Thursday, October 09, 2025

Cor ad Cor Loquitur

 Today is the feast of St. John Henry Newman, who will be officially designated a Doctor of the Church in November. From An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent, Chapter 10, Section 1:

Conscience is a personal guide, and I use it because I must use myself; I am as little able to think by any mind but my own as to breathe with another's lungs. Conscience is nearer to me than any other means of knowledge. And as it is given to me, so also is it given to others; and being carried about by every individual in his own breast, and requiring nothing besides itself, it is thus adapted for the communication to each separately of that knowledge which is most momentous to him individually, -- adapted for the use of all classes and conditions of men, for high and low, young and old, men and women, independently of books, of educated reasoning, of physical knowledge, or of philosophy. Conscience, too, teaches us, not only that God is, but what He is; it provides for the mind a real image of Him, as a medium of worship; it gives us a rule of right and wrong, as being His rule, and a code of moral duties. Moreover, it is so constituted that, if obeyed, it becomes clearer in its injunctions, and wider in their range, and corrects and completes the accidental feebleness of its initial teachings. Conscience, then, considered as our guide, is fully furnished for its office. I say all this without entering into the question how far external assistances are in all cases necessary to the action of the mind, because in fact man does not live in isolation, but is everywhere found as a member of society; I am not concerned here with abstract questions.
One of his most famous works, usually just known as "Lead, Kindly Light":

The Pillar of the Cloud
by St. John Henry Newman

Lead, Kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom
 Lead Thou me on!
The night is dark, and I am far from home --
Lead Thou me on!
Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see
The distant scene -- one step enough for me. 

 I was not ever thus, nor pray'd that Thou
 Shouldst lead me on.
I loved to choose and see my path, but now
 Lead Thou me on!
I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears,
Pride ruled my will: remember not past years. 

So long Thy power hath blest me, sure it still
 Will lead me on,
O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
 The night is gone;
And with the morn those angel faces smile
Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile. 

 At Sea.
June 16, 1833.

Wednesday, October 08, 2025

A Poem Draft

A rough first sketch, based on the Japanese folktales of Momotarō; 'Momo' means 'peach' and Tarō is a very common Japanese name, common enough that it is sometimes used to mean an everyman. Hence 'Peachy Jack'.


 Peachy Jack

In days of old, young Peachy Jack,
from river born, explored the earth,
and sought the spirit-island ways
to fight the spirits of the earth;
he met a dog upon the road
and with him shared some sticky buns;
a monkey, and a pheasant, too,
were sharing in those tasty buns.
"And whither go you?" each would ask;
"I go to steal the spirit-gold,"
our Peachy Jack would then reply,
and so they went in search of gold,
and, coming to the spirit-house,
the pheasant flew above the gate,
the monkey climbed the ivy wall,
the dog broke through the iron gate,
and they and Peachy Jack did fight
the spirit-king and bound him well,
and took his gold and then went home;
the four together lived quite well.

Tuesday, October 07, 2025

It Never Was Lit Again on my Hearth

 The Witch
by Mary Elizabeth Coleridge 

I have walked a great while over the snow,
And I am not tall nor strong.
My clothes are wet, and my teeth are set,
And the way was hard and long.
I have wandered over the fruitful earth,
But I never came here before.
Oh, lift me over the threshold, and let me in at the door! 

 The cutting wind is a cruel foe.
I dare not stand in the blast.
My hands are stone, and my voice a groan,
And the worst of death is past.
I am but a little maiden still,
My little white feet are sore.
Oh, lift me over the threshold, and let me in at the door! 

 Her voice was the voice that women have,
Who plead for their heart's desire.
She came -- she came -- and the quivering flame
Sunk and died in the fire.
It never was lit again on my hearth
Since I hurried across the floor,
To lift her over the threshold, and let her in at the door.

Monday, October 06, 2025

More Lonesome than the Desert Wild

 The Stranger
by Henry Longueville Mansel

 I stood amidst a joyful crowd, in festive pageantry:
Among the gay, the fair, the proud, was none to smile on me.
 No! cold was every glancing eye, and heartless every tone:
 And in the midst of gaiety I felt I was alone. 

