Previté-Orton justly sums
dictator, is to-day a matter of small lesson to sink into the substance of our up the remaining satire of the period
moment, for there is probably no period thought.
dictator, is to-day a matter of small lesson to sink into the substance of our up the remaining satire of the period
moment, for there is probably no period thought.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
If all artists
A. E. 8. -E. J. T. -Received.
could interpret the composer's music with
B. W. -Next week.
MYSTICISM AND MAGIC
the same perfect phrasing and pure tone
No notice can be taken of anonymous communications. IN TURKEY.
6/-
net
which this artist displays, we should hear
We cannot undertake to reply to inquiries concerning the
appearance of reviews of books,
By LUCY M. J. GARNETT, Author of 'Turkey
no more about Bach's music being dry.
of the Ottomans. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, gilt
top, with Illustrations.
THE THOMASSCHULE at Leipsic, in which
T
H E Α Τ Η Ε Ν Ε Ο M.
Johann Sebastian Bach for many years
OLD COUNTRY INNS.
was cantor and conductor of the chorister
SCALE OF CHARGES FOR ADVERTISEMENTS.
By HENRY P.
boys, celebrates this year the 700th anni.
MASKELL and E. w. 3/6
GREGORY. New and Cheaper Edition, with net
versary of its foundation ; it is, in fact, the
(Half Column) :: ::
List of Inns, Glossary of Curious Signs, and
oldest school of the kind in Germany. The A Coſumn
List of “Reformed " Inns. Large crown 8vo,
: : :
cloth, with numerous Illustrations.
choir, as in Bach's time, sings motets in
St. Thomas's Church on Saturday afternoons. Auctions and Public Institutions, Five Liner u. and 8d. per lino
Pearl Type beyond
THE BRITISH MUSEUM:
THE TRIENNIAL HANDEL FESTIVAL will
IN TAR MEASUREMENT OP ADVERTISEMENTS, CARE
take place at the Crystal Palace next June.
Its History and Treasures.
On the 22nd the full rehearsal will be held.
A View of the Origins of that Great Institution, 12/6
JOHN O. FRANCI8 and J. EDWARD FRANCIS,
Israel in Egypt' will be performed on the
Sketches of its Early Benefactors, and a Sur.
net
vey of the Priceless Objects preserved within
The Atheneum Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancory Lane, London, E. O
25th, and The Messiah on the 29th, a
its walls. By HENRY C. SHELLEY, Author
change from the usual order assigned to these
of 'Inns and Taverns of Old London,' &c.
oratorios. The programme of the Selection
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS.
Demy Svo, handsome cloth gilt, gilt top, with
50 Full-Page Plate Illustrations.
Day, on June 27th, includes important AUTHORS' AGENTS
excerpts from 'Samson,' the first Concerto
354 JAPAN OF THE JAPANESE.
Grosso for strings in g, and selections from
CHATTO & WINDUS
Rodrigo: (a Sailors' Dance for orchestra),
By Prof. J. H. LONGFORD, Author of The 6-
Acis, Belshazzar,' Ottone,' and the
Eno's FRUIT SALT
Story of Korea, &c. Imperial 18mo, cloth gilt, net
gilt top: With 29 Full - Page Plates and
St. Cecilia Ode. The principal singers will
Coloured Map.
be Miss Perceval Allen, Madame Donalda, HAM SMITH
355
INSURANCE COMPANIES
and Madame Clara Butt, and Messrs. Ben
LECTURES . .
353 THE BRITISH WEST INDIES :
Davies, Kennerley Rumford, and Robert LONG
Low & Co.
Radford. To the choir, numbering over
Their History, Resources,
MACMILLAN & Co.
3,000 voices, will be added a large con- MAGAZINES, &c.
and Progress.
i
3 Lines of Pearl. .
75
:::
£. d.
0 36
1 16 0
3 3 0
9 90
A Page
SHOULD BE TAKEN TO MEASURE PROM
RULE TO RULE,
1
>
.
1
PAOG
354
BOOKBINDING
CATALOGUES
EDUCATIONAL
&
6
355
353
375
353
876
EXHIBITIONS
FARMER
375
355
373
356
354
354
374
378
372
354
853
354
355
375
358
854
373
356
854
356
7/6
tingent from the North, selected and trained MISCELLANEOUS.
NOTES AND QUERIES
By ALGERNON E. ASPINALL, Author of net
by Dr. Henry Coward. Sir Frederick Cowen
PAUL & Co.
The Pocket Guide to the West Indies,' Secre-
will act for the fourth time as conductor, PITMAN & Sons ::
tary to the West India Committee. Demy 8vo,
PRINTERS
and Mr. Walter W. Hedgcock will be the
cloth gilt, gilt top, with Map and many Full.
PROVIDENT INSTITUTIONS
Page Plate Illustrations.
organist.
SALES BY AUCTION
SCOTTISH OCEANOGRAPHICAL LABORATORY
PERFORMANCES NEXT WEEK.
SHIPPING
Concert, 2, Royal Albert Hall.
SITUATIONS VACANT
Pitman's Spring List post free on application
Sunday Concert Society, 3. 30, Queen's Hall.
SITUATIONS WANTED
Hunday League Concert, 7, Queen's Pall.
STANFORD. .
to Dept. 8. L.
TUES. Fraser Gange and Dou Luiz Pigueras's Vocal and Violoncello SWIFT & Co.
Recital, 3, Steinway Hall.
SIR ISAAC PITMAN & SONS, LTD. ,
Royal Choral Society, 7, Royal Albert Hall.
TYPE-WRITERS, &c.
Bacred Concert, 7. 30, Queen's Hall.
WILLIAMS & NORGATE
1, Amen Corner, E. C.
Bus.
FRI.
## p. 381 (#287) ############################################
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
THE ATHENAUM
381
CONTENTS,
as
PAGR
381
THE AGE OF DRYDEN . .
393
384
Windows)
385-386
66
886
386
ROGER BACON
888
388
6
889890
391-394
894
394
Gossip. .
ANCES NEXT WEEK
396
6
as
SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1912.
instances of words as well as standard naval power, have, it is pointed out, con-
writers who are not generally familiar, tributed to our nautical vocabulary such
and because he has a sense of humour words
skipper,” boom, and
TAK ROMANCE OF WORDS
and of the life of to-day which is not yacht,” the last, now used for pleasure,
382 always characteristic of professors. being originally a hunting ship (cognato
ENGLISH NONCONFORMITY (The Early English Dis-
sontors; History of English Nonconformity).
The book is brief for its subject, and with German "Jagd ”).
MODERN DEMOCRACY (God and Democracy; Demo- to master right off its 190 pages, thickly The supplanting of native words by
cratic England ; The New Democracy).
RECENT VERSE (storin Sung : The Iscariot; London studded with derivations, will, we think, loan words is well exhibited, as in the
ENGLISH PHILOSOPHY (English Philosophers and
be beyond the average reader, unless he Anglo-Saxon “ here,”
here,” army,
which has
Schools of Philosophy ; English Thonght for English is an enthusiast. We recommend a chap- survived in harbour and “harry. ”
Thinkers)
STATE RECORDS
ter at a time. A few pages thus perused Sometimes a word gets restricted in
OUR LIBRAKY TABLE (One Look Back ; Ä Poet's Chii.
should supply alike amusement and in- meaning-e. g. , "weeds,” which was a
dren ; The Pocket Edition of lamb ; The Signal;
Le Livre de la Route; The Labor Movement in
struction. Some idea of the resources of general term for clothes in Shakespeare's
France)
387
JAPAN AND GREECE (The Creed of Hali Japan ; The
the language is really—to put it on day. Prof. Weekley notes, of course,
Glory that was Greece)
the lowest ground—a social advantage the retention of " widow's weeds,” but
THE ARTIST, BY V. H. FRIEDLAENDER ; ËNGLAND AND in enlarging the range of a talker, and does not point out that Tennyson has
THE PAPACY; A KEATS AUTOGRAPH AT WELBECK reducing the words which he repeats preserved the Shakespearian sense in
ABBEY ; “CKOSSKAGUELL,"; CUNNINGHAM'S Ex.
TRACTS FROM THE REVELS' BOOKS; BOOK SALES ad nauseam because he knows no other. In Memoriam' ':-
LIST OP NEW BOOKS
Not much above the talker to-day is the
FORTHCOMING BOOKS ::
casual writer, and he also may learn-e. g. ,
In words, like weeds, I'll wrap me o'er.
