth produced in him a military ardour, which blazed forth in the exercises of the Brienne academy. Accidental superiority was improved by continued suc- cess and constant application, and the boy who had been victorious in laying siege to fortifications of snow, became the conqueror at Marengo. And who would assert that the man bred in the tumult of revolutions was indebted to innateness for his promotion ? If there ever were one man more indebted to fortune than another, it was Buonaparte ; he had the penetration to perceive that circum- stances regulate equally men's actions and opinions ; and when he saw one string in the harp of " Chance" vibrating in his favor, he struck it again and again, till every chord sounded in unison. Poets. William Shakspeare was born at Stratford upon Avon, which, if in a flat coun- 284 AN ESSAY ON try, is nevertheless picturesque, and was brought up amongst a class of people who lit- tle disguise their manners, at a period when frankness was a virtue.* He was hy an acci- dent occasioned by his unfortunate wildness obliged to seek refuge in the metropolis. His wildness had kept his mind in a state of acti- * It is singular that Dr. Gall and Helvetius should think of differing, the former from the latter, upon so trivial a circum- stance as the trade of Shakspeare's father. Dr. Gall says he \vas a butcher ; Helvetius says he was a woolcomber. The rea- son why the butcher account is adopted, is, that there is a proof of innateness in an anecdote that is related of tlie young dramatist. It is said that he would sometimes kill a calf, and he would " do it in a high style, and make a speech ''* Wool- combers and butchers are not very far asunder, and probably the dispute originated ia the father's pursuing one trade, and some one of Shakspeai'e'a relations, whom he sometimes visited, professing the other. Whether he was a butcher or wool- comber, however, we will suppose his son sometimes to kill a calf and make a speech over it. He would not, surely do that without some cause, without some exhibition of players or mountebanks had given him the idea ; and after all, this is only one of the foolish recollections which people love to seize, when they see a man called great, in order to prove that he was al- ways something different from themselves. " See some miscellaneous collections, published with letters from the Bod- 'eian Librarv. .7 vols. octavo. CAPACITY AND GENIUS.. 285 vity, ai)d feeling the necessity there was of his procuring himself a livelihood, he determined that his profession should he mental. It is most probable that he turned player first, and finding his talent, or, as the innatists would say, his " genius" did not l^that way, retir- ed to the closet with a natural determination to write, when he could not act. It is suppo- sed that we have not his first dramatic essays; and, before he became generally celebrated, he must have consulted and studied the fa- mous dramatic authors who preceded him. He saw the difference between London man- ners and those of home, and of course, in his best pieces, he has given us circumstances sup- posed to have happened at his birth place. None of his fables are invented ; passages which we most admire, were copied from the mouths or examples of others ;* and he has * There is extant an anecdote which shows plainly the man- ner in which Shakspeare procured many of his best scenes am! -Men?. It is a letter from n fellow of Christ-church Coll^i-. '286 AN ESSAY ON followed history with astonishing minuteness.* By the great character of superior nature and a member of a club which used to assemble at the Globe, in Black friars, to one Marie. " Friend Marie, I must desyre that my syster hyr watche, and the cookerie book you promysed, may be sente bye the man. I never longed tor thy company more than last night : we were all very merrye at the Globe, when Ned Alleyn did not scruple to affyrme pleasauntely to thy friende Will, that he had stolen his speeche about the qualityes of an actor's excellencye in Hamlet hys Trajedye, from conversations manyfold whych had passed betweene them, and opinyons given by Alleyn touchinge the subjecte. Shakspeare did not take this talke in good sorte : but Jonson put an end to the strife with wittylye remarkinge, ' This affaire needeth no contentione ; you stole it from Ned, no double ; do not marvel. Have you not seen him act tymes out of number ? Believe me most syncerilie, Your's, G. PEEL." Alleyn was one of the best actors of his day, and though the compliment, of Jonson (Ben), seems to take off all suspicion of the immediate theft with which he was charged, it gives us an additional proof to the many instances already narrated in the best commentaries on Shakspeare, that he was a man who paid no attention to his genius, when he could get any thing else to help him forward. The anecdote I have transcribed is from Dodsley's Annual Register for 1770. Its not having appeared in any edition of his works, is my excuse for giving it here. * Shakspeare says, " Saddle white Surrey for the field to- " morrow Now it is well known that Richard the third rode CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 287 which his plays have acquired, he has super- seded the authors who wrote before him, so that some whose nature was almost equal, are forgotten since it became the fashion to praise Shakspeare. There was, no doubt, some minute circumstance which directed him to the stage and the drama, perhaps the example of one of his wild friends ; be that as it may, we have related too many circumstances, to suffer his excellence to be attributed to his in- nate powers. It may seem singular that I should instance next a person comparatively so lately known as through Leicester on a great white horse, which is said to have been his favorite. Shakspeare's great genius appears to consist in giving as many general particulars as possible to his readers particular facts with so much general ornament as to make them pleasing to every mind of taste, and sometimes general circumstauces, so artfully contrived as to appear to every person to whom they are represented as in some degree particular. These, and a strict reliance on nature, though more generally extraordinary and prominent nature than common, will give any man a poetical genius. -88 AN ESSAY ON Robert Burns, but no man lias perused the little lie has written, without acknowledging that, for adherence to nature, he might securely be called the Shakspeare of Scotland. He de- serves particular notice, if it were for no other reason than that he has described the genius of his country throwing her inspiring mantle over him whilst at the plough. Though it is not ac- curately innate, there is something like innate- ness in the idea. But he himself gives us the origin of his genius :-T-" Though it cost the " schoolmaster some thrashings, I made an " excellent English scholar, and by the time " I was ten or eleven years of age, I was a " critic in substantives, verbs, and participles. ie In my infancy and boyish days too, I owed " much to an old woman who resided in the " family, remarkable for her ignorance, cre- 4C dulity, and superstition. She had, I sup- " pose, the largest collection in the country of " tales and songs, concerning devils, ghosts, " faeries, brownies, witches, warlocks, spun- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 289 " kies, kelpies, elf-candles, dead lights, " wraiths, apparitions, cantraips, giants, en- f( chanted towers, dragons, and other trum- " pery. This cultivated the latent seeds of " poetry." The latter part of this sentence may be looked upon as an argument in favor of innate genius, hut, in another part of the same letter, he says of some other person, " I " saw no reason why I might not rhyme as " well as he."* Dr. Johnson was the son of a bookseller, and his father, as he somewhere characteri- zes him, was a shrewd man, and an observer of the times. His father's shop was the only one of the kind in Litchfield, and for many miles round ; and he was so short-sighted as to be unable to join in the sports of his com- panions; nay, he could not go to school with- out an attendant. The Doctor mentions * See a letter of Burns to Dr. Moore, in Currie's edition of his works. 290 AN ESSAY ON many of the books which he read for his amusement, and, as it might naturally he ex- peeled, his peculiar opportunities and situation produced an immense difference between him and his associates, and much to his advantage. That difference gradually widened, from a su- periority to his original companions, to a su- periority above the literature of his time. From the religious books the shop of his fa- ther furnished, may be traced his puritanical bigotry; his melancholy proceeded from the disorders with which he was afflicted, and his overbearing disposition, from his contriving to be the head of almost every company of which he was a member. Concentred within himself, his composition became his chief care, and his poetry was beautiful, because his sight enabled him only to perceive the bold beauties of nature, whilst it was too de- fective to suffer him to investigate her mi- nutely. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 291 Cowley and Boileau were both influenced to become poets by the perusal of celebrated authors ; the former wrote early, from having found accidentally where he sate, the Faery Queen of Spenser ; the latter did not write till he was forty, because till then no circum- stance impelled him. Rousseau did not become an author till he was forty years of age, and not then, till an academical question drew him into the pro- fession*. The famous Lopez de Vega was the son of a poet, and he himself was made one by his father's constant care to turn every rising idea in the mind of his son towards poetry. Laurence Sterne, (for who does not reckon a man of his feelings amongst poets ?) while * See his letter to the Archbishop of Paris, on the subject of his life. '292 AN ESSAY ON yet a boy at school, at Halifax, in Yorkshire, wrote his name in large letters on the ceiling of the school-room.* The assistant chastised him severely, hut the master praised him, and would not let the inscription be erased, for, he said, he always thought Sterne was "a boy of genius." Might not the master's idea of Sterne's genius be accidental, and that very compliment be the occasion of his exertions, and his after- wards manifesting such superior abilities ? Or, perhaps, the master was a person of more than common penetration; knew the slight causes of genius, and sometimes paid undue compliments to induce application. Christopher Smart and Robert Fergusson were both too weak to have any play-fellows but books, and both became poets, because both were accustomed to the same kind of reading. * See his account of his own life, in a letter to his daughter. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 293 The unfortunate Cowper himself relates the cause of his poetry. " Dejection of spirits, " which I suppose may have prevented many " a man from becoming an author, made me " one. I find constant employment necessary, " and therefore I take care to be constantly " employed."* Armstrong and Mickle both lived on the banks of the Esk, and those who have ever been there, will know how likely it was for persons in their circumstances to become poets. Thomas WJfarton, once poet laureat, used to relate, that when his father, accompanied by his brother and himself, was returning from seeing Windsor Castle, the first said in in his hearing, "Thomas goes on, and takes " no notice of any thing he has seen." To * See his letter to his cousin. Hayley's Lifeojf C'owper, vol. i. T 294 AN ESSAY ON this observation, Wharton attributed much of his castellated poetry. Falconer, the author of the Shipwreck, was bred to the sea, and by some accident was impelled to write a poem, for which the cir- cumstances of his life had qualified him. Is there, then, any thing like a shadow of innateness in any one of the instances we have adduced ? We may be answered in the negative; and we shall, no doubt, be told, that circumstances do not disprove the exist- ence of innateness, though they alone can bring it forth ! If, however, the very power that is said to bring into the world another power of disputed being cannot prove its ex- istence, it must be left for proof till we have acquired the experience of a few thousand years more than we have at present. Musical men. Young Crotch, of Norwich, CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 295 appears to have been one of the most remark- able musicians, from the early commencement of his attachment to the science. The publi- cations of the time (1778-9, &c.) extolled him as a prodigy of genius. But was this prodigy educated in the woods by wolves; or, did he make an instrument in a wilderness, and play upon it, where never instrument was made, or played upon before ? Far from it. His father, an ingenious mechanic, built an organ in the same room in which the child generally remained, and having been con- stantly in the habit of playing almost from the first moment after the child's attention was attracted, that attention gradually, as is natural, became fixed to the most prominent object which was presented to it,* The or- gan had been played upon from the period of * Those who have ever read Mad., de Genlis' Knights of the Swau, will recollect, the interesting account which she gives- of the effect the organ had, when first heard by the Caliph Haroun Al-Raschid, and they will almost be tempted to forget that T2 296 AN ESSAY ON the child's birth, till he was a year and a half old, and then, and not till then, was any symptom of pleasure shewn for the organ. If there is any wonder in all this, it is, that the child had not shewn his gratification at hearing the music sooner. Then it was so astonishing to perceive a child touch the key notes of an instrument to have any particular tune played that it wanted ! Who does not recognize in this the natural principle of imi- tation. The first note or two of the tunes the father played most frequently were all the child could remember, and if it could have remembered them all, it would have touched them all, because its father did so before it. A monkey would have done the same. But, then, it was confessed that the child never the story is fiction, from the appearance of truth it carries with it. There are numerous instances of people fainting when they first heard this instrument, or rather combination of instru- ments, played upon, and yet a new and well- played, full-toned organ, could not make a child a musician, without the inter- ference of innateness ! CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 297 played a tune till after a better player than ordinary, a Mrs Lutman, had been at his fa- ther's, and then, when he was two years old and three weeks, he learnt to play God save the King. We are told, in an account writ- ten v by Dr. Burney, in the Philosophical Transactions, and by various other accounts, that the father and mother were honest work- ing people. That they were working people, is one of the greatest possible arguments against the fact, that the child played of his own accord upon the instrument; and the man who would believe that young Crotch had not been taught, and taught by great ex- ertion too, to play upon the organ, would stretch his credulity to believe that this world was an egg laid by an enormous hen from Mahomet's paradise. Dr. Burney says, " It " has likewise been imagined by some, that " every child might be taught music in the " cradle, if the experiment were made ; but " to those it may with truth be said, that T3 298 AN ESSAY ON fs such an experiment is daily made on every " child, by every mother and nurse that is " able to form a tune, on every part of the " globe. In Italy, the ninne nonne, or lulla- " bies, are fragments of elegant melodies, &c. " and those, though they help to form the " national taste, are not found to stimulate 16 the attention of Italian children to melody," &c. &c. This is the argument of Dr. Bur- ney, who does not appear to have known that the stronger a sound is, the more forcibly does it affect the drum of the ear, and that an organ sounds more forcibly than a wo- man's " lullaby !" Till I can hear of another child whose attention was attracted in the same manner to an organ, and who did not become a musical genius, I shall not be dis- satisfied with my own arguments, nor even then, till I can be shewn an exact similarity of circumstances. Handel early took a fancy for music and CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 299 musical instruments, which some circumstance had given him ; but what this circumstance was, none of his biographers have informed us. His friends had designed him for ano- ther profession, and therefore tried every means of prevailing on him to relinquish a pursuit they considered by no means to his interest. In vain, said those friends, when they saw their efforts unavailing, that nature was opposed. In vain, I would say, did they oppose the disposition which circumstances had produced. At first he pursued, secretly, the profession he was openly /orbidden, till his parents consented to have him taught music. And how do you explain, cry some, the difference in the effect of circumstances ; some men will cling to a profession, in spite of every opposition, and some will yield, when requested, and follow the profession for which they were designed by their parents ? This is plainly explicable by circumstances. Accord- ing as the genius has imbibed more or less 300 AN ESSAY ON a spirit of self-willed independence, or as those who wish him to change his profession use mild or tyrannical means of influencing him, the change is effected, or all endeavours to bring it about are obstinately resisted. Ben- venuto Cellini, who had adopted the profes- sion of a sculptor and jewel engraver, was commanded to learn to play upon the flute, by his father, in a most tyrannical manner ; he refused, as might have been expected; but, when in a dream he saw his parent almost dying from his refusal, and beseeching him, if he would save his life, to apply himself to music, he begun to learn flute-playing, and soon acquired considerable excellence.* Players and dramatic authors. Garrick was accustomed in his infancy to the sight of dramatic performances, and was consequently influenced to the stage.f * See his Life written by himself. f See Bosvvell's Life of Johnson, and Davics' Life of Garrick. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 301 Tate Wilkinson, the well -known northern stage manager, was directed to the stage in the same manner, as was that charming ac- tress, George Ann Bellamy.* Henderson first imbibed a notion of thea- tricals, from a volume of Shakspeare, which his mother gave him to read when very young. Cooke \Vas very early in life drawn by his play-fellows behind the scenes of a theatre ; the amusement he procured there pleased him, and, by degrees, his fondness increased into a passion for the life of a performer, f But as singular an instance of the effect of circumstances as was ever known, at present exists, and is one of the brightest ornaments the English stage ever possessed. Mr Kean, * See Memoirs of his own life, by Tate Wilkinson, 'and George Ann Bellamy's Apology for her own life. f See Dnnlap's Memoirs of Cooke, 2 vols. octavo. 