Reverence for age, at least so it
has long seemed to me, reverence for age, I say, is
a fair test of the vigour of youth; and, conversely,
insolence toward the old and the past, whether in individuals
or in nations, is a sign rather of weakness than of
strength. And the cause, I think, is this.
The rich and strong young natures, which feel themselves
capable of original thought and work, have a corresponding
respect for those who, in the generations gone by,
have thought and worked as they hope to do hereafter.
And this temper, understand me, so far from being
servile, or even merely conservative, usually accompanies
true independence of spirit. The young athlete,
like the young race-horse, does not despise, but emulate,
his sire; even though the old victor be long past
his prime. The young soldier admires the old
general; the young midshipman the old admiral, just
in proportion as he himself is likely to be a daring
and able officer hereafter. The son, when grown
to man’s estate, may say to his father, I look
on you still with all respect and admiration.
I have learnt, and desire always, to learn from you.
But you must be to me now, not a dictator, but an example.
You became what you are by following your own line;
and you must let me rival you, and do you honour,
by following mine.
This, I believe, is true of nations
as well as of individuals. I do not hesitate
to say that, paradoxical as it may seem, the most original
races those who have succeeded best and
left their stamp most broadly and permanently on the
human race have also been the most teachable,
provided they were allowed to learn in their own way
and to adapt to their own purposes any higher ancient
civilisation with which they came in contact.
What more striking instances of this truth for
truth it is than the reverence of the free
Republican Greek for the old despotic civilisation
of Egypt? and of the free Norseman, our own ancestor,
for the old and equally despotic civilisation of Rome?
These the two most originative
and most progressive races of Europe had
a faith in, an awe of, the supposed or real wisdom
of the men of old time, which was often exaggerated
into a superstition; but never thanks to
their own innate force degenerated into
a bondage.
Pardon me this somewhat dry prooemium;
and pardon me, too, if it leads me on to a compliment
to the American people, which I trust you will not
think impertinent.
For I have seen, and seen with joy,
a like spirit in those Americans whom it has been
my good fortune to meet in my own land. I mean
this: That I found in them, however self-teaching
and self-determining they might be, that genial reverence
for antiquity which I hold to be the sign of a truly
generous that is in the right sense of the
grand old word a truly high-bred, nature.
I have been touched, and deeply touched, at finding
so many of them, on landing for the first time at Liverpool,
hurrying off to our quaint old city of Chester to
gaze on its old girdle of walls and towers; Roman,
Mediaeval, Caroline; its curious ‘Rows’
of overhanging houses; its fragments of Roman baths
and inscriptions; its modest little Cathedral; and
the really very few relics of
English history which it contains. Even two
banners of an old Cheshire regiment which had been
in the Peninsular war were almost as interesting,
to some, as an illuminated Bible of the early Middle
Age. More than once have I had to repress the
enthusiasm of some charming lady and say, ’But
this is nothing. Do not waste your admiration
here. Go on. See the British Museum, its
marbles and its manuscripts See the French
Cathedrals; the ruins of Provence and Italy; the galleries
of Florence, Naples, Rome.’
‘Ah, but you must remember,’
was the answer, ’these are the first old things
I ever saw.’
A mere sentiment? Yes:
but as poets know, and statesmen ought to know, it
is by sentiment, when well directed as by
sorrow, when well used by sentiment, I
say, great nations live. When sentiment dies
out, and mere prosaic calculation of loss and profit
takes its place, then comes a Byzantine epoch, a Chinese
epoch, decrepitude, and slow decay.
And so the eagerness of those generous
young souls was to me a good augury for the future,
of them, and of their native land. They seemed
to me and I say again it touched me, often
deeply to be realising to themselves their
rightful place in the community of the civilised nations
of all lands, and of all times realising
to themselves that they were indeed
Heirs of all the ages, foremost
in the ranks of time;
and minded, therefore, like wise and
noble heirs, not to despise and squander, but to treasure
and to use that inheritance, and the accumulated labours
of the mighty dead.
I saw this, I say, at Chester.
And therefore I was not surprised to find the pleasant
experience repeated, and to even a higher degree, at
Westminster. A pleasant experience, I say.
I know few more agreeable occupations than showing
a party of Americans round our own great Abbey; and
sentimentalising, if you will, in sympathy with them,
over England’s Pantheon.