 I turned me from the festal scene -- my heart was truly sad;
 I felt I must not linger there, where all save me were glad.
 I was a lonely being there -- unnoticed and unknown:
 I turned me from the sight and wept, because I was alone. 

I stood where every look was warm, and every accent kind;
I thought not of the giddy throng, the joys I left behind:
But, withering like the autumn leaves, those kindred souls are gone,
 And I am left in solitude, neglected and alone. 

 More lonesome than the desert wild, than ocean's trackless wave;
 More mournful than the pall of death, more cheerless than the grave;
 Is he who weeps for loved ones lost, for friendships overthrown;
 And gazes on the busy world, 'mong millions, -- yet alone. 

 O may I learn to rest my hopes on other worlds than this!
Here, pilgrims on life's weary way, we cannot hope for bliss.
 O may I, bowed to God's decrees, with resignation own,
Our destined mansion is not here -- 'tis good to be alone.

Sunday, October 05, 2025

The Golden Age of the Philosopher

 There are proud enthusiasts who conclude that, by advancing in knowledge and the useful arts, man will soon be able to command nature, and become independent of it. It is singular to observe how every mind paints a golden age for the future destinies of our world, and each mind colours that age with its own hues. The golden age of the philosopher is an anticipated period in which man shall be able to control all, and yet be controlled of none. But the philosopher forgets one most important element in his calculation and that is, that in very proportion as society becomes more artificial, it becomes more reticulated, and the destinies of every one portion more connected with those of every other, and that the snapping of one link in this network may throw the whole into inextricable confusion. In short, both the regular and the contingent pervade nature, and we cannot free ourselves from the one or the other; and man, whether in his lesser or wider spheres, whether in the ruder or more civilized states of society, is made to fall in with very much the same proportion of both.

James McCosh, The Method of the Divine Government, Physical and Moral, Third Edition, Sutherland and Knox (Edinburgh: 1852) p. 173. McCosh was arguably the last major figure in what we call today, 'Scottish Common Sense Philosophy'. He spent some time in Belfast at Queen's College (now Queen's University), but in the 1860s was invited by the College of New Jersey (now Princeton) to become its president. He was one of Princeton's most effective presidents; the college had had a very rocky nineteenth century, beginning with student riots over Stanley Stanhope Smith's attempts to secularize it, continuing with student riots over Ashbel Green's attempt to re-theologize it, nearly shutting down due to low enrollment under James Carnahan, then, as it was slowly improving, hit by the Civil War (almost a third of its students had been from Southern states). McCosh turned most of it around, cultivated one of the premier faculties in the United States, established the doctorate program, massively expanded enrollment, and established features of collegiate life that were copied elsewhere for the next fifty years. In 1888, he resigned the presidency and became a philosophy professor until his death in 1894. McCosh's The Method of the Divine Government is one of the better nineteenth-century discussions of design arguments and their implications.

Saturday, October 04, 2025

Or in What High Metropolis of Mars

 The Absence of the Muse
by Clark Ashton Smith 

 O Muse, where loiterest thou? In any land
Of Saturn, lit with moons and nenuphars?
Or in what high metropolis of Mars --
Hearing the gongs of dire, occult command,
And bugles blown from strand to unknown strand
Of continents embattled in old wars
That primal kings began? Or on the bars
Of ebbing seas in Venus, from the sand
Of shattered nacre with a thousand hues,
Dost pluck the blossoms of the purple wrack
And roses of blue coral for thy hair?
Or, flown beyond the roaring Zodiac,
Translatest thou the tale of earthly news
And earthly songs to singers of Altair?