LITERARY GOSSIP
SCIENCE-DAIRYING AND THE DAIRY FARMER (Dairy.
to avoid such tautologies as “ fantastic A great poet is a legislator over language,
ing; Bacteria as Friends and Foes of the Dairy fancy” or “a posy of verse," " posy and can make an old word new. The
Farmer); SOCIETIES; MEETINGS NEXT WEEK ;
393—894 being a contracted form of “ “poesy: Authorized Version of the Bible has a
FINE ARTS - PREHISTORIC THESSALY; SIR WILLIAM
In matters of scholarship Prof. Weekley notable influence in this way, preserving
RICHMOND'S PICTURES ; PICTUKE SALES ; Gossip 395
MUSIC-THE JENA' SYMPHONY; GOSSIP; PERFORM. is both learned and careful, and his phrases the origin of which is forgotten.
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
:: 398 chapter on 'Semantics' is specially valu- Throughout the work we find abundant
able, as that science is yet in its infancy. evidence of the Professor's eye for neo-
His arrangement in chapters is satisfactory logisms, but they are rather confusingly
LITERATURE
from the scholar's point of view, but, in mixed up with older words, and might
order to attract a popular audience, it have had a section to themselves. In
would, we think, have been a better plan the first chapter, for instance, we range
THE ROMANCE OF WORDS. to take such headings as Religion,' from “malice prepense” and “ affidavit,
War,' or
THE late Prof. Minto, an admirable and
Amusements,' and explain various words from Greek and Latin, and
stimulating teacher in English, once
under them the genesis of words due an old word like assoil,” to the “ kine-
described “ Romance in Words
to various changes or events in the matograph,'
the
appendicitis," "sabotage,
only proper definition of a dictionary.
national life. What we may call the out- and * barracking,” and return to sham
It is certain
a happy indication of the lands have also a large and daily
increasing antiques like "bartisan," " slug-horn,”
wealth of meaning and interest, the odd part in introducing strange words into and niddering,” to end with " bovril”
survival of lost causes, of forgotten events, local colour, revel in words on the way is said to be unaltered from the Greek,
the language. Novelists, for the sake of and“ chortle. ” In this chapter“ nausea"
of to-day. We live in an age in which to be English, which they seldom take But the Greek is vavoia, or vavría, and
the trouble to explain.
everybody wishes to appear in print, and
How many “nausea” surely the Latin form. “Tennis”
the standard of decent English is being people know what copra is, or jaggery, or is rightly derived from the French
daily degraded. “Ignorance, pure ignor-
even a patio ?
tenez ! ” but we cannot conceive why
ance,” is as much the cause of this slack- decreasing phenomenon, and the
words it ball about to be served—is not added.
War is happily an intermittent and the translation " take it”-i. e. , take the
proved where the very guides that should introduces are not so persistent as some This is clear to those who know Latin
correct are often ignorant too. Mr. Peck- and Prof. Weekley, who regards it as authority of Erasmus. On several occa-
“Jingo " is now well established, from the use of "accipe," quoted on the
sniff
probably the only pure Basque word in sions we wish that fewer words had been
was in the frequent habit of using any English, adds :
word that occurred to him as having a good
mentioned, and space made for a little
sound, and rounding a sentence well, without “In 1878, when war with Russia seemed more by way of illustration and explana-
much care of its meaning. ”
imminent, a music hall singer, the great tion. But we may be underrating the
MacDermott, delighted large audiences patience and perseverance of the average
He has a formidable host of followers in
with-
the twentieth century, whose mistakes are
reader. We certainly hope so, as we wish
We don't want to fight, but, by Jingo, if we do,
80 frequent as to have ceased to be
many to share the enjoyment which the
We've got the ships, we've got the men, we've got the
amusing. The makers of the great Oxford Hence the name jingo applied to that ultra-
book has given us. On the last page we
are told that
swank' is only a year or
scholars who toil so zealously at a mini patriotic section of the population, which, two old,” and asked who brought it
in war-time, attends to the shouting. "
mum wage in the dark and difficult mines
suddenly to England. Its wide popu-
of the English tongue, see their labours We do not doubt this, but we think that larity in the mouth of the public may be
daily neglected, and some, wild guess current by Minto. At any rate, he laid English is much earlier than is here sup;
in respectable writing “Jingo" was made strange and new, but its introduction to
pen, when they have long since exploded claim to popularizing the chorus of the posed.
'gas
its folly, and explained the truth by song for readers in The Daily News when gives it in the sense “ to boast or
scientific study and a host of examples.
he was engaged in political journalism. unduly. "
We welcome, then, heartily Prof. Week-“ Spanish, à word for money which The last word in fashion for an elegant
ley's study—somewhat on the lines of survived into the nineteenth century,
survived into the nineteenth century, young man is a “nut. ” It remains, so
Trench's well-known books on English-of recalls the greatdaysof Drake and Raleigh; | far as we are aware, a nut at present un-
the wide field of derivation and meaning and " Sir Garnet ”. [Wolseley] made a cracked by philologists. Perhaps Prof.
involved in the vocabulary of the past popular phrase which would now need Weekley may apply his learning and
and present. His book is all the more
explanation. The Boer War brought into humour to the query in a new edition, or,
effective because it introduces popular frequent use a number of South African better still, give us a separate volume on
words, such as “lager” and “sjambok,” modern slang, like the study on the 'Arry
The Romance of Words. By Ernest Wookley, which are not now current in ordinary Ballads in Punch which a Dutch scholar
(John Murray. )
conversation. The Dutch, as a great produced some eighteen years since.
## p. 382 (#288) ############################################
382
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
cherished an ideal of life seen through a * Mac Flecknoe 'was published by Dryden's
The Cambridge History of English Lite- medium of art, and focussed their view enemies without his knowledge, from a
rature. Edited by A. W. Ward and on the medium instead of on the object, manuscript copy.
A. R. Waller. -Vol. VIII. The Age of substituting a set of rules for direct and It is not easy to frame any definition
Dryden. (Cambridge University Press. ) first-hand observation, with the result of the Age of Dryden which shall include
that their work has passed into oblivion Hudibras' and Barclay's “Apology,' ex-
THE Age of Dryden, which corresponds with the rules on which it was based. cept that of time. A well-considered
with the forty years after the Restora- Poetry and the drama, drawing the chapter on Samuel Butler is written by
tion, has left a deep impression on our outlines of an art without any living Mr. W. F. Smith, who rightly treats
literature. It marks, as Matthew Arnold master to instruct," sought for guidance Hudibras' rather as a survival of the
pointed out, the birth of modern English in French doctrinaire ideals. Now it is Elizabethan spirit than as touched by any
prose, of which Dryden himself, more not to be denied that our literature had French influence later than Rabelais. Butler
than any other, may be called the father. many things to learn from France, was whimsical, of the family of Robert
To the reader of our day, whether a and that Dryden and his age profited Burton, and like him full of out-of-the-
professed student of literature or no, greatly in these respects from their way learning, some of it at second-hand;
this is Dryden's chief claim to remem- lesson; but it is noteworthy that at no but his work is founded on direct observa-
brance. That through these forty years epoch which models itself on a foreign tion of life and still pleases,“ though
he was the representative writer of his literature has the fruit of its borrowing with a kind of Pain to the best sort of
time, its mouthpiece and its literary come to maturity ; time is needed for the Readers. ” Mr.
Previté-Orton justly sums
dictator, is to-day a matter of small lesson to sink into the substance of our up the remaining satire of the period
moment, for there is probably no period thought.
in a way which will not encourage any
in the history of our language since the We remember, too, that this French one to enter on a fuller study of it. Mr.
