Rogers defaulter of
unaccounted
millions,” and
ir indefinitely; indeed, there are a score he was living in constant apprehension of
is of good things to which we would gladly having to disgorge?
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No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
33
ear3.
PAGE
33
34
35
36-37
37
38
38-39
. .
40
LIST OF NEW BOOKS
41
43
ST. ANDREWS UNIVERSITY SCIENTIFIC PAPERS;
MEREDITH ;
MR. ROGER FRY'S PAINTINGS AND
47-49
FORMANCES NEXT WEEK
50-51
THE
51-52
FROGS OF ARISTOPHANES
52
lation of that profound humour that lies / to some extent “feminist,” hostile, at any
SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1912.
beneath the surface he neither practised nor rate, to arrogant virility, it sounds in its
appreciated. Indeed, an interest in what ideas and arguments oddly familiar to
lies beneath the surface seemed tolerable modern
Political wisdom , like
CONTENTS.
only so long as it was reasonably insincere. human folly, seems to obey a law known
Truth, thought Voltaire, was too good for to men of science as “ the Conservation of
THE LYSISTRATA OF ARISTOPHANES
lackeys; sincerity too coarse for the Energy ”- quantity and quality are per-
HENRY Fox, FIRST LORD HOLLAND
MISS STEPHEN'S VISION OF FAITH
gentry: No great man ever feared coarse manent, form alone changes. It is the
BIOGRAPHY (A Duke and his Friends ; The Life Story
ness; but little ones, however much they Aristophanic method that differs so greatly
of the Shareefa of Wazan ; Sir Edward FitzGerald may relish indecency, cannot afford to be from that of most modern satirists. For
Law; Sir Edward Seymour's Naval Career)
found ill-bred.
Aristophanes does not confine himself
PHILOSOPHY (Bergson ; William James, and other
Essays)
To have read Mr. Rogers's translations is to driving the blade of his wit into the
TOLSTOY (Father Sergius ; Life of Count Tolstoy)
to know that he is on the side of Plato. rotten parts of a bad case; he does not
OUR LIBRARY TABLE (The Harry Furniss Thackeray; Unfortunately, we are only just beginning score intellectual points only. His method
Stanley Weyman's Novels ; Life in Shakespeare's
England; Emily Brontë's Works ; Persian Gram- to rub our eyes after a bout of prudery is more fundamental. A clever contro-
mar; The Story of Quamin; Peerages ; Visitation that would have dumbfounded Plato and versialist can always find joints in the
of England and Wales)
THE BOOK SALES OF 1911
filled Voltaire with disgust. Even now, harness of his foe. When one popular
were Aristophanes alive and publishing, philosopher of to-day meets another, it is
LITERARY GOSSIP
his plays would be vetoed by the Censor sometimes hard to say which makes the
SCIENCE-THE CHEMISTRY OF THE RADIO-ELEMENTS; and boycotted by the libraries probably, greater number of hits. Even harder is it
RESEARCH NOTES; SOCIETIES; MEETINGS NEXT
while a judge of the High Court could to say that the cause of truth has been
WEEK ; GOSSIP
46–47 surely be found to sentence the author of much advanced. One may hold, fairly
FINE ARTS—WOOD SCULPTURE ; ILLUSTRATIONS TO The Birds' to three months' hard labour enough, that both sides have been made
DRAWINGS; OTHER EXHIBITIONS ; GOSSIP
for blasphemy. Mr. Rogers, therefore, | ludicrous ; but it is still fairer to admit
DIUSIC - STYLE IN MUSICAL ART; GOSSIP; PER- who made this translation, not in the that neither has been discredited. If
Athens of Plato, but in the London of Aristophanes never succeeded in ruining
DRAMA-PLAYS FOR AN IRISH THEATRE ;
Podsnap-in 1878, to be exact—is not to a party, at least he succeeded in dis-
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
be blamed for having allowed it to bear crediting some pestilent opinions. This
the mark of its age. Nevertheless, though he did, not so much by a brisk display of
pardonable, his compromise is deplorable, intellectual handiness, as by showing that
since it robs this translation of precisely a pompous superstructure was baseless.
that quality which gives to most of the He makes us feel a position to be absurd,
LITERATURE
others their high importance. For Mr. instead of merely thinking certain things
Rogers is one of those who during the in it silly.
last five-and-twenty years have been The superior, sneering official has not
busy awakening us to a new sense of the escaped shrewd knocks from the wits
The Lysistrata of Aristophanes, acted at possibilities of life. His share in that task of every age. There is a type of mind
Athens in the Year B. C. 411. The has been to express and restate, in a form which, under every form of government,
Greek Text Revised, with a Transla- appreciable by the modern mind, some pushes to the front by sheer lack of virtue.
tion into Corresponding Metres, Intro- of the adventures and discoveries of the Wherever life has become sufficiently
duction, and Commentary, by Benjamin Hellenic genius. He is one of those mechanical to support a bureaucracy,
Bickley Rogers. (Bell & Sons. )
scholars who, consciously or unconsciously, there will the Poloniuses and Shallows
have joined hands with the boldest spirits gather, and, wherever there is an official
Ai Xúpites tépevós to daßtîv Örep ovxl of the age, and, by showing what the caste, there will be satirists or torture-
πεσείται
Greeks thought and felt, have revealed chambers. Yet, though the self-com-
ζητούσαι ψυχήν εύρον 'Αριστοφάνους.
to us new worlds of thought and feeling. placent magistrate has been the butt of the
Plato.
Now, to write like the sociologists, the ages, Aristophanes and Shakespeare, and
“Ce poète comique, qui n'est ni comique subject of 'The Lysistrata ' is the funda- perhaps Flaubert, have alone revealed his
ni poète, n'aurait pas été admis parmi nous mental nature and necessity of the essential nullity, because they alone have
à donner ses farces à la foire Saint-Laurent. ” interdependence of the sexes. But what looked for something essential beneath
-Voltaire.
Aristophanes thought and felt about the the accidental. Nothing could be simpler
Two quotations that illustrate more neatly matter, what Plato praised and Voltaire than the character of Polonius ; nothing
the difference between a great man and a misunderstood, is just what we shall not could be more subtle. A rap here, a stab
clever critic it would be hard to find. find in this translation. For instance, the there, and the soul of a minister is exposed.
Perhaps no one has felt so surely as Plato scene between Cinesias and Myrrhina is We have come to see, we scarcely know
the significance of the universe, or per- essential to a perfect understanding of the how, that, if he ever had one, he has lost it.
ceived so clearly that no parts of it, not play, but the latter part of it (ll. 905-60) Some idea of the simplicity and subtlety
even the great facts of life and the simple is not so much as paraphrased here. And of the Aristophanic method may be
emotions, are common or unclean. To so the spirit languishes; it could flourish gathered from the following scene, but
him, therefore, it seemed that the Graces, only in the body created for it by the to illustrate the extravagance and beauty
seeking an imperishable temple, discovered poet, and that body has been mutilated. of the form, or the profundity of the
the soul of Aristophanes. To Plato, This version, then, fails to bring out the conception, no quotation can suffice.
who knew that there is essential comedy profound, comic conception that gives Lysistrata has unfolded her famous scheme
just as there is essential tragedy, and that unity and significance to the original ; for stopping the war : there is to be a
both are roads by which men come at nevertheless, it has something more than sympathetic strike; the women of all
truth, these plays were full of beauty and literary interest. The comic poet offers the combatant states, principals and
significance ; whereas to Voltaire, who matter worthy of the consideration of allies, are to withhold their services until
never perceived the essential beneath politicians and political controversialists, the war has been stopped :-
the accidental, they were stupid and vulgar and this the translator has rendered
farces. Life, for him, was an affair of the fearlessly and well. For The Lysis- Lysistrata (ending a specch). Then shall the
people revere us and honour us,
intellect-an affair of intellectual rela- trata' is a political play, and cannot be
givers of Joy, and givers of Peace.
tions controlled by intellectual conventions. discussed profitably apart from its political Magistrate. Tell us the mode and the means of
Life was Society; and comedy the mirror
your doing it.
ideas and arguments. It can no more
Lys. First we will stop the disorderly
held up to Society by talent. Humour be treated as pure literature than the
meant wit--the bedecking of superficial of Tennyson can be treated as Soldiers in arms promenading and marketing.
things with brain-spun finery. The reve.