I pause to confess once more that
it is almost an impertinence in me to pay you such
a compliment. You have a right to answer me How
could it be otherwise? Are we not educated
people? Has not our taste been trained by native
authors, who were at least civilised enough to value
the great past, without the need of any European crossing
the seas to tell us of its wealth?
If you reprove me thus, I can but
say that the reproof is just, and will remain just,
as long as your poets are what they are; and as long,
above all, as you reverence as much in America as
we do in England, the poetry of Mr. Longfellow.
He has not, if I recollect aright, ever employed his
muse in commemorating our great Abbey; but that muse
is instinct with all those lofty and yet tender emotions
which the sight of that great Abbey should call out.
He knows, as few know on our side of the wide water,
the effect, chastening and yet ennobling, of such architecture,
consecrated by such associations. He has not
only perceived and drank in all that is purest and
noblest in the now sleeping last ten centuries:
but he has combined it, again and again, with that
which is purest and noblest in the waking and yearning
present; and combined it organically and livingly,
as leaf and stem combines with flower and fruit.
Yes; as long as the poet who could write both the
Belfry of Bruges and The Village Blacksmith
is read among you, there is no need for me to bid you
reverence the past; and little need, I trust, for me
to tell those whom I leave at home to reverence the
present. For it is a fact of which
some Americans may not be as well aware as they should
be that your exquisite poet has exercised
an influence in Britain it may be as great as, and
certainly more varied than, that which he has exercised
in his native land. With us as, I
presume, with you he has penetrated into
thousands of Puritan homes, and awakened tens of thousands
of young hearts to the beauty and the nobleness of
the old pre-Reformation age, and of that romance and
art from which their too exclusive hereditary training
had, until his time, shut them out. And he has
thus, truly, done a sacred deed in turning the hearts
of the children to their fathers. That was enough:
but that is not the whole. He has, conversely,
turned the hearts of the fathers to the children.
The world-wide humanity of his poems, and, to be
just, of all your American poets who have studied in
his school, has produced throughout Great Britain
a just reverence and affection for the American mind
which will have which has had already large
social and political results. Be sure, be sure,
that in spite of passing jars, our empire will never
be long unjust to yours, while Mr. Longfellow and
Mr. Lowell remain not merely the household bards though
that is much but counsellors, comforters,
and trusted friends to hundreds of thousands of gentle
and earnest souls; from the palace to the parsonage,
from the little village shop to the farm-house on
the lonely down.
But there is another American author who
was the delight of my own youth, and who should have
been my teacher also, for he was a master of our common
tongue, and his prose is as graceful and felicitous
as poor Elia’s own, and it is certainly more
manly another American author, I say, who,
with that high-bred reverence for what is old, has
told you already more about Westminster Abbey, and
told it better, than I am likely to tell it.
Need I say that I mean the lamented Washington Irving?
Ah, that our authors had always been as just to you
as he was just to us; and indeed more than just; for
in his courtesy and geniality he saw us somewhat en
beau, and treated old John Bull too much as the
poet advises us to treat young and fair ladies
Be to their faults a little
blind,
Be to their virtues very kind.
But what a charming book is that old
‘Sketch-book.’ And what a charming
essay that on our great Abbey, set with such gems of
prose as these,
’The sun was pouring down a
yellow autumnal ray into the square of the cloisters,
beaming upon a scanty spot of grass in the centre,
and lighting up an angle of the vaulted passage with
a kind of dusty splendour. From between the
arcades, the eye glanced up to a bit of blue sky,
or a passing cloud, and beheld the sun-gilt pinnacles
of the Abbey towering into the azure heaven.’
Or this again, describing the general
effect of Henry the Seventh’s unrivalled chapel, ’The
very walls are wrought into universal ornament; encrusted
with tracery, and scooped into niches, crowded with
the statues of saints and martyrs. Stone seems,
by the cunning labour of the chisel, to have been
robbed of its weight and density; suspended aloft as
if by magic; and the fretted roof achieved with the
wonderful minuteness and airy security of a cobweb.’
‘Dusty splendour,’ ‘airy
security,’ epithets so unexpected, and yet so
felicitous, as to be seemingly accidental. Such
are the tokens of that highest art, which is to
conceal its own existence. After such speech
as that, what have I to tell you of the great old Abbey?
Yet there are one or two things, I
dare to say, which Washington Irving would have written
differently had he visited Westminster, not forty
years ago, but now.