Reformation the books of which are so ideal is not native even to its own soil; E. Grubb gives an interesting account of
rarely opened by the ordinary reader. that the French of France are not a Latin, the early Quaker publications and the
The few works written in those years but a Latinized race; and that, just as the gradual and short-lived appearance among
which still appeal to us are by men of a Latins had adopted this ideal at the cost them of a literary element. Three chap-
different age, and are rooted in quite of the destruction of their national poetry, ters on the Restoration Drama follow-
other sentiments and ideals than those so the price paid for it by the French is none too great an allowance for what
of the Restoration. Dryden and his that their poetry between Ronsard and was then the sole provision of fiction for
compeers have little or nothing to say the Romantic Revival (with the single the public. The first of them, by Prof.
to the man of to-day.
exception of La Fontaine) has lost its Schelling, takes us up to Wycherley's
For the first half of the seventeenth universal appeal. Happily our own lite- · Plain Dealer. ' The author does not
century our literature depended for its rature is so rich that we can well afford seem to have opened up any new ground,
vitality on the Elizabethan spirit, the to balance the loss of a century of barren and the Spanish influence on which he
influence of which died with the men of poetry by the gain to our prose in every lays stress is highly hypothetical, but
the Civil War. The new age began direction. Mere temporary absurdities, the chapter is useful. We only regret
afresh without the guidance of a con- as when Rymer applies to the study of that Etherege and Wycherley were not
tinuous tradition : it was materialistic, Othello' canons of criticism eminently in the province of Mr. Charles Whibley,
experimental, open-minded as to the applicable to documents in his Foedera,
' ' who follows, and carries on comedy
merits of all accepted rules of life and may well be passed by with little remark. to the end of the century in one of the
literature. There is no lack of explana- The chapter on Dryden by Dr. Ward, best chapters of the book. Mr. A. T.
tions of this change ; but they are all with which this volume opens, is an
Bartholomew reviews the whole period in
curiously incomplete. Politically, the appreciation of one of our greatest lite- the third chapter, with special reference
Restoration was a compromise which rary artists, worthy of the subject and to the lesser work of the day, principally
left unsettled most of the questions for of the skill of the writer. We have in tragedy — the works he has to deal
which the Civil War had been fought, but a suspicion that his admiration for with being usually too bad for praise and
which left both sides shaken in their Dryden's matchless prose blinds him too feeble for blame. Mr. Whibley follows
adherence to the ideals that had guided to the weakness of the tragedies with with a chapter on the Court Poets; and
them : doubtless the frame of mind their mock-heroics and cynical view of Prof. Saintsbury completes the first half
which this induced had its result on the life ; speaking for ourselves, we cannot of the volume with another on Seven-
literature of the day, but it did not cause count among dramatic masterpieces either teenth-Century Prosody in his usual
the change in its spirit. Nor can the comedies or tragedies as dead as even vigorous and convoluted style.
influence of the returned exiles be counted Don Sebastian All for Love. ' Re- Mr. Wheatley is better fitted than any
for much. Few indeed of the writers of membering Sarcey, we may
may count it other to give an adequate account of
this period had followed the fortunes of already sufficient criticism that Dr. Ward Evelyn and Pepys, and Dr. Ward is at
Charles, and the number of important judges by the standards of his own day his happiest in dealing with the lesser
persons in the Age of Dryden who could Dryden's plays and verse, instead of putting memoir- and letter-writers of the period.
be called returned exiles was very small. him beside the greatest. Such works as Mr. Bass Mullinger's chapter on Platonists
The personal influence of Charles II. is a Absalom and Achitophel' and
' Absalom and Achitophel' and 'Mac and Latitudinarians should be read with
factor of much greater importance; the Flecknoe,' in which his art is brought to that on Latitudinarianism and Pietism
literature of the Restoration, whether bear on life, will, however, bear com- in vol. v. of The Cambridge Modern
of poetry, of the stage, or of the pulpit, parison with anything of their kind in our History,' which it controverts in some
was a Court literature, and much of it literature. A critic is not a biographer, particulars. Archdeacon Hutton deals
was directly intended to gain his favour. but the question of Dryden's sincerity with the pulpit oratory of the period, and
He was an opportunist of sense and of must be faced in estimating the value seems rather severe upon Tillotson's style
taste, a lover of wit, and these are cha- of much of his work, and Dr. Ward has -"utterly without charm, or distinction,
racteristic of the writing of his day, and dealt with the matter at sufficient length, or interest. ” Prof. Hearnshaw's chapter
constitute its redeeming qualities.
showing him as what friends call " open- on Legal Literature gives an account of
Conditions of this kind do not mould great minded” and enemies arriviste—neither the subject which does not add much
literature; they affect the lesser authors of the vicious craftsman of Macaulay and detail to popular knowledge.
a period, while the more important are Green, nor the immaculate poet of his fame as a scholar among those who have
above their influence. The real cause admirers. Mr. H. B. Wheatley has con- worked at the original documents on
of our inability to feel any interest in the tributed a bibliography of Dryden which which he relies does not stand very high ;
Age of Dryden is that the imaginative contains much that is new to students, he owed much of his learning to Cotton
writers of the day sought their inspira- and it is perhaps a pity that he did not and some to Hakewell, who is not even
tion in literature instead of in life. They call attention in it to his suggestion that I mentioned in this chapter, while his
or
## p. 383 (#289) ############################################
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
383
we
as
knowledge of our records was far inferior to two such discourses for the Sunday, Stinton at once began to copy the manu-
that of Prynne, probably the most deeply besides conducting services during the scripts, but died too soon to complete his
read archivist in our history. As a writer, week, at each of which an address is task. The work then fell to Crosby, and,
on the other hand, Selden takes a high expected, visiting his congregation, and additional matter being obtained, it was
place.
working at the institutions associated completed by the publication of the third
With the exception of the preachers, with his church; and in addition, if a and fourth volumes in 1740, under the title
the subjects of these chapters have little popular preacher, he has frequent calls of 'The History of the English Baptists
essential connexion with the Age of from other churches. It is, however, sur- from the Reformation to the Beginning of
Dryden except in time. John Locke, on prising that among the country clergy the Reign of King George I. ' During that
whom Prof. Sorley writes an expository of the Church of England, who have period, Mr. Burrage tells us, a more
chapter, full of sound criticism and just some leisure, more should not have scholarly work was published by the Rev.
appreciation, is one of its best products. | been done in the way of research. We John Lewis, a clergyman of Margate;
His work is compact of unimaginative are glad to see that Nonconformists this was entitled 'Brief History of the
common sense applied to important sub- of recent years have shown themselves Rise and Progress of Anabaptism in Eng
jects, clearly and forcibly written-philo- desirous of collecting information con- land. Between 1793 and 1802 Dr. John
sophy speaking the language of every- cerning their early history, and our Rippon, who was the minister of the
day life. Dr. Shipley, writing on the readers may remember the welcome we church of which Spurgeon became pastor,
progress of science, deals with another have given to the publications of the edited four volumes of “The Baptist
typically Restoration movement, vivified Baptist Historical Society, as well as to Annual Register. ' In this work was first
by a constant contact with nature. The those of the Congregational Society. published Joshua Thomas's History of
instructions issued by the Royal Society Mr. Burrage, in the volumes the Baptist Association in Wales' from
at its foundation to writers of papers
are now reviewing, gives the story of 1650 to 1790. Mr. Burrage also refers
might well be reprinted and circulated early English Dissent complete in itself to Ivimey's history, the fourth volume
among scientific men at the present day. for the period treated, but he designs it of which was completed in 1830, as well
The volume closes with Mr. Arthur
the first section of a larger treatise,” | as to the considerable interest felt by
Tilley's account of the Essay and the for which he has been making investiga- English Baptists in the publications of the
beginning of modern English prose. In tions for a number of years, and biblio- Hanserd Knollys Society, two volumes
it he has dealt at some length with the graphers will be glad to hear that it is of which are composed chiefly of reprints
influence of French literature upon our proposed to print
of early Baptist works. America has, of
own during the second half of the seven-
course, quite a literature of its own on
teenth century. His view differs natur-
“an extended bibliography of between two the subject.
ally from that indicated in the early part been prepared as a supplement to Dr.
and three thousand items, which has already
of this article, but rather as respects the Henry Martyn Dexter's Collections toward Henry Martyn_Dexter's epoch-making
Among other works mentioned is Dr.
value of the literature copied than as a Bibliography of Congregationalism, but book entitled The Congregationalism of
to the use made of it. He shares with which will be chiefly concerned with the the Last Three Hundred Years as seen
Dr. Ward and Mr. Whibley the honours literature of the English Anabaptists and
in its Literature. This was, Mr.
of the volume.
Baptists before 1745.