302 AN ESSAY ON if we may believe the best accounts which have been given of his early life, performed the parts of devils and cupids at the age of two years ! Indeed I need only refer my readers to any authentic account of this exraordinary man they can procure, and they will find a series of circumstances gradually producing a genius that commands almost universal admi- ration, and to which even his enemies allow the merit of originality. Parents frequently complain of the foolish fancies which their children have taken for theatricals, whilst they overlooked the cause of such fancies, which originated in their own conduct. Those who have already become stage-struck, should be allowed full vent to their passion, and it will most probably be overwhelmed by disgust. To avoid such dis- agreeable circumstances, however, children should not be allowed to visit the theatre, even to see George Barnwell and the Christ- CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 303 mas Pantomime, till they were convinced that all men were not naturally designed for the performance of tragedy and comedy. Parents ridiculously imagine that such fancies are in- evitable at a particular age ; but if they did not send their children to the theatre, because Mrs. this, and Mrs. that, send theirs, they would soon perceive the fortunate result, and we should have no more stage-struck ap- prentices. I cannot cite a better instance of a generally literary man, who owed his propensities to cir- cumstance, than Mr. Gibbon. He was, in his infancy, weak, and clumsy at the common amusements of youth ; and, therefore, requir- ed a substitute at home for the exercise in which he could not partake with his ptty-fel- lows. His aunt's library furnished him with this substitute, and that and other repositories he ransacked with avidity. By a stock of li- terary information thus acquired, he laid a 304 AN ESSAY ON foundation for future eminence, which he soon displayed for his own recreation, after he had been sent, by his father's displeasure, to Lau- sanne, for having turned catholic. By reflec- tions on his own folly, his religious opinions were soon fixed, and, in every transaction of his after life, the effect of early circumstances was predominant. Divines. Dr. Priestley was made religious by the instructions of a calvinistic aunt with whom he resided in his youth, and every one who has perused his life, knows the circum- stances which made him an Unitarian, and af- terwards confirmed him in his faith. Dr. Geddes was born in a cottage, in which the bible was the most attractive object, and the religious life of his parents and the neigh- bourhood in which they lived, will sufficiently account for his extensive biblical application, and its consequences. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 305 Painters and sculptors. Hans Holbein's father was a correct painter, though he never attained to any considerable eminence, Joseph of Arpino, or Giaseppino, was car- ried to Rome very young as a color grinder, and catching the enthusiasm of his employers, he became famous in their profession. Gessner, the son of the author of the Idyls, became a painter from the instructions and example of his father. Benjamin West, whilst a child, in America, drew a likeness of a sleeping infant sister. Whether parental fondness thought well of his sketch, or it really happened to be extraordi- nary, we are not informed, but he was encou- raged to pursue the profession, and became a painter.* * Gait's Life and Studies of West. 306 AN ESSAY ON George Morland's fathdr was a painter in crayons ; " like most children, he imitated the " employments of those around him, and fre- " quently amused himself with the pencil."* He was encouraged, and his fame is known. At the birth of Michael Angelo, " Mercury " and Venus were in conjunction with Jupi- " ter for the second time ;" at that period ju- dicial astrology was in vogue, and it was pro- phesied that Michael would be a famous man, particularly in the arts of " painting, sculp - " ture, and architecture ;" add to this, that his nurse was the wife of a stone mason ; her father had been of the same profession, and we shall not wonder that Michael became a sculptor, when the chisel was his play-thing.f A prophecy, or a kind of augury, w r as ta- ken at the birth of Benvenuto Cellini, which * Davve's Life of G. Morland. f Duppa's Life of M. Angelo, quarto, p. 3. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 30? produced nearly the same effect upon him, as that we have just related did upon Michael Angelo. Naturalists. Saussure's father was an agriculturalist, and he followed his example. He gradually became fond of minutely inves- tigating plants, and at length was made a con- firmed botanist by the conversation of Bonnet. Linnaeus's " father was a singular lover of " gardening. The small ness of his income " obliged him at the same time to make the " best of husbandry. Flowers were the first " things they gave the smiling babe, and it " seemed to take a natural delight in the va- " riety of their colors." He appears to have been partly educated by a botanist of the name of Lanaerius.* Thus I have given what I conceived the * Stoever's Life of Linnaeus, translated by Trapp, p. 3 5. 308 AN ESSAY ON circumstances which produced many of the geniuses that are considered innate, and on the most careful examination I could make of many hundred characters besides, I have not been able to find the least argument in favor of innate genius. Where such arguments are to be found, but in the lives of the men who had genius, the innatists alone can determine. Many have actually allowed the influence of circumstances on the human character, who are the firmest advocates of innate powers ; and they say, with Dr. Johnson, that the true genius is a mind of great natural strength, in- fluenced by accident to some particular pur- suit. This is only capacity. But if they al- low that circumstances form the human cha- racter, where is the proof that the mind was originally stronger than common ? We know it is often stronger after birth : but that is from circumstances, and from circumstances only ; and we have no reason to infer, either CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 309 of the mind, the body or any other thing whatever, the primary to have been the same as is the present situation, and differing only in degree. Because the mind is great now, it was great at first ! Because the mind is poor and imbecile now, it was weak and poor before it existed ! These are the arguments in favor of innateness. We fear we have oc- cupied our readers too long in answering such assertions, which, if they could prove genius to be innate, would first prove the innate po- verty of genius in the minds of those who made them. Our readers will see at a glance the whole course of argument we have pursued, as we shall now proceed, in the conclusion, to sum up our positions. In the 'iirst place, we have shewn that what is properly denominated the mind is not innate, for the mind is made up of ideas, and r 310 AN ESSAY ON is, in fact, a power which is composed of them ; that a certain repetition of ideas upon a sort of blank of the senses produces the power by which they are recognized and exercised, and that, therefore, no ideas being innate, nothing can be innate which is the consequence of ideas. If no persons have minds when they are first born, it is plain no one man can be constituted mentally superior to another; all must .be equally mindless. Supposing the mind to be innate, however, we have proceeded to argue upon the sup- posed original superiority. We have shewn that there is no original superiority known at the birth, and of course there is nothing but conjecture to prove that there is any superi- ority, except for circumstances ; that an ori- ginal superiority is contrary to the universal benevolence of the Almighty, and when be- lieved in, is likely to produce, and has produ- ced, the most horrible consequences; and that when the evil does not extend to its CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 311 greatest height, the helief has a had tendency, by preventing a desire for improvement, and destroying hope of emendation. We have proceeded to shew that capacity is formed hy reasoning and memory; and that, therefore, neither of these being innate, because no man can reason without ideas, or recollect, when he has had nothing to remember, it is impos- sible that extraordinary capacity, in other words, original mental superiority, can be in- nate, which is composed of reasoning and memory particularly powerful. Reasoning and memory, then, plainly appear, by our ar- guments, to be formed by circumstances di- rected to the mind by education or otherwise, in a state of civilization; because we have had no instance of any person having been seclu- ded all his life from society, who had these faculties in common with the most illiterate citizen, and there have been instances of men who have been found so secluded, almost literally without minds. That ideots are not II 2 312 AN ESSAY ON considered as men by philosophy, we have assumed, because they have in no respect either genius or capacity ; and that they can form no objection to our doctrine, because their infirmity proceeds entirely from some accident at present unknown, but most pro- bably the negligence of the nurse in exciting the attention at a proper period, or some con- cussion or disorganization in the womb, or at the time of parturition. Under the head of mal -organization, we have shewn that defects which are discovered in the brain are more probably owing to the want of education, than the want of education to them ; and that all imperfections, as of deafness, dumbness, blindness, &c. are only circumstantial ob- structions to the capacity, and riot arguments for natural differences. We have then taken as concise a survey of craniology as was con- sistent with the importance at present at- tached to the system, and have shewn that it is without foundation, except in the head of CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 313 Dr. Gall; thus, I hope, destroying one of the great objections which have been raised up tc the arguments of Helvetius on our subject, in the present times. From creation, and from general acceptation, we have then drawn arguments in favor of original equality of capacity, the latter of which being from the universal consent of mankind, has every presumption of truth in its favor. Genius, which is particular, as capacity was general superiority, we have endeavour- ed to shew is not innate, even from its most, appropriate definition ; as indeed, how can that be innate, the foundation of which is ac- cidental. We have adopted the definition of Dr. Gerard, and shewn that it is correct, as well as inconsistent with innateness. That men of genius arc the same as other men, and that no man is designe:! by nature for a pro- fession, we have proved, we hope, satisfacto- rily. After shewing that men of extraordinary US 314 AN ESSAY ON \ powers are believed in general much greater than they are, from a kind of infatuation, and that the phrases " it is my nature," " he " soon excelled his tutor," and the like, prove nothing like innateness, we have proceeded to show that there is no evidence that mankind are of more than one species, and that, there- fore, there can be no large intellectual differ- ence, i. e. between the inhabitants of one cli- mate and another, except from circumstances. We have then entered into a short examina- tion of the genius of language and nations, and shewn that they are all circumstantial ; after which, we have demonstrated that mu- sic, painting, and poetry, are necessary arts, or discovered accidentally, and therefore can- not be innate, but must be circumstantial. As a proof of the effect of circumstances, -we have instanced a number of characters formed by accident, arranging them under their se- veral classes. CAPACITY AND GENIUS. 315 If, after a survey of our arguments, our readers should consider themselves as not yet at a proper conclusion, I am sorry that I have not been ahle to place my doctrine in a more decisive situation ; but I trust I shall have in- fluenced many to reflection, who had before seen error in the garb of truth. On taking a view of my own reasoning, I fear much that what I said in the commence- ment, about the novelty of what I had writ- ten, may be looked upon as egotism and pre- sumption. When an author first examines his own labor, he may be compared to a man standing at the base of what he thinks a py- ramid, which seems to him to rise from the broadest possible foundation, and to pierce the heavens with its summit, whilst a distant spectator views it but as a hillock, and passes onward uninterested. I now leave my essay, however, in the hands of a disinterested public, confident that if a man endeavour to con- 316 AN ESSAY, &C. vince them which is truth, they will at least weigh what he has done, before they declare it to be erroneous: APPENDIX. /a think, will not this be overthrown?'- p. 28. I supposed that the absence of thought at the birth might be foolishly imagined to be the same as a cessation from thought, at any other period when the mind was in existence} but to every rational person, this must plainly appear impossi- ble. After a cessation from thought, we generally recollect something that happened previous to our ceasing to think, but immediately after birth we have no cessation from thought, for we have never thought at all. "Nothing can disprove universal equality, but arguments deduced "from the existence of a particular Providence." p. 30. " The " Deity vsill be recognized," &c. p. 37. . It is impossible to say how far population would in- crease in such a state, or how far provisions would increase, tvhen till men had a share in their cultivation, instead of, as now, being chiefly employed on other far different concerns ; but it is most probable that provisions and consumers would still be proportioned. In such a state of society, there would not be the enormous waste which luxuiy now constantly produces. Mankind would not live in crowded* cities, and more room would be left for cultivation. Besides, many of the animal creation which are now u^ed for domestic purposes, would become ar- ticles of food. In sliort, there is always such an equality be- Burke's Vindication of Natural Society, p. l. APPENDIX. 325 t-.vixt food and consumers,, that 1 think it would be impossible for mankind to starve in any situation. But at some future period I shall enter more fttlly on these considerations. Ift arty- other state of society than that at present established, truth ought to be knotvn to be snch by the evidence brought forward to each succeeding mind, and men should not take the d&fc*a^ ffceir ancestors as unquestionable. Axioms might be considered true without examination, and what Was in one age of disputation, will, in succeeding time, gradually the nature of axiom. Thus, much labour is pre- vented even to those who study things from the commencement. Btft'iw nothing Ought the careful examination we have recom- mended to be practised more, than with regard to subjects Whteh respect the present, welfare and future happiness; and where the latter is concerned, the former is equally a subject of consideration. Now, the general practice in religion, Christian, mahomttan, and almost every other, is to educate children in the 'ceremonies and doctrines which belong to them. To make the cross, for instance, with one sect, and the genuflexion with another ; to consider Friday sacred with one, Saturday with a -eeond, and Sunday with a third; with one to make restriction-: wV^he Use of meats, with another to drink no wine. Would it not be much more adviseable to bring children up in the prin- ciples Of sound morality, without connexion with any >ect, till they were able to judge for themselves which sect was least ex- ceptionable r It may be objected to this, that there is a text \vhic-H requires children to be brought to Christ, or, as those who make it ail objection say, to his church : " Suffer lithe " children to come unto me, and forbid them not." The reason why Jesus said this 'is evident. He wished as many children to b( ; brought to him as possible, in order that the recollection of him '"Aright be strong in their imaginations as they grew up, and 'thus they wtfuld assist in disseminating the doctrines he X 326 preached. If, in after years, the children could not reraembt-r the remarkable circumstances which they beheld, the enthusi- astic recollections of their aged relations, on thi-ir. death-beds, would hand down sufficient for them to transmit to their chil- dren. Ridiculous is the conduct of thoe preachers,. whoJ in the spirit of bigotry, request children to be .brought to their places of worship, for the inculcation of their religion,, oft the the foundation of this text. For what else is it but bigotry, ye Christians, to educate your children in the fuith of your fci- thers? Is it not common, in the transaction.-; of life, first to examine the truth of any thing, and then to believe it - } but, ia your religion, ye first teach your children to believe without exam-nation, and then perhaps one in an hundred examines 4 he evidence on which his faith is founded ! In God's name, let the principles of morality be inculcated; let not your religion be taught till reason can exert herself; and let mat your enemies see that it is founded on a rock impregnable to infidelity, . and fortified by reason, whose presence crumbles the faith of other Sectaries into powder. Shew them that your religion can be taught in a manner far different from that of t lie grand lama of Thibet, the triple and \et single god of Hindostan, and the obscene deities of Malabar, and yet that it can be believed- Alas I that the Christian religion, which is capable of confounding all sceptics who oppose it, should be taught and credited along with tales of seven- league boots and mountains of sugar candy ! Some who object to our arguments, say, what necessity for ull men to become geniuses ? Is it not sufficient that perfection t/o of a moral nature ? By the state of society we have been advocating, it will be seen that all mankind would naturally possess what is called genius, and here the. objection may be brought with peculiar force. But what is more likely to ad- vance us in morality, than the study of the Deity with whom it is aid we are hereafter to hold converse? And what can bet- APPENDIX. ? 327 ter promote that study than the contemplation of his works, the proper understanding of which is the sole end of philosophy : When the philosopher feels his soul rise within him, as he inves- tigates the wonders of creation ; when the poet is tired by sen- sations which nature only can inspire ; are these not proofs that man was made for enjoyment, and that he himself has been the cause of his own unhappiness? When men have been enabled, without prejudice, to seek and adopt the true religion ; when they have given themselves up to enjoyments as comparatively endless as those of eternity, the catalogue of crimes with which every day renews our horrible acquaintance will be removed with the cause ; gold will give place to a search after wealth which will excite no evil passions; universal peace will succeed perpetual war, and mankind will be deified, even before they are immortalized. We must now conclude these observations, on what we con- sider to be a state of society more adapted to the dignity of man than the present. If they are thought, in general, too romantic, at least let the few observations on the advancement of human learning be attended to; and let me entreat tutors, parents, and guardians, if they wish, the children under their care to produce any benefit to society, to educate them from the precepts of the most skilful in every tiling they teach them ; in every art or science they learn, let them be instructed in its rudiments from the works of the highest, in its practice ; thus, they will be enabled to erect, not a foolish Babel of brick and bitumen, but an intellectual edifice that will approach nearer in every age to the loftiest heyven of perfection. " When not encumbered icith a weight of evidence," &c. p. 4O. This ought to have been, " when not encumbered with a weight " of evidence as to its difficulty." What one train of circum- stances makes easy to one man, another train makes difficult. 