I think, in the first place, that
if he visited the great Abbey now, he would not have
noticed that look of dilapidation at which he hints and
perhaps had a right to hint some forty years
ago. Dilapidation, dirt, and negligence are
as hateful to us now, as to the builder of the newest
house outside. We too, for more than a generation
past, have felt, in common with the rest of England
and with all the nations of Northern Europe, that
awakened reverence for Mediaeval Art and Mediaeval
History, which is for good and for evil the
special social phenomenon of our times; the natural
and, on the whole, useful countercheck to that extreme
of revolutionary feeling which issues as
it did in Paris but three years ago in
utter hatred and renunciation of the past, and destruction
of its monuments.
To preserve, to restore, and, if not,
to copy, as a sort of filial duty, the buildings which
our forefathers have left us, is now held to be the
very mark of cultivation and good taste in Britain.
It may be that we carry it too far; that by a servile
and Chinese exactness of imitation we are crippling
what originality of genius may exist among our draughtsmen,
sculptors, architects. But we at least confess
thereby that we cannot invent and create as could
our ancestors five hundred years ago; and as long
as that is the case it is more wise in us as
in any people to exhaust the signification
and power of the past, and to learn all we can from
older schools of art and thought ere we attempt novelties
of our own which, I confess freely, usually issue
in the ugly and the ludicrous.
Be that as it may, we of Westminster
Abbey have become, like other Englishmen, repairers
and restorers. Had we not so become, the nation
would have demanded an account of us, as guardians
of its national mausoleum, the building of which our
illustrious Dean has so well said
’Of all the characteristics
of Westminster Abbey, that which most endears it to
the nation and gives most force to its name which
has, more than anything else, made it the home of
the people of England and the most venerated fabric
of the English Church is not so much its
glory as the seat of the coronations, or as the sepulchre
of the kings; not so much its school, or its monastery,
or its chapter, or its sanctuary, as the fact that
it is the resting-place of famous Englishmen, from
every rank and creed, and every form of genius.
It is not only Reims Cathedral and St. Denys both
in one; but it is what the Pantheon was intended to
be to France what the Valhalla is to Germany what
Santa Croce is to Italy. . . It is this which
inspired the saying of Nelson Victory or
Westminster Abbey. It is this which has intertwined
it with so many eloquent passages of Macaulay.
It is this which gives point to the allusions of
recent Nonconformist statesmen, least inclined to draw
illustrations from ecclesiastical buildings.
It is this which gives most promise of vitality to
the whole institution. Kings are no longer buried
within its walls; even the splendour of pageants has
ceased to attract. But the desire to be buried
in Westminster Abbey is as strong as ever.
’This sprang, in the first instance,
as a natural off-shoot from the coronations and interments
of the kings. Had they, like those of France,
of Spain, of Austria, of Russia been buried
far away in some secluded spot, or had the English
nation stood aloof from the English monarchy, it might
have been otherwise. The sepulchral chapels built
by Henry the Third and Henry the Seventh might have
stood alone in their glory. No meaner dust need
ever have mingled with the dust of Plantagenets, Tudors,
Stuarts, and Guelphs. . . . But it has been the
peculiar privilege of the kings of England that neither
in life nor in death have they been parted from their
people. As the Council of the Nation and the
Courts of Law have pressed into the Palace of Westminster,
and engirdled the very throne itself, so the ashes
of the great citizens of England have pressed into
the sepulchre of the kings, and surrounded them as
with a guard of honour after their death. We
are sometimes inclined bitterly to contrast the placid
dignity of our recumbent kings, with Chatham gesticulating
from the northern transept, or Pitt from the western
door, or Shakspeare leaning on his column in Poet’s
Corner, or Wolfe expiring by the chapel of St. John.
But, in fact, they are, in their different ways, keeping
guard over the shrine of our monarchs and our laws;
and their very incongruity and variety become symbols
of that harmonious diversity in unity which pervades
our whole commonwealth.’
Honoured by such a trust, we who serve
God daily in the great Abbey are not unmindful of
the duty which lies on us to preserve and to restore,
to the best of our power, the general fabric; and
to call on government and on private persons to preserve
and restore those monuments, for which they, not we,
are responsible. A stranger will not often enter
our Abbey without finding somewhere or other among
its vast arcades, skilled workmen busy over mosaic,
marble, bronze, or ’storied window richly dight;’
and the very cloisters, which to Washington Irving’s
eye were ’discoloured with damp, crumbling with
age, and crusted with a coat of hoary moss,’
are being repaired till that ’rich tracery of
the arches, and that leafy beauty of the roses which
adorn the keystones’ of which he
tells shall be as sharp and bright as they
were first, 500 years ago.