Friday, October 03, 2025

Hieroglyphics and Rebusses

 Jeremy Bentham's Church of Englandism and Its Catechism Examined gets a passing mention in Newman's Loss and Gain, so I went back and re-read it, and, holy moly, I had blocked out how much of an unhinged, lunatic, nearly eight-hundred-page rant it is. Bentham has a besetting sin in which he will often not provide any arguments for his position, merely classifying things in tendentious ways, and yet clearly thinks he is providing an argument by doing so; he also often, when he does deign to give an argument, clearly thinks he is speaking in a plain, literal way, when in reality load-bearing parts of his arguments almost always depend on metaphors and analogies. Church of Englandism takes both of these Benthamite traits and exponentializes them. But I also looked into some of the critial responses to the work, and they are sometimes a delight. The very best is the review in The British Critic for November 1818, which begins:

We have been very credibly informed, that Mr. Jeremy Bentham is an original thinker; and we are not inclined to doubt the assertion. We feel certain that he is a most profound thinker; for in many a part of this work before us, we have run out every fathom of our critical line, without once being fortunate enough to sound the bottom of a meaning. Words, as we have been taught, or so many signs and symbols of mental conceptions; and as we have no other means by which we can determine the quantity of such conceptions, unless through the medium of these signs and symbols, it is no unfair deduction, if we assert that unintelligible speaking is a proof of equally unintelligible thinking; in other words, that a man who writes in hieroglyphics, conceives in rebusses. Or to put the proposition in terms which Mr. Jeremy Bentham himself will not deny, unless, (which is not probable,) he supposes there can be any other authority equal to his own, "uncognoscibility being the end; indistinctness, voluminousness, confusion, and uncertainty, are so many means," Pref. xxxvii. We know not how we can put our readers more completely in possession of the present work (except excip; for where mischief is to be done this writer can speak plainly enough) than by the above appropriate quotation.

Mr. Jeremy Bentham is known to his own coterie of petty sophists and political quacks, as the author of a variety of treatises, more or less closely printed, published or unpublished, out of print, or waste paper, of which a "list hastily and imperfectly collected," is subjoined in his new volume. He has employed himself, at divers times, on morals, legislation, hard-labour, usury, mad-houses, taxation, special juries, perjury, economy, and parliamentary reform; and his depth of knowledge on each subject is said by those who have read his works, to be co-extensive with its variety -- a fact which we will not take upon ourselves to dispute, as we have no means of denying it. Moreover, he lives in a cock-loft, looking into the bird-cage walk; and as he cannot always make his countrymen understand the English, in which he thinks, he has occasionally employed a most respectable foreigner, to do it into French, for the benefit of our neighbours across the water.

From this slight sketch of the nature of Mr. Jeremy Bentham's lucubrations, our readers of course will be prepared for the impossibility of our attempting to present them with any detailed analysis of the contents of the work before us. As a literary phaenomenon it must always be regarded with curiosity; for except the lobster-cracking Bedlamite, we recollect no professed lunatic whose hallucinations have been published under his own immediate inspection; and they related more to physical than to moral effects....

The British Critic also had an association with Newman, although that came later. It was founded in 1793 by a bunch of High Church Anglicans who wanted to counteract ideas from the French Revolution and a public forum for discussing conservative Anglican ecclesiology. In the early 1810s, it was bought by Joshua Watson, the philanthropist, and Henry Handley Norris, the theologian, who were both key figures in the so-called Hackney Phalanx, a loosely strutured High-Church Tory group that was more actively engaged in reform and activism. (The review above is from this period.) For financial reasons, it combined with another review in 1826 to become officially The British Critic, Quarterly Theological Review, and Ecclesiastical Record. In the 1830s, it was having significant financial difficulties, and in 1836, Newman made a deal with Joshua Watson and the then-editor, James Shergold Boone, to provide them with authors who would write a portion of the review entirely for free. This led to The British Critic being a major vehicle for the Oxford Movement, and was arguably a more important, and perhaps more successful, and certainly less self-destructive, part of the Movement than Tracts for the Times. Nonetheless, Boone and Newman couldn't really agree on editorial matters, with the result that he resigned in 1837, to be replaced by Samuel Roffey Maitland, who soon after resigned. For all his many admirable qualities, including being famously sweet-tempered, it is a consistent feature of Newman's career that he was difficult to work with, in the paradoxical way that you would expect someone affable, headstrong, and arguably oversensitive to be. After Maitland, first Newman and then, in 1841, Thomas Mozley became editors, and the dominant editorial view of the review became rather bellicose, used less often to give a general High Church voice and more often for polemic about internal disputes in the broader High Church movement, and eventually came to an end in 1843.