328 APPENDIX. to another man. People of different countries, and at different periods, think pursuits difficult or easy, just as circumstances have made them. Difficulty, then, is entirely circumstantial ; for as a man's mind is ciicutiistanctd, he is enabled to sohe tht most difficult problem in 'algebra, or he finds it an almost in- surmountable task to explain the simplest proposition in Euclid. When the trains of circumstances can be investigated and traced from beginning to end, which we may be enabled to do when mankind live in situations a little more uniform, we shall know how to educate our children, so that much of the bug- bear, difficulty, will vanish from before their minds like a cloud from before the sun. " There is considerable difference in the rapidity of receiving " ideas, in the first few years after birth." p 47. Besides the difference in common circumstances, there is thought to be a very great difference in the reception of ideas, from diseases. Many diseases are considered hereditary, and, of course, it is said that a man may have in one sense his mind innate, for it is formed according to the operation of the disorder, whatever it may be, at the time when attention is first excited. The well-known founder of what is called the Brunonian system of medicine, is of opinion that there is no such thing as an here- ditary disease.* " A taint transmitted from parents to their offspring, and celebrated un- der the appellation of hereditary, is a mere tale, or there is nothing in the fun- damental part of this doctrine. The sons of the rich who succeed to their lather's estate, succeed also to his gout : those who are excluded from the estate, escape the disease also, unless they bring it on by their own conduct. Nay, if there be but two diseases in the strict sense of the word, they must be either all, or none of them hereditary. This supposition makes the noxious powers superfluous, which have been proved to be every thing respecting dis- ease;* and as it is therefore absurd, so the truth of the latter opinion must l>c admitted." The Elements of Medicine, by John Brovn, M. D. Dr. Beddocs'' edition, vol. 2, p. 245. " Though Peter's father may have been affected with the gout, it does not follow that Peter must be affected; because, by a proper way or" life, that is by * Set from p. i, ol. I, to p. us, ami other parts of the T<1. for an account of Hies* powers, which are plainly circunutantial. APPENDIX. 329 Helvetius says, that it is even in the womb that the child ' ieai ns to distinguish between sickness and health." This is the true state of the case. If the womb be capable of carrying an infection from the parent to the fistus, then, inasmuch as the child happened to be born of an infected parent, and as that parent, or some one of her ancestors, accidentally caught the disease which is communicated, (for it could never be in- born or inn vte in the first instance) that eff-ct of the disease upon the mind is entirely circumstantial. Nay, the effect of di-e:v;e, if all mankind were infected in the womb, is only par- tial, for it injures the mind only so far as there is a slow circu- lation of circumstances, which, had they succeeded each other quicker, would have entirely prevented any mental injury. We often see children, whose parents were dreadfully affected by disease, as sprightly as if no infection had been communi- cated; whilst children, whose parents have not been more vio- lently affected, have been all their lives the victims of morbid melancholy. " What connexion can a hooked nose, or peculiar mouth, have " with the future life of g, person who is not yet determined in the " path he is to pursue?" p. 71. A person may have a face which seems to foretel a particular mode of life, or to point out a par- cular genius, and as soon as his features become fixed, a strong circumstance may completely overturn any conclusion a phy- siognomist might have drawn from his countenance. Thus, adapting his excitement to his stamina, he may have learned to evade his fa- ther's disease." " If the same person who, from h.is own fault and improper management, has fallen into the disease, afterwards, by a contrary management and by taking good care of himself, prevents and'remaves the disease, as it has been lately discovered, what then is become of hereditary taint?" 44 Lastly, if the gout is the same disease as dyspepy, arises from the same noxious powers, and is removed by the same remedies; if the only symptom in which it can possibly be thought to differ, the inflammation, is only a slight part of the disease, depending- upon the same original cause, and ready to yield to the same remedies, what signify distinctions ab >ut either, that do not apply to both ?" p. '2i6. X3 330 APPENDIX. \vc have often seen a benevolent man with the face of a villain, and a villain with the most engaging contour. The impres- sions that, circumstances make upon a man's features, are ac- cording to the effect produced by the trains which have prece- ded th^ni, and circumstances flow in so many thousand different channels, that physiognomy, even as a mode of knowing the mind at the moment, is an aft impossible to be exercised with success in ninety-nine cases out of an hundred. A man may have a particularly benevolent face by performing all his life particularly benevolent actions, if no contrary current of cir- cumstances have completely altered the appearance of his coun- tenance. But particular actions are in different estimation in different countries, and the countenance appears to be. regu- lated according to this estimation. Thus, if murder were con- sidered as a benevolent action, and a man should murder an immense number of fellow creatures, his features, according as he was satisfied with himself, and his fellow countrymen were pleased with his conduct, would assume a most pleasing appear, ance. On the contrary, however, as murder is discouraged by society, the murderer gradually acquires a ferocity which is a necessary cousequence of his enmity to that society which he has injured. If, in a country, the native inhabitants of which lived upon vegetables, there should reside a family which made the flesh of animals their food ; the flesh-eaters would by degrees assume peculiar countenances, inasmuch as their living on any- thing but vegetables was considered cruel or otherwise impro- per. The features of the face, as well a.s the features of the mind, acquire their form in society, though, as we have said, phy-iognomy can take no cognizance of the differences in differ- ent facos, for it is an. aft founded upon the erroneous supposi- tion that one train of circumstances alone has taken effect. If we look amongst portfolios of portraits, as I have before said, (note p. 228.) we shall find the human countenance rough APPENDIX. 33 1 wherever society was rough ; wherever it was polished, the coun- tenance T as noble. Wherever there is a uniformity of face there is more uniformity of conduct, especially amongst savage nations, where one man may be drawn as a perfect picture of the human race. It is often said, that a shepherd can distinguish peculiarities in the countenance of every sheep in his flock which a common observer would overlook ; the shepherd might also remember the slightest possible peculiarity of circumstances which helped to form each countenance. The tigers, which corne near well-peopled and guarded districts in India, are of a milder aspect than those which frequent wild jungles, which have countenances of ineffable ferocity. Craniologists will find their system equally impossible with physiognomy, for if there are indentions in the head which be- token particular dispositions, then, as circumstances appear in the first instance to create the indentions, as soon as the lat- ter are formed, other circumstances may entirely change the conduct ; and I could give the doctor several instances of men whfo were foolish enough to credit his system for a moment, who found hy their heads that they had dispositions their minds had never so much as dreamt of. We have unintentionally omitted in the text, a few observa- tions made on genius by persons who were well qualified to judge of its innateness. M. Buffbn, in a conversation witto Herault de Sechelles, said that genius was only a greater apti- tude to patience than common. In works about genius, the cause is often put for the effect, and this is the case in this con- versation. The great naturalist, considering genius to be a greater aptitude to patience, seemed to imply that genius, as it were, caused the patience. Now genius, if this saying were true, would be producing its own cause, for M. Buffon himself describes with delight the rising of each new idea which his pa- tienco gave him when he eat for fourteen hours together in his study. Tim? his patience gradually enabled him to invent. Dr. Burner says, in his history of music, " Metastasio laughs ", at all poetical inspiration, nud makes. a poem a? mechanically '' us another would make n. shoe, at what.) tii*tf she pleases, and '' without any other occasion than the \va*t of it." " ' I know of no such thing as genius', mi -I Hogarth one '. iy '' to Gilbert Cooper; 'genius is notiii.fi^ but labour *ml s saying; (p. lo'U) tiiat, j-jiic genius is often display cul in imitation. Mr fBtfeli^w, ,j$wui DO;. well considered the subject, or heAvoijW jhave -Know-.n genius of poetry, and frequently <> -ppivUng, <.on=i-t in ii tions ofnaturv:; but then the iuvenUuniOf poefs a i3 exercised to imitate nature in such a manner as to atfect the reader or spectator \vith something like tie .feeling ui)icyi (Syiv? impressed upon themselves. We hud before, rxfliflcd tlhte, Jiioutih not with entire correctness, in the note to p. .171. particular geniuses, I Imve ofily corvsiderw!. tiios^/for s-ic, painting, and poetry, as the three aa&ore paMivularly con- nected with innateness. My readers will easily se.tiiat al ! other i,-eiiiiHcs are circumstantial, by a careful *wKinWwn, ami ;in v-jij)!ication of the principles I have laid, ifowfl. That all children have an inclination to poetry, which is, in f; ti . an inclination to the language of nature, ! need o.nly re- fer to parents to prove. They will all recollect some simple, but beautiful savings, which llwir infants utt< red, and \vhioh . too many for the benefit of the. chiMren, have considered APPENDIX. 333 ai presaging something extraordinary, and extolled them as such. Some of the characters which I have enumerated, may be con- sidered as bearing evidence contrary to the effect of circumstan- ces. In the life of Handel, for instance, 1 have related no cir- cumstance which first influenced him to adopt the profession of music. I instanced him only to show the consequence of a ty- rannical command agninst an accidental disposition, which by raiider means might have been .subdued. In " the life and studies of Benjamin West/' in which is re- lated the circumstance of his early painting, which I have no- ticed, I find an argument which plainly discovers its author to be- an innatist. He savs, that the Swiss are not a poetical nation, though inhabiting scenes which are the cause of poetry in others. A man need only consider a moment to see the fallacy of this argument for innateness. Men by custom may be made to consider the least picturesque country as beautiful, and to re- gard the most beautiful with indifference. There have been poets in Switzerland, however, as oflen as circumstances direct- ed them to books of poetry, or to write their feelings upon paper. Mr. Gilt had got the notion into his head that is too common, that there are no poets who do not write. If he had not had this idea, he would have found the language of the Swiss pea- sants in many respects highly poetical. There are a people of whom we hear little but calumny, who have almost all, accord- ing to their circumstances, a peculiarly romantic and poetical cast of character and language the Gipsies ; the same singu- larity of expression and of speech characterizes them, from the common fortune-teller of Norwood to theTiranna of Madrid. It is not the country which causes disposition to any thing. If is the slightest possible circumstance that disposes the country, or any thing else, to luivc an uncommon effect upon the mind, 334 APPENDIX. which pursues the path |>ointed out and leading to a singular train of ideas, of which the directing circumstance produces the first. I must now conclude these additions to my essay. I leave them and the work to a tribunal which sooner or later must come to a true decision. I fear there is some repetition of ar- guments in several parts of the work, which, on such a sub- ject, is almost inevitable. None can be more conscious of our liability to error than myself, but if I have removed one stone from the interest-raised wall which debars us of the sight and enjoyment of truth, the knowledge of having done so is a glori- ous compensation. AN ENQUIRY INTO THE JBatute of AND OTHER APPEARANCES SUPPOSED TO BE SUPERNATURAL. Ora mod's ad tollens pallida miris, Crudcles aras, trajectwque pectora ferro Nudavit. " VIRG. MK. " Nonne, inquit, videtis illic immanem draconem, igneis armatum'cornibus, cauda in circuium retortn." ERASMUS. la 0! - AN ENQUIRY INTO THE ' NATURE OF GHOSTS, Sec. W HAT is a ghost ?* This is a question which it may be said every person is qualified to answer. We have asked it, however, in order that we may ourselves explain to our own satisfaction, and that of our readers, what is generally known by the word ghost, and why ghosts disturb the habitations of the living. Mr. Grose has given us the necessary explanation : " A ghost is supposed to be the * It may be proper to mention, that, in the first instance, I have called the appearances of spirits- ghosts, as it is, in fact, the word which ought exclusively to be applied to them. As I might be liable to a charge of adopting a vulgar appellation, when I advance farther in the essay, I have used the word ap- parition as a synonym. The "ghost," is plainly from the Ger- man geist, or Saxon gaste or gest . Guest is a woid which i* used to denominate an apparition, to this day, in the North of England. 338 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE " spirit of a person deceased, who is either " commissioned to return for some especial " errand, such as the discovery of a murder ; " to procure restitution of lands or money " unjustly withheld from an orphan or wi- " dow ; or, having committed some injustice " whilst living, cannot rest till that is redres- " sed. Sometimes the occasion of spirits re- " visiting this world, is to inform their heir in fi what secret place or private drawer in an " old trunk they had hid the title deeds of the " estate; or where in troublesome times they " had buried the money and plate. Some " ghosts of murdered persons, whose bodies " have been secretly buried, cannot be at ease " till their bones have been taken up and de- " posited in consecrated ground, with all the " rites of Christian burial." There arc some more important purposes, however, to which these beings are subservient. They have ap- peaied to foretel approaching dissolution, and to warn and convince the unbelieving NATURE 07 GHOSTS, &C. 339 sinner of a state of existence beyond the pre- sent. They have sometimes shewn them- selves, to give notice of misfortunes of a tem- porary nature, in order that they might be avoided. But, by far the greater number have appeared for no other cause but that of terrifying rustics, of killing old women, and weakening the intellects of children. That ghosts often exist only in imagina- tion. The proofs of this are numerous. Ghosts commonly appear at times when the mind is -least prepared for a careful investiga- tion of phenomena. When all the world is shut out, and a thousand images rush at once upon the solitary, without there being any power to arrange or to prevent them, where is the wonder that sometimes thoughts will become embodied ? No man can think of any thing which is substantial, without having in his mind the form of that substance. When I think of a man, 1 see a man with 340 AN EN Q VI in INTO THE " my mind's etc ;" the fact is so certain, that to mention it i* almost unnecessary. Wh i>. then, a ghost is seen, it may in many in- stances be nothing more than the klea .of'tffcfe moment, placet more im mediately in viewttf some of the senses, because it is stronger than common. When ire are awakened from a dream, we frequently betray a partial igno- rance of our situation ; either we think that we see some part of our dream, or we are in some degree deceived as to the position of ob- jects by which we are surrounded. Most of ghosts are plainly produced by vitiated per- ception, to which things appear different from what they are, Or before .which phantoms '-flit which have no real existence. This may be traced from the Confined madman, to t : he man whose rational conversation gains credit td the appearances whidi a momentary privation of judgment hail occasioned. The vitiated perception, which creates apparitions, is no- thing more than the imaginatioH throning ofV NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 341 all control from the judgment, and suffering itself to be guided, or misguided, by every phantasy which its own waywardness produ- ces.* Thus the mind loses all idea of distance in some situations, and the appearance, which is within itself, it supposes to be at some dis- tance from it ; so that men have often a power exercised upon their minds, embodying their perceptions at some place beyond them, al- most like that power called ventriloquism, which deceives as to the position of sounds; but that one power is voluntary, and the other, except in some few cases, entirely in- voluntary. f ? " It is well known, that in certain diseases of the brain, such as delirium and insanity, spectral delusions take place even during the space of many days. But it has not been ge- nerally observed, that a partial affection of the brain may exist, which renders the patient liable to such imaginary impressions, either of sight or sound, without disordering his judgment or memory. From this peculiar condition of the sensorium, I con- ceive that the best supported stories of apparitions may be com- pletely accounted for." Ferriar on Apparitions, p. 14. 