Stratyllis (leader of the chorus of women)
Yea, by divine Aphrodite, 'tis true.
anything else. Frankly “pacifist,” and
crew,
poetry
## p. 34 (#42) ##############################################
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4394, JAN. 13, 1912
Vio
ILL
3
2,
能力,
n.
es
CS
e!
ir,
>>
HAN
>>
66
cause
Democrats, who clamoured daily for a we would suggest to those whose Greek
1.
dozen Dreadnoughts, conscription, and has grown a little rusty that a literal
the head of Mr. Keir Hardie on a charger, translation in French or German would
and yet spent his leisure warning readers be a suitable companion for the English
is
of the daily papers against the danger of paraphrase. Without it, they will hardly
t, admitting to any share of power a sex understand what provoked Plato's splen-
notorious for its panic-fearfulness, in- did compliment or the nervous indignation
h tolerance, and lack of humour; such a of Voltaire.
one would indeed merit admission to the
χορός γερόντων, would be a proper fellow
r,
to take his stand εξής 'Αριστογείτονι,
beside the brave Aristogiton, and matága.
tode ypads toy yvádov, beat down this Henry Fox, First Lord Holland : a Study
monstrous regiment of women. ”
of the Career of an Eighteenth Century
it
Aristophanes was a staunch conser-
Politician. By Thad W. Riker. 2 vols.
vative, but he disliked a stupid argument
(Oxford, Clarendon Press. )
wherever he found it. He cared intensely MR. RIKER’s sub-title judiciously indicates
about politics, but he could not easily the scope of his able book. With Henry
ot
t forget that he was an artist.
an artist. Neither
the men nor the women are tied up and Fox the affectionate husband, the fond if
peppered with the small shot of his wit ; host, the enthusiastic art collector and
injudicious parent, the cordial friend and
they are allowed to betray themselves.
,
The art consists in selecting from the gardener, he is but little concerned. In
mass of their opinions and sentiments his account of the politician's private life
what is most significant, and making the he virtually follows
Sir George Trevelyan,
e magistrate, who speaks for the party, I the Journal of Elizabeth, Lady Holland,
and he has missed a significant passage in
$ deliver himself of judicious commonplaces. which implies that Henry Fox, in his old
at politicians, whom chance or misfortune age, did not accept the extravagance of
has led to favour one side rather than the his son Charles with the complacency that
is other, are less cautious without being is commonly attributed to him. This
d less platitudinous. Their talk is all of piece of evidence was worth giving, because
le
inevitable war and “stripping for the
it gets rid of the contradiction that a man
d fray,” “ vindicating rights, tyranny
who was rapacious in the acquiring of
and traitors, spoliation,” innova- money should have been absolutely indif-
tion," and striking good blows for the ferent as to what became of it. Lady Hol-
; at least it was twenty-three
land did not love Charles Fox, but there is
hundred
no reason to doubt her statement that his
years ago.
parents were grieved by his indebtedness.
Jen Chorus.
It must have been a bitter thing for the
al
This is not a time for slumber;
aged placeman, as he was nearing his end,
now let all be bold and free,
co Strip to meet the great occasion,
to have to provide no less than 140,0001.
-1.
.
vindicate our rights with me.
to save his favourite son from ruin.
I can'smell a deep, surprising
En
Tide of Revolution rising,
Within the limits he has imposed upon
ed Odour as of folk devising
himself, Mr. Riker has been conspicuously
* Hippias's tyranny.
And I feel a dire misgiving,
successful. He has delved deeply and
Lest some false Laconians, meeting
intelligently into eighteenth - century
in the house of Cleisthenes,
politics, and one of their most typical
Have inspired these wretched women
се
all our wealth and pay to seize.
characters appears, as the result of his
it Pay from whence I get my living.
labours, in a far more satisfactory present-
Gods ! to hear these shallow wenches
taking citizens to task,
ment than had previously been given to
n Prattling of a brassy buckler,
history. We do not get a new Henry
10
jabbering of a martial casque !
Fox, for Mr. Riker is far too truthful a
Gods ! to think that they have ventured
11
with Laconian men to deal,
writer to attempt a refurbishing of that
ne Men of just the faith and honour
somewhat dingy career, but we get to
ne
that a ravening wolf might feel !
Plots they ’re hatching, plots contriving,
know ever so much more about him. In
of
plots of rampant Tyranny ;
fact, despite Mr. Riker's honest admission
it But o'er US they shan't be Tyrants,
that he has been unable to obtain access
ld
no, for on my guard I'll be,
And I 'll dress my sword in myrtle,
to the Holland House manuscripts, it may
re
and with firm and dauntless hand, well be the case that but little more
10
Here beside Aristogeiton
remains to be known. Was an astute
resolutely take my stand,
e.
Marketing in arms beside him.
person such as Henry Fox likely to leave
n.
This the time and this the place undestroyed the evidence of the means
When my patriot arm must deal a
le
blow upon that woman's face.
by which he became so rapidly rich, when
le
the City was railing at him “ as the public
id One is tempted to quote Mr.
Rogers defaulter of unaccounted millions,” and
ir indefinitely; indeed, there are a score he was living in constant apprehension of
is of good things to which we would gladly having to disgorge? It does not, some-
a, call attention. Having warned readers how, seem the sort of thing he would have
ts that this version is not a translation done. If a weakness in treatment must
id in the sense that the versions of 'The be pointed out, it is that no idea is given
vs Frogs' and 'The Birds are, we can, by Mr. Riker of Fox's capacity as a writer
2- with a clear conscience, urge all to of dispatches when Secretary of State.
ic read it who care for good literature “ War and Foreign Office Papers (passim),
tor
are interested in political ideas. Public Record Office,” figure in the biblio-
al' They will not be disappointed; only, 'graphy, but they are infrequently cited.
09
a
6
>
## p. 35 (#43) ##############################################
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
35
-
66
"no one
46
Henry Fox's career is a melancholy ambition in Henry Fox's breast. He was Caroline Stephen's outlook, the present
example of a decline in worth and content, thenceforth, to grow rich on the reviewer gets from her the impression of
dignity as the years went on. Up to a pickings of the Pay Office, with but little a “self-made creed," of a point of view
certain point he lay open, though with voice in affairs, except during the autumn which has — not rejected indeed, since
some qualification, to Chesterfield's sar- of 1762, when he was " His Majesty's we cannot reject what we have never
casm that
he had not the least notion Minister in the House of Commons for had — but has failed to grasp the real
or regard for the public good or constitu- the corruption of Parliament and the essence of “the Church"; of that
tion, but he was a creditable specimen extermination of the Whigs and their Church so careful, as Baron von Hügel
”
of the vigorous party man.
He followed dependents. Mr. Riker's estimate of showed, of the respective elements
Walpole faithfully, and cherished his Henry Fox’s venality is, one unfortunate in religion, the institutional, the intel-
memory. Under the laxer direction of word excepted, a just and moderate lectual, and the mystical. Miss Stephen
Henry Pelham he allowed himself much reckoning. He amassed wealth much as pays tribute to the second, and high
greater latitude ; _but as he avowedly his father, old Stephen Fox, whom Evelyn honour to the third, but passes by the
belonged to the Duke of Cumberland's praised without stint, had lined his first. Yet, for many minds, the institu-
,
party, and as ministerial homogeneity pockets before him. The auditing of his tional has been, and still is, the necessary
was far from a recognized principle, his accounts, according to the haphazard casket of the other two.
displays of independence by no means custom of those days, being years in
It is happily true that
amounted to a scandal. They earned for arrear, he played with the balances,
him, it is true, the icy hostility of Hard- investing and selling out with much
can now fail to recognize the
wicke, a timorous politician whom Mr. astuteness ; and he profited by a long existence of a very high degree of goodness
Riker sums up with much insight. Then run of his office while war contracts and great beauty of character and purity of
came the welter of politics whence emerged abounded. In so doing he was following life in many of those who reject all forms of
the powerful Pitt-Newcastle Ministry: precedent, ignoring the fact that Pitt, beliefs underlying them. ”
religious expression, and who deny the
Our author tells the story with much while at the Pay Office, had broken away
documentary detail ; he clears up several from the evil tradition. Mr. Riker But this passage, and the following,
disputed points, and he does substantial inserts a “ perhaps,” but that is surely a
justice to individuals, with the exception mistake. Pitt's disinterestedness stands sincerity, as distinguished from mere correct-
“the more fully the idea of faithfulness or
of Pitt. Later on, when he draws the above all cavil, and it is just because he sincerity, as distinguished from mere correct-
inevitable contrast between the two rivals, elevated political ideals that his rival, who that saves, the more cautious shall we be in
ness of theory, enters into our idea of the faith
he perceives clearly enough why Pitt stuck to the old system, became the best- the use of either words or symbols to repre-
was great and Henry Fox a good deal less hated man in the country.