Burrage
considers, “ the most learned work of the
Mr. Burrage modestly states that kind” up to that time (1880) produced
“ the present publication is not intended as by an American scholar; and in his
ENGLISH NONCONFORMITY. an exhaustive history of English Dissent opinion it
during even the period treated, but rather
THE first volume of Mr. Burrage's impor-
as an introduction to the study of that surpasses even to-day, in minute critical
detailed, and vast knowledge, anything that
tant work is devoted to ' History and history and its literature. "
has been done in this line either by his-
Criticism. ' In his Preface he states truly Wherever possible, primary evidence has torians of the Church of England or by
that
been sought, and second-hand sources English Dissenters. ”
In reference
even the best histories of the Church of used as little as possible.
adequate information relating to our subject, that it was as late as 1700 before any Shakespeare's little volume Baptist and
England have been noticeably lacking in to printed literature, it is curious to find To those who seek popular histories
Mr. Burrage commends the Rev. J. H.
while the average history written by Non- general work of importance was published
conformists is not unnaturally apt to be in defence of the Puritans,
in defence of the Puritans, or of any Congregational Pioneers,' and “a notable
somewhat partial in its treatment
branch of separatists with whom these posthumous work”-Dr. R. W. Dale's
and he maintains rightly that
volumes deal. “In 1702 Cotton Mather
History of English Congregationalism,
" English church history as a whole, how. brought out his now celebrated folio 1907, which was completed and pub-
lished by his son, Chancellor Dale.
ever, cannot be said to be satisfactorily entitled · Magnalia Christi Americana,""
studied, unless the story of Dissent is fully lishing his numerous writings concerning attention to
Strype pub- Mr. Burrage in his Foreword' calls
and fairly represented. '
the change of meaning
the Church of England, which contain which has taken place during three
Nonconformity has in the past had but
some references to the early English centuries in the words Nonconformist,
few historians, and the chief reason of this separatists. In 1732–8 Neale’s ‘History Dissenter, Independent, Congregationalist,
is the fact that its ministers, when com- of the Puritans, or Protestant Noncon- and Baptist. Î'o-day they are applied in
petent for such a task, have had too formists,' appeared; this work has been popular usage to persons who have
much to occupy them to spare time for several times republished, but up to that separated themselves from the Church
historic research.
time in England neither the Baptists nor of England; but the words have not
The sermon, it is well known, has always Independents had published any history always been so employed :-
formed an important part in Noncon of their rise and growth.
formist services, and the minister has
“ The earliest Nonconformists, for in-
Fortunately, however, some of the early stance, were not separatists, but often
to devote much time to the preparation of leaders of the Baptists in London had left learned clergymen of the Church of Eng;
behind them a few documents relating to land, who found fault with the clerical
The Early English Dissenters in the Light their early history; and these, after passing vestments, &c. , and yet remained in the
of Recent
Champlin Burrage. 2 vols. (Cambridge through several hands, came into the Church. The term Puritan appears to have
University Press. )
possession of Stinton, who succeeded been first used about 1566, and was correctly
History of English Nonconformity, from Wiclit his father-in-law, Benjamim Keach, as applied to Nonconformists as previously
defined. ”
to the Close of the Nineteenth Century pastor of the congregation at Horsely-
By Henry W. Clark. –Vol. I. From Wickij | down. Keach, it may be recalled, The word Dissenter appears to have had
to the Restoration. (Chapman & Hall. ) suffered the punishment of the pillory. I a history similar to that of the word
i
"|
## p. 384 (#290) ############################################
384
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
66
for a
66
Nonconformist, only it seems to have been Angus as Principal of the College. The and so he becomes “ the standard whereby
first employed after 1641 :-
Catalogue forms a handsome quarto the Nonconformist spirit, in all its sub-
“The first Englishman of strong intel- volume, of a copy of which we are the sequent manifestations, must submit to
lectual gifts to win distinction as a preacher
fortunate possessors.
be judged. ” By this same principle the
of separatism and as the bold author of
Mr. Burrage devotes his second volume author tests Church movements in the
works which directly encouraged separation to documents illustrative of the history Elizabethan age. He insists upon clearly
from the Church of England was Robert of early English Dissent. While he does discriminating between Puritans and Pres-
Browne, and from 1582 to the present time
byterians, and considers that the Puritans,
his name has been a landmark in English not claim for them
church history, known not only in England, “the dignity of forming
while accepting the organization of the
but also on the Continent and in America. ” | Corpus of the literature relating to the real Nonconformists, and that the Presby;
“the dignity of forming a complete English Church, were nevertheless the
Browne is well entitled to be called subject, they have been carefully selected terians, who protested against the Church
the Father of Congregationalism. Like from the mass of material now available for
Wesley, he had no intention of instituting to the reader a number of the more inacces at all. On the principle that, wherever
investigation. My aim has been to present constitutions, were not Nonconformists
any permanent separation of churches sible or historically valuable writings, many form is made compulsory, life loses its
from one another :-
of which have as yet been only imperfectly supremacy, and the Nonconformist spirit
or partially reproduced. Others have re- is lost, Mr. Clark finds that the true Non-
The idea of State Church seemed to mained entirely, or almost entirely, un-
him as desirable as to any other English noticed. ”
conformist theory was grasped by the
citizen. . . . he would undoubtedly have used
Independents, but that while they held
the parish church buildings, practically as Such a selection has long been needed for the theory, “they did not entirely exem-
they stood, for his congregational churches, students, who hitherto, Mr. Burrage fears, plify it. " He concludes that
as any Puritans of the time would probably
manifesting of life and ecclesiastical con-
have wished to do. ”
" have generally been much more familiar struction in their ideal relations, as two
with what has been said by writers and
He considered the Church to be “in a historians of different points of view con parts of a perfectly articulated whole, the
commonwealth,” and looked upon the cerning this literature than with the manu.
world has still to wait. "
power of the civil magistrate as one great scripts themselves, with resultant mis-
force which, when properly limited, might understanding, or only partial understand-
be used as a means of keeping the churches
ing. ”
under State control, and so of ensuring in We hope that these volumes will prove MODERN DEMOCRACY.
them a reasonable amount of unity in an incentive to the zealous writers who
belief and practice.
have already added much to Noncon- The crudity of expression in Mr. Frank
Mr. Burrage in his thirteenth chapter formist history through the publications Crane’s ‘God and Democracy'is the more
gives an exhaustive account of the of the Baptist and Congregational His to be regretted because it is marked by the
Gould manuscript preserved at Regent's torical Societies, and also that there may conception of beautiful ideals. This little
Park College. It contains a history of be an increase in their rolls of members, brochure will, we believe, serve to unify
the Independent Puritan congregation which have always appeared to us far and realize for many what is at present but
organized by Henry Jacob in London too small.
a vague idea of a God of Democracy who
from 1616 to 1640. Jacob considered We cannot praise too highly the in- will stand the test of an age of widening
that each church ought to have one dustry of Mr. Burrage, and we cordially our readers the standpoint from which we
spiritual outlook. In order to convey to
pastor at least, or more than one if means congratulate him on the result of his view the subject, we quote Mr. Crane's
allowed and the congregation was large arduous labours, which_must influence
definition :
enough to require it. The pastor was to all future histories of English Religion.
have absolute power over all the eccle- Nor can we close our review of his “The true oneness of a people depends
siastical affairs and government of the volumes without making mention of the upon the spirit in them, and not upon the
church. The following clause in reference modesty with which he puts forth his power over them. This now conception is
to marriage and burial is singular :- facts, and the anxiety he always displays called Democracy. Its basis is the mind of
to appreciate the efforts of other workers the whole people. It is humanity doing
“ Concerning making of marriage, and in the same field. The volumes also things for itself, and not having things done
burying the dead, we believe that they are
for it. ”
no actions of a Church minister (because they
contain beautifully executed facsimiles of
are no actions spirituall), but civill. Neither
title-pages and documents.
We held over our notice of Dr. Weyl's
are ministers called to such business : neither
'The New Democracy' in the hope that
is there so much as one example of any such The author of the History of English Mr. Percy Alden's would furnish us with
practise in the whole book of God. ”
Nonconformity' has given us
a fresh a comparison between America and
Our hopes are grievously
Mr. Burrage, after giving a complete list study of an old subject, surveyed and England.
of the various documents contained in presented by one who has consulted com disappointed. His book, with the re-
the Gould manuscript, says
petent authorities, and brought to their sounding title of Democratic England,'
consideration an original and discriminat- proves to be little more than a panegyric
that if the English
Baptists of to-day ing mind. Nonconformist readers may of the Liberal Government—its measures
have a greater knowledge of their history reasonably feel proud of their ideals.
and supporters.
Where Mr. Alden's
than they have had since Stinton's time,
honesty will not permit of whole-
it is to the Rev. George Gould of Norwich
Mr. Clark reviews the history down to hearted adulation, he either adopts a
that they are first indebted for preserving the Restoration. The remaining period patronizing tone towards great men and
the at present only known first-hand copy is to be treated in a second volume. The movements, or candidly avers his dis-
of this valuable and long-lost Stinton Nonconformist spirit is defined by him as quietude when approaching something
Crosby manuscript.
that spirit which exalts life above organiza- like criticism of his friends. His essays
Among other treasures to be found at tion. By this principle he finds that the were originally written for an American
Regent's Park College is the library maturest Nonconformist we have yet public, and in their collected form show
presented by Dr. Angus (formerly a seen lived and died in the communion of
valued contributor to our columns), who the Catholic Church. This is the position God and Democracy. By Frank Crane.
for many years devoted much time to the assigned to John Wiclif, in whom Mr.
collecting of books and documents relating Clark finds the first emergence of the Non- Democratic England. By Percy Alden.