15. t What I have said here, may make me liable to the charge Y 342 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE Amongst the ghosts which the imagination? has created, we may enumerate all those tiiat have been seen, in a manner, exclusively ; for, why, if a man's perception were not diseased, could he see and receive answers from a ghost, whilst bye-standers neither perceived any thing, nor heard any sound, but the ques- tions, which to their ears were unanswered ? To be seen, and to utter sounds, a ghost must be substantial, and what affects the senses of one man, must certainly, if it be external, af- fect the senses of all who are in the same situation, or nearly so, in point of distance or elevation. Thus, if a lighted candle be set at a particular distance from a large army, drawn out upon a plain, all the soldiers must inevitably see that candle, if to its flame their of confound! naf^deas and images, and bring me into the end- less and useless disputes about the form of our ideas. I have stated, however, what I conceive to be the fact; deeper meta- physicians may drown themselves in quibbles upon it, but, finally,, they must come to the same conclusion. NATURE O? GHOSTS, &C. 343 eyes are directed without any obstruction; but, if one man from an hundred thousand men, of which number we will suppose that army to consist, should say that he saw the ghost of a deceased relation, though no other person perceived any thing, would not he be considered as suffering under a momentary insanity ? Besides, if a ghost appeared for any beneficial or important purpose, would it not be much more satisfactory to have as many witnesses of its appearance as possible ? If, however, a ghost appears neither for any purpose nor to any but one person, though others are present when it is seen, what is there that can prove it to be any thing* but the effect of a disordered mind ? But the generality of ghosts are seen hy persons who are alone, and at seasons when the imagination has most play, and the judg- ment least power. Their standard hour is midnight, when sleep holds dominion over the Y 2 344 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE greater part of mankind, and when the wisest, even if determined to be watchful, are liable to slumber away their philosophy. Many of the ghosts seen at the midnight hour, are un- doubtedly " waking dreams," as they are em- phatically denominated. Some sudden over- powering influence sometimes so disengages us from our pursuits, that we imagine our- selves perhaps far distant from our real situ- ation ; or we suppose we are conversing with some friend, and seem to be just breaking off the conversation, when we are roused from our unconscious reverie. The slumber which is more general late at night than any other, is that from which a man awakes, even after he may have slept an hour or two, or some considerable time, without having been con- scious of his having slept at all, except from the state of his candle or his fire, or the dif- ference in the hour. The only question therefore is, whether it might not easily hap- pen that a man having fallen asleep, dreamt NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 345 that he was in the. room in which he really sate, and having seen in his dream an old and much respected friend, deceased, might not imagine that he had seen an apparition, and relate what had happened to him 'as such, after he had given it the fullest consideration? This might easily happen; and this appears to me to he the true cause of many of the apparitions with which the credulous have been too often troubled. The circumstances attending midnight ap- paritions, if fairly considered, will, I think, confirm the opinion I have expressed. The falling of plates in the kitchen, or a dreadful crash of some kind, is frequently heard in haunted houses ; but the most singular fact, which I have often had stated to me, is, that when one person hears the crash, not another person in the house is the least alarmed, though others must have certainly heard it, if -it had ever taken place. Some few in- Y 3 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE stances I have heard related, in which crashes were heard by the whole family, but then the families in those instances were unfortunately so much bigotted to supernatural phenomena, that they never so much as sought for natural causes for the noises by which they were dis- turbed. I am persuaded there is no man who does not remember, some time in his life, being surprised as he was dropping asleep by an involuntary jump, or sudden motion, as if he were falling down a precipice, and yet no man imagines that he is moved by any super- natural impulse. This has been attempted to be accounted for ; but never yet has been ex- plained to satisfaction. The same cause however, whatever it may be, appears to me to create these crashes, which are in the mind itself, and not commonly external. These strange noises have from the creation preceded some kinds of midnight ghosts, only that they have altered with the times : they were wont in the days of our ancestors to be NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 347 sudden and tremendous rattlings of chains, or falling to pieces of armour; in modern history, however, they have heen domesticated into a strife of dishes. It is observed, that in noc- turnal visitations of the ghost kind, the can- dle generally burns blue, as a kind of an- nouncement of the apparition. There was a time, when, instead of endeavouring to ac- count for this from any rational cause, which most philosophers would have considered sa- crilege, learned treatises would have been written to prove how the approach of a spirit, being the condensation of moisture from a dead body,* naturally caused the light to burn blue and dimlv. I believe, however, it * ' ' Some are of the opinion, that Ghosts (by which I mean the Apparitions of Souls departed) do for the most part by vir- tue of their Formative Plastic Power, frame unto themselves the Vehicles in which they appear, out of the Moisture of their Bodies ; this being a Matter that is believed more Congenial to them, and more Sympathetical ; and for that Reason, they say, it is, that Ghosts do often appear in Church-Yards ; and that they do not appear but for some sJiort time, to wit, before the moisture is wholly dried up ; as also, that the Ancients used to 348 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE will easily appear, that the candle's generally burning dimly before the ghost ventured into the presence of the person he was to terrify, was not occasioned by his being on his jour- ney, but that in many cases the indistinct burning of the light caused the ghost-seer to conjure up shadows in the darkened part of his chamber, which would not have appeared had he been furnished with a consecrated, otherwise a thick and strong- burning candle. There is another species of ghosts, though somewhat more uncommon than the last men- tioned, which have the singular property of enlightening the place in which they appear, by a sulphurous vapour, or a kind of phos- phoric preparation. Many which may be Burn not to Burie the Dead ; for Cardan tells us, that during that Custom, there was no such Appearing of Ghosts as is now.'' An. Essay upon Reason and the nature of Spirits, by Rich- ard Burthogge, M. D. London, 1694. The ingenious author sets himself to controvert this opinion, ac if the daring falsehood of Cardan were not a sufficient answer. NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 349 dassed under this species, are explicable from the formation of ocular spectra. I remember a singular instance of this kind which hap- pened to myself. In the middle of a very dark night I awoke in bed, and some associ- ation, which I cannot now recollect, brought to my mind some old man stirring his fire with a poker. Feeling my eyes about to close again to sleep at that moment, I mechanically opened them as a person does who is looking with great earnestness at any object, and to my surprise I saw, about a yard and a half from me, a complete representation of the old man stirring his fire. The fire was in a large square grate, and the light of it shone full upon the person. The whole scene was square, a circumstance which appears to me rather uncommon in such appearances, and altogether as if it had been enclosed in a pic- ture frame, the limits were so well defined. As well as I can recollect, it appeared about a foot and a half long, and a foot broad. 350 AX ENQUIRY INTO THE Many might be tempted to consider this a kind of miniature apparition, which really ex- isted beyond the eye; but. I found it was not so; by accidentally moving my head down- wards (for it was with my eyes directed to- wards the ceiling that it appeared), the conse- quence vyas, that the whole picture went in the same direction, an:l, when my eyes were upon a leyel with the bed foot, all vanished. I mention the squareness of this vision not as extraordinary in itself, but because, with the exception of spectra formed by a window, it is the only thing of the kind which 1 ever re- collect to have heard mentioned I do not now remember having been in a room, whose section was furnished as that which I saw in miniature; nor could I call to mind a room of the particular kind which I saw, on my en- deavouring at the time to find out its cause. It appears to me, that this, and all the ghosts which have seemed to produce the NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 351 iight by which they themselves were visible, though they may with propriety be denomi- nated ocular spectra, can in no possible man- ner be classed amongst those appearances so called by Dr. Darwin. Ocular spectra gene- rally so called, vanish a short time after the object which caused them is removed ; these appearances, however, come at a time when their primary cause is entirely obliterated from the memory, or when the impressions which caused them to assume the shapes they bear, were not recognized by the mind on which they were made. We shall, in the first place, consider the causes of the appearance of any thing unreal beyond the eye, and then proceed to examine whether there be any reason assignable for such appearances assuming 'their particular and extraordinary shapes. The term hallucination has been given to AN ENQUIRY INTO THE all apparitions which have their existence only in the imagination. M. Nicolai, the celebra- ted bookseller of Berlin, after he had been afflicted by a number of unfortunate accidents, became troubled with a violent vertigo, after the removal of which, and, as he considered, in consequence of the unsettled state of his mind, he saw for nearly two months an im- mense number of apparitions, with which he conversed, and who seemed to condole with him on his misfortunes. This is an extreme case. Though his eyes and his other senses were continually, for the time, liable to decep- tion, yet he preserved his judgment so far as to know that it was merely his imagination which produced the spectres by which he was visited. That these appearances were in M. Nicolai's mind, and not 'external, can never be doubted ; but how happened he to be surprised at what the disorder of his own frame occasioned ? In this consists the whole deception. In the first place, a man who NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 353 sees a ghost is deprived of internal reflection, if I may so speak, and then he is astonished to see something before him of which he had no idea previous to its presenting itself.* And why had he no idea of it ? The reason is plain. The thing itself which stands before him is his idea, and that a man expresses surprise at such an appearance, is no more singular than that a man should feel pleasure, which in fact is only a modification of sur- prise, when he is conscious of what he be- lieves to be a thought before unknown. The reason why the appearance is beyond the eye, then, is, that for a certain period the * The case of embodiment, if I might use such a word, which I have related, does not come under this class j and supposing that apparitions are ever .classed under species and genera, this fact, that we have the idea of some apparitions before they ap- pear, and that the idea and the apparition in other instances are for the time co-existent, will be a material -line of distinc- tion. The account of M. Nicblai's apparitions is so well known, that I have not inserted it in the body of my essay. For the con- venience of reference, however, I have added it in the appendix. 354 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE operations of nature are reversed ; instead of the ideas being within the mind, they are em- bodied forth ; the immediate manner in which this is effected we cannot discover, but it appears to be occasioned by any thing which materially affects what are called the finer feelings. Thus, when any one loses a dear friend or relative, what is more likely than, in the dark, to conjure up from the force of imagination the form so much regret- ted ? It is by no means uncommon to hear of apparitions appearing just after a light has been extinguished. It will plainly appear that these are generally produced from the strong spectrum left; by the light, greatly as- sisted by fancy. But how happens it that apparitions take to themselves the shapes they bear? It is evidently the mind itself that occasions any peculiarity in the shape of apparitions. Thus, they always appear in garbs which are well NATURE OF. GHOSTS, &C. 355 known to the person who sees them ; be- cause the mind could not conjure up things of which it knew nothing; they generally agree in every respect with the seer's ideas of apparitions, from reasons already stated ; and as the mind is more subject to melancholy or to terror at the time, so there is more melan- choly or terror in the circumstances of the appearance. I will venture to say* that ap- paritions of the dead would never appear in the present circumstances, if, instead of la- menting over a deceased person, a jovial ban- quet were held at his interment ; and that if he had had any chance of success, the fears and the evil genius of Brutus would have been alike absent on the evening before the battle of Philippi. But I fear 1 am entering upon a track too much beaten, to be either advan- tageous or entertaining to the reader ; and by thus commencing the subject, I may prevent many from accompanying me to the conclu- sion. I shall, therefore, now proceed to con- 356 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE sider some of the circumstances which create arguments against the supposition that super- natural apparitions are really unproved. I. That apparitions have heen seen at the precise period of the death of those whom they represented, as it were to announce what had happened. Many of these apparitions may, without doubt, he set down as singular coincidences with what was actually occur- ring. That many of them are in reality co- incidences, is plainly proved by one general rule in relations of this kind, viz. : that they are not made public till after the death has been known to have taken place, and till every fact can be reconciled in order to add to the stories' credibility. The appearance is not much regarded till the ghost seer hears of the death of some person whom he knew, and then his imagination, suppressing every difference and exaggerating every resem- blance, forces upon him the belief that lie NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. 357 saw deceased precisely at the time of his death, and dressed exactly in the same man- ner. There are very few men who have not more than one acquaintance : they, though they may not have any very peculiar form, are generally distinguishable from the rest of mankind. If, then, a man conjures up a spectrum, the probability is, that it will as- sume the form of some one with whom he is acquainted ; and if all the world, whom he knew not, should die at the time of its ap- pearance, he would not draw any connexion between them and the apparition, though the moment an acquaintance expires, he easily overlooks a slight variation in circumstance, and roundly asserts that he beheld his ghost. But no rule can be completely general, and this one has its exception. Some instances are on record, which bear the appearance of authenticity, and that is as much as can be expected of such relations, of persons who have noted down their having seen certain Z 358 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE apparitions at particular periods. But these instances are as one in a million, and ought, after all, to be considered as nothing more than coincidences, for several reasons.* A man who has been brought up in civilized society, as it is called, is generally thinking of his fellow-creatures, from the connexion which his situation in life, whatever it may be, has produced between him and them. There is a well-known story of a captain and most of the crew of a vessel, seeing a person (the baker who used to supply the ship) run up a burning mountain, and rush into the crater. Sailors are not good judges of per- spective, or good critics of appearances, by * I have here only stated one of the reasons, when I men- tion that there are several. The others are 1. That appa- ritions in general are not of great importance. 2. That they do not appear always to warn of the same dangers, or to foretel the same events. 3. That we ought always to take the most probable explanation of any phenomenon, and these apparitions are most likely to have been shadows, detached portions of va- pour, &c. These, and other reasons, will be fully investigated >in the course of the essay. NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 359 which their imaginations are inflamed or over- powered, and though I shall not scruple to say that the appearance of Mr. Booty, tne baker, was entirely a phantasy, yet it might happen that their minds were directed to him more particularly at the moment of the appa- rition. We are not, at least in such accounts of this apparition as I have seen, informed of the condition of the ship with regard to its provisions. They may have been entirely without biscuit, and then they would have cause to think of Mr. Booty. The captain called out, " Did not you see Booty go "to hell?" Most of the crew agreed that they saw the poor biscuit maker plunge him- self into the volcano. Now, if we could find any thing which probably caused the appear- ance that attracted the attention of the crew of this vessel, so as to explain away the fact of the supernatural apparition, (and the man who thinks a moment on the subject, will no doubt discover ten thousand shadows, every Z 2 360 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE one of which may have produced it,) there is nothing supernatural in the story, hut that most of a ship's crew should, at the sugges- tion of their captain, think of their baker, about the period when he expired ! There is nothing supernatural in the story; the cap- tain thought of Mr. Booty, from some cause which is not known, and instantaneously he called upon his crew to look at what he di- rected them into the propriety of considering a resemblance of their baker. How often has a man thought on another when he was dy- ing, or after he was dead ; there is nothing supernatural in these things ; it is almost as probable as that one man should say what another is about to utter. The apparitions under this head may, I think, be arranged under the following expla- natory positions : 1. Either the stories of these ghosts have grown marvellous by com- ing through a number of hands, or, if not far NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. 361 from the original seer* he is dead, abroad, or some circumstance prevents him from appear- ing to testify to the truth of the relation. 2. The identity of the ghost with the person, and the coincidence in time, are not discover- ed till it is found that about the period of the appearance some person expired, and then the seer exclaims with astonishment, " I saw " his ghost." 3. The stories which, from consistency, &c., carry with them the greatest proofs of being true, have in reality the least evidence of external existence. 4. These stories generally, when traced to their origin, depend upon the veracity or credulity of one person. 5. As far back as we can trace, we have accounts of persons appearing either at the moment of their death or soon after, but through all time we have scarcely one relation * Throughout this essay I have made use of the word seer, which is more commonly applied to a prophet, as signifying the person to whom a ghost appears. The brevity and sim- plicity of the expression is a sufficient apology for its adoption. Z3 362 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE indisputably proved. 