sent our faith without being quite sure that
than great. But, in commenting on his Mr. Riker does not bring much fresh they do so accurately. "
documents, Mr. Riker allows himself too evidence to bear on the purchase and pro-
short a perspective, and we hear far too scription of the Whigs by means of which
seem to suggest that there is some almost
much about Pitt's arrogance,” his Fox forced through the Peace, but his necessary opposition between a “right
somewhat tyrannical nature," and his account of that comprehensive revenge is faith” and a “good life. ” As a matter
”
* egotism. ” All that may be more or less written with spirit.
of fact, some of the greatest saints of
We agree with him
true, but Pitt's pride was in his country. that “ His Majesty's Minister ” did not
the world are, as again Matthew Arnold
reached the crisis of his career in the of a strong kingship, for directly his The fact is, perhaps, that very many
As Mr. Riker well remarks, Henry Fox regard himself as a conscientious adherent pointed out, to be found in that body
where faith is defined most rigidly.
autumn of 1755, when he became Secre- vengeance was sated he began urging for
tary of State for the Southern Depart- retirement with a peerage. He knew, of people, not markedly original or specu-
lative, have found it easier to profess a
ment, an office he had previously refused. course, that Bute was contemplating a
right faith than to live a consistently
He seemed the ideal man for the post. similar step, and his own health was
beautiful life. So men, watching them,
In the management of the Commons he unequal to the strain which events put have put down their failure to their
was incomparable. He held his own in upon it. What he did not foresee was orthodoxy-an odd cause indeed. In her
clebate, his superior judgment, as he was that, having consigned himself to the strictures on the orthodox, as, e. g. , where
-
thoroughly aware, making up for Pitt's shelf
, his claims would fall on unresponsive she speaks of the Athanasian Creed, Miss
advantage in oratory. The reports of his ears. When Grenville made it one of the
speeches are fragmentary, yet we can
conditions of a continuance in office that Stephen writes as if unaware of the
catch the aptness of his retort on the Holland should be dismissed from the doctrine of the “ soul of the Church. ”
"Cousinhood,” that "the clamours of one Pay Office, the King merely remarked, The longest paper, 'The Vision of
family will never pass for the voice of the “I don't much like turning him out, but Faith, seems to have been delivered to
nation. " After that debate Speaker with all my heart, Mr. Grenville. " His some Cambridge society, and Miss Stephen
Onslow told Fox that, “ if Pitt. . . . did not repeated pleadings for an earldom went speaks of “ that which is crumbling and
provide better matter to make his fine unregarded ; on one occasion he “left passing away. ” In the learned circles of
speeches upon, he would soon grow as
London, much dissatisfied with the Court, Cambridge all things may seem to partake
insignificant as any man in the House. " and the Court with him. ” There is some of the Heraclitean flux. But there is a
But Fox risked all on one throw; he force in Horace Walpole's contention that great world outside curiously ignorant of
must, as Horace Walpole observed, be Holland had well earned promotion in academic arrangements; and there are
“ First Minister
ruined. ” The the peerage, but, after all, George III. signs in that bigger world that the stir
crafty Newcastle took care that he should had summed up the value of his instru- and fret of thought are really sorting out
be isolated in the “ Conciliabulum” or
or ments in corruption not unfairly when he those whom Miss Stephen calls“ believers
inner ring of the Cabinet ; and his repre- said, “We must call in bad men to govern and unbelievers ”; that it is a process
sentations for a more vigorous war policy, bad men. ”
rather of separation than of destruction.
notably in the relief of Minorca, went
The nineteenth century proclaimed loudly
unheeded. He was compelled, in short,
that certain elements in life had gone
to defend failures in public which in the Vision of Faith, and other Essays. . By Of all the eras which most of us mis-
for ever,” but they are with us still.
private he had done his best to prevent.
The ugly feature in his conduct is his
Caroline Émelia Stephen. (Cambridge, understand, our own may surely rank
persistency in drawing the net, as Mr.
Heffer. )
facile princeps.
Riker puts it, about the hapless Byng. MATTHEW ARNOLD, in the Preface to Many readers will turn to the 'Essay
There must have been a spice of cruelty Culture and Anarchy,' used the phrase on Pain. Here again, except in one
'
about him-possibly of cowardice as well. the members of a non-conforming or short passage where it is recognized that
His bitter experience as Newcastle's self - made religious community. ” In the Light of Revelation has shone in
distrusted underling killed the honourable I spite of the insight and fragrance of the darkness,” the sense of " self-made"
-
9
6
>
or
6
## p. 36 (#44) ##############################################
36
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
theory is uppermost. Miss Stephen poses The Principal of Newnham College con- of Arms, and convicted the novelist, in
the question thus :-
tributes the Introduction. Perhaps it is Clarissa Harlowe, of callingla Viscount's
not impertinent to add that in its distinct- daughter“ Lady Charlotte, which I
*These ask not what God ought to allow,
wonder
brother booksellers of the
your
but how we ought to meet that which is
ness from the outlook of its subject, in its
genteel side of Temple Bar did not inform
allowed; not whether the infliction of pain quiet strength and sincerity, it gives, were
you of. ”. The mistake was duly corrected
can be morally justifiable, but whether the any needed, one more proof of the com-
in vol. iii. of Clarissa. '
email
endurance of it can be made morally profit- bined originality and many-sidedness of We get but few letters written by the Duke
able. "
the members of that distinguished family himself, the great majority being from his
As a matter of fact, surely these are not of whom, without flattery, it may be said correspondents. The collection
is none the
worse for that, since the prettiest epistles
two questions, but different forms of the that to know is to respect them.
are those of his daughter Emilie, the happy,
same answer. If pain be prophylactic- -
sixteen-year-old wife of Lord Kildare ;
if in some cases, as humanity is here and
her more famous sister, Lady Sarah Lennox,
now, it, as it appears, be the only prophy-
might have been their author. Lord March
BIOGRAPHY.
has taken much pains with his editing, and
lactic-is it not its own justification ? We
we hope that the archives of Goodwood will
recall such a book as John Cordelier's IN A Duke and his Friends : the Life and yield further materials for his selection and
' Path of the Eternal Wisdom,' to mention Letters of the Second Duke of Richmond, publication. He may be recommended,
a very recent view; we remember the 2 vols. (Hutchinson & Co. ), the Earl of however, to chasten his style, which is too
lifelong practice of St. Teresa's hardy March gives a lively picture of a great noble- exclamatory.
motto, "Aut pati aut mori,” and we are
man's existence in the eighteenth century.
led to wonder whether it is only by political, though we get an animated account
The social interest takes precedence of the
My Life Story. By Emily, Shareefa of
practice in the Church that men know of the battle of Dettingen and the un. England has furnished foreign lands with
Wazan. (Arnold. )—There is no doubt that
what the Church really holds ; and popularity incurred by George II. through many of their most romantic figures and
whether all other theories are not the wearing a yellow, or Hanoverian, sash careers ; and it is a mistake to suppose that
achievement of those outside.
during the engagement, instead of the true in modern days these extraordinary careers
British red; while “ the 45" is illustrated
It is strange that Miss Stephen, so fond by flurried letters from the Duke of New-
no longer have any place. Less than forty
of young people, in whom the fact appears castle, and the artless effusions of officers Tangier to the Shareef of Wazan, of all holy
years ago an English girl was married in
most patently, and so observant, should at the front. Scotland was to them a
not have noted how we meet here and foreign country where there is nothing revered. In Morocco there has never been
men in the world of Islam possibly the most
there persons who cannot learn through but pride and falsehood,” and Prince Charlie
Ittalyan dog. " The brutal Hawley customs of Islam and Christendom. Even
pain, whose perfection seems to depend an
any compromise between the practices and
on their continued dwelling in life's sun-
undertook to clear the country if Parlia- to-day no Nazarene would be permitted to
ment would give the soldiers & guinea &
light. When she wrote of our over-
set foot in a mosque in Morocco. Forty
day and a pair of shoes for every rebel's
crowded and in many respects corrupt head they brought in. The Duke of Rich-
years ago the barriers were yet more sharply
defined, and that the greatest of all holy
city populations,” she surely saw, though mond, a steady Whig despite his descent
men in the land should then wed a Christian,
she did not say, that these are largely from Charles II. and Louise de Kéroualle, and this without attempting to influence
'the outcome of human selfishness and corresponded not only with the Whig fac-
her beliefs or customs in any way, was
carelessness, sometimes of blank, unfore- totum, Newcastle, but also with Lord Ches- indeed a startling and unprecedented event.
terfield and Lord Hervey, who were wits as
seeing stupidity; not a puzzle, except as
well as Whigs.
