regret, for he was a
consistent vegetarian.
However, we are advancing too rapidly, and we must discuss Plotinus
more in order. His name is very dear to
mystic novelists, like the
author of "Zanoni." They always describe their favourite hero as
"deep in Plotinus or Iamblichus," and I
venture to think that nearly
represents the depth of their own explorations. We do not know
exactly when Plotinus was born. Like many ladies he used to wrap up
his age in a
mystery, observing that these petty details about the
body (a mere husk of flesh
binding the soul) were of no importance.
He was not weaned till he was eight years old, a singular
circumstance. Having a turn for
philosophy, he attended the schools
of Alexandria,
concerning which Kingsley's "Hypatia" is the most
accessible authority.
All these anecdotes, I should have said, we learn from Porphyry, the
Tyrian, who was a kind of Boswell to Plotinus. The
philosopherhimself often reminds me of Dr. Johnson, especially as Dr. Johnson
is described by Mr. Carlyle. Just as the good doctor was a sound
Churchman in the
beginning of the age of new ideas, so Plotinus was
a sound pagan in the
beginning of the
triumph of Christianity.
Like Johnson, Plotinus was lazy and
energetic and short-sighted. He
wrote a very large number of treatises, but he never took the
trouble to read through them when once they were written, because
his eyes were weak. He was
superstitious, like Dr. Johnson, yet he
had lucid intervals of common sense, when he laughed at the
superstitions of his
disciples. Like Dr. Johnson, he was always
begirt by
disciples, men and women, Bozzys and Thrales. He was so
full of honour and
charity, that his house was
crowded with persons
in need of help and friendly care. Though he lived so much in the
clouds and among
philosophical abstractions, he was an excellent man
of business. Though a
philosopher he was pious, and was courageous,
dreading the
plague no more than the good doctor dreaded the tempest
that fell on him when he was voyaging to Coll.
You will admit that the
parallel is pretty close for an historical
parallel,
despite the differences between the ascetic of Wolf-town
and the sage of Bolt Court, hard by Fleet Street!
To return to the education of Plotinus. He was twenty-eight when he
went up to the University of Alexandria. For eleven years he
diligently attended the lectures of Ammonius. Then he went on the
Emperor Gordian's
expedition to the East, hoping to learn the
philosophy of the Hindus. The Upanishads would have puzzled
Plotinus, had he reached India; but he never did. Gordian's army
was defeated in Mesopotamia, no "blessed word" to Gordian, and
Plotinus hardly escaped with his life. He must have felt like
Stendhal on the
retreat from Moscow.
From Syria his friend and
disciple Amelius led him to Rome, and
here, as novelists say, "a curious thing happened." There was in
Rome an Egyptian
priest, who offered to raise up the Demon, or
Guardian Angel, of Plotinus in
visible form. But there was only one
pure spot in all Rome, so said the
priest, and this spot was the
Temple of Isis. Here the seance was held, and no demon appeared,
but a regular God of one of the first circles. So terrified was an
onlooker that he crushed to death the living birds which he held in
his hands for some
ritual or
magical purpose.
It was a curious scene, a cosmopolitan
confusion of Egypt, Rome,
Isis, table-turning, the late Mr. Home, religion, and mummery, while
Christian hymns of the early Church were being sung, perhaps in the
garrets around, outside the Temple of Isis. The discovery that he
had a god for his
guardian angel gave Plotinus plenty of confidence
in
dealing with rival
philosophers. For example, Alexandrinus
Olympius, another
mystic, tried
magical arts against Plotinus. But
Alexandrinus, suddenly doubling up during lecture with unaffected
agony, cried, "Great
virtue hath the soul of Plotinus, for my spells
have returned against myself." As for Plotinus, he remarked among
his
disciples, "Now the body of Alexandrinus is collapsing like an
empty purse."
How diverting it would be, Lady Violet, if our modern
controversialists had those accomplishments, and if Mr. Max Muller
could,
literally, "double up" Professor Whitney, or if any one could
cause Peppmuller to
collapse with his queer Homeric theory!
Plotinus had many such arts. A piece of jewellery was
stolen from
one of his protegees, a lady, and he detected the thief, a servant,
by a glance. After being flogged within an inch of his life, the
servant (perhaps to save the remaining inch) confessed all.
Once when Porphyry was at a distance, and was meditating suicide,
Plotinus appeared at his side,
saying, "This that thou schemest
cometh not of the pure
intellect, but of black humours," and so sent
Porphyry for change of air to Sicily. This was
thoroughly good
advice, but during the
absence of the
disciple the master died.
Porphyry did not see the great snake that glided into the wall when
Plotinus expired; he only heard of the circumstance. Plotinus's
last words were: "I am striving to
release that which is divine
within us, and to merge it in the
universally divine." It is a
strange
mixture of
philosophy and
savage survival. The Zulus still
believe that the souls of the dead
reappear, like the soul of
Plotinus, in the form of serpents.
Plotinus wrote against the paganizing Christians, or Gnostics. Like
all great men, he was accused of plagiarism. A defence of great men
accused of
literary theft would be as
valuable as Naude's work of a
like name about magic. On his death the Delphic Oracle, in very
second-rate hexameters, declared that Plotinus had become a demon.
Such was the life of Plotinus, a man of sense and
virtue, and so
modest that he would not allow his
portrait to be painted. His
character drew good men round him, his
repute for supernatural
virtues brought "fools into a circle." What he meant by his
beliefthat four times he had, "whether in the body or out of the body,"
been united with the Spirit of the world, who knows? What does
Tennyson mean when he writes:
"So word by word, and line by line,
The dead man touch'd me from the past,
And all at once it seem'd at last
His living soul was flashed on mine.
And mine in his was wound and whirl'd
About empyreal heights of thought,
And came on that which is, and caught
The deep pulsations of the world."
Mystery! We cannot
fathom it; we know not the paths of the souls of
Pascal and Gordon, of Plotinus and St. Paul. They are wise with a
wisdom not of this world, or with a
foolishness yet more wise.
In his practical
philosophy Plotinus was an optimist, or at least he
was at war with pessimism.
"They that love God bear
lightly the ways of the world--bear
lightlywhatsoever befalls them of necessity in the general
movement of
things." He believed in a rest that remains for the people of God,
"where they speak not one with the other; but, as we understand many
things by the eyes only, so does soul read soul in heaven, where the
spi
ritual body is pure, and nothing is
hidden, and nothing feigned."
The arguments by which these opinions are buttressed may be called
metaphysical, and may be called
worthless; the
conviction, and the
beauty of the language in which it is stated, remain im
mortalpossessions.
Why such a man as Plotinus, with such ideas, remained a pagan, while
Christianity offered him a
sympatheticrefuge, who can tell?
Probably natural conservatism, in him as in Dr. Johnson--
conservatism and taste--caused his adherence to the forms at least
of the older creeds. There was much to laugh at in Plotinus, and
much to like. But if you read him in hopes of material for strange
stories, you will be disappointed. Perhaps Lord Lytton and others
who have invoked his name in
fiction (like Vivian Grey in Lord
Beaconsfield's tale) knew his name better than his
doctrine. His
"Enneads," even as edited by his patient Boswell, Porphyry, are not
very light subjects of study.
LUCRETIUS
To the Rev. Geoffrey Martin, Oxford.
Dear Martin,--"How individuals found religious
consolation from the
creeds of ancient Greece and Rome" is, as you quote C. O. Muller, "a
very curious question." It is odd that while we have countless