One sentiment, again, which was called
up in the mind of your charming essayist, at the sight
of Westminster Abbey, I have not felt myself:
I mean its sadness. ‘What,’ says
he, ’is this vast assembly of sepulchres but
a treasury of humiliation? a huge pile of reiterated
homilies on the emptiness of renown and the certainty
of oblivion.’
So does that ‘mournful magnificence’
of which he speaks, seem to have weighed on him, that
he takes for the motto of his whole essay, that grand
Elizabethan epigram
When I behold, with deep astonishment,
To famous Westminster how
there resort
Living in brasse or stony
monument,
The Princes and the worthies
of all sort;
Do I not see re-formed nobilitie,
Without contempt, or pride,
or ostentation,
And look upon offenseless
majestie,
Naked of pomp or earthly domination?
And how a play-game of a painted
stone
Contents the quiet, now, and
silent sprites,
Whom all the world, which
late they stood upon,
Could not content, nor quench
their appetites.
Life is a frost of cold felicities;
And death the thaw of all
our vanities.
True, true who knows it
not, who has lived fifty years in such a world as
this? and yet but half the truth.
Were there no after-life, no juster
home beyond the grave, where each good deed so
spake the most august of lips shall in no
wise lose its reward is it nought, virum
volitare per ora, to live upon the lips of men,
and find an immortality, even for a few centuries,
in their hearts? I know what answer healthy souls
have made in every age to that question; and what
they will make to the end, as long as the respect of
their fellow-creatures is, as our Creator meant that
it should be, precious to virtuous men. And
let none talk of ‘the play-game of a painted
stone,’ of ‘the worthless honours of a
bust.’ The worth of honour lies in that
same worthlessness. Fair money wage for fair
work done, no wise man will despise. But that
is pay, not honour; the very preciousness whereof like
the old victor’s parsley crown in the Greek games is
that it had no value, gave no pleasure, save that
which is imperishable, spiritual, and not to be represented
by gold nor quintessential diamond.
Therefore, to me at least, the Abbey
speaks, not of vanity and disappointment, but of content
and peace.
The quiet now and silent sprites
of whom old Christolero sings, they
are content; and well for them that they should be.
They have received their nation’s thanks, and
ask no more, save to lie there in peace. They
have had justice done them; and more than one is there,
who had scant justice done him while alive. Even
Castlereagh is there, in spite of Byron’s and
of Shelley’s scorn. It may be that they
too have found out ere now, that there he ought to
be. The nation has been just to him who, in
such wild times as the world had not seen for full
three hundred years, did his duty according to his
light, and died in doing it; and his sad noble face
looks down on Englishmen as they go by, not with reproach,
but rather with content.
Content, I say, and peace. Peace
from their toil, and peace with their fellow-men.
They are at least at rest. Obdormierunt in pace.
They have fallen asleep in peace. The galled
shoulder is freed from the collar at last. The
brave old horse has done his stage and lain down in
the inn. There are no more mistakes now, no more
sores, no more falls; and no more whip, thank God,
laid on too often when it was least needed and most
felt.
And there are no more quarrels, too.
Old personal feuds, old party bickerings, old differences
of creed, and hatreds in the name of the God of love all
those are past, in that world of which the Abbey is
to me a symbol and a sacrament. Pitt and Fox,
Warren Hastings and Macaulay, they can afford to be
near to each other in the Abbey; for they understand
each other now elsewhere; and the Romish Abbot’s
bones do not stir in their grave beside the bones
of the Protestant Divine whom he, it may be, would
have burned alive on earth.
In the south aisle of Henry the VIIth’s
Chapel lies in royal pomp she who so long was Britain’s
bane ’the daughter of debate, who
discord still did sow’ poor Mary
Queen of Scots. But English and Scots alike have
forgotten the streams of noble blood she cost their
nations; and look sadly and pityingly upon her effigy why
not?
Nothing is left of her
Now but pure womanly.
And in the corresponding aisle upon
the north, in a like tomb which the voice
of the English people demanded from the son of Mary
Stuart lies even a sadder figure still poor
Queen Elizabeth. To her indeed, in her last
days, Vanity of vanities all was vanity.