A. E. 8. -E. J. T. -Received.
could interpret the composer's music with
B. W. -Next week.
MYSTICISM AND MAGIC
the same perfect phrasing and pure tone
No notice can be taken of anonymous communications. IN TURKEY.
6/-
net
which this artist displays, we should hear
We cannot undertake to reply to inquiries concerning the
appearance of reviews of books,
By LUCY M. J. GARNETT, Author of 'Turkey
no more about Bach's music being dry.
of the Ottomans. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, gilt
top, with Illustrations.
THE THOMASSCHULE at Leipsic, in which
T
H E Α Τ Η Ε Ν Ε Ο M.
Johann Sebastian Bach for many years
OLD COUNTRY INNS.
was cantor and conductor of the chorister
SCALE OF CHARGES FOR ADVERTISEMENTS.
By HENRY P.
boys, celebrates this year the 700th anni.
MASKELL and E. w. 3/6
GREGORY. New and Cheaper Edition, with net
versary of its foundation ; it is, in fact, the
(Half Column) :: ::
List of Inns, Glossary of Curious Signs, and
oldest school of the kind in Germany. The A Coſumn
List of “Reformed " Inns. Large crown 8vo,
: : :
cloth, with numerous Illustrations.
choir, as in Bach's time, sings motets in
St. Thomas's Church on Saturday afternoons. Auctions and Public Institutions, Five Liner u. and 8d. per lino
Pearl Type beyond
THE BRITISH MUSEUM:
THE TRIENNIAL HANDEL FESTIVAL will
IN TAR MEASUREMENT OP ADVERTISEMENTS, CARE
take place at the Crystal Palace next June.
Its History and Treasures.
On the 22nd the full rehearsal will be held.
A View of the Origins of that Great Institution, 12/6
JOHN O. FRANCI8 and J. EDWARD FRANCIS,
Israel in Egypt' will be performed on the
Sketches of its Early Benefactors, and a Sur.
net
vey of the Priceless Objects preserved within
The Atheneum Office, Bream's Buildings, Chancory Lane, London, E. O
25th, and The Messiah on the 29th, a
its walls. By HENRY C. SHELLEY, Author
change from the usual order assigned to these
of 'Inns and Taverns of Old London,' &c.
oratorios. The programme of the Selection
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS.
Demy Svo, handsome cloth gilt, gilt top, with
50 Full-Page Plate Illustrations.
Day, on June 27th, includes important AUTHORS' AGENTS
excerpts from 'Samson,' the first Concerto
354 JAPAN OF THE JAPANESE.
Grosso for strings in g, and selections from
CHATTO & WINDUS
Rodrigo: (a Sailors' Dance for orchestra),
By Prof. J. H. LONGFORD, Author of The 6-
Acis, Belshazzar,' Ottone,' and the
Eno's FRUIT SALT
Story of Korea, &c. Imperial 18mo, cloth gilt, net
gilt top: With 29 Full - Page Plates and
St. Cecilia Ode. The principal singers will
Coloured Map.
be Miss Perceval Allen, Madame Donalda, HAM SMITH
355
INSURANCE COMPANIES
and Madame Clara Butt, and Messrs. Ben
LECTURES . .
353 THE BRITISH WEST INDIES :
Davies, Kennerley Rumford, and Robert LONG
Low & Co.
Radford. To the choir, numbering over
Their History, Resources,
MACMILLAN & Co.
3,000 voices, will be added a large con- MAGAZINES, &c.
and Progress.
i
3 Lines of Pearl. .
75
:::
£. d.
0 36
1 16 0
3 3 0
9 90
A Page
SHOULD BE TAKEN TO MEASURE PROM
RULE TO RULE,
1
>
.
1
PAOG
354
BOOKBINDING
CATALOGUES
EDUCATIONAL
&
6
355
353
375
353
876
EXHIBITIONS
FARMER
375
355
373
356
354
354
374
378
372
354
853
354
355
375
358
854
373
356
854
356
7/6
tingent from the North, selected and trained MISCELLANEOUS.
NOTES AND QUERIES
By ALGERNON E. ASPINALL, Author of net
by Dr. Henry Coward. Sir Frederick Cowen
PAUL & Co.
The Pocket Guide to the West Indies,' Secre-
will act for the fourth time as conductor, PITMAN & Sons ::
tary to the West India Committee. Demy 8vo,
PRINTERS
and Mr. Walter W. Hedgcock will be the
cloth gilt, gilt top, with Map and many Full.
PROVIDENT INSTITUTIONS
Page Plate Illustrations.
organist.
SALES BY AUCTION
SCOTTISH OCEANOGRAPHICAL LABORATORY
PERFORMANCES NEXT WEEK.
SHIPPING
Concert, 2, Royal Albert Hall.
SITUATIONS VACANT
Pitman's Spring List post free on application
Sunday Concert Society, 3. 30, Queen's Hall.
SITUATIONS WANTED
Hunday League Concert, 7, Queen's Pall.
STANFORD. .
to Dept. 8. L.
TUES. Fraser Gange and Dou Luiz Pigueras's Vocal and Violoncello SWIFT & Co.
Recital, 3, Steinway Hall.
SIR ISAAC PITMAN & SONS, LTD. ,
Royal Choral Society, 7, Royal Albert Hall.
TYPE-WRITERS, &c.
Bacred Concert, 7. 30, Queen's Hall.
WILLIAMS & NORGATE
1, Amen Corner, E. C.
Bus.
FRI.
## p. 381 (#287) ############################################
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
THE ATHENAUM
381
CONTENTS,
as
PAGR
381
THE AGE OF DRYDEN . .
393
384
Windows)
385-386
66
886
386
ROGER BACON
888
388
6
889890
391-394
894
394
Gossip. .
ANCES NEXT WEEK
396
6
as
SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1912.
instances of words as well as standard naval power, have, it is pointed out, con-
writers who are not generally familiar, tributed to our nautical vocabulary such
and because he has a sense of humour words
skipper,” boom, and
TAK ROMANCE OF WORDS
and of the life of to-day which is not yacht,” the last, now used for pleasure,
382 always characteristic of professors. being originally a hunting ship (cognato
ENGLISH NONCONFORMITY (The Early English Dis-
sontors; History of English Nonconformity).
The book is brief for its subject, and with German "Jagd ”).
MODERN DEMOCRACY (God and Democracy; Demo- to master right off its 190 pages, thickly The supplanting of native words by
cratic England ; The New Democracy).
RECENT VERSE (storin Sung : The Iscariot; London studded with derivations, will, we think, loan words is well exhibited, as in the
ENGLISH PHILOSOPHY (English Philosophers and
be beyond the average reader, unless he Anglo-Saxon “ here,”
here,” army,
which has
Schools of Philosophy ; English Thonght for English is an enthusiast. We recommend a chap- survived in harbour and “harry. ”
Thinkers)
STATE RECORDS
ter at a time. A few pages thus perused Sometimes a word gets restricted in
OUR LIBRAKY TABLE (One Look Back ; Ä Poet's Chii.
should supply alike amusement and in- meaning-e. g. , "weeds,” which was a
dren ; The Pocket Edition of lamb ; The Signal;
Le Livre de la Route; The Labor Movement in
struction. Some idea of the resources of general term for clothes in Shakespeare's
France)
387
JAPAN AND GREECE (The Creed of Hali Japan ; The
the language is really—to put it on day. Prof. Weekley notes, of course,
Glory that was Greece)
the lowest ground—a social advantage the retention of " widow's weeds,” but
THE ARTIST, BY V. H. FRIEDLAENDER ; ËNGLAND AND in enlarging the range of a talker, and does not point out that Tennyson has
THE PAPACY; A KEATS AUTOGRAPH AT WELBECK reducing the words which he repeats preserved the Shakespearian sense in
ABBEY ; “CKOSSKAGUELL,"; CUNNINGHAM'S Ex.
TRACTS FROM THE REVELS' BOOKS; BOOK SALES ad nauseam because he knows no other. In Memoriam' ':-
LIST OP NEW BOOKS
Not much above the talker to-day is the
FORTHCOMING BOOKS ::
casual writer, and he also may learn-e. g. ,
In words, like weeds, I'll wrap me o'er.