6. That people have sometimes seen the apparitions of men whom they believed at the time of seeing them to be dying- or dead ; and, when they made enqui- ries and found that the persons they had seen were in perfect health, they have exclaimed, " I thought he must be dead, for I saw his " ghost;" plainly shewing that the idea of that person's death produced his ghost, or rather, that the idea of the death and the ghost were co-existent, and arising merely from the common notions of appearance at the time of decease. II. The second kind of apparitions which may be adduced against their proceeding from the imagination, we may consider those which foretel the death of the person whom they represent, of those to whom they appear, or of others, their prophecies being generally strictly fulfilled. One of the Lords Lyttleton saw the ghost of a woman, which informed NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. him that he would die at a particular hour. The fulfilment of the prophecy, however, is not the least proof that the apparition was any thing but the creation of the mind, he- cause in such cases the very dread of death will bring that fulfilment. It is a commonly received opinion, that people in general have some foreknowledge of their own dissolution, for they tell their friends by whom they are surrounded, that they are dying; but this arises from no supernatural spirit ; it is only a plain inference drawn by a person in his senses, when he finds his body in a condition in which he never knew it to be before. When people were in a weak state on their death-beds, they have often imagined they saw a ghost, or an angel, come to announce their departure, which was nothing more than their own ideas of meeting at their entrance to another world, angels, or persons for whom they had had a great regard in this, perceived more forcibly than common, because the 364 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE judgment has then little controul over the senses. It is not at all improbable, that, be- sides that some apparitions, by the terror they produced, may have caused the dissolution they announced, the apparitions in many such cases may have been occasioned by such a state of the body as would in itself termi- nate in death (see appendix). Some persons are said to have seen and conversed with their own apparitions, which have assured them of the exact time they had to live, entered with the greatest sang froid into general con- versation, and, after bidding the seers good morning or good afternoon, vanished with a bow or a farewell salutation, exactly in the manner of the original. This kind of ghost is a complete anomaly, for we cannot class it except amongst those of the imagination, since by no law of spiritual zoology could it be produced but from the mind of the seer it may be called an evil spirit, but it is not probable that an evil spirit, ffrhich is the title NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. 365 given to most inexplicable ghosts , by their most intimate acquaintances, would announce to a man his death, and enforce the necessity of preparation. One thing I am certain of, (and which would prove these ghosts to be entirely imaginary, if there were any person present when such an apparition showed it- self,) the man who saw it would be found to be talking to himself. How any man can make the air a looking-glass, except mentally, requires a greater knowledge of the laws of apparitions than I can at present boast of pos- sessing. III. Apparitions of sounds* which seem prophetical. As " apparition" is a word * There are apparitions of all the senses, as well as those of sight, but as circumstances have thrown that one sense into more prominent situations than the others, those which pro- ceed from it are most notorious. It may seem ridiculous, 'but I, nevertheless, cannot help referring my readers for an ac- count of an appaiition of feeling to the novel of "The Anti- quary." They will there find an infirm old woman in her dotage, twisting- the rffif with her fingers, under the influence 366 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE commonly limited to objects of sight, this at first appears improper. As supernatural call- ings, however, are materially connected with our subject, and more particularly with this part of it, I shall take the liberty of saying a few words upon them. The most common calling is, by the voice of some person, with whom you are well acquainted, naming you, at the moment when you are least thinking of him. Most of the instances of this calling, however, are reducible to the same explana- tion as we gave of Mr Booty's ghost ; all that is supernatural about them, is the thinking of an idea that she has in her hands her distaff and spindle. 1 refer to this author, because I am confident that most of the minute conduct of his characters ^ from nature. We are frequently conscious of apparitions of taste when ill-health pre- vents the proper exercise of that sense. The reader will shortly come to some account of apparitions of hearing. Those of smell are as powerful as of any other sense. Dr. Darwin men- tions a baron who was sick on passing a dead animal which lay by the road side, and passing (he same way next year/ he was sick from the very idea of the effluvitwhich he had before per- ceived. In this instance there must have been an imaginary effluvia nearly as strong as the original. NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 367 on some person at the very moment. of his death, which is in fact nothing but a singular coincidence of the ideas with a particular situation of their object. When a man hears a voice calling him, he imagines, at the mo- ment, that the transition from his ideas im- mediately before, to the idea of the person whose voice he supposes himself to have heard, is very sudden and surprising, whereas it is not at all surprising, as will be seen, after a careful examination. Supposing a sound to have struck my ear, I immediately endeavour to discover its cause ; after some consideration, I cannot conceive it to be any thing but the voice of a friend : some time afterwards I hear that that friend died in the very hour in which I thought I heard his voice. Now, what could this be but a coin- cidence ; it was not to inform me of my friend's death that the voice spoke, for I did not hear of his death till some time after the sound attracted my attention. If a real voice, 368 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE then there was a supernatural means employ- ed without any supernatural or important consequence, which in all cases of apparition I consider to be a kind of reductio ad absur- dum. I myself have frequently imagined I heard voices call me, hut I never employed myself to find any remarkable connexion be- tween them and particular events, and I think if there had really been any such connexion, it would have suggested itself to my imagina- tion ; if there had been any, I should, without doubt, have afterwards given credit to all kinds of supernatural informations. If such callings and apparitions as we con* tinually hear of did really exist beyond the mind, it is necessary to imagine that they existed by some law or general providential arrangement, that they should only appear in particular circumstances, and should always appear in like situations ; i. e. if one man had made an agreement with a friend to appear NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 369 to him after death, and had afterwards ap- peared, another person who had made the like agreement should do the same; if a voice should inform one person that a relation was dead or dying, a voice should be heard by another person telling him of a relation under similar circumstances. This is no more than the usual regularity of nature,* but amongst ghosts and supernatural voices there is no re- gularity, and therefore I assert, they have no real existence. IV. Prophetic dreams. It is by no means uncommon to hear relations of dreams which have been most accurately prophetic of alarm- ing or pleasing events, but more generally of * Why expect the regularity of nature in supernatural cases ? I have used the word supernatural heretofore as it is commonly used in the cases I have had to consider ; but if is improper, because that which could not exist without nature must be natural. If there were any such word, an apparition ought to be called supercommon. Uncommon is too simple a word to ex- press a superstition. 370 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE the former. These I make the fourth kind of apparitions which may be brought against the assertion that they are commonly imagi- nary; because, if dreams be supernaturally prophetic, there is something working beyond the imagination to produce them, and that same something may with equal probability produce before my eyes v the ghost of a de- ceased relative,, as it may represent him to me, whilst asleep, in the agonies of death, at the moment when he is dying. Prophetic dreams ! many of my readers will exclaim, " I have had thousands." The question, however, is, were they really, and externally, and without connexion with former circum- stances, prophetic ? This question is soon de- cided. Does a man ever dream of any thing which he never knew before it was in his dream presented to his imagination ? Many will say they have so dreamt. I remember hearing it said, that a lady enquired one morning if there was such a place or country NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 371 as Madagascar, for she had dreamt of it, but had never heard of it before. The fact is this : the recollection of particular transac- tions, and of things which have formerly happened to us, is frequently taken from us in our dreams, and after we have awakened, by a method as singular as that by which we often dream that we recollect facts and cir- cumstances which, on awaking, we are con- vinced never did in reality occur to us. The mind, it is likewise well known, seizes upon circumstances, and lays them into its store, without its own knowledge, so that it often presents to itself, as new, what was procured from some other place by its own power of reception.* * I cannot help again referring to " the Antiquary" for a most striking proof of what is a well known fact in Metaphysics. I mean the dream of Mr Lovel, in which a person shews him a motto of a book which he never to his recollection saw before, and which he could not understand, when it was plainly proved that he had really observed the motto and heard a conversation upon it, without his own knowledge. I have met with a simi- 372 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE It is impossible for a man to dream of any thing which never existed, and it is impossible for any person to dream of what does exist, or has existed, without his having previous knowledge of it. These are two rules which ought always to be remembered when we are considering the subject of dreams. The first will be found to be strictly true, notwithstand- ing the seeming contradiction in the dragons and monsters which sometimes present them- selves ; for these monsters are of a color which we have previously seen ; they are covered with scales like those of fish; they have generally heads, eyes, noses, mouths, feet, &c. and are altogether things composed of our simple ideas, however distorted and mishapen in the concrete. The second I con- sider so self-evident, that I need not say lar story in some author whose name I cannot now recollect ; but I am sure my readers will pardon my again mentioning a book, the author of which uiust have deeply studied the human mind. NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. 373 much upon it. Certainly it is often the case, that a man will dream of a road, and the next day he will travel over a road over which he never before travelled, and will say that that road was exactly the same with that of which he dreamt, though he never saw it hefore the moment in which he is expressing his astonishment at the coincidence. But though he has not hefore seen that particular road, he has seen many roads, some of which undoubtedly would so much resemble the par- ticular part at which he is astonished, as to explain his dream in that prophetic circum- stance. Though I dream that a relation is drowning, and shortly after hear that he was drowned ; the seeing a person drowning w r as nothing new, it is only the coincidence of the situation of the same person in the dream and in the reality at which I am surprised. The question which requires a satisfactory answer then, is, why does a road present it- self to roe, which I see next day ; why do I A a 374 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE dream of a relation drowning, and hear shortly afterwards that he is drowned ? There are laws of dreaming; it does not proceed by chance; and the laws, or rather law, I find so simple, that I am astonished that chance has ever been considered to have any thing to do with dreaming. When a man eats a particular food, or drinks a particular liquor, his ideas flow quicker or more slug- gishly than common, and according as exter- nal circumstances affect him at the moment, the degree of the quick or slow succession is increased or diminished. We have, in dreams, a quick or slow succession of ideas, at such periods as to show that they, like our ideas when we are awake, are regulated by the state of the body. Inasmuch as there is a similarity in effects, we may argue a con- siderable similarity in causes.* The only im- * I had intended to have made a sketch, in the body of this essay, of the most generally observed phenomena in dreaming 1 , NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 375 portant question that presents itself here, as immediately connected with our subject, is, but I feared I should be intruding too much upon the patience of my readers. I shall here, however, subjoin a brief outline of my ideas on the subject, noticing by the way some opinions of philosophers, who are allowed credit for their researches into the history of the human mind. Dr. Hartley says, that dreams are the reveries of sleeping persons; that they are the consequences of strong impressions, often those of the preceding day; that they are occasioned by the state of the body ; and lastly, by association. The latter he has foolishly considered a separate cause of dreams, when, *H*4-in fact, it is the great and only cause, though its peculi- arities are formed by the state of the body and the circum- stances into which the mind is thrown. The whole of our dreams must immediately result from particular associations; the only phenomena unexplained, are the causes of these asso- ciations. Of many associations we can immediately obtain the origin ; but an explanation of the concatenations in the minds of particular persons, we can only procure by a constant observation of their lives. Mr Dugald Stewart mentions that a person dreamt of a volcano, and that his feet were scorched with lava, because of his having a bottle of hot water in reality applied to them : in the same passage, mention is made of a man who dreamt he was scalped by a party of Indians, because of his having a blister upon his head. If I were to add to these, that I have two or three friends who are what the world would rail deep thinkers, who can dream almost whatever they wish, I may assert, without hazard of contradiction, that dreams and waking ideas are as nearly as possible similar in their recur- rence ; that they are in fact the same, except for the circuna- Aa2 376 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE whether there is any thing remarkable in what are generally considered prophetic stances of general distinction Mr Hobbes says, that men, in the cold, dream of terrible objects, and when the heat is mo- derate, their dreams are pleasing. This is undoubtedly in ge- neral the truth, and it is nothing more than the effect of heat and cold upon the body, either sleeping or waking Our asso- ciations in sleep are often most unexpected and most ridicu- lous. In fact, it appears to me that the strange conjunctions of objects in sleep, would have been frequently, if they had oc- curred to a waking person, what is called wit. We can some- times trace the cause of these singular conjunctions. 1 myself remember, when very young, that I was dreadfully alarmed for some weeks, from some calvinistic books I harl looked into, and from what I had heard, lest the devil should lay hold of me. Whilst under this fear of the devil, I one day cut something with a pair of scissars, which I was afterwards chastised for cutting. The next night I dreamt that the devil came and presented me with a pair of scissars ! The whole of our drenms inay be as well traced as our waking ideas. It is only because the former arc stronger and come more forcibly upon the ima- gination, that they appear more wonderful. A theory of dreams might easily be formed by considering the causes of those of persons of the simplest life, and gradually proceeding to those accustomed to complex intellectual exertions. I would com- mence with animals, some of which are well known to dream, and which naturally dream only of their waking occupations. Our dreams are in general much more distorted and incon- gruous than our waking thoughts; this is asserted, ani' it appears true; but our waking thoughts wouW be just as un- connected and as distorted as in sleep, if they were not kept 5a NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. dreams besides the coincidences ? I think it will be found that they are reducible to the same principles as common dreams, as far as dreams can be reducible. There are some, the cause of which is easily found, and some which are mysterious and have no discover- able origin ; it is the same with common dreams which have no consequences, and are not remarkable for any coincidence. But there is one circumstance which will greatly detract from the wonderful appearance which these dreams frequently have to inconsiderate minds. They are not prophetic in general ; they only present some transaction, which is afterwards found to have happened at the order by the constant recurrence of our precise situation. At the moment I am writing this, (he whole of my past life ha* flitted through my mind, and if I had not recalled myself, 1 might have dreamt that I was at Constantinople or at Peters- burgh I do not believe it would be possible even for the most abstracted mathematician to avoid the wandering of his ideas at some period, and if he could prevent it constantly, I am firmly persuaded that he would not dream at. all, or his dreams would be on mathematics only. Aa 3 3/"8 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE time of the presentation. These transactions are generally accidents, or circumstances which are not altogether uncommon in the present state of society; or, if they are not very common, they are such as may be con- sidered likely to occur. A man may he thrown into such circumstances frequently recurring, as are likely sometimes to attract his attention, and then, if he dream about any such circumstances, superstitious people will say that the dream was prophetic of the next recurrence. The man himself, however, will be convinced that the dream was produ- ced by one circumstance, and that there was nothing extraordinary in its being succeeded by another circumstance exactly similar. I happen to be one of those prophetic dreamers myself, and on the recurrence of the circum- stance of which I dreamt, I sometimes ex- claim with surprise, " I dreamt of it," exactly as I have related of some ghost seers who cry out, " I saw his ghost," when their own inia- NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 3^9 ginations form the coincidences at which they are astonished. As we are not astonished at dreaming of constantly recurring circum- stances, so we have no need to he astonished at our dreams of circumstances, which, though not so frequently taking place, are by no means uncommon or improbable. We should not be surprised at our dreaming of occur- 'rences within the common course of circum- stances, even though we cannot trace in our minds any thing which could give rise to such dreams, because, since we know that the mind can mechanically seize circumstances without its own cognizance, we cannot con- scientiously say that such dreams were not the result of such mechanical seizures or im- pressions. I remember dreaming one night, that the street into which my window opened was crowded with caravans, containing wild beasts. In the morning, I discovered that that dream had been caused by my seeing, the day before, a number of such caravans ; but 380 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE I found my dream, a few hours after 1 had thus explained it, turn out to be a most mira- culous prophesy, for, on going to my window, the street was actually crowded with caravans of the same color as those of which 1 dreamt! But it is the great singularity of coincidence in every circumstance that makes many dreams to he considered as prophetic. Sup- pose 1 should dream that my brother was drowned, and I should find, the next day, that he had actually perished in crossing a river at the moment of my dream. This is a case as strong in coincidences as can well be imagined. The coincidence in time is the most remarkable, supposing that I did not know what my brother was doing, or where he was ; but it is altogether unusual to dream of any person of whose way of life, in general at least, we have not some knowledge. If I knew that I had a relation in a particular army in active service, I might by a common train of ideas think that he might be fighting, NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 381 or he might be killed, at the moment that he was presented to my mind, and shortly after I might have a letter informing me that he was fighting, or he was killed, at or near that precise period. In like manner, a train of ideas might run through my mind about my brother, when asleep, in such a case as I have above related. I might be thinking he might perhaps be in danger in crossing such a river, from the common anxiety which one person feels for another for whom he has any regard, (for it should be observed, that our dreams do not present to us any thing but our own pains and pleasures,) and then my hearing after- wards that he was drowned, being a confir- mation of my dream, would no doubt astonish me. But I ought not to be astonished, for plainly the dream was nothing more than a confirmation of my own fears for my brother, which, by reason of the absence of other sen- sations, were presented to my imagination with the strength of reality. 