Tyrone’s rebellion killed her. ’This
fruit have I of all my labours which I have taken under
the sun’ and with a whole book of
Ecclesiastes written on her mighty heart, the old
crowned lioness of England coiled herself up in her
lair, refused food, and died, and took her place henceforth
opposite to her ’dear cousin’ whom she
really tried to save from herself who would
have slain her if she could, and whom she had at last,
in obedience to the voice of the people of England,
to slay against her will. They have made up that
quarrel now.
Ay, and that tomb is the sacred symbol
of a reconciliation even more pathetic and more strange.
Elizabeth lies seemingly by her own desire in
the same vault as her own sister, Mary Tudor.
‘Bloody Mary,’ now, no more. James
the First, who had no love for either of them, has
placed at the head of the monument ‘two lines,’
as has been well said, ’full of a far deeper
feeling than we should naturally have ascribed to
him’
’Fellows in the kingdom, and
in the tomb, Here we sleep; Mary and Elizabeth the
sisters; in hope of the resurrection.’
I make no comment on those words;
or on that double sepulchre. But did I not say
well, that the great Abbey was a place of peace a
place to remind hardworked, purblind, and often, alas!
embittered souls
For Mother Earth she gathers
all
Into her bosom, great and
small.
Ah! could we look into her
face,
We should not shrink from
her embrace.
Yes, all old misunderstandings are
cleared up by now in that just world wherein all live
to God. They live to God; and therefore the great
Abbey is to me awful indeed, but never sad.
Awful it ought to be, for it is a symbol of both worlds,
the seen and the unseen; and of the veil, as thin
as cobweb, yet opaque as night, which parts the two.
Awful it is; and ought to be like that
with which it grew the life of a great nation,
growing slowly to manhood, as all great nations grow,
through ignorance and waywardness, often through sin
and sorrow; hewing onward a devious track through
unknown wildernesses; and struggling, victorious, though
with bleeding feet, athwart the tangled woods and thorny
brakes of stern experience.
Awful it is; and should be.
And, therefore, I at least do not regret that its
very form, outside, should want those heaven-pointing
spires, that delicate lightness, that airy joyousness,
of many a foreign cathedral even of our
own Salisbury and Lichfield. You will see in
its outer shape little, if any, of that type of architecture
which was, as I believe, copied from scenery with
which you, as Americans, must be even more familiar
than were the mediaeval architects who travelled through
the German forests and across the Alps to Rome.
True, we have our noble high-pitched snow-roof.
Our architect, like the rest, had seen the mountain
ranges jut black and bare above the snows of winter.
He had seen those snows slip down in sheets, rush
down in torrents from the sun, off the steep slabs
of rock which coped the hill-side; and he, like the
rest, has copied in that roof, for use as well as beauty,
the mountain rocks.
But he has not, as many another mediaeval
architect has done, decked his roofs as Nature has
decked hers, with the spruce and fir-tree spires,
which cling to the hill-side of the crag, old above
young, pinnacle above pinnacle, whorl above whorl;
and clothed with them the sides and summit of the
stone mountain which he had raised, till, like a group
of firs upon an isolated rock, every point of the
building should seem in act to grow toward heaven,
and the grey leads of the Minster roof stand out amid
peaks and turrets rich with carven foliage, as the
grey rocks stand out of the primaeval woods.
That part of the mediaeval builder’s
task was left unfinished, and indeed hardly attempted,
by our Westminster architects, either under Henry III.,
Edward I., or Henry V.
Their Minster is grand enough by grave
height and severe proportion; and he who enters stooping
under that low-browed arch of the north door, beneath
the beetling crag of weatherworn and crumbling stone,
may feel like one who, in some old northern fairy
tale, enters a cave in some lone mountain side where
trolls and dragons guard the hoards of buried kings.
And awful it is, and should be still,
inside; under that vaulted roof a hundred feet above,
all more mysterious and more huge, and yet more soft,
beneath the murky London air.