Predictions were not wanting at the time
to their removal; but an open shame to disappointingly, about a cook; and though necessarily follow such a step.
Chesterfield, however, writes
that unhappiness, and even tragedy, would
all serious human beings.
Hervey's account of the reception of Gay's
In the story of her life which the
It is in the letters that the reader posthumous opera, 'Achilles, is not without
Shareefa has now published: such predic-
finds the charm, delicacy, and quiet, point, it does not represent him at his best.
tions are to a great extent falsified. " Hers
shrewd humour which won the writer all
The daily concerns of a ducal house form, has been a busy, interesting, and, in
those friends, and made the Porch so agreeable volumes. The Duke's father was
as we have said, the chief subject of these many respects, useful career ; not without
its troubles and difficulties, of course,
sought-out a resort. In them there ap-
none too reputable, but he had an admir- but, upon the whole, happy.
And now,
pears, even more convincingly perhaps able mother, a Brudenell, who watched in these later
years, the Shareefa is
than in the set discourses, the real religion over her boy with constant anxiety. On able, with an unaffected candour-which,
of the writer, and that conspicuously in the inevitable grand tour he was accom- indeed, distinguishes her whole narrative-
those to the elder daughter of Charles panied by his tutor, one Tom Hill, who to say that she has never regretted the step
Darwin. In one of these there is a happy might have stepped out of the pages of she took in marrying Muley. Ali ben Abde-
slam, Shareef of Wazan. This is not to say
sentence precisely hitting a crucial point": / Fielding, so rolficking and obsequious are
Tom remained familiar that such unions are generally desirable, or
“If by a reasonable faith' you mean a
throughout the Duke's life-Richmond's that the average woman in the position in
faith which succeeds in explaining every-
relations with his dependents were, indeed, which Miss Emily Keene found herself in
thing, mine assuredly is not that; and that
of a most praiseworthy kind. He was also 1873 would have been able many years
would appear to me not faith but omnisci-
a staunch and active friend, with all the afterwards to say she did not regret her
ence. "
Whig talent for building up political and marriage. The exact contrary would be
social connexions. His chief virtue, in nearer the truth.
Writing to the same beautifully of death, Lord Hervey's eyes, was that "he made The somewhat onerous task of editing
great expenses in elections. "
To us he these reminiscences has been creditably
appears most meritorious
the good- performed by Mr. S. L. Bensusan. (There
Fancy the midges or the coral insects natured father and host, who bore with
is an unfortunate misprint in the name of
troubling their heads about which or how exemplary meekness the lectures from his Mr. Ion Perdicaris on p. 299, which should
many should live or die; and I doubt uncles, the Brudenells, on his extravagance, be corrected in a subsequent edition. ) Mr.
whether even little birds feel keenly about it. and took keen delight in his woods, his R. B. Cunninghame Graham has contributed
:::. One cannot begin to apply 'when Thou hounds, and his menagerie. The last, by the a preface. The book is in the best sense &
hidest Thy face they are troubled,' much way, was not so unusual a feature in a great human document; its style is admirably
lower than dogs. "
establishment as Lord March seems to simple and unaffected; and its matter is
think : Queen Caroline had two, one in full of vivid interest.
To Lady Farrer she speaks of her love for Kensington Gardens, the other at Kew.
her garden, and conveys the unique To the Duke's credit are two elaborate The Life of Sir Edward FitzGerald Law.
Cambridge environment, that curious quiet hoaxes. Disguised as a highwayman, he compiled and edited by Theodore Morison
which, despite stray motors and “ pro caused Dr. Sherwin, an unpopular canon of and George T. Hutchinson (Blackwood. )
gress,” the little town has managed Chichester, to stand and deliver; and a -Sir Edward Law's career was remarkable,
to preserve in its heart of hearts: the bogus confession in his handwriting, which and fully warrants the labour of Mr. Hutch-
inson in collecting and examining the avail-
sky-seeking poplars, the flat spaces jour-pleasing knowledge of thieves' English. able records, and of Sir Theodore Morison
neying into eternity, the enwrapping | Again, he wrote to Richardson in the name in editing them, & task which he has per-
greyness and greenness. ”
of his friend and butt Cheale, Norroy King'formed with much ability and judgment.
a
she says:
as
## p. 37 (#45) ##############################################
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
37
THE ATHENÆUM
66
The story is often surprising, for, if ever
of the supreme novelty of his outlook and
there was a rolling stone, Law was one, We are very grateful to Sir Edward H. of the brilliance of his style ; and the little
yet he never failed to gather moss ; and in Seymour for his interesting and suggestive book fulfils the function, not of a mere
the different situations he held his whole volume of reminiscences entitled My Naval compendium, but of a genuine introduction.
energy was employed to make his work Career, and Travels (Smith & Elder), and We start with the idea of change. M. Berg-
acceptable to States whose interests pro- should have been still more so if only whilst son, the modern Heraclitus, posits the reality
foundly differed.
writing it he had, occasionally at least, felt of change. It is not an illusion, as science,
Law was born in Ireland in 1846, but was able to “ let himself go. ” An Admiral of with its timeless formulæ, would try to
descended from a Scottish family connected the Fleet and wearer of the O. M. whomas make out. On the contrary, the illusion is
with banking. Like many successful diplo-
we know from the Navy List-has passed to suppose that it can thus be explained
matists, he had a very mixed education : his 70th birthday, is bound, both by age
first on the Continent, where he acquired and habit, to exercise & close scrutiny on
away. Causal explanations, however valu-
able as means of dealing with the inanimate,
a knowledge of many languages, and what he writes ; but how often, in reading leave the felt reality of change wholly un-
afterwards in Scotland and in England, his book, have we wished that rank, honours, touched. Real duration is perceived at once
where he was prepared for the Army, one and officially trained reticence were sunk for what it truly is in the case of the living.
of his masters being the present Lord Morley. full fathom five, and that we could have Here the time-process is not negligible, since
From the R. M. A. , Woolwich, he passed into
the Engineers, but was transferred to the which tells of the bargee's comment on the ment from self.
more of that boyish appreciation of humour it involves constant self-creation, or develop-
A proof is that such change
Artillery, with which he served three familiar chaff that there was a rat in his is neither actually nor even conceivably
years in India, being invalided home in fore chains. ” Many big books of reminis- reversible.
1872. He resigned his commission at the
cences we have read and wished they were Thus we are led on to examine the idea of
end of that year, thus taking a step which a great deal smaller ; this, in comparison, life. As a whole that has duration, life is
seemed far from promising. “ His only is only a little one, and we think that it & continual creation that is, an active or
assets, we are told,
were his force of might have been made much larger without free adaptation, a process of self-determina-
character and his knowledge of foreign offending our artistic sense.
languages. ”
tion. The analogy which best suggests its
He took these attributes to
Russia, where he remained ten years, and
The book describes in a pleasant though nature is that of the artist, who does not
cursory manner many incidents of the au- create in response to à predetermined
was not very successful in business, though
he acquired much information and made
thor's career in and out of the service notion, but rather creates as he goes along.
adventures of war, of travel, and of ship-Such, then, is the vital impetus, the life-
many friends, Jews as well as princes.
His next employment was at the Congo,
wreck, including the salving of the Howe ; force. The environment in regard to it is
The
whither he was sent by King Leopold on
many experiences and reflections on experi- not so much a control as an occasion.
ences, in which the practical knowledge of physical impression is treated by the life-
the recommendation of Lord Wolseley and
Col. Brackenbury. He did not stay long the theories of the doctrinaire ; above all, its whole store of experience by reacting
the old seaman does not always agree with force as a question which it answers out of
there, and after his return home got a place for the delectation of the lay reader, it is a upon it as its own nature directs.