382 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE Grotius, I think, mentions a person who was saved from being buried in the ruins of a house in which he slept, by a dream warn- ing him to depart. This kind of dream, if we had any well-authenticated instances of it, is certainly prophetic, and most providentially so ; but there are very few instances extant, and none have yet come to my knowledge, which are not capable of being completely explained. It is most probable that the sol- dier (which I believe the person was whom Grotius mentions) saw the state of the place in which he was, before he fell asleep, and that the warning was nothing but the modi- fied suggestion of his own imagination. We are informed by Josephus, that Alexander, who had vowed vengeance against the Jews, had a singular dream, which turned aside his wrath, and that the High Priest met him, arrayed in his grandest habiliments, by the command of God, who had appeared to him in a vision. This story, however, has little NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 383 authority, and most probably, if the report was set abroad that the High Priest and Alexander had had these dreams, the whole was nothing more than a political contrivance for the interest of all parties. In prophetic dreams, or in dreams connect- ed with futurity, or with present circum- stances, then, the coincidence is the only thing remarkable, and that is only so because we cannot always trace the cause of our dreams. But if we cannot always trace the cause of our dreaming about particular cir- cumstances, we find as great difficulty, as Mr. Dugald Stewart truly observes, in finding the cause of our waking ideas ; and we have just as great reason to wonder at the coincidence between the latter and particular transactions, as between circumstances and our dreams. Dreams of warning, as of the death of re- lations, &c. often take very serious effect upon 384 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE the imagination, and are, 1 believe, by a ma- jority, considered in some degree superna- tural. That they are mere coincidences, when the person dreamt of dies at or shortly after the time of the dream, is evident, from many such dreams having occurred which had no accompanying or consequent event. by appointment. There have been many appointments to appear after death if it were possible. Some have succeeded, but an immense number of such appointments have never been regarded. We are not in- formed whether the journey was too long for some of those who did not fulfil their engage- ments; but, as we have had both bad and good apparitions of this kind, the difference in situation could make no difference in the difficulty of appearing, and it is most pro- bable that the apparitions existed only in the imaginations of those by whom they were per- ceived. It is well known, that every compact NATURE O? GHOSTS, &C. 385 of this kind which has been fulfilled, has been explained from natural causes ; and, there- fore, till we know an authenticated instance of an apparition of this kind, without the pos- sibility of so explaining it, we shall refrain from dwelling longer upon this part of our subject. Dr. Johnson. There is a very well-known paragraph in Rasselas, which we shall here take the liberty of quoting, as we intend to make a few observations upon the great argu- ment which it contains. When Rasselas, his sister, her favorite, and Imlac, are about to en- ter the great pyramid, the favorite starting back with horror at the gloomy entrance, mention- ed her dread of apparitions ; upon the prince's telling her to fear nothing* as the dead are seen no more, Imlac says, " That the dead " are seen no more I will not undertake to " maintain, against the concurrent and unva- f *>/&*+&*'& are afterwards^ placed. This faculty, how- * Dr. Aikin, in the Essay on Spectral Appearancess, in his letters toihis son, has answered this assertion of Dr. Johnson about the universality of belief, by referring to Cicero de > ra?f*rr l rt~ ni|[ri j n u-ijich the veracity and divine origin of the Delphic oracle are proved by the same arguments. The Doctor ought to have seen, however, that the two cases were by no means parallel. The Delphic oracle had spread its fame far and wide ; but in whatever place it was famous, thither its re- putation had been carried. Apparitions are believed in by nations whose common origin has long since been forgotten, and who had acquired that belief from the same customs pro- duced by similar circumstances. The argument is good on the part of Dr. Johnson j its application by Cicero is ridiculous. NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. 391 ever, is so easily deduced from natural causes, sometimes assisted by the contrivances of im- postors, that I do not think it at all of conse- quence, though I was at first disposed to con- sider some of its attendant phenomena as remarkable. Dr. Beattie has very reasonably concluded that such scenes as the highlands of Scotland present, joined with the effect of solitude upon the imagination, first produced the waking rlreams of the future, called " second sight." He says, that such visions do not commonly intrude upon those who are more conversant with social lite ; but there is a reason why they do not so much disturb society, as they frequent situations nearly solitary, which he does not appear to have considered. When in mixed society, men are not only much engaged with the multiplicity of business which surrounds them, and of course prevented from thinking immediately on any thing but that; but circumstances most various and complex so rapidly succeed Bb2 392 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE each other, that it is almost impossible that any man can foresee events as he would have done in a more constant and uniform state of life. In the early periods of history, where any one stated time bears almost an exact re- semblance in point of circumstances with any other stated time, when day after day and month after month pass by in the same rou- tine, men are naturally led, in the first in- stance, to look forward to the repetition of similar events to those which have already taken place. Those who have most leisure will be tempted to prophesy the most fre- quently, till at length particular persons are likely to become soothsayers or seers to their particular districts or clans. Situation pro- duces the particular effect upon the mind, of fancying prophetic apparitions ; it is not any immediate gift to a peculiarly protected or peculiarly distressed people; the natives of the Alps and Pyrennees, and the inhabitants of every country, in like circumstances, per- NATURE OP GHOSTS, &C. 393 ceive the visions of second sight, as well as those of the highlands of Scotland. Dr. Ferriar has not considered this subject. He has merely adduced two instances to prove what is proved by every instance of se- cond sight of which I ever read or heard, " that the spectral impressions certainly take " place." (Theory of Apparitions, p. 64.) The spectral impressions do certainly take place, but that they are only imaginary is clear, from their being visible to none but the seer himself. In the visions of second sight, upon a complete examination, there will be found nothing more remarkable than that certain persons, who hav^ employed them- selves nearly all their lives in that manner, have, as we said before of some cases of appa- ritions, drawn probable conclusions of futu- rity. The apparitions are only the produc- tions of disordered imaginations, and that we hear nothing of all the instances of second Bb 3 394 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE sight that have failed, will easily explain the many wonderful stones of the fulfilment of such visions. One instance of sight wlm h proved unsuccessful, related hy a believer in the faculty, will prove that it is not always infallible : " But all such as profess that Skill are not " equally dexterous in it. For instance, two " of them were in Mr Hector Ulai'kenzi " Minister of Inverness his Father's House ; " the one a Gentleman, the other a common Who would imagine that the elf and the goblin were ever de- NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 405 and monsters, which a more modern super- stition has produced or modified ; and that we are no longer visited hy these aerial fan- tasies will prove, by a moment's considera- tion, that they were nothing but the decep- tions of imperfect knowledge, and the effects of a bad state of society. I need not mention the variation in super- natural appearances produced by climate, farther than I have already noticed them ; every reader who can consider die subject for a moment, will allow that, when he has exa- mined the history of supernatural appearances belonging to one nation, he has examined the supernatural history of the whole world, ex- cept for the operation of climate and other general circumstances. rived from the Guelphs and Ghibellines, because the nurses of each party used to frighten the children with the name of the tfeer ! Ce 406 AN' ENQFTRY INTO THE I hope I may here be allowed to resume my observations upon the general belief in apparitions, by shortly commenting on the nature of the evidence by which they are sup- portedj It happens with many human trans- actions, that a more impartial judgment is formed of them by posterity, than by those amongst whom they immediately take place. This generally arises from the disclosure of circumstances, which are at first concealed from interested motives. It has been said, that a man has a better view of a large city from a distant eminence, than when standing under its walls. But, however true, this is a poor illustration of the difference between the judgment of posterity and our contemporaries; and the fact is, that, in nine cases out of ten, posterity are worse judges of circumstances than those immediately present at their oc- currence. Amongst those circumstances "of which posterity are ill qualifier! to judge, are those relating to what have been considered NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 407 supernatural events. If the Cock lane ghost had been undiscovered for one generation, it is most probable that it would have been handed down for several centuries as super- natural. If a performer of legerdemain can deceive an enlightened audience of two or three hundred persons present at his exhibi- tions, is it possible that any persons, from the distance of one day to that of two or three thousand years, can better explain the per- formance than those who were present at it ? When I cannot believe a circumstance which is related to me to havp happened at a distant part of the island in which I live, how is it possible that I can credit the relations of men, the exact amount of whose interest in what they described it is not in my power to esti- mate, and the whole circumstances of whose stories may have acquired a consistency from factitious corroborations ? I may believe there was once such a city as Jerusalem, and that there is yet a portion of that city remain- Cc2 408 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE ing ; but how far can I extend my credence to every occurrence recorded to have taken place there, when there are many circum- stances that happened at Paris, even in the last war with France, on which I cannot arrive at an accurate conclusion ? As far as relates to the common transac- tions of life, human evidence will convey to me considerable conviction ; because the very fact that these are common transactions, will strengthen any particular belief respecting them which I may entertain; but surely supernatural events ought to have more than common evidence. I do not mean that evi- dence is wanting to prove that this or that man saw something which he called a ghost some hundred years ago, but that evidence is wanting to shew that that which he saw was really and bonajide a supernatural apparition, and not the consequence of a disordered mind, or a deception produced upon him by some interested persons. If I can prove, in one instance, that an apparition was not super- NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 409 natural, then, I say, I am not to believe that another was supernatural, because I cannot instantly explain it to have been otherwise. The most probable as well as the most ra- tional explanation to such an apparition, is, that it was not supernatural, but that there are some natural causes, which I cannot yet find out, by which it was produced, or that the reason why it will not come under any known genus, is, that some circumstances re- lating to it have been suppressed or exag- gerated. I find some apparitions to be the result of interested contrivances, and others to be ex- plicable by natural philosophy ; where, then, am I to draw the line ? Who is to say, thus far you have deception of one kind or ano- ther ; and farther, all apparitions are super- natural? Except for leading and isolated facts, which stand like guides to the naviga- tors on the ocean of history, we can form no Cc3 410 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE correct judgment of past events. It is true, from certain actions being by constant prac- tice coupled with certain motives, we may say that such an action proceeded from such a motive, but even so far we may be in error ; and indeed in most cases we cannot judge of the motives,, of the real causes, and of the precise relative nature of events, because we have no evidence that we have a knowledge of all the circumstances in those cases. How, then, can we judge of apparitions which have been seen at a very remote period, and the whole circumstances of whose appearance It is impossible we can ever know ? The only way we have of judging of any thing past, is, by an accurate examination of what \ve may consider as nearly as possible parallel cases in our own times. If we find all these to be de- ceptions, we may safely consider all the ridi- culous relations of which we read as most distorted and exaggerated, as Mr Mitford has well said, when speaking of the representation NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 411 of events to posterity, like the painted figures upon a church window thrown by the rays of the sun, in a thousand hideous disproportions, upon the pavement. Whilst I am considering the general sub- ject of apparitions, it may not be deemed im- proper that I should say a few words upon the proofs which scripture gives us of super- natural appearances. This part of the ques- tion has been thrown aside by a gentleman who might, I have no doubt, have done it full justice, without bringing any thing like discredit upon his religious sentiments.* As it is of importance to be considered, however, * " If any thing contained in the ensuing pages could be construed into the most indirect reference to theological dis- cussions, the manuscript would have been committed, without mercy, to the flames." Ferriar on Apparitions, Prefa-n. This gentleman has an enlightened mind, but dare not show it ; I will venture 'to say he knows the bad effects of making supernatural agency a part of any r< ligious creed, but he has unfortunately left his work incomplete, by omitting 1o notice the connexion between apparitions and religion. This con- 412 AN FA-QUTRY INTO THE inasmuch as the fulfilments of visions in the Bible, and other supernatural events therein mentioned, are constantly adduced as proofs of the existence of apparitions, I shall feel it my duty not to pass it over in silence. It will he guessed, by what I have said above, that I aui not disposed to lend any favorable ear to the supernatural events related in the Bible, which have auy connexion with this essay. Had 1 been really convinced of the connexion between visions of God and appa- ritions of angels, and the sublime moral truths of Christianity, I should certainly have com- mitted to the flames all I had written on the subject ; but, as it is, I hope rational readers will not be offended with me. What the ideas of those men were, who nexion I myself have not completely considered. I shall take an opportunity of stating it fully in the Chart of Apparitions which I have promised. Dr Ferriar says his essay applies only to prophane history. Is not all history prophane but that which is most obscure ? NATURE OF GHOSTS, &C. 413 saw God iii their dreams, I cannot pretend to determine; but I cannot help thinking, that, if any man should in the present time attempt to ascribe limits to the Supreme Being, or to talk about God waving his arm, or moving his lips, he would be deemed by most of peo- ple a blasphemer. The authenticity of these visions may be easily gathered from the com- mands given when they took place ; on them I shall therefore content myself with observ- ing, that my readers will form the best con- clusions by referring to the Old Testament. ^here are several prophetic dreams which are thought very wonderful. That of Pharoah, for instance, about the years of famine and the years of plenty. But where is the proof that these were fulfilled ? Might not the dreams in general and their fulfilments be co- existent in tbe mind of the holy man from whose pen the history emanated in which they are related ? Is there one single witness against such having been the case ? 