But sad I cannot call it. Nor,
I think, would you feel it sad, when you perceive
how richly successive architects have squandered on
it the treasures of their fancy; and made it, so they
say, perhaps the most splendid specimen in the world
of one of those stone forests, in which the men of
old delighted to reproduce those leafy minsters which
God, not man, has built; where they sent the columns
aloft like the boles of giant trees, and wreathed
their capitals, sometimes their very shafts, with
vines and flowers; and decked with foliage and with
fruit the bosses above and the corbels below; and
sent up out of those corbels upright shafts along
the walls, in likeness of the trees which sprang out
of the rocks above their head; and raised those walls
into great cliffs; and pierced those cliffs with the
arches of the triforium, as with wild creatures’
caves or hermits’ cells; and represented in the
horizontal string-courses and window-sills the strata
of the rocks; and opened the windows into wide and
lofty glades, broken, as in the forest, by the tracery
of stems and boughs, through which were seen, not only
the outer, but the upper world. For they craved as
all true artists crave for light and colour;
and had the sky above been one perpetual blue, they
might have been content with it, and left their glass
transparent. But in our dark dank northern clime,
rain and snowstorm, black cloud and grey mist, were
all that they were like to see outside for six months
in the year. So they took such light and colour
as nature gave in her few gayer moods, and set aloft
in their stained glass windows the hues of the noonday
and of the sunset, and the purple of the heather, and
the gold of the gorse, and the azure of the bugloss,
and the crimson of the poppy; and among them, in gorgeous
robes, the angels and the saints of heaven, and the
memories of heroic virtues and heroic sufferings, that
they might lift up the eyes and hearts of men for
ever out of the dark sad world of the cold north,
with all its coarsenesses and its crimes, towards a
realm of perpetual holiness, amid a perpetual summer
of beauty and of light: as one who, from between
the black jaws of a narrow glen, or from beneath the
black shade of gigantic trees, catches a glimpse of
far lands gay with gardens and cottages; and purple
mountain ranges; and the far-off sea; and the hazy
horizon melting into the hazy sky; and finds his soul
led forth into an infinite, at once of freedom and
repose.
Awful, and yet not sad; at least to
one who is reminded by it, even in its darkest winter’s
gloom, of the primaeval tropic forest at its two most
exquisite moments its too brief twilight,
and its too swift dawn.
Awful, and yet not sad; at least to
an Englishman, while right and left are ranged the
statues, the busts, the names, the deeds, of men who
have helped, each in his place, to make my country,
and your country too, that which they are.
For am I not in goodly company?
Am I not in very deed upon my best behaviour? among
my betters? and at court? Among men before whom
I should have been ashamed to say or do a base or
foolish thing? Among men who have taught me,
have ennobled me, though they lived centuries since?
Men whom I should have loved had I met them on earth?
Men whom I may meet yet, and tell them how I love
them, in some other world? Men, too, whom I
might have hated, and who might have hated me, had
we met on this poor piecemeal earth; but whom I may
learn to regard with justice and with charity in the
world where all shall know, even as they are known?
Men, too alas! how fast their number grows whom
I have known, have loved, and lost too soon; and all
gleaming out of the gloom, as every image of the dead
should do, in pure white marble, as if purged from
earthly taint? To them, too
Nothing is left of them
Now but pure manly.
Yes, while their monuments remind
me that they are not dead, but living for
all live to God then awed I am, and humbled;
better so: but sad I cannot be in such grand
company.
I said, the men who helped to make
my country, and yours too. It would be an impertinence
in me to remind most of you of that. You know
as well as I that you are represented just as much
as the English people, by every monument in that Abbey
earlier than the Civil Wars, and by most monuments
of later date, especially by those of all our literary
men. You know that, and you value the old Abbey
accordingly. But a day may come a
generation may come, in a nation so rapidly increasing
by foreign immigration, as well as by home-born citizenship a
generation may come who will forget that fact; and
orators arise who will be glad that it should be forgotten for
awhile. But if you would not that that evil day
should come then teach your children That
the history and the freedom of America began neither
with the War of Independence, nor with the sailing
of the Pilgrim Fathers, nor with the settlement of
Virginia; but 1500 years and more before, in the days
when our common Teutonic ancestors, as free then as
this day, knew how
In den Deutschen Forsten
Wie der Aar zu
horsten,
when Herman smote the Romans in the
Teutoburger-Wald, and the great Cæsar wailed in vain
to his slain general, ’Varus, give me back my
legions!’ Teach your children that the Congress
which sits at Washington is as much the child of Magna
Charta as the Parliament which sits at Westminster;
and that when you resisted the unjust demands of an
English king and council, you did but that which the
free commons of England held the right to do, and
did, not only after, but before, the temporary tyranny
of the Norman kings.