LITERARY GOSSIP
SCIENCE-DAIRYING AND THE DAIRY FARMER (Dairy.
to avoid such tautologies as “ fantastic A great poet is a legislator over language,
ing; Bacteria as Friends and Foes of the Dairy fancy” or “a posy of verse," " posy and can make an old word new. The
Farmer); SOCIETIES; MEETINGS NEXT WEEK ;
393—894 being a contracted form of “ “poesy: Authorized Version of the Bible has a
FINE ARTS - PREHISTORIC THESSALY; SIR WILLIAM
In matters of scholarship Prof. Weekley notable influence in this way, preserving
RICHMOND'S PICTURES ; PICTUKE SALES ; Gossip 395
MUSIC-THE JENA' SYMPHONY; GOSSIP; PERFORM. is both learned and careful, and his phrases the origin of which is forgotten.
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
:: 398 chapter on 'Semantics' is specially valu- Throughout the work we find abundant
able, as that science is yet in its infancy. evidence of the Professor's eye for neo-
His arrangement in chapters is satisfactory logisms, but they are rather confusingly
LITERATURE
from the scholar's point of view, but, in mixed up with older words, and might
order to attract a popular audience, it have had a section to themselves. In
would, we think, have been a better plan the first chapter, for instance, we range
THE ROMANCE OF WORDS. to take such headings as Religion,' from “malice prepense” and “ affidavit,
War,' or
THE late Prof. Minto, an admirable and
Amusements,' and explain various words from Greek and Latin, and
stimulating teacher in English, once
under them the genesis of words due an old word like assoil,” to the “ kine-
described “ Romance in Words
to various changes or events in the matograph,'
the
appendicitis," "sabotage,
only proper definition of a dictionary.
national life. What we may call the out- and * barracking,” and return to sham
It is certain
a happy indication of the lands have also a large and daily
increasing antiques like "bartisan," " slug-horn,”
wealth of meaning and interest, the odd part in introducing strange words into and niddering,” to end with " bovril”
survival of lost causes, of forgotten events, local colour, revel in words on the way is said to be unaltered from the Greek,
the language. Novelists, for the sake of and“ chortle. ” In this chapter“ nausea"
of to-day. We live in an age in which to be English, which they seldom take But the Greek is vavoia, or vavría, and
the trouble to explain.
everybody wishes to appear in print, and
How many “nausea” surely the Latin form. “Tennis”
the standard of decent English is being people know what copra is, or jaggery, or is rightly derived from the French
daily degraded. “Ignorance, pure ignor-
even a patio ?
tenez ! ” but we cannot conceive why
ance,” is as much the cause of this slack- decreasing phenomenon, and the
words it ball about to be served—is not added.
War is happily an intermittent and the translation " take it”-i. e. , take the
proved where the very guides that should introduces are not so persistent as some This is clear to those who know Latin
correct are often ignorant too. Mr. Peck- and Prof. Weekley, who regards it as authority of Erasmus. On several occa-
“Jingo " is now well established, from the use of "accipe," quoted on the
sniff
probably the only pure Basque word in sions we wish that fewer words had been
was in the frequent habit of using any English, adds :
word that occurred to him as having a good
mentioned, and space made for a little
sound, and rounding a sentence well, without “In 1878, when war with Russia seemed more by way of illustration and explana-
much care of its meaning. ”
imminent, a music hall singer, the great tion. But we may be underrating the
MacDermott, delighted large audiences patience and perseverance of the average
He has a formidable host of followers in
with-
the twentieth century, whose mistakes are
reader. We certainly hope so, as we wish
We don't want to fight, but, by Jingo, if we do,
80 frequent as to have ceased to be
many to share the enjoyment which the
We've got the ships, we've got the men, we've got the
amusing. The makers of the great Oxford Hence the name jingo applied to that ultra-
book has given us. On the last page we
are told that
swank' is only a year or
scholars who toil so zealously at a mini patriotic section of the population, which, two old,” and asked who brought it
in war-time, attends to the shouting. "
mum wage in the dark and difficult mines
suddenly to England. Its wide popu-
of the English tongue, see their labours We do not doubt this, but we think that larity in the mouth of the public may be
daily neglected, and some, wild guess current by Minto. At any rate, he laid English is much earlier than is here sup;
in respectable writing “Jingo" was made strange and new, but its introduction to
pen, when they have long since exploded claim to popularizing the chorus of the posed.
'gas
its folly, and explained the truth by song for readers in The Daily News when gives it in the sense “ to boast or
scientific study and a host of examples.
he was engaged in political journalism. unduly. "
We welcome, then, heartily Prof. Week-“ Spanish, à word for money which The last word in fashion for an elegant
ley's study—somewhat on the lines of survived into the nineteenth century,
survived into the nineteenth century, young man is a “nut. ” It remains, so
Trench's well-known books on English-of recalls the greatdaysof Drake and Raleigh; | far as we are aware, a nut at present un-
the wide field of derivation and meaning and " Sir Garnet ”. [Wolseley] made a cracked by philologists. Perhaps Prof.
involved in the vocabulary of the past popular phrase which would now need Weekley may apply his learning and
and present. His book is all the more
explanation. The Boer War brought into humour to the query in a new edition, or,
effective because it introduces popular frequent use a number of South African better still, give us a separate volume on
words, such as “lager” and “sjambok,” modern slang, like the study on the 'Arry
The Romance of Words. By Ernest Wookley, which are not now current in ordinary Ballads in Punch which a Dutch scholar
(John Murray. )
conversation. The Dutch, as a great produced some eighteen years since.
## p. 382 (#288) ############################################
382
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
cherished an ideal of life seen through a * Mac Flecknoe 'was published by Dryden's
The Cambridge History of English Lite- medium of art, and focussed their view enemies without his knowledge, from a
rature. Edited by A. W. Ward and on the medium instead of on the object, manuscript copy.
A. R. Waller. -Vol. VIII. The Age of substituting a set of rules for direct and It is not easy to frame any definition
Dryden. (Cambridge University Press. ) first-hand observation, with the result of the Age of Dryden which shall include
that their work has passed into oblivion Hudibras' and Barclay's “Apology,' ex-
THE Age of Dryden, which corresponds with the rules on which it was based. cept that of time. A well-considered
with the forty years after the Restora- Poetry and the drama, drawing the chapter on Samuel Butler is written by
tion, has left a deep impression on our outlines of an art without any living Mr. W. F. Smith, who rightly treats
literature. It marks, as Matthew Arnold master to instruct," sought for guidance Hudibras' rather as a survival of the
pointed out, the birth of modern English in French doctrinaire ideals. Now it is Elizabethan spirit than as touched by any
prose, of which Dryden himself, more not to be denied that our literature had French influence later than Rabelais. Butler
than any other, may be called the father. many things to learn from France, was whimsical, of the family of Robert
To the reader of our day, whether a and that Dryden and his age profited Burton, and like him full of out-of-the-
professed student of literature or no, greatly in these respects from their way learning, some of it at second-hand;
this is Dryden's chief claim to remem- lesson; but it is noteworthy that at no but his work is founded on direct observa-
brance. That through these forty years epoch which models itself on a foreign tion of life and still pleases,“ though
he was the representative writer of his literature has the fruit of its borrowing with a kind of Pain to the best sort of
time, its mouthpiece and its literary come to maturity ; time is needed for the Readers. ” Mr.
Previté-Orton justly sums
dictator, is to-day a matter of small lesson to sink into the substance of our up the remaining satire of the period
moment, for there is probably no period thought.
in a way which will not encourage any
in the history of our language since the We remember, too, that this French one to enter on a fuller study of it. Mr.
Reformation the books of which are so ideal is not native even to its own soil; E. Grubb gives an interesting account of
rarely opened by the ordinary reader. that the French of France are not a Latin, the early Quaker publications and the
The few works written in those years but a Latinized race; and that, just as the gradual and short-lived appearance among
which still appeal to us are by men of a Latins had adopted this ideal at the cost them of a literary element. Three chap-
different age, and are rooted in quite of the destruction of their national poetry, ters on the Restoration Drama follow-
other sentiments and ideals than those so the price paid for it by the French is none too great an allowance for what
of the Restoration. Dryden and his that their poetry between Ronsard and was then the sole provision of fiction for
compeers have little or nothing to say the Romantic Revival (with the single the public. The first of them, by Prof.
to the man of to-day.
exception of La Fontaine) has lost its Schelling, takes us up to Wycherley's
For the first half of the seventeenth universal appeal. Happily our own lite- · Plain Dealer. ' The author does not
century our literature depended for its rature is so rich that we can well afford seem to have opened up any new ground,
vitality on the Elizabethan spirit, the to balance the loss of a century of barren and the Spanish influence on which he
influence of which died with the men of poetry by the gain to our prose in every lays stress is highly hypothetical, but
the Civil War. The new age began direction. Mere temporary absurdities, the chapter is useful. We only regret
afresh without the guidance of a con- as when Rymer applies to the study of that Etherege and Wycherley were not
tinuous tradition : it was materialistic, Othello' canons of criticism eminently in the province of Mr. Charles Whibley,
experimental, open-minded as to the applicable to documents in his Foedera,
' ' who follows, and carries on comedy
merits of all accepted rules of life and may well be passed by with little remark. to the end of the century in one of the
literature. There is no lack of explana- The chapter on Dryden by Dr. Ward, best chapters of the book. Mr. A. T.