A. W. --Not suitable for us.
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## p. 33 (#41) ##############################################
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
33
ear3.
PAGE
33
34
35
36-37
37
38
38-39
. .
40
LIST OF NEW BOOKS
41
43
ST. ANDREWS UNIVERSITY SCIENTIFIC PAPERS;
MEREDITH ;
MR. ROGER FRY'S PAINTINGS AND
47-49
FORMANCES NEXT WEEK
50-51
THE
51-52
FROGS OF ARISTOPHANES
52
lation of that profound humour that lies / to some extent “feminist,” hostile, at any
SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1912.
beneath the surface he neither practised nor rate, to arrogant virility, it sounds in its
appreciated. Indeed, an interest in what ideas and arguments oddly familiar to
lies beneath the surface seemed tolerable modern
Political wisdom , like
CONTENTS.
only so long as it was reasonably insincere. human folly, seems to obey a law known
Truth, thought Voltaire, was too good for to men of science as “ the Conservation of
THE LYSISTRATA OF ARISTOPHANES
lackeys; sincerity too coarse for the Energy ”- quantity and quality are per-
HENRY Fox, FIRST LORD HOLLAND
MISS STEPHEN'S VISION OF FAITH
gentry: No great man ever feared coarse manent, form alone changes. It is the
BIOGRAPHY (A Duke and his Friends ; The Life Story
ness; but little ones, however much they Aristophanic method that differs so greatly
of the Shareefa of Wazan ; Sir Edward FitzGerald may relish indecency, cannot afford to be from that of most modern satirists. For
Law; Sir Edward Seymour's Naval Career)
found ill-bred.
Aristophanes does not confine himself
PHILOSOPHY (Bergson ; William James, and other
Essays)
To have read Mr. Rogers's translations is to driving the blade of his wit into the
TOLSTOY (Father Sergius ; Life of Count Tolstoy)
to know that he is on the side of Plato. rotten parts of a bad case; he does not
OUR LIBRARY TABLE (The Harry Furniss Thackeray; Unfortunately, we are only just beginning score intellectual points only. His method
Stanley Weyman's Novels ; Life in Shakespeare's
England; Emily Brontë's Works ; Persian Gram- to rub our eyes after a bout of prudery is more fundamental. A clever contro-
mar; The Story of Quamin; Peerages ; Visitation that would have dumbfounded Plato and versialist can always find joints in the
of England and Wales)
THE BOOK SALES OF 1911
filled Voltaire with disgust. Even now, harness of his foe. When one popular
were Aristophanes alive and publishing, philosopher of to-day meets another, it is
LITERARY GOSSIP
his plays would be vetoed by the Censor sometimes hard to say which makes the
SCIENCE-THE CHEMISTRY OF THE RADIO-ELEMENTS; and boycotted by the libraries probably, greater number of hits. Even harder is it
RESEARCH NOTES; SOCIETIES; MEETINGS NEXT
while a judge of the High Court could to say that the cause of truth has been
WEEK ; GOSSIP
46–47 surely be found to sentence the author of much advanced. One may hold, fairly
FINE ARTS—WOOD SCULPTURE ; ILLUSTRATIONS TO The Birds' to three months' hard labour enough, that both sides have been made
DRAWINGS; OTHER EXHIBITIONS ; GOSSIP
for blasphemy. Mr. Rogers, therefore, | ludicrous ; but it is still fairer to admit
DIUSIC - STYLE IN MUSICAL ART; GOSSIP; PER- who made this translation, not in the that neither has been discredited. If
Athens of Plato, but in the London of Aristophanes never succeeded in ruining
DRAMA-PLAYS FOR AN IRISH THEATRE ;
Podsnap-in 1878, to be exact—is not to a party, at least he succeeded in dis-
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
be blamed for having allowed it to bear crediting some pestilent opinions. This
the mark of its age. Nevertheless, though he did, not so much by a brisk display of
pardonable, his compromise is deplorable, intellectual handiness, as by showing that
since it robs this translation of precisely a pompous superstructure was baseless.
that quality which gives to most of the He makes us feel a position to be absurd,
LITERATURE
others their high importance. For Mr. instead of merely thinking certain things
Rogers is one of those who during the in it silly.
last five-and-twenty years have been The superior, sneering official has not
busy awakening us to a new sense of the escaped shrewd knocks from the wits
The Lysistrata of Aristophanes, acted at possibilities of life. His share in that task of every age. There is a type of mind
Athens in the Year B. C. 411. The has been to express and restate, in a form which, under every form of government,
Greek Text Revised, with a Transla- appreciable by the modern mind, some pushes to the front by sheer lack of virtue.
tion into Corresponding Metres, Intro- of the adventures and discoveries of the Wherever life has become sufficiently
duction, and Commentary, by Benjamin Hellenic genius. He is one of those mechanical to support a bureaucracy,
Bickley Rogers. (Bell & Sons. )
scholars who, consciously or unconsciously, there will the Poloniuses and Shallows
have joined hands with the boldest spirits gather, and, wherever there is an official
Ai Xúpites tépevós to daßtîv Örep ovxl of the age, and, by showing what the caste, there will be satirists or torture-
πεσείται
Greeks thought and felt, have revealed chambers. Yet, though the self-com-
ζητούσαι ψυχήν εύρον 'Αριστοφάνους.
to us new worlds of thought and feeling. placent magistrate has been the butt of the
Plato.
Now, to write like the sociologists, the ages, Aristophanes and Shakespeare, and
“Ce poète comique, qui n'est ni comique subject of 'The Lysistrata ' is the funda- perhaps Flaubert, have alone revealed his
ni poète, n'aurait pas été admis parmi nous mental nature and necessity of the essential nullity, because they alone have
à donner ses farces à la foire Saint-Laurent. ” interdependence of the sexes. But what looked for something essential beneath
-Voltaire.
Aristophanes thought and felt about the the accidental. Nothing could be simpler
Two quotations that illustrate more neatly matter, what Plato praised and Voltaire than the character of Polonius ; nothing
the difference between a great man and a misunderstood, is just what we shall not could be more subtle. A rap here, a stab
clever critic it would be hard to find. find in this translation. For instance, the there, and the soul of a minister is exposed.
Perhaps no one has felt so surely as Plato scene between Cinesias and Myrrhina is We have come to see, we scarcely know
the significance of the universe, or per- essential to a perfect understanding of the how, that, if he ever had one, he has lost it.
ceived so clearly that no parts of it, not play, but the latter part of it (ll. 905-60) Some idea of the simplicity and subtlety
even the great facts of life and the simple is not so much as paraphrased here. And of the Aristophanic method may be
emotions, are common or unclean. To so the spirit languishes; it could flourish gathered from the following scene, but
him, therefore, it seemed that the Graces, only in the body created for it by the to illustrate the extravagance and beauty
seeking an imperishable temple, discovered poet, and that body has been mutilated. of the form, or the profundity of the
the soul of Aristophanes. To Plato, This version, then, fails to bring out the conception, no quotation can suffice.
who knew that there is essential comedy profound, comic conception that gives Lysistrata has unfolded her famous scheme
just as there is essential tragedy, and that unity and significance to the original ; for stopping the war : there is to be a
both are roads by which men come at nevertheless, it has something more than sympathetic strike; the women of all
truth, these plays were full of beauty and literary interest. The comic poet offers the combatant states, principals and
significance ; whereas to Voltaire, who matter worthy of the consideration of allies, are to withhold their services until
never perceived the essential beneath politicians and political controversialists, the war has been stopped :-
the accidental, they were stupid and vulgar and this the translator has rendered
farces. Life, for him, was an affair of the fearlessly and well. For The Lysis- Lysistrata (ending a specch). Then shall the
people revere us and honour us,
intellect-an affair of intellectual rela- trata' is a political play, and cannot be
givers of Joy, and givers of Peace.
tions controlled by intellectual conventions. discussed profitably apart from its political Magistrate. Tell us the mode and the means of
Life was Society; and comedy the mirror
your doing it.
ideas and arguments. It can no more
Lys. First we will stop the disorderly
held up to Society by talent. Humour be treated as pure literature than the
meant wit--the bedecking of superficial of Tennyson can be treated as Soldiers in arms promenading and marketing.
things with brain-spun finery. The reve.