Show them the tombs of English kings;
not of those Norman kings no Norman king
lies buried in our Abbey there is no royal
interment between Edward the Confessor, the last English
prince of Cerdic’s house, and Henry the Third,
the first of the new English line of kings. Tell
them, in justice to our common forefathers, that those
men were no tyrants, but kings, who swore to
keep, and for the most part did keep, like loyal gentlemen,
the ancient English laws, which they had sworn in Westminster
Abbey to maintain; and that the few of them who persisted
in outraging the rights or the conscience of the free
people of England, paid for their perjury with their
crowns, or with their lives. And tell them,
too, in justice to our common ancestors, that there
were never wanting to the kings, the nobles, or the
commons of England, since the days when Simon de Montfort
organised the House of Commons in Westminster Hall,
on the 2nd of May, 1258 there were never
wanting, I say, to the kings, the nobles, or the commons
of England, counsellors who dared speak the truth
and defend the right, even at the risk of their own
goods and their own lives.
Remind them, too or let
our monuments remind them that even in the
worst times of the War of Independence, there were
not wanting, here in England, statesmen who dared
to speak out for justice and humanity; and that they
were not only confessed to be the leading men of their
own day, but the very men whom England delighted to
honour by places in her Pantheon. Show them
the monuments of Chatham, Pitt, and Fox Burke
sleeps in peace elsewhere and remind them
that the great earl, who literally died as much in
your service as in ours, whose fiery invectives
against the cruelties of that old war are, I am proud
to say, still common-places for declamation among
our English schoolboys, dared, even when all was at
the worst, to tell the English House of Lords ’If
I were an American, as I am an Englishman, while a
foreign troop was landed in my country, I never would
lay down my arms never, never, never!’
Yes an American as well
as an Englishman may find himself in the old Abbey
in right good company.
Yes and I do not hesitate
to say, that if you will look through the monuments
erected in that Abbey, since those of Pitt and Fox you
will find that the great majority commemorate the
children, not of obstruction, but of progress; not
of darkness, but of light.
Holland, Tierney, Mackintosh, Grattan,
Peel, Canning, Palmerston, Isaac Watts, Bell, Wilberforce,
Sharp, the Macaulays, Fowell Buxton, Francis Horner,
Charles Buller, Cobden, Watt, Rennell, Telford, Locke,
Brunel, Grote, Thackeray, Dickens, Maurice men
who, each in his own way, toiled for freedom of some
kind; freedom of race, of laws, of commerce, of locomotion,
of production, of speech, of thought, of education,
of human charity, and of sympathy these
are the men whom England still delights to honour;
whose busts around our walls show that the ancient
spirit is not dead, and that we, as you, are still,
as 1500 years ago, the sons of freedom and of light.
But, beside these statesmen who were
just and true to you, and therefore to their native
land, there lie men before whose monuments I would
ask thoughtful Americans to pause I mean
those of our old fighters, by land and sea.
I do not speak merely of those who lived before our
Civil Wars, though they are indeed our common heritage.
And when you look at the noble monuments of De Vere
and Norris, the fathers of the English infantry, you
should remember that your ancestors and mine, or that
of any other Englishman, may have trailed pike and
handled sword side by side under those very men, in
those old wars of the Netherlands, which your own
great historian, Mr. Motley, has so well described;
or have sailed together to Cadiz fight, and to the
Spanish Main, with Raleigh or with Drake.
There are those, again, who did their
duty two and three generations later though
one of the noblest of them all, old Admiral Blake,
alas! lies we know not where cast out,
with Cromwell and his heroes, by the fanatics and
sycophants of the Restoration whom not only
we, but Royalty itself, would now restore, could we
recover their noble ashes, to their rightful resting-place.
And these, if not always our common
ancestors, were, often enough, our common cousins,
as in the case of my own family, in which one brother
was settling in New England, to found there a whole
new family of Kingsleys while the other brother was
fighting in the Parliamentary army, and helping to
defeat Charles at Rowton Moor.
But there is another class of warriors’
tombs, which I ask you, if ever you visit the Abbey,
to look on with respect, and let me say, affection
too. I mean the men who did their duty, by land
and sea, in that long series of wars which, commencing
in 1739, ended in 1783, with our recognition of your
right and power to be a free and independent people.
Of those who fought against you I say nought.
But I must speak of those who fought for you who
brought to naught, by sheer hard blows, that family
compact of the House of Bourbon, which would have been
as dangerous to you upon this side of the ocean as
to us upon the other; who smote with a continual stroke
the trans-Atlantic power of Spain, till they
placed her once vast and rich possessions at your mercy
to this day; and who even more important
still prevented the French from seizing
at last the whole valley of the Mississippi, and girdling
your nascent dominion with a hostile frontier, from
Louisiana round to the mouth of the St. Lawrence.