414 AN ENQUIRY INTO THE It is in vain that learned commentators tell us that society was far at eleven o'clock in the morning. No person was! with me besides the surgeon, but during the operation my chamber was crowded with human phantasms of all descriptions. This continued uninterruptedly till about half an hour after four o'clock, just when my digestion commenced. I then perceived that they began to move more slowly. Soon after, their color began to fade, and at seven o'clock they were entirely white. But they moved very little, though the forms were as distinct as before ; growing, however, by degrees more obscure, yet not fewer in number than had generally been the case. The phan- toms did not withdraw nor did they vanish, which previous to that time had frequently happened. They now seemed to dis- solve in the air ; while fragments of some of them continued visible a considerable time. About eight o'clock the room was entirely cleared of my fantastic visitors. " Since this time I have felt twice or three times a sensation as if these phantasms were going to re-appear, without how- ever actually seeing any thing. The same sensation surprised me just before I drew up this account, while I was examining some papers relative to these apparitions which I had drawn up in the year 1791." M. Nicolai puzzled himself without much cause, in attempting to find the exclusive ori- * Leeches were applied formerly, as IVf . Nicolai mentions in the part of the account we have not copied. They were applied for conjestions of the head, and not for apparitions, as the word " formerly" would here seem to imply. 462 APPENDIX. gin of the apparitions by which he was visited. Indeed, after confessing that he could not re- duce them to any known laws of association or imagination, he says, they will probably remain "as inscrutable as the origin of " thought and reflection." Though he had some faint conception of it, from his own ac- count, he had not perfectly considered the analogy betwixt these apparitions and his ideas. Though it may not seem to be making any advance in our knowledge of the human mind on a slight examination, I cannot but consider that the reflection that ideas, dreams, and apparitions, are sometimes explicable and sometimes inexplicable, that in fact the taking the three divisions as bearing a complete ana- logy to each other, will prove a very great means of simplifying philosophical disquisi- tions on these subjects. Mental apparitions, however, are those only which should be con- sidered as bearing the analogy with dreams and ideas: those of deception from external causes, require separate investigation. APPENDIX. 463 Those who will carefully consider M. Nico- lai's relation, will perceive a very great differ- ence betwixt his apparitions and those which are commonly considered as supernatural; indeed that age must have been almost incal- culably barbarous which could be so deceived as to imagine his phantasms to be any but the productions of a disordered intellect. He saw them sometimes with his eyes shut. This would have proved, in the most uncivi- lized period, that they were internal. The most singularly observable difference between these apparitions and those which are more commonly considered supernatural, is the vanishing. All the apparitions of which I ever read, vanished at once; M. Nicolai's, however, disappeared piece by piece, and dis- solved gradually, just as a painting of winter, with sympathetic colors, dissolves before the sun. Indeed the change of color to white completely, before they vanished, bears a very great resemblance to the transformation of 464 APPENDIX. some of those sympathetic paintings. He could tell the difference between an appari- tion's seeming to open the door and to come in, and its opening and the entrance of a real person. This is not the case, however, with most of supernatural visitants, for the seers frequently do not know that they are super- natural, till they are informed of their precise nature. Dr. Ferriar will pardon me, if I here take an opportunity of shortly observing upon his very interesting little work. He has con- sidered, with great ingenuity and research, the proof of the existence of morbid spectral impressions without any sensible external agency, and has made the third of his posi- tions, and in fact the chief end of his book, " the application of these principles to the " best authenticated examples of apparitions." What must be the surprise, however, of every considerate reader, when he finds that the APPENDIX. 465 learned Doctor has related only three, or at most four stories of apparitions, and the par- ticulars of those he has not examined, but applied them, or rather left those who may peruse his work to apply them, to the prin- ciples he has stated. He has extracted rela- tions of Cardan, of Kotter, of Petrarch, and Ben Jonson, &c. which would hardly in any period be considered as supernatural, and which would not at any rate be confounded with common apparitions. He says, that, by the key which he has furnished, readers of history will have found a mode of explaining many difficulties by which they were before greatly embarrassed ; but I am afraid there is no one who has not perused the "Essay to- " wards a Theory of Apparitions," without some disappointment. The Doctor might cer- tainly have made his work more complete, with less research into books with which few are acquainted, and with the contents of which few are interested. With respect to 466 APPENDIX. the application of the principle of morbid spectral impressions, surely Dr. Ferriar, con- sidering his great research, could not suppose it to be unknown : by reference to writers who have dropped ideas on the subject, he will find that it was known even as far back as the time of Plato; and God knows how many ages before that period. The version of the ghost of Mr. Booty, from a recollection of which I have given the particulars stated in the text, I have not been able to refer to, though I perfectly remember having seen it so related somewhere in the Gentleman's Magazine; and in a number some weeks after the relation, which stated that the case was brought before the Court of King's Bench, I remember also its being objected that no mention was made of the judge who presided at the time when the action was brought by Mrs. Booty for defamation, whereas, had that been mentioned, a single APPENDIX. 46J reference to the Court Rolls would have de- cided whether such an action had ever been brought. Those who are better versed in apparition stories than myself, inform me that the most authenticated story of Mr. Booty was, that he was baker to the ship, though the only ac- count of the event which is now in my posses- sion states him to have been a miser, without mentioning any trade. This account professes to be taken " from the records of Westmin- ster," though what the whole story had to do upon the records of any court of Westminster, it would puzzle the wisest head to determine. It states that three captains of ships, named Bar- naby,Brissow, and Brewer, landed on the island of Lusara, to shoot sea-birds. They, and other persons who were in their company, saw the appearance of a person in grey clothes, whom Captain Barnaby instantly denominated " Mr. i( Booty, my near neighbour in London," run 468 APPENDIX. into the crater of mount Strombolo. There followed Mr. Booty a man in black, whom they alleged to be the devil. The widow of Mr. Booty, from this account, brought her action for defamation, and Captain Barnaby, the de- fendant, obtained a verdict. The judge's name, however, is not mentioned, though it might easily be known whether such an ac- tion was ever brought, for the date of the ghost is given, May 6, 1672, and it could not be very long after that, that the case would come before a court of justice. What I have said in the body of my essay on this and all such cases, will equally apply to all accounts of this story. The appearance of two per- sons, one in black and the other in grey, makes it more probable than in the other ac- count where Mr. Booty was alone, that the whole was an exhalation of some kind. " The apparitions in many such cases may " have been occasioned by suck a state of the APPENDIX. 469 " body as would in itself terminate in death. 1 ' P. 364. It is related of a well-known literary character, that as he was sitting in his study, a room with which the passage com- municated that led to the kitchen, he was interrupted in his pursuits by a little old woman, who had on her arm" a basket of provisions. The gentleman requested the good woman to step into the kitchen, to which he supposed she had mistaken her way, and in order that he might not be further disturbed by her, opened the door and shewed her which direction she was to take. After he had returned to his studies, he found him- self again assailed by the little old woman. He expostulated with her, and again shewed her the road to the kitchen; but after he had resumed his labors, he again found the old woman at his elbow. He instantly conceived his real situation; rang the bell, and sent for a surgeon, who bled him, and the old woman did not again trouble him. The surgeon informed him that his blood was in such a state, that had he not been bled, he would have undoubtedly sustained a fit of apoplexy, which would in all probability have carried him off. I am not certain whether this case has ever been before the public, but if it has, it is sin- gular enough to excuse its repetition. There is one kind of dream which I have not examined, but which is very remarkable on first consideration, or rather on its first Gg 4JO APPENDIX. appearance to the mind, without considera- tion. It is a kind of double dream, of which there have been two or three authenticated instances* In one case, a Mr. Joseph Wilkins dreamt he was going to London, and that on his way he stopped at his father's house in Gloucestershire, tried the doors (it being night), went up stairs into his father's room, and informed his mother, his father be- ing asleep, that he had come to bid her farewell, for he was go- ing a long journey. On this, he thought his mother exclaimed " O ! dear son, thee art dead!" on which he awoke. Shortly after this dream, he had a letter from home, stating that his mother had been awake on such a night on which he had ap- peared, coming and trying the doors, &c. and had told her he vras goine: a long journey, at which time she made the ex- clamation " O ! dear son, thee art dead !" She persisted she was awake, and Mr Wilkins himself, from all circumstances, believed the dream and the vision to have happened at the saihe instant. People have no doubt been frequently de- ceived into an idea of their being awake, from their dreaming that they were so, and this I think must have been the case with Mr Wil- kins' mother. The next instance which I have procured, is related in the London Magazine for July, 1765. It is there stated, that a APPENDIX. 471 particular gentleman dreamt that he was pushing against the door of a room in a house with which he was well acquainted, and that the people who were in that room were, at the very instant of the gentleman's dream, alarmed by a violent pushing against the door ; indeed it was necessary to hold it, and to use very great exertion to prevent its being broken down. As soon as the attempt to burst open the door was ended, and all was still, the house was searched, but nothing was found which was likely to have caused such extraordinary efforts to break into the room. It is very remarkable that in both these accounts, one party appears to have been awake ; in the former one it may have hap- pened that Mrs. Wilkins only dreamt she was not asleep, but in the latter case, there must have been some extraordinarily coincident attempts to break open the door, for the party was awakened and was obliged to use great exertions in his own defence. It is probable that in the former case the exact coincidence of expressions was produced by a desire in superstitious and ignorant people to make the two parts of the story agree with one another; and that in the latter, some house clog was overlooked in the search for the cause of the Gg2 APPENDIX. disturbance : the efforts are related to have been great, but the imagination always exag- gerates when it knows not the power with which it is contending. Some superstitious men, in explaining such stories, say that no doubt the soul was transported while the body was left in a state of torpor. This mode of explanation, however, requires much greater credulity than that we have adopted, though it generally happens that the simplest solu- tions of such events are looked upon as fan- ciful and far-fetched by those who cling to the prejudices of their ancestors. Sometime in the beginning of last century there was a story of a remarkably prophetic dream, which was said to have been related before a court of justice, and was much talked of I think in the West of England. One person dreamt that ano- ther, a friend of his, was accompanied on a short journey by two men, one tall and the other little, and robbed and mur- dered by these men in a particular part of the road. The dream was so perfect, that, when two men made their appear- ance in reality to the dreamer, he recognized them, and cau- tioned his friend against accompanying them on his journey. He did accompany them, and was murdered and his property taken iYorn him at the very part of the road which had been APPENDIX. 473 presented to the dreamer in his sleep, and the dream was the principal means of discovering the murderers, who were taken and executed. If I had been told this dream after it had happened, and before the men were seen by the dreamer, I might have believed it to be something supernatural. As it happens in the end, however, with all these stories, there wants evidence for every particular, and there is no proof that the whole is not a fabrication. Even though an apparition or a dream were prophetic, to prove that it was super- natural, it is necessary to show that the pro- phesy was contrary to all human calculation, that the event which constituted its fulfilment was most improbable in itself, and most ac- curately corresponding with the announce- ment in every particular. In a simple state of society, a shrewd observer reckoning upon what has already happened, may make won- derful progress in divining what is to come. Gg3 4JT4 APPENDIX. This is what is called second sight. When we go very far back in society, we find sacred prophesies which are either calculations upon what is likely to take place, or rhapsodies so mysterious, that they will apply to almost every possible circumstance. Ancient times are so hidden in obscurity, that only Theolo- gians would think it worth while to examine them. In modern history we have no ac- counts of prophetic apparitions, or of pro- phetic men, who foresaw any thing which prudence would not enable any person to dis- cover. (t Apparitions by appointment," p. 384. I am credibly informed that the chaplain of the present Sir M. W. Ridley's grandfather made with that person a contract, that the first that died should if possible appear to the other. No apparition, however, was the con- sequence of this agreement. I am acquainted with two or three similar contracts, to one of APPENDIX. 475 which I am a party ; if any apparition should shew itself in fulfilment of any one of these contracts, the world will know it. There is a story in the La Belle Assembled for July 1806, of Lord Tyrone having appeared to Lady Beresford, who had been very loose in her principles, in consequence of an appointment. Lady Beresford, it is said, expressed great doubts as to the reality of the apparition ; in consequence of which he marked her wrist, and turned the curtains of the bed up in a most supernatural manner, in order to confirm her in her belief of his having appeared, when she awoke in the morning. She related the story the next day to her husband, and shortly after, a letter arrived announcing the death of Lord Tyrone. The ghost wiote in her pocket book, and the account states that the writing is yet extant. The evidence for these stories always fails somewhere. In this instance, it is unfortu- nate that there is no proof of the facts he re- lates before the public, but the supposition of the relater's own veracity; but even if the hand writing and the ribbon which covered Lady JBeresford's withered wrist were produ- ced, there is no proof of the apparition. Lady Beresford alone saw it, and the only unex- APPENDIX. ceptionable proof died with her. The appear- ance of persons after death by appointment has been often urged by the clergy as a proof of the immortality of the soul; if it could prove any thing, however, it would only shew that there was a possibility of a semblance of the body appearing after death, but the soul, from its immaterial nature, surely could not assume the form of any thing material. If we agree with the common belief, viz. that the soul flies at the moment of death, we must believe it to be invisible, for no man ever saw the soul flying out at the window or through the roof of the room in which the body had just expired. To return for a moment to the subject of dreaming : May we not arrive at as complete an explanation of its phenomena as possible, considering our want of knowledge of primary causation ? We cannot find out what is the Teason why a particular food affects the mind APPENDIX. 477 in a particular manner, because we know not what the mind is, except from plausible con- jecture. The effects of particular aliment upon the mind are chiefly relative ; thus, one man feels great benefit to his powers of think- ing from drinking coffee, another from drink- ing wine, and another from drinking porter, because they were used to these liquors, though perhaps if each were to drink what was nourishment to the other, all would feel their intellectual faculties injured rather than improved, but the reason why any ali- ment has its effect upon the mind, except it be relatively, we cannot discover. If, how- ever, by an examination of the lives of per- sons who have lived in the simplest manner (see note p. 376), we can find that those per- sons, according to some connexion* between their food and their ideas, had particular dreams, we may, after having had some ex- perience in the connexion which we have not yet acquired, be enabled to say, according to 478 APPENDIX. the quantity of food, and its tendency upon the powers of digestion, what will be the na- ture of any person's dream, and even what will be its precise duration, till by degrees we may procure such an exact knowledge of dreams, that we shall be able to find what number of figures will appear to us, what va- riety of scenery, or what number of speeches will be made to us. I have often heard people relate, as remark- able examples of prophetic dreaming, that they, or their friends, had dreamt of a parti- cular number in the lottery, which has after- wards been drawn a considerable prize. The person who dreamt of the number must have had an idea of it before he dreamt, or it would not have been presented to him ; and we have already said too much about coincidence to require us to give an explanation of the fact of the ticket having been drawn a prize.- People are frequently heard to say they are APPENDIX. 