Stratyllis (leader of the chorus of women)
Yea, by divine Aphrodite, 'tis true.
anything else. Frankly “pacifist,” and
crew,
poetry
## p. 34 (#42) ##############################################
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4394, JAN. 13, 1912
Vio
ILL
3
2,
能力,
n.
es
CS
e!
ir,
>>
HAN
>>
66
cause
Democrats, who clamoured daily for a we would suggest to those whose Greek
1.
dozen Dreadnoughts, conscription, and has grown a little rusty that a literal
the head of Mr. Keir Hardie on a charger, translation in French or German would
and yet spent his leisure warning readers be a suitable companion for the English
is
of the daily papers against the danger of paraphrase. Without it, they will hardly
t, admitting to any share of power a sex understand what provoked Plato's splen-
notorious for its panic-fearfulness, in- did compliment or the nervous indignation
h tolerance, and lack of humour; such a of Voltaire.
one would indeed merit admission to the
χορός γερόντων, would be a proper fellow
r,
to take his stand εξής 'Αριστογείτονι,
beside the brave Aristogiton, and matága.
tode ypads toy yvádov, beat down this Henry Fox, First Lord Holland : a Study
monstrous regiment of women. ”
of the Career of an Eighteenth Century
it
Aristophanes was a staunch conser-
Politician. By Thad W. Riker. 2 vols.
vative, but he disliked a stupid argument
(Oxford, Clarendon Press. )
wherever he found it. He cared intensely MR. RIKER’s sub-title judiciously indicates
about politics, but he could not easily the scope of his able book. With Henry
ot
t forget that he was an artist.
an artist. Neither
the men nor the women are tied up and Fox the affectionate husband, the fond if
peppered with the small shot of his wit ; host, the enthusiastic art collector and
injudicious parent, the cordial friend and
they are allowed to betray themselves.
,
The art consists in selecting from the gardener, he is but little concerned. In
mass of their opinions and sentiments his account of the politician's private life
what is most significant, and making the he virtually follows
Sir George Trevelyan,
e magistrate, who speaks for the party, I the Journal of Elizabeth, Lady Holland,
and he has missed a significant passage in
$ deliver himself of judicious commonplaces. which implies that Henry Fox, in his old
at politicians, whom chance or misfortune age, did not accept the extravagance of
has led to favour one side rather than the his son Charles with the complacency that
is other, are less cautious without being is commonly attributed to him. This
d less platitudinous. Their talk is all of piece of evidence was worth giving, because
le
inevitable war and “stripping for the
it gets rid of the contradiction that a man
d fray,” “ vindicating rights, tyranny
who was rapacious in the acquiring of
and traitors, spoliation,” innova- money should have been absolutely indif-
tion," and striking good blows for the ferent as to what became of it. Lady Hol-
; at least it was twenty-three
land did not love Charles Fox, but there is
hundred
no reason to doubt her statement that his
years ago.
parents were grieved by his indebtedness.
Jen Chorus.
It must have been a bitter thing for the
al
This is not a time for slumber;
aged placeman, as he was nearing his end,
now let all be bold and free,
co Strip to meet the great occasion,
to have to provide no less than 140,0001.
-1.
.
vindicate our rights with me.
to save his favourite son from ruin.
I can'smell a deep, surprising
En
Tide of Revolution rising,
Within the limits he has imposed upon
ed Odour as of folk devising
himself, Mr. Riker has been conspicuously
* Hippias's tyranny.
And I feel a dire misgiving,
successful. He has delved deeply and
Lest some false Laconians, meeting
intelligently into eighteenth - century
in the house of Cleisthenes,
politics, and one of their most typical
Have inspired these wretched women
се
all our wealth and pay to seize.
characters appears, as the result of his
it Pay from whence I get my living.
labours, in a far more satisfactory present-
Gods ! to hear these shallow wenches
taking citizens to task,
ment than had previously been given to
n Prattling of a brassy buckler,
history. We do not get a new Henry
10
jabbering of a martial casque !
Fox, for Mr. Riker is far too truthful a
Gods ! to think that they have ventured
11
with Laconian men to deal,
writer to attempt a refurbishing of that
ne Men of just the faith and honour
somewhat dingy career, but we get to
ne
that a ravening wolf might feel !
Plots they ’re hatching, plots contriving,
know ever so much more about him. In
of
plots of rampant Tyranny ;
fact, despite Mr. Riker's honest admission
it But o'er US they shan't be Tyrants,
that he has been unable to obtain access
ld
no, for on my guard I'll be,
And I 'll dress my sword in myrtle,
to the Holland House manuscripts, it may
re
and with firm and dauntless hand, well be the case that but little more
10
Here beside Aristogeiton
remains to be known. Was an astute
resolutely take my stand,
e.
Marketing in arms beside him.
person such as Henry Fox likely to leave
n.
This the time and this the place undestroyed the evidence of the means
When my patriot arm must deal a
le
blow upon that woman's face.
by which he became so rapidly rich, when
le
the City was railing at him “ as the public
id One is tempted to quote Mr.
Rogers defaulter of unaccounted millions,” and
ir indefinitely; indeed, there are a score he was living in constant apprehension of
is of good things to which we would gladly having to disgorge? It does not, some-
a, call attention. Having warned readers how, seem the sort of thing he would have
ts that this version is not a translation done. If a weakness in treatment must
id in the sense that the versions of 'The be pointed out, it is that no idea is given
vs Frogs' and 'The Birds are, we can, by Mr. Riker of Fox's capacity as a writer
2- with a clear conscience, urge all to of dispatches when Secretary of State.
ic read it who care for good literature “ War and Foreign Office Papers (passim),
tor
are interested in political ideas. Public Record Office,” figure in the biblio-
al' They will not be disappointed; only, 'graphy, but they are infrequently cited.
09
a
6
>
## p. 35 (#43) ##############################################
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
35
-
66
"no one
46
Henry Fox's career is a melancholy ambition in Henry Fox's breast. He was Caroline Stephen's outlook, the present
example of a decline in worth and content, thenceforth, to grow rich on the reviewer gets from her the impression of
dignity as the years went on. Up to a pickings of the Pay Office, with but little a “self-made creed," of a point of view
certain point he lay open, though with voice in affairs, except during the autumn which has — not rejected indeed, since
some qualification, to Chesterfield's sar- of 1762, when he was " His Majesty's we cannot reject what we have never
casm that
he had not the least notion Minister in the House of Commons for had — but has failed to grasp the real
or regard for the public good or constitu- the corruption of Parliament and the essence of “the Church"; of that
tion, but he was a creditable specimen extermination of the Whigs and their Church so careful, as Baron von Hügel
”
of the vigorous party man.
He followed dependents. Mr. Riker's estimate of showed, of the respective elements
Walpole faithfully, and cherished his Henry Fox’s venality is, one unfortunate in religion, the institutional, the intel-
memory. Under the laxer direction of word excepted, a just and moderate lectual, and the mystical. Miss Stephen
Henry Pelham he allowed himself much reckoning. He amassed wealth much as pays tribute to the second, and high
greater latitude ; _but as he avowedly his father, old Stephen Fox, whom Evelyn honour to the third, but passes by the
belonged to the Duke of Cumberland's praised without stint, had lined his first. Yet, for many minds, the institu-
,
party, and as ministerial homogeneity pockets before him. The auditing of his tional has been, and still is, the necessary
was far from a recognized principle, his accounts, according to the haphazard casket of the other two.
displays of independence by no means custom of those days, being years in
It is happily true that
amounted to a scandal. They earned for arrear, he played with the balances,
him, it is true, the icy hostility of Hard- investing and selling out with much
can now fail to recognize the
wicke, a timorous politician whom Mr. astuteness ; and he profited by a long existence of a very high degree of goodness
Riker sums up with much insight. Then run of his office while war contracts and great beauty of character and purity of
came the welter of politics whence emerged abounded. In so doing he was following life in many of those who reject all forms of
the powerful Pitt-Newcastle Ministry: precedent, ignoring the fact that Pitt, beliefs underlying them. ”
religious expression, and who deny the
Our author tells the story with much while at the Pay Office, had broken away
documentary detail ; he clears up several from the evil tradition. Mr. Riker But this passage, and the following,
disputed points, and he does substantial inserts a “ perhaps,” but that is surely a
justice to individuals, with the exception mistake. Pitt's disinterestedness stands sincerity, as distinguished from mere correct-
“the more fully the idea of faithfulness or
of Pitt. Later on, when he draws the above all cavil, and it is just because he sincerity, as distinguished from mere correct-
inevitable contrast between the two rivals, elevated political ideals that his rival, who that saves, the more cautious shall we be in
ness of theory, enters into our idea of the faith
he perceives clearly enough why Pitt stuck to the old system, became the best- the use of either words or symbols to repre-
was great and Henry Fox a good deal less hated man in the country.