When you see Wolfe’s huge cenotaph,
with its curious bronze bas-relief of the taking of
the heights of Abraham, think, I pray you, that not
only for England, but for you, the ‘little red-haired
corporal’ conquered and died.
Remember, too, that while your ancestors
were fighting well by land, and Washington and such
as he were learning their lesson at Fort Duquesne and
elsewhere better than we could teach them, we were
fighting well where we knew how to fight at
sea. And when, near to Wolfe’s monument,
or in the Nave, you see such names as Cornwallis,
Saumarez, Wager, Vernon the conqueror of
Portobello Lord Aubrey Beauclerk, and so
forth bethink you that every French or
Spanish ship which these men took, and every convoy
they cut off, from Toulon to Carthagena, and from Carthagena
to Halifax, made more and more possible the safe severance
from England of the very Colonies which you were then
helping us to defend. And then agree, like the
generous-hearted people which you are, that if, in
after years, we sinned against you and
how heavy were our sins, I know too well there
was a time, before those evil days, when we fought
for you, and by your side, as the old lion by the
young; even though, like the old lion and the young,
we began, only too soon, tearing each other to pieces
over the division of the prey.
Nay, I will go further, and say this,
paradoxical as it may seem: When you enter
the North Transept from St. Margaret’s Churchyard
you see on your right hand a huge but not ungraceful
naval monument of white marble, inscribed with the
names of Bayne, Blair, Lord Robert Manners three
commanders of Rodney’s, in the crowning victory
of April 12, 1782 fought upon Tropic waters,
over which I have sailed, flushed with the thought
that my own grandfather was that day on board of Rodney’s
ship.
Now do you all know what that day’s
great fight meant for you, fought though
it was, while you, alas! were still at war with us?
It meant this. That that day followed
up, six months after, by Lord Howe’s relief
of Gibraltar settled, I hold, the fate of
the New World for many a year. True, in one
sense, it was settled already. Cornwallis had
already capitulated at York Town. But even then
the old lion, disgraced, bleeding, fainting, ready
to yield but only to you, of his own kin
and blood struck, though with failing paw,
two such tremendous blows at his old enemies, as deprived
them thenceforth of any real power in the New World;
precipitated that bankruptcy and ruin which issued
in the French and Spanish revolutions; and made certain,
as I believe, the coming day when the Anglo-Saxon
race shall be the real masters of the whole New World.
Of poets and of men of letters I say
nought. They are the heritage, neither of us,
nor you, but of the human race. The mere man
of letters may well sleep in the very centre of that
busy civilisation from which he drew his inspiration:
but not the poet not, at least, the poet
of these days. He goes not to the town, but
nature, for his inspirations, and to nature when he
dies he should return. Such men artificial,
and town-bred however brilliant, or even
grand at times as Davenant, Dryden, Cowley,
Congreve, Prior, Gay sleep fitly in our
care here. Yet even Pope though one
of such in style and heart preferred the
parish church of the then rural Twickenham, and Gray
the lonely graveyard of Stoke Pogis. Ben Jonson
has a right to lie with us. He was a townsman
to the very heart, and a court-poet too. But
Chaucer, Spenser, Drayton such are, to
my mind, out of place. Chaucer lies here, because
he lived hard by. Spenser through bitter need
and woe. But I should have rather buried Chaucer
in some trim garden, Spenser beneath the forest aisles,
and Drayton by some silver stream each man’s
dust resting where his heart was set. Happier,
it seems to me, are those who like Shakespeare, Wordsworth
and Southey, Scott and Burns, lie far away, in scenes
they knew and loved; fulfilling Burke’s wise
choice: ’After all I had sooner sleep in
the southern corner of a country churchyard than in
the tomb of all the Capulets.’
Yes these worthies, one
and all, are a token that the Great Abbey, and all
its memories of 800 years, does not belong to us alone,
nor even to the British Empire alone and all its Colonies,
but to America likewise! That when an American
enters beneath that mighty shade, he treads on common
and ancestral ground, as sacred to him as it is to
us; the symbol of common descent, common development,
common speech, common creed, common laws, common literature,
common national interests, and I trust, of a common
respect and affection, such as the wise can only feel
toward the wise, and the strong toward the strong.
Is all this sentiment? Remember
what I said just now: by well-used sentiment,
and well-used sorrow, great nations live.