479 very true dreamers. There are persons who consider the recurrence of circumstances they have formerly known and dreamt of, as ful- filments of prophecies. Perhaps it never entered the minds of the most superstitious advocates of second sight, to add to it a means of the seers transporting himself through the air from one place to another. Yet Aubrey relates an instance (Miscellanies, p. 158-9.), in which an earl of Cathness said he had asked a second-sighted person to inform him where a particular ves- sel was, which he kept for bringing home wine and other provisions. The man replied, four hours sail distant, and as a proof that he was relating what was true, he produced the cap of one of the seamen, which he had got from off his head immediately before. When the vessel arrived, one of the seamen claimed the cap, and said it had been carried from off his head by a gust of wind ! This transporta- 480 APPENDIX. tion by invisible power leads me to say a few words upon witchcraft, of which such trans- portation was wont to be a proof and a quali- fication. It is singular, that with all the proofs of witchcraft, which have often been many degrees stronger. than those in favor of appa- ritions, the belief in that power, in the king- doms of Great Britain at least, is now much diminished and almost extinguished. Perhaps the unrelenting persecution with which witch- craft was visited, tended greatly to eradicate both the belief and the practice. " Nam tua " res agitur, quum paries proximus ardet." The old women as well as the young probably thought it politic to accuse nobody of witch- craft, lest they might themselves hazard a ducking or a roasting, in the same manner as Hopkins, the witch -finder, was burnt at last, after having spent his life in procuring the destruction of his fellow creatures. I rather think that in some countries where witches are not in such great danger, old women may still APPENDIX. 481 be pointed at for having thrown maidens into fits, and prevented cows from giving milk. But, however generally suppressed, witchcraft is still partially believed in, in superstitious districts. A gentleman, on whose veracity I can depend, informs me that in Ross-shire, within his own recollection, there were some persons who were believed to practise witch- craft. One George Hossack, in a district of that county, shot a hare as she was leaping through a hedge, and presently there appear- ed on the other side of the hedge an old wo- man who was a reputed witch, wounded in the leg. It was of course circulated that the woman had returned to her proper shape, af- ter she had been wounded in the leg in the shape of a hare; though probably the man only set abroad that report to save himself from the imputation of having fired at a hare and shot an old woman. Another woman in the same neighbourhood accused an elder of the church with having violated her person. 482 APPENDIX. After the most candid and impartial examina- tion, it was declared that the elder was inno- cent ; that the woman had been violated by the devil in his shape, and she was excommu- nicated ! The devil, poor angel, has been calumnia- ted with every crime which has disgraced hu- man nature from the creation to the present time, though St. James plainly tells us that man is tempted " of his own lust." I remem- ber, when very young, several instances hav- ing been made near where I resided to raise his satanic majesty ; for my part, I confess I was so superstitious once as to try to raise him myself, but whether he had heard of my in- tention of writing against him, or he was " asleep, or on a journey," I could not disco- ver; however, he never deigned to convince me of his existence, and his neglect to appear has, perhaps for his own good purposes, con- firmed me in my opinion that he is either de- APPENDIX. 483 funct or never lived. I have heard from re- sidents, that in a certain town in Norfolk (the name of which I would mention, but that I am afraid of so far calumniating its good in- habitants), a number of true believers assem- bled in the church, and read the Lord's pray- er backwards, (which, with other ceremonies, is an old and approved receipe,) on which the church was filled with smoke, and a very powerful hissing ensued, which lasted for some minutes. I have heard from another quarter, that one of the parishioners prophanely drop- ped a hint that a horn stuffed with tow was found not far from the place whence the smoke issued. I am not quite certain as to the nature of the corps-candles. Perhaps they may be of different kinds, for, as some persons relate in- stances of their having appeared upon a table, and in dry situations, they cannot all be the common Will-o'-the-wisp. Probably those in- 484 APPENDIX. stances which are related to have appeared in such situations proceeded from fish, or some phosphoric substance, of the nature of which the people who saw them were ignorant. To ascertain their precise nature requires a per- sonal investigation which I have not yet made, but which I shall take the earliest opportunity of making. I shall now proceed to enumerate such dif- ferences in relations, as will shew that appa- ritions have only existed according to the ideas people have formed of them, and not from any standard. This will prove them to be merely imaginary. A Mrs. Bretton appeared to a person who had been her ser- vant, in order to procure from a relation the gift of a certain portion of land to the poor. This may serve as an instance of the coldness of ghosts. The servant, whose name was Alice, expressed great surprise, as well she might, at the appearance of her mistress. She said, " were not my Mistress dead, I should not question but that you are she. She replied, I ain the same that was your Mistress, and took her by the hand j which Alice affirmed was as cold as a Clod." Glanvil's Sadu- cismus iriumphatus, 1681, page 239. APPENDIX. 485 Aubrey has the following : " T. M. Esq., an old Acquaintance of mine, hath assured me, that about a quarter of a Year after his first wife's death as he lay in Bed awake, with his Grand-child, his Wife opened the Closet Door, and came into the Chamber by the Bed side, and looked upon him, and stooped down and Kissed him ; her Lips were warm, he fancied they would have been cold. He was about to have Embraced her, but was afraid it might have done him hurt. When she went from him, he asked her when he should see her again ? She turned about and smiled, but said nothing. The Closet Door striked, as it uses to do, both at her coming in and going out." Miscellanies, 8;c. p. 82. As an instance of an apparition which ap- peared unsubstantial, we may refer to the first which we related in this appendix. The following is the conclusion of one of Glanvil's stories : " David Hunter told her he never knew her. No, says she, I died Seven years before you came into the Countrcij : But for all that, if he would do her Message, she would ne\er Imrt him. But he deferred doing as the Apparition bid him, and she ap- peared the night efter as he lay in bed, and struck him on the shoulder very hard ; at which he cried out, and askt her if she did not. promise she would not hurt him ? She said, that was if he did her Message ; if not, she would kill him. He told her he could not go now by reason the Waters were out. She said she was content he should stay till they were abated : but Hh 486 APPENDIX. charged him afterwards not to fail her. So he did her errand, and afterwards she appeared and gave him thanks. For now, said she, I shall be at rest, therefore pray you lift me up from, the ground, and I will trouble you no more So David Hunter lifted her up from the ground, and as he said, she felt just like a bag of Feathers in his arms. So she vanisht, and he heard most delicate Musick as she went off, over his head j and he never was more troubled.'* Glantil, p. 286-7. " The Doctor," (Scot) " as I have the Story related, was sit- ting alone by the Fire, either in his Study, or his Parlour, in Broad-street where he liv'd, and reading a Book, his Door being shut fast and lock'd ; he was well assured there was no body in the Room but himself, when accidentally raising his Head a little, he was exceedingly surpris'd to see sitting in an Elbow- Chair, at the other side of the Fire-place, or Chimney, an an- cient, grave Gentleman in a black Velvet gown, a long Wig, and looking with a pleasing countenance towards him (the Doctor) as if just going to speak." Moreton's Secrets of the invisible World disclosed, p. 295 " After this Discourse, and the Doctor promising to go down into the Country, and dispatch this important Commission j the Apparition putting on a very pleasant and smiling Aspect, thank'd him, and disappear'd." Ibid. p. 299. We have already had a ghost which opened and shut doors with all proper civility, viz. the ghost of the wife whose lips were warm. The famous ghost of Mrs. Veal, related in the introduction to Drelincourt on Death, APPENDIX. 487 felt and spoke exactly as if she had been alive, and when she took her leave of her friend, did not vanish, but went out of the door, and was not lost sight of till she had turned the corner. The question naturally suggests itself here, why do not all ghosts act in the same manner? or, why do not the ghosts of the good act in one manner and the ghosts of the wicked in another manner ? This question is unanswerable, except that ghosts proceed en- tirely from the imagination. Some obstinate believer will say, however, that real ghosts have all one conduct, those of imagination only are variable. The question then resolves itself into this ; which are the real ghosts ? This would puzzle all the ghost seers that ever existed to determine, for there is just as much evidence for one kind as for another. All the witches, of whose appearance we have the most authenticated relations, come through walls and closed windows, and do Hh2 488 APPENDIX. not seem to have felt interruption from any common interposing substance. Glanvil, and other of the sage defenders of witchcraft, attribute this readiness of passing through what would be considered obstacles to com- mon mortals, to what they call their astral spirits, which they managed to send abroad instead of themselves. Two men were seized at Guilford, for having murdered an, old man of the name of Bower, and put into gaol to the same cell with another who had been committed for a robbery. The night on which the two were thrown into prison, " this third Man was awakened about one of the Clock, and greatly terrified with an Old Man, who had a great gash cross his Throat almost from Ear to Ear, and a wound down his Breast." Glanvil, SfC. p. 232. This was an apparition through the prison door, or through the wall of the cell. See the converse : " And so it went away over the Rails into the Wood there, in the like Man- ner as any Man would go over a Style to his apprehension." Ibid. 212. Ghosts will be recollected by those who have been at all conversant in stories of super- natural appearances, which have passed through trees and bushes, and other obstacles. APPENDIX. 489 It is sufficient that they are proved to pass through obstacles in general. It would be in vain to instance all the cases which have oc- curred. Mr. Grose has enumerated most of those instances of difference in the ingenious essay from which I made an extract in the commencement of this enquiry, and I should not myself have dwelt so long upon them, had it not been considered by many enlight- ened men who profess to believe in appari- tions, that the not giving examples of those differences proceeded from inability to give them. It may not be improper, in passing, to no- tice some arguments for apparitions which are adduced in spite of the differences we have heen enumerating. Those arguments, though not applicable to this or any particular part of the subject, but to apparitions generally, it may be better to state, than to pass by in total silence, especially as superstitious people Hh 3 490 APPENDIX. of all kinds are apt to consider what remains unanswered, as unanswerable. We have already stated that apparitions are asserted to prove the immortality of the soul, hut the strength of that argument in favor of the soul's immortality is very much diminished, when we find that those who adduce it like- wise bring forward the immortality of the soul to prove the possibility of ghosts ! Mr. Glan- vil-has the following passage : " This is the common argument of those that deny the Being of Apparitions, they have Travelled all hours of the night, and never saw any thing worse than themselves (which may well be) and thence they conclude, that all pretended Apparitions are Fancies or Impostures. But why do not such arguers conclude, that there was never a Cut-purse in London, because they have lived there many years without being met with by any of those Practisers } Certainly he that denies ^parifion5iij>on the confi- dence of this Negative against the vast heap of Positive assuran- ces, is credulous in believing there was ever any Highway -man in the World, if he himself was never robbed. And the Trials of Assizes and Attestations of those that have (if he will be just) ought to move his assent no more in this case than in that of IVitches and Apparitions, which have the very same evidence." I should not have mentioned this, if it had been tfye argument of Mr. Glanvil only. But APPENDIX. 491 as I hear it every day alleged in favor of the existence of apparitions, it must not be passed by unnoticed. The great question here is, is there any belief like that in supernatural ap- pearances ? Is there any doctrine or dogma which has a similar foundation with such a belief? The belief in God? That is sup- ported by the most incontestible evidence. A belief in cut-purses or highwaymen ? That is a belief which cannot be controverted. There is in fact no belief like that in appari- tions and supernatural phenomena in general. It stands alone, and therefore ought not to be compared with any other. It is the con- founding of this belief with others that are better founded, that has so firmly fixed it in the minds of many generations. If mankind would have considered it alone, when it iirst gained dominion over their minds, it would have been cast off as unworthy of rational beings. It is said that the whole universe is peopled with millions of spiritual beings, and 492 APPENDIX. therefore we have no reason to discredit the existence or possibility of apparitions. Rather, however, than allow this to support the be- lief, I make it a ground of denying the pos- sibility of ghosts altogether ; for, if the world he peopled with such a number of spiritual beings, they are invisible to any of our senses, and therefore before any of them could appear to us, they must change their nature or we must change ours, which, as far as our know- ledge extends, is impossible.* * Stay a little, cries a sage apparitkmist, when he comes to this passage ; how can you write thus? Does not this assertion of yours include and deny the whole act of vanishing from the creation even until now? This deserves a slight examination. The assertion that the air is peopled with spirits proves nothing, because it adduces one disputed existence in support of another disputed existence. That these spirits must change their nature, then, before any of them appear to us, is the only ques- tion. There are certainly such things as vanishings in nature. A candle is dissipated to our eyes, though the substance is only attenuated and mingled with the air in smoke and vapor. But all natural vanishings are from substance to less substance ; whereas this one most singular transformation of apparitions i- to change from a thinner state to a thicker. This change is not sufficient, for after it we have a vanishing back again to APPENDIX. 493 We now proceed to state a few of the attri- butes of apparitions, such as we have men- tioned in our essay (p. 419.) As an instance of an apparition appearing without being re- cognized to be such, we may cite the story of Mrs. Bretton, which we have already mentioned. The passage we have cited, commencing " were not my mistress dead, &c.'' shews that the seer did not know who it was she saw till she was informed. One Thomas Goddard saw a person like his deceased father in law : " When he came near, the apparition spake to him with an audible voice these words, Are you afraid ? To which he answered, I am thinking on one who is dead and buried, whom you are like. To which the apparition replied with the like voice, I am he that you were thinking on, I am Edward Avon, the former state. Now let us imagine a candle to be burnt away, and that candle to be restored again to its former con- dition from the smoke into v.hicli it had been dissolved. This is a parallel case, as near as may be, with apparitions. The whole system of apparition-vanishing, whether in the shape of devils or angels, with lights or without, is most ridiculous. Miracle- mongers talk about our not krowing the laws of nature, and they therefore say that such things as miracles, apparitions, and the like, (indeed the latter is a species of the former) may be according to the laws of nature. It is common with human laws to contradict one another; but it is not the case with the laws of nature j and any thing we find contra- dicting what we now know to be a principle in natural phi- losophy, cannot be a la'.v of nature, but a phantom of prejudice. 494 APPENDIX. your father in law ; come near to me, I will do you no harm. To which Goddard answered, I trust in him who hath bought my soul with his precious blood, you shall do me no harm. Then the apparition said, How stand cases at home ? Goddard askt What cases r" Glanvit, p. 210. This is a very singular case ; for the ap- parition knows, from the whole of the account, neither what is past, nor what is to come. At another appearance of the same apparition, William Avon, the son of the deceased person whose apparition it was, was in company with Goddard ; when it appeared, Goddard ' ' called to his brother in law, and said, Here is the apparition of our father, who said, I see nothing Then Goddard fell on his knees and said, Lord open his eyes that he may see it. But he replyed, Lord grant I may not see it. if it be thy blessed will." As soon as the. apparition vanished, " Avon told Goddard he heard his voice and understood what he said, and heard other words dis- tinct from his, but could not understand a word of it, nor saw any Apparition at all." Gianni, p. 215. There is a story- of a cure which is accompanied by an appari- tion. The woman cured was called Jesch Claes, though I have some accounts of her ston which call her Janet. " This Woman for fourteen jears had been lame of both Legs, one of them be- ing dead and without feeling, so that she could not go but creep upon the ground, or was carried in People's Anns as a Child, but now through the power of God Almighty =.he hath walked again. Which came to pavs afirr this manner, as 1 have taken it from her own moutn. In the year 16/6 about the 13th or 14th of APPENDIX. 495 this Month October, in the Night between one and two of the Clock, this Jesch C'laes being in bed with her Husband, who was a Boatman, she was three times pulled by her Arm, with which she waked and cried out, O Lord ! What may this be? Here- upon she heard an answer in plain words : Be not afraid, I come in the Name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. Your malady which hath for many years been upon you shall cease, and it shall be given you from God Almighty to walk again. But keep this to yourself till further answer. Whereupon she cried aloud, O Lord ! That I had a light that I might know what this is. Then had she this answer, There needs no light, the light shall be given you from God. Then came light all over the room, and she saw a beautiful Youth about Ten years of Age, with Curled Yellow Hair, Clothed in White to the Feet, who went from the Bed's-head to the Chimney with a light which a little after vanished." Glanvil, p. 252. Besides other peculiarities which it possess- ed, my readers will not fail to notice that this ghost was a decided Trinitarian, whereas, had it appeared at Constantinople or Pekin, it would have spoken of Mahomet or Fot. Glanvil has the following singular instance of appearing and disappearing in music ; it is related in a letter : " Sir, my service to you and your Lady. Now according to your desire I shall write what my Cousin told me : Her name was Mary Watkinson, her Father did live in Smithfield, but she 496 APPENDIX. was Married to one Francis Toppam, ami she did live in York, with her Husband, being an ill one, who did steal her away against her Parents' consent, so that thev oould not abi