tions of this change ; but they are all with which this volume opens, is an
Bartholomew reviews the whole period in
curiously incomplete. Politically, the appreciation of one of our greatest lite- the third chapter, with special reference
Restoration was a compromise which rary artists, worthy of the subject and to the lesser work of the day, principally
left unsettled most of the questions for of the skill of the writer. We have in tragedy — the works he has to deal
which the Civil War had been fought, but a suspicion that his admiration for with being usually too bad for praise and
which left both sides shaken in their Dryden's matchless prose blinds him too feeble for blame. Mr. Whibley follows
adherence to the ideals that had guided to the weakness of the tragedies with with a chapter on the Court Poets; and
them : doubtless the frame of mind their mock-heroics and cynical view of Prof. Saintsbury completes the first half
which this induced had its result on the life ; speaking for ourselves, we cannot of the volume with another on Seven-
literature of the day, but it did not cause count among dramatic masterpieces either teenth-Century Prosody in his usual
the change in its spirit. Nor can the comedies or tragedies as dead as even vigorous and convoluted style.
influence of the returned exiles be counted Don Sebastian All for Love. ' Re- Mr. Wheatley is better fitted than any
for much. Few indeed of the writers of membering Sarcey, we may
may count it other to give an adequate account of
this period had followed the fortunes of already sufficient criticism that Dr. Ward Evelyn and Pepys, and Dr. Ward is at
Charles, and the number of important judges by the standards of his own day his happiest in dealing with the lesser
persons in the Age of Dryden who could Dryden's plays and verse, instead of putting memoir- and letter-writers of the period.
be called returned exiles was very small. him beside the greatest. Such works as Mr. Bass Mullinger's chapter on Platonists
The personal influence of Charles II. is a Absalom and Achitophel' and
' Absalom and Achitophel' and 'Mac and Latitudinarians should be read with
factor of much greater importance; the Flecknoe,' in which his art is brought to that on Latitudinarianism and Pietism
literature of the Restoration, whether bear on life, will, however, bear com- in vol. v. of The Cambridge Modern
of poetry, of the stage, or of the pulpit, parison with anything of their kind in our History,' which it controverts in some
was a Court literature, and much of it literature. A critic is not a biographer, particulars. Archdeacon Hutton deals
was directly intended to gain his favour. but the question of Dryden's sincerity with the pulpit oratory of the period, and
He was an opportunist of sense and of must be faced in estimating the value seems rather severe upon Tillotson's style
taste, a lover of wit, and these are cha- of much of his work, and Dr. Ward has -"utterly without charm, or distinction,
racteristic of the writing of his day, and dealt with the matter at sufficient length, or interest. ” Prof. Hearnshaw's chapter
constitute its redeeming qualities.
showing him as what friends call " open- on Legal Literature gives an account of
Conditions of this kind do not mould great minded” and enemies arriviste—neither the subject which does not add much
literature; they affect the lesser authors of the vicious craftsman of Macaulay and detail to popular knowledge.
a period, while the more important are Green, nor the immaculate poet of his fame as a scholar among those who have
above their influence. The real cause admirers. Mr. H. B. Wheatley has con- worked at the original documents on
of our inability to feel any interest in the tributed a bibliography of Dryden which which he relies does not stand very high ;
Age of Dryden is that the imaginative contains much that is new to students, he owed much of his learning to Cotton
writers of the day sought their inspira- and it is perhaps a pity that he did not and some to Hakewell, who is not even
tion in literature instead of in life. They call attention in it to his suggestion that I mentioned in this chapter, while his
or
## p. 383 (#289) ############################################
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
383
we
as
knowledge of our records was far inferior to two such discourses for the Sunday, Stinton at once began to copy the manu-
that of Prynne, probably the most deeply besides conducting services during the scripts, but died too soon to complete his
read archivist in our history. As a writer, week, at each of which an address is task. The work then fell to Crosby, and,
on the other hand, Selden takes a high expected, visiting his congregation, and additional matter being obtained, it was
place.
working at the institutions associated completed by the publication of the third
With the exception of the preachers, with his church; and in addition, if a and fourth volumes in 1740, under the title
the subjects of these chapters have little popular preacher, he has frequent calls of 'The History of the English Baptists
essential connexion with the Age of from other churches. It is, however, sur- from the Reformation to the Beginning of
Dryden except in time. John Locke, on prising that among the country clergy the Reign of King George I. ' During that
whom Prof. Sorley writes an expository of the Church of England, who have period, Mr. Burrage tells us, a more
chapter, full of sound criticism and just some leisure, more should not have scholarly work was published by the Rev.
appreciation, is one of its best products. | been done in the way of research. We John Lewis, a clergyman of Margate;
His work is compact of unimaginative are glad to see that Nonconformists this was entitled 'Brief History of the
common sense applied to important sub- of recent years have shown themselves Rise and Progress of Anabaptism in Eng
jects, clearly and forcibly written-philo- desirous of collecting information con- land. Between 1793 and 1802 Dr. John
sophy speaking the language of every- cerning their early history, and our Rippon, who was the minister of the
day life. Dr. Shipley, writing on the readers may remember the welcome we church of which Spurgeon became pastor,
progress of science, deals with another have given to the publications of the edited four volumes of “The Baptist
typically Restoration movement, vivified Baptist Historical Society, as well as to Annual Register. ' In this work was first
by a constant contact with nature. The those of the Congregational Society. published Joshua Thomas's History of
instructions issued by the Royal Society Mr. Burrage, in the volumes the Baptist Association in Wales' from
at its foundation to writers of papers
are now reviewing, gives the story of 1650 to 1790. Mr. Burrage also refers
might well be reprinted and circulated early English Dissent complete in itself to Ivimey's history, the fourth volume
among scientific men at the present day. for the period treated, but he designs it of which was completed in 1830, as well
The volume closes with Mr. Arthur
the first section of a larger treatise,” | as to the considerable interest felt by
Tilley's account of the Essay and the for which he has been making investiga- English Baptists in the publications of the
beginning of modern English prose. In tions for a number of years, and biblio- Hanserd Knollys Society, two volumes
it he has dealt at some length with the graphers will be glad to hear that it is of which are composed chiefly of reprints
influence of French literature upon our proposed to print
of early Baptist works. America has, of
own during the second half of the seven-
course, quite a literature of its own on
teenth century. His view differs natur-
“an extended bibliography of between two the subject.
ally from that indicated in the early part been prepared as a supplement to Dr.
and three thousand items, which has already
of this article, but rather as respects the Henry Martyn Dexter's Collections toward Henry Martyn_Dexter's epoch-making
Among other works mentioned is Dr.
value of the literature copied than as a Bibliography of Congregationalism, but book entitled The Congregationalism of
to the use made of it. He shares with which will be chiefly concerned with the the Last Three Hundred Years as seen
Dr. Ward and Mr. Whibley the honours literature of the English Anabaptists and
in its Literature. This was, Mr.
of the volume.
Baptists before 1745.