sent our faith without being quite sure that
than great. But, in commenting on his Mr. Riker does not bring much fresh they do so accurately. "
documents, Mr. Riker allows himself too evidence to bear on the purchase and pro-
short a perspective, and we hear far too scription of the Whigs by means of which
seem to suggest that there is some almost
much about Pitt's arrogance,” his Fox forced through the Peace, but his necessary opposition between a “right
somewhat tyrannical nature," and his account of that comprehensive revenge is faith” and a “good life. ” As a matter
”
* egotism. ” All that may be more or less written with spirit.
of fact, some of the greatest saints of
We agree with him
true, but Pitt's pride was in his country. that “ His Majesty's Minister ” did not
the world are, as again Matthew Arnold
reached the crisis of his career in the of a strong kingship, for directly his The fact is, perhaps, that very many
As Mr. Riker well remarks, Henry Fox regard himself as a conscientious adherent pointed out, to be found in that body
where faith is defined most rigidly.
autumn of 1755, when he became Secre- vengeance was sated he began urging for
tary of State for the Southern Depart- retirement with a peerage. He knew, of people, not markedly original or specu-
lative, have found it easier to profess a
ment, an office he had previously refused. course, that Bute was contemplating a
right faith than to live a consistently
He seemed the ideal man for the post. similar step, and his own health was
beautiful life. So men, watching them,
In the management of the Commons he unequal to the strain which events put have put down their failure to their
was incomparable. He held his own in upon it. What he did not foresee was orthodoxy-an odd cause indeed. In her
clebate, his superior judgment, as he was that, having consigned himself to the strictures on the orthodox, as, e. g. , where
-
thoroughly aware, making up for Pitt's shelf
, his claims would fall on unresponsive she speaks of the Athanasian Creed, Miss
advantage in oratory. The reports of his ears. When Grenville made it one of the
speeches are fragmentary, yet we can
conditions of a continuance in office that Stephen writes as if unaware of the
catch the aptness of his retort on the Holland should be dismissed from the doctrine of the “ soul of the Church. ”
"Cousinhood,” that "the clamours of one Pay Office, the King merely remarked, The longest paper, 'The Vision of
family will never pass for the voice of the “I don't much like turning him out, but Faith, seems to have been delivered to
nation. " After that debate Speaker with all my heart, Mr. Grenville. " His some Cambridge society, and Miss Stephen
Onslow told Fox that, “ if Pitt. . . . did not repeated pleadings for an earldom went speaks of “ that which is crumbling and
provide better matter to make his fine unregarded ; on one occasion he “left passing away. ” In the learned circles of
speeches upon, he would soon grow as
London, much dissatisfied with the Court, Cambridge all things may seem to partake
insignificant as any man in the House. " and the Court with him. ” There is some of the Heraclitean flux. But there is a
But Fox risked all on one throw; he force in Horace Walpole's contention that great world outside curiously ignorant of
must, as Horace Walpole observed, be Holland had well earned promotion in academic arrangements; and there are
“ First Minister
ruined. ” The the peerage, but, after all, George III. signs in that bigger world that the stir
crafty Newcastle took care that he should had summed up the value of his instru- and fret of thought are really sorting out
be isolated in the “ Conciliabulum” or
or ments in corruption not unfairly when he those whom Miss Stephen calls“ believers
inner ring of the Cabinet ; and his repre- said, “We must call in bad men to govern and unbelievers ”; that it is a process
sentations for a more vigorous war policy, bad men. ”
rather of separation than of destruction.
notably in the relief of Minorca, went
The nineteenth century proclaimed loudly
unheeded. He was compelled, in short,
that certain elements in life had gone
to defend failures in public which in the Vision of Faith, and other Essays. . By Of all the eras which most of us mis-
for ever,” but they are with us still.
private he had done his best to prevent.
The ugly feature in his conduct is his
Caroline Émelia Stephen. (Cambridge, understand, our own may surely rank
persistency in drawing the net, as Mr.
Heffer. )
facile princeps.
Riker puts it, about the hapless Byng. MATTHEW ARNOLD, in the Preface to Many readers will turn to the 'Essay
There must have been a spice of cruelty Culture and Anarchy,' used the phrase on Pain. Here again, except in one
'
about him-possibly of cowardice as well. the members of a non-conforming or short passage where it is recognized that
His bitter experience as Newcastle's self - made religious community. ” In the Light of Revelation has shone in
distrusted underling killed the honourable I spite of the insight and fragrance of the darkness,” the sense of " self-made"
-
9
6
>
or
6
## p. 36 (#44) ##############################################
36
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
theory is uppermost. Miss Stephen poses The Principal of Newnham College con- of Arms, and convicted the novelist, in
the question thus :-
tributes the Introduction. Perhaps it is Clarissa Harlowe, of callingla Viscount's
not impertinent to add that in its distinct- daughter“ Lady Charlotte, which I
*These ask not what God ought to allow,
wonder
brother booksellers of the
your
but how we ought to meet that which is
ness from the outlook of its subject, in its
genteel side of Temple Bar did not inform
allowed; not whether the infliction of pain quiet strength and sincerity, it gives, were
you of. ”. The mistake was duly corrected
can be morally justifiable, but whether the any needed, one more proof of the com-
in vol. iii. of Clarissa. '
endurance of it can be made morally profit- bined originality and many-sidedness of We get but few letters written by the Duke
able. "
the members of that distinguished family himself, the great majority being from his
As a matter of fact, surely these are not of whom, without flattery, it may be said correspondents. The collection
is none the
worse for that, since the prettiest epistles
two questions, but different forms of the that to know is to respect them.
are those of his daughter Emilie, the happy,
same answer. If pain be prophylactic- -
sixteen-year-old wife of Lord Kildare ;
if in some cases, as humanity is here and
her more famous sister, Lady Sarah Lennox,
now, it, as it appears, be the only prophy-
might have been their author. Lord March
BIOGRAPHY.
has taken much pains with his editing, and
lactic-is it not its own justification ? We
we hope that the archives of Goodwood will
recall such a book as John Cordelier's IN A Duke and his Friends : the Life and yield further materials for his selection and
' Path of the Eternal Wisdom,' to mention Letters of the Second Duke of Richmond, publication. He may be recommended,
a very recent view; we remember the 2 vols. (Hutchinson & Co. ), the Earl of however, to chasten his style, which is too
lifelong practice of St. Teresa's hardy March gives a lively picture of a great noble- exclamatory.
motto, "Aut pati aut mori,” and we are
man's existence in the eighteenth century.
led to wonder whether it is only by political, though we get an animated account
The social interest takes precedence of the
My Life Story. By Emily, Shareefa of
practice in the Church that men know of the battle of Dettingen and the un. England has furnished foreign lands with
Wazan. (Arnold. )—There is no doubt that
what the Church really holds ; and popularity incurred by George II. through many of their most romantic figures and
whether all other theories are not the wearing a yellow, or Hanoverian, sash careers ; and it is a mistake to suppose that
achievement of those outside.
during the engagement, instead of the true in modern days these extraordinary careers
British red; while “ the 45" is illustrated
It is strange that Miss Stephen, so fond by flurried letters from the Duke of New-
no longer have any place. Less than forty
of young people, in whom the fact appears castle, and the artless effusions of officers Tangier to the Shareef of Wazan, of all holy
years ago an English girl was married in
most patently, and so observant, should at the front. Scotland was to them a
not have noted how we meet here and foreign country where there is nothing revered. In Morocco there has never been
men in the world of Islam possibly the most
there persons who cannot learn through but pride and falsehood,” and Prince Charlie
Ittalyan dog. " The brutal Hawley customs of Islam and Christendom. Even
pain, whose perfection seems to depend an
any compromise between the practices and
on their continued dwelling in life's sun-
undertook to clear the country if Parlia- to-day no Nazarene would be permitted to
ment would give the soldiers & guinea &
light. When she wrote of our over-
set foot in a mosque in Morocco. Forty
day and a pair of shoes for every rebel's
crowded and in many respects corrupt head they brought in. The Duke of Rich-
years ago the barriers were yet more sharply
defined, and that the greatest of all holy
city populations,” she surely saw, though mond, a steady Whig despite his descent
men in the land should then wed a Christian,
she did not say, that these are largely from Charles II. and Louise de Kéroualle, and this without attempting to influence
'the outcome of human selfishness and corresponded not only with the Whig fac-
her beliefs or customs in any way, was
carelessness, sometimes of blank, unfore- totum, Newcastle, but also with Lord Ches- indeed a startling and unprecedented event.
terfield and Lord Hervey, who were wits as
seeing stupidity; not a puzzle, except as
well as Whigs.
