education unbiassed by any
logical" target="_blank" title="a.神学(上)的">
theological creed; and he brought
exceptional powers of
abstractreasoning to bear upon matters
of
permanent and
supreme importance to all men. Yet, in
spite of his
ruthlessimpartiality, I should not
hesitate to
call him a religious man. This very
tendency which no
imaginative mind, no man or woman with any
strain of poetical
feeling, can be without, invests Mill's
character with a
clash of
humanity which entitles him to a place in our
affections. It is in this respect that he so widely differs
from Mr. Herbert Spencer. Courageous Mr. Spencer was, but
his courage seems to have been due almost as much to absence
of
sympathy or kinship with his fellow-creatures, and to his
contempt of their opinions, as from his dis
passionate love of
truth, or his sometimes
passionate defence of his own tenets.
My friend Napier told me an
amusing little story about John
Mill when he was in the East India Company's administration.
Mr. Macvey Napier, my friend's elder brother, was the senior
clerk. On John Mill's
retirement, his co-officials
subscribed to present him with a silver standish. Such was
the general sense of Mill's
modestestimate of his own
deserts, and of his aversion to all
acknowledgment of them,
that Mr. Napier, though it fell to his lot, begged others to
join in the
ceremony of
presentation. All declined; the
inkstand was left upon Mill's table when he himself was out
of the room.
Years after the time of which I am
writing, when Mill stood
for Westminster, I had the good fortune to be on the
platformat St. James's Hall, next but one to him, when he made his
first speech to the electors. He was completely unknown to
the public, and, though I worshipped the man, I had never
seen him, nor had an idea what he looked like. To satisfy my
curiosity I tried to get a
portrait of him at the
photographic shop in Regent Street.
'I want a photograph of Mr. Mill.'
'Mill? Mill?'
repeated the shopman, 'Oh yes, sir, I know - a
great sporting gent,' and he produced the
portrait of a
sportsman in top boots and a
hunting cap.
Very different from this was the figure I then saw. The hall
and the
platform were
crowded. Where was the principal
personage? Presently, quite alone, up the side steps, and
unobserved, came a thin but tallish man in black, with a tail
coat, and, almost unrecognised, took the
vacant front seat.
He might have been, so far as dress went, a clerk in a
counting-house, or an undertaker. But the face was no
ordinary one. The wide brow, the sharp nose of the Burke
type, the
compressed lips and strong chin, were
suggestive of
intellect and of suppressed
emotion. There was no applause,
for nothing was known to the crowd, even of his opinions,
beyond the fact that he was the Liberal
candidate for
Westminster. He spoke with perfect ease to himself, never
faltering for the right word, which seemed to be always at
his command. If interrupted by questions, as he constantly
was, his answers could not have been amended had he written
them. His voice was not strong, and there were frequent
calls from the far end to 'speak up, speak up; we can't hear
you.' He did not raise his pitch a note. They might as well
have tried to bully an automaton. He was doing his best, and
he could do no more. Then, when, instead of the usual
adulations, instead of declamatory appeals to the passions of
a large and a mixed
assembly, he gave them to understand, in
very plain language, that even socialists are not infallible,
- that
extreme and
violent opinions, begotten of ignorance,
do not
constitute the highest political
wisdom; then there
were murmurs of
dissent and
disapproval. But if the ignorant
and the
violent could have stoned him, his calm manner would
still have said, 'Strike, but hear me.'
Mr. Robert Grosvenor - the present Lord Ebury - then the
other Liberal member for Westminster, wrote to ask me to take
the chair at Mill's first
introduction to the Pimlico
electors. Such, however, was my
admiration of Mill, I did
not feel sure that I might not say too much in his favour;
and mindful of the standish
incident, I knew, that if I did
so, it would
embarrass and annoy him.
Under these circumstances I declined the honour.
When Owen was delivering a course of lectures at Norwich, my
brother invited him to Holkham. I was there, and we took
several long walks together. Nothing seemed to escape his
observation. My brother had just completed the
recovery of
many hundred acres of tidal marsh by embankments. Owen, who
was greatly interested, explained what would be the effect
upon the sandiest
portion of this, in years to come; what the
chemical action of the rain would be, how the sand would
eventually become soil, how
vegetation would cover it, and
how
manure render it cultivable. The splendid crops now
grown there bear
testimony to his
foresight. He had always
something
instructive to
impart, stopping to contemplate
trifles which only a Zadig would have noticed.
'I observe,' said he one day, 'that your
prevailing wind here
is north-west.'
'How do you know?' I asked.
'Look at the roots of all these trees; the large roots are
invariably on the north-west side. This means that the
strain comes on this side. The roots which have to bear it
loosen the soil, and the loosened soil favours the extension
and the growth of the roots. Nature is beautifully
scientific.'
Some years after this, I published a book called 'Creeds of
the Day.' My purpose was to show, in a popular form, the
bearings of science and
speculative thought upon the
religious creeds of the time. I sent Owen a copy of the
work. He wrote me one of the most interesting letters I ever
received. He had bought the book, and had read it. But the
important content of the letter was the
confession of his own
faith. I have purposely excluded all
correspondence from
these Memoirs, but had it not been that a forgotten collector
of autographs had captured it, I should have been tempted to
make an
exception in its favour. The tone was agnostic; but
timidly agnostic. He had never freed himself from the
shackles of early prepossessions. He had not the necessary
daring to clear up his doubts. Sometimes I fancy that it was
this difference in the two men that lay at the bottom of the
unfortunate antagonism between Owen and Huxley. There is in
Owen's
writing, where he is not
purelyscientific, a touch of
the apologist. He cannot quite make up his mind to follow
evolution to its
logical conclusions. Where he is forced to
do so, it is to him like signing the death
warrant of his
dearest friend. It must not be forgotten that Owen was born
more than twenty years before Huxley; and great as was the
offence of free-thinking in Huxley's youth, it was nothing
short of anathema in Owen's. When I met him at Holkham, the
'Origin of Species' had not been published; and Napier and I
did all we could to get Owen to express some opinion on
Lamarck's theory, for he and I used to talk confidentially on
this
fearfulheresy even then. But Owen was ever on his
guard. He evaded our questions and changed the subject.
Whenever I pass near the South Kensington Museum I step aside
to look at the noble statues of the two
illustrious men. A
mere glance at them, and we
appreciate at once their
respective
characters. In the one we see
passivewisdom, in
the other militant force.
CHAPTER XLI
BEFORE I went to America, I made the
acquaintance of Dr.
George Bird; he continued to be one of my most intimate
friends till his death, fifty years afterwards. When I first
knew him, Bird was the
medicaladviser and friend of Leigh
Hunt, whose family I used often to meet at his house. He had
been
dependent entirely upon his own exertions; had married
young; and had had a pretty hard fight at starting to provide