Burrage
considers, “ the most learned work of the
Mr. Burrage modestly states that kind” up to that time (1880) produced
“ the present publication is not intended as by an American scholar; and in his
ENGLISH NONCONFORMITY. an exhaustive history of English Dissent opinion it
during even the period treated, but rather
THE first volume of Mr. Burrage's impor-
as an introduction to the study of that surpasses even to-day, in minute critical
detailed, and vast knowledge, anything that
tant work is devoted to ' History and history and its literature. "
has been done in this line either by his-
Criticism. ' In his Preface he states truly Wherever possible, primary evidence has torians of the Church of England or by
that
been sought, and second-hand sources English Dissenters. ”
In reference
even the best histories of the Church of used as little as possible.
adequate information relating to our subject, that it was as late as 1700 before any Shakespeare's little volume Baptist and
England have been noticeably lacking in to printed literature, it is curious to find To those who seek popular histories
Mr. Burrage commends the Rev. J. H.
while the average history written by Non- general work of importance was published
conformists is not unnaturally apt to be in defence of the Puritans,
in defence of the Puritans, or of any Congregational Pioneers,' and “a notable
somewhat partial in its treatment
branch of separatists with whom these posthumous work”-Dr. R. W. Dale's
and he maintains rightly that
volumes deal. “In 1702 Cotton Mather
History of English Congregationalism,
" English church history as a whole, how. brought out his now celebrated folio 1907, which was completed and pub-
lished by his son, Chancellor Dale.
ever, cannot be said to be satisfactorily entitled · Magnalia Christi Americana,""
studied, unless the story of Dissent is fully lishing his numerous writings concerning attention to
Strype pub- Mr. Burrage in his Foreword' calls
and fairly represented. '
the change of meaning
the Church of England, which contain which has taken place during three
Nonconformity has in the past had but
some references to the early English centuries in the words Nonconformist,
few historians, and the chief reason of this separatists. In 1732–8 Neale’s ‘History Dissenter, Independent, Congregationalist,
is the fact that its ministers, when com- of the Puritans, or Protestant Noncon- and Baptist. Î'o-day they are applied in
petent for such a task, have had too formists,' appeared; this work has been popular usage to persons who have
much to occupy them to spare time for several times republished, but up to that separated themselves from the Church
historic research.
time in England neither the Baptists nor of England; but the words have not
The sermon, it is well known, has always Independents had published any history always been so employed :-
formed an important part in Noncon of their rise and growth.
formist services, and the minister has
“ The earliest Nonconformists, for in-
Fortunately, however, some of the early stance, were not separatists, but often
to devote much time to the preparation of leaders of the Baptists in London had left learned clergymen of the Church of Eng;
behind them a few documents relating to land, who found fault with the clerical
The Early English Dissenters in the Light their early history; and these, after passing vestments, &c. , and yet remained in the
of Recent
Champlin Burrage. 2 vols. (Cambridge through several hands, came into the Church. The term Puritan appears to have
University Press. )
possession of Stinton, who succeeded been first used about 1566, and was correctly
History of English Nonconformity, from Wiclit his father-in-law, Benjamim Keach, as applied to Nonconformists as previously
defined. ”
to the Close of the Nineteenth Century pastor of the congregation at Horsely-
By Henry W. Clark. –Vol. I. From Wickij | down. Keach, it may be recalled, The word Dissenter appears to have had
to the Restoration. (Chapman & Hall. ) suffered the punishment of the pillory. I a history similar to that of the word
i
"|
## p. 384 (#290) ############################################
384
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4406, APRIL 6, 1912
66
for a
66
Nonconformist, only it seems to have been Angus as Principal of the College. The and so he becomes “ the standard whereby
first employed after 1641 :-
Catalogue forms a handsome quarto the Nonconformist spirit, in all its sub-
“The first Englishman of strong intel- volume, of a copy of which we are the sequent manifestations, must submit to
lectual gifts to win distinction as a preacher
fortunate possessors.
be judged. ” By this same principle the
of separatism and as the bold author of
Mr. Burrage devotes his second volume author tests Church movements in the
works which directly encouraged separation to documents illustrative of the history Elizabethan age. He insists upon clearly
from the Church of England was Robert of early English Dissent. While he does discriminating between Puritans and Pres-
Browne, and from 1582 to the present time
byterians, and considers that the Puritans,
his name has been a landmark in English not claim for them
church history, known not only in England, “the dignity of forming
while accepting the organization of the
but also on the Continent and in America. ” | Corpus of the literature relating to the real Nonconformists, and that the Presby;
“the dignity of forming a complete English Church, were nevertheless the
Browne is well entitled to be called subject, they have been carefully selected terians, who protested against the Church
the Father of Congregationalism. Like from the mass of material now available for
Wesley, he had no intention of instituting to the reader a number of the more inacces at all. On the principle that, wherever
investigation. My aim has been to present constitutions, were not Nonconformists
any permanent separation of churches sible or historically valuable writings, many form is made compulsory, life loses its
from one another :-
of which have as yet been only imperfectly supremacy, and the Nonconformist spirit
or partially reproduced. Others have re- is lost, Mr. Clark finds that the true Non-
The idea of State Church seemed to mained entirely, or almost entirely, un-
him as desirable as to any other English noticed. ”
conformist theory was grasped by the
citizen. . . . he would undoubtedly have used
Independents, but that while they held
the parish church buildings, practically as Such a selection has long been needed for the theory, “they did not entirely exem-
they stood, for his congregational churches, students, who hitherto, Mr. Burrage fears, plify it. " He concludes that
as any Puritans of the time would probably
manifesting of life and ecclesiastical con-
have wished to do. ”
" have generally been much more familiar struction in their ideal relations, as two
with what has been said by writers and
He considered the Church to be “in a historians of different points of view con parts of a perfectly articulated whole, the
commonwealth,” and looked upon the cerning this literature than with the manu.
world has still to wait. "
power of the civil magistrate as one great scripts themselves, with resultant mis-
force which, when properly limited, might understanding, or only partial understand-
be used as a means of keeping the churches
ing. ”
under State control, and so of ensuring in We hope that these volumes will prove MODERN DEMOCRACY.
them a reasonable amount of unity in an incentive to the zealous writers who
belief and practice.
have already added much to Noncon- The crudity of expression in Mr. Frank
Mr. Burrage in his thirteenth chapter formist history through the publications Crane’s ‘God and Democracy'is the more
gives an exhaustive account of the of the Baptist and Congregational His to be regretted because it is marked by the
Gould manuscript preserved at Regent's torical Societies, and also that there may conception of beautiful ideals. This little
Park College. It contains a history of be an increase in their rolls of members, brochure will, we believe, serve to unify
the Independent Puritan congregation which have always appeared to us far and realize for many what is at present but
organized by Henry Jacob in London too small.
a vague idea of a God of Democracy who
from 1616 to 1640. Jacob considered We cannot praise too highly the in- will stand the test of an age of widening
that each church ought to have one dustry of Mr. Burrage, and we cordially our readers the standpoint from which we
spiritual outlook. In order to convey to
pastor at least, or more than one if means congratulate him on the result of his view the subject, we quote Mr. Crane's
allowed and the congregation was large arduous labours, which_must influence
definition :
enough to require it. The pastor was to all future histories of English Religion.
have absolute power over all the eccle- Nor can we close our review of his “The true oneness of a people depends
siastical affairs and government of the volumes without making mention of the upon the spirit in them, and not upon the
church. The following clause in reference modesty with which he puts forth his power over them. This now conception is
to marriage and burial is singular :- facts, and the anxiety he always displays called Democracy. Its basis is the mind of
to appreciate the efforts of other workers the whole people. It is humanity doing
“ Concerning making of marriage, and in the same field. The volumes also things for itself, and not having things done
burying the dead, we believe that they are
for it. ”
no actions of a Church minister (because they
contain beautifully executed facsimiles of
are no actions spirituall), but civill. Neither
title-pages and documents.
We held over our notice of Dr. Weyl's
are ministers called to such business : neither
'The New Democracy' in the hope that
is there so much as one example of any such The author of the History of English Mr. Percy Alden's would furnish us with
practise in the whole book of God. ”
Nonconformity' has given us
a fresh a comparison between America and
Our hopes are grievously
Mr. Burrage, after giving a complete list study of an old subject, surveyed and England.
of the various documents contained in presented by one who has consulted com disappointed. His book, with the re-
the Gould manuscript, says
petent authorities, and brought to their sounding title of Democratic England,'
consideration an original and discriminat- proves to be little more than a panegyric
that if the English
Baptists of to-day ing mind. Nonconformist readers may of the Liberal Government—its measures
have a greater knowledge of their history reasonably feel proud of their ideals.
and supporters.
Where Mr. Alden's
than they have had since Stinton's time,
honesty will not permit of whole-
it is to the Rev. George Gould of Norwich
Mr. Clark reviews the history down to hearted adulation, he either adopts a
that they are first indebted for preserving the Restoration. The remaining period patronizing tone towards great men and
the at present only known first-hand copy is to be treated in a second volume. The movements, or candidly avers his dis-
of this valuable and long-lost Stinton Nonconformist spirit is defined by him as quietude when approaching something
Crosby manuscript.
that spirit which exalts life above organiza- like criticism of his friends. His essays
Among other treasures to be found at tion. By this principle he finds that the were originally written for an American
Regent's Park College is the library maturest Nonconformist we have yet public, and in their collected form show
presented by Dr. Angus (formerly a seen lived and died in the communion of
valued contributor to our columns), who the Catholic Church. This is the position God and Democracy. By Frank Crane.
for many years devoted much time to the assigned to John Wiclif, in whom Mr.
collecting of books and documents relating Clark finds the first emergence of the Non- Democratic England. By Percy Alden.