Predictions were not wanting at the time
to their removal; but an open shame to disappointingly, about a cook; and though necessarily follow such a step.
Chesterfield, however, writes
that unhappiness, and even tragedy, would
all serious human beings.
Hervey's account of the reception of Gay's
In the story of her life which the
It is in the letters that the reader posthumous opera, 'Achilles, is not without
Shareefa has now published: such predic-
finds the charm, delicacy, and quiet, point, it does not represent him at his best.
tions are to a great extent falsified. " Hers
shrewd humour which won the writer all
The daily concerns of a ducal house form, has been a busy, interesting, and, in
those friends, and made the Porch so agreeable volumes. The Duke's father was
as we have said, the chief subject of these many respects, useful career ; not without
its troubles and difficulties, of course,
sought-out a resort. In them there ap-
none too reputable, but he had an admir- but, upon the whole, happy.
And now,
pears, even more convincingly perhaps able mother, a Brudenell, who watched in these later
years, the Shareefa is
than in the set discourses, the real religion over her boy with constant anxiety. On able, with an unaffected candour-which,
of the writer, and that conspicuously in the inevitable grand tour he was accom- indeed, distinguishes her whole narrative-
those to the elder daughter of Charles panied by his tutor, one Tom Hill, who to say that she has never regretted the step
Darwin. In one of these there is a happy might have stepped out of the pages of she took in marrying Muley. Ali ben Abde-
slam, Shareef of Wazan. This is not to say
sentence precisely hitting a crucial point": / Fielding, so rolficking and obsequious are
Tom remained familiar that such unions are generally desirable, or
“If by a reasonable faith' you mean a
throughout the Duke's life-Richmond's that the average woman in the position in
faith which succeeds in explaining every-
relations with his dependents were, indeed, which Miss Emily Keene found herself in
thing, mine assuredly is not that; and that
of a most praiseworthy kind. He was also 1873 would have been able many years
would appear to me not faith but omnisci-
a staunch and active friend, with all the afterwards to say she did not regret her
ence. "
Whig talent for building up political and marriage. The exact contrary would be
social connexions. His chief virtue, in nearer the truth.
Writing to the same beautifully of death, Lord Hervey's eyes, was that "he made The somewhat onerous task of editing
great expenses in elections. "
To us he these reminiscences has been creditably
appears most meritorious
the good- performed by Mr. S. L. Bensusan. (There
Fancy the midges or the coral insects natured father and host, who bore with
is an unfortunate misprint in the name of
troubling their heads about which or how exemplary meekness the lectures from his Mr. Ion Perdicaris on p. 299, which should
many should live or die; and I doubt uncles, the Brudenells, on his extravagance, be corrected in a subsequent edition. ) Mr.
whether even little birds feel keenly about it. and took keen delight in his woods, his R. B. Cunninghame Graham has contributed
:::. One cannot begin to apply 'when Thou hounds, and his menagerie. The last, by the a preface. The book is in the best sense &
hidest Thy face they are troubled,' much way, was not so unusual a feature in a great human document; its style is admirably
lower than dogs. "
establishment as Lord March seems to simple and unaffected; and its matter is
think : Queen Caroline had two, one in full of vivid interest.
To Lady Farrer she speaks of her love for Kensington Gardens, the other at Kew.
her garden, and conveys the unique To the Duke's credit are two elaborate The Life of Sir Edward FitzGerald Law.
Cambridge environment, that curious quiet hoaxes. Disguised as a highwayman, he compiled and edited by Theodore Morison
which, despite stray motors and “ pro caused Dr. Sherwin, an unpopular canon of and George T. Hutchinson (Blackwood. )
gress,” the little town has managed Chichester, to stand and deliver; and a -Sir Edward Law's career was remarkable,
to preserve in its heart of hearts: the bogus confession in his handwriting, which and fully warrants the labour of Mr. Hutch-
inson in collecting and examining the avail-
sky-seeking poplars, the flat spaces jour-pleasing knowledge of thieves' English. able records, and of Sir Theodore Morison
neying into eternity, the enwrapping | Again, he wrote to Richardson in the name in editing them, & task which he has per-
greyness and greenness. ”
of his friend and butt Cheale, Norroy King'formed with much ability and judgment.
a
she says:
as
## p. 37 (#45) ##############################################
No. 4394, Jan. 13, 1912
37
THE ATHENÆUM
66
The story is often surprising, for, if ever
of the supreme novelty of his outlook and
there was a rolling stone, Law was one, We are very grateful to Sir Edward H. of the brilliance of his style ; and the little
yet he never failed to gather moss ; and in Seymour for his interesting and suggestive book fulfils the function, not of a mere
the different situations he held his whole volume of reminiscences entitled My Naval compendium, but of a genuine introduction.
energy was employed to make his work Career, and Travels (Smith & Elder), and We start with the idea of change. M. Berg-
acceptable to States whose interests pro- should have been still more so if only whilst son, the modern Heraclitus, posits the reality
foundly differed.
writing it he had, occasionally at least, felt of change. It is not an illusion, as science,
Law was born in Ireland in 1846, but was able to “ let himself go. ” An Admiral of with its timeless formulæ, would try to
descended from a Scottish family connected the Fleet and wearer of the O. M. whomas make out. On the contrary, the illusion is
with banking. Like many successful diplo-
we know from the Navy List-has passed to suppose that it can thus be explained
matists, he had a very mixed education : his 70th birthday, is bound, both by age
first on the Continent, where he acquired and habit, to exercise & close scrutiny on
away. Causal explanations, however valu-
able as means of dealing with the inanimate,
a knowledge of many languages, and what he writes ; but how often, in reading leave the felt reality of change wholly un-
afterwards in Scotland and in England, his book, have we wished that rank, honours, touched. Real duration is perceived at once
where he was prepared for the Army, one and officially trained reticence were sunk for what it truly is in the case of the living.
of his masters being the present Lord Morley. full fathom five, and that we could have Here the time-process is not negligible, since
From the R. M. A. , Woolwich, he passed into
the Engineers, but was transferred to the which tells of the bargee's comment on the ment from self.
more of that boyish appreciation of humour it involves constant self-creation, or develop-
A proof is that such change
Artillery, with which he served three familiar chaff that there was a rat in his is neither actually nor even conceivably
years in India, being invalided home in fore chains. ” Many big books of reminis- reversible.
1872. He resigned his commission at the
cences we have read and wished they were Thus we are led on to examine the idea of
end of that year, thus taking a step which a great deal smaller ; this, in comparison, life. As a whole that has duration, life is
seemed far from promising. “ His only is only a little one, and we think that it & continual creation that is, an active or
assets, we are told,
were his force of might have been made much larger without free adaptation, a process of self-determina-
character and his knowledge of foreign offending our artistic sense.
languages. ”
tion. The analogy which best suggests its
He took these attributes to
Russia, where he remained ten years, and
The book describes in a pleasant though nature is that of the artist, who does not
cursory manner many incidents of the au- create in response to à predetermined
was not very successful in business, though
he acquired much information and made
thor's career in and out of the service notion, but rather creates as he goes along.
adventures of war, of travel, and of ship-Such, then, is the vital impetus, the life-
many friends, Jews as well as princes.
His next employment was at the Congo,
wreck, including the salving of the Howe ; force. The environment in regard to it is
The
whither he was sent by King Leopold on
many experiences and reflections on experi- not so much a control as an occasion.
ences, in which the practical knowledge of physical impression is treated by the life-
the recommendation of Lord Wolseley and
Col. Brackenbury. He did not stay long the theories of the doctrinaire ; above all, its whole store of experience by reacting
the old seaman does not always agree with force as a question which it answers out of
there, and after his return home got a place for the delectation of the lay reader, it is a upon it as its own nature directs.
