I wish to speak to you to-night about
one of those old despotic empires which were in every
case the earliest known form of civilisation.
Were I minded to play the cynic or the mountebank,
I should choose some corrupt and effete despotism,
already grown weak and ridiculous by its decay as
did at last the Roman and then the Byzantine Empire and,
after raising a laugh at the expense of the old system
say, See what a superior people you are now, how
impossible, under free and enlightened institutions,
is anything so base and so absurd as went on, even
in despotic France before the Revolution of 1793.
Well that would be on the whole true, thank God;
but what need is there to say it?
Let us keep our scorn for our own
weaknesses, our blame for our own sins, certain that
we shall gain more instruction, though not more amusement,
by hunting out the good which is in anything than by
hunting out its evil. For me, true to that which
I proposed in my last lecture, I have chosen, not
the worst, but the best despotism which I could find
in history, founded and ruled by a truly heroic personage,
one whose name has become a proverb and a legend,
that so I might lift up your minds, even by the contemplation
of an old Eastern empire, to see that it, too, could
be a work and ordinance of God, and its hero the servant
of the Lord. For we are almost bound to call
Cyrus, the founder of the Persian Empire, by this
august title for two reasons First, because
the Hebrew Scriptures call him so; and next, because
he proved himself to be such by his actions and their
consequences at least in the eyes of those
who believe, as I do, in a far-seeing and far-reaching
Providence, by which all human history is
Bound by gold chains unto
the throne of God.
His work was very different from any
that need be done, or can be done, in these our days.
But while we thank God that such work is now as unnecessary
as impossible; we may thank God likewise that, when
such work was necessary and possible, a man was raised
up to do it; and to do it, as all accounts assert,
better, perhaps, than it had ever been done before
or since.
True, the old conquerors, who absorbed
nation after nation, tribe after tribe, and founded
empires on their ruins, are now, I trust, about to
be replaced, throughout the world, as here and in
Britain at home, by free self-governed peoples
The old order changeth, giving
place to the new;
And God fulfils Himself in
many ways,
Lest one good custom should
corrupt the world.
And that custom of conquest and empire
and transplantation did more than once corrupt the
world. And yet in it, too, God may have more
than once fulfilled his own designs, as He did, if
Scripture is to be believed, in Cyrus, well surnamed
the Great, the founder of the Persian Empire some
2,400 years ago. For these empires, it must be
remembered, did at least that which the Roman Empire
did among a scattered number of savage tribes, or
separate little races, hating and murdering each other,
speaking different tongues, and worshipping different
gods, and losing utterly the sense of a common humanity,
till they looked on the people who dwelt in the next
valley as fiends, to be sacrificed, if caught, to
their own fiends at home. Among such as these,
empires did introduce order, law, common speech, common
interest, the notion of nationality and humanity.
They, as it were, hammered together the fragments
of the human race till they had moulded them into
one. They did it cruelly, clumsily, ill:
but was there ever work done on earth, however noble,
which was not alas, alas! done
somewhat ill?
Let me talk to you a little about
the old hero. He and his hardy Persians should
be specially interesting to us. For in them first
does our race, the Aryan race, appear in authentic
history. In them first did our race give promise
of being the conquering and civilising race of the
future world. And to the conquests of Cyrus so
strangely are all great times and great movements
of the human family linked to each other to
his conquests, humanly speaking, is owing the fact
that you are here, and I am speaking to you at this
moment.
It is an oft-told story: but
so grand a one that I must sketch it for you, however
clumsily, once more.
In that mountain province called Farsistan,
north-east of what we now call Persia, the dwelling
place of the Persians, there dwelt, in the sixth and
seventh centuries before Christ, a hardy tribe, of
the purest blood of Iran, a branch of the same race
as the Celtic, Teutonic, Greek, and Hindoo, and speaking
a tongue akin to theirs. They had wandered thither,
said their legends, out of the far north-east, from
off some lofty plateau of Central Asia, driven out
by the increasing cold, which left them but two months
of summer to ten of winter.
They despised at first would
that they had despised always! the luxurious
life of the dwellers in the plains, and the effeminate
customs of the Mèdes a branch of their
own race who had conquered and intermarried with the
Turanian, or Finnish tribes; and adopted much of their
creed, as well as of their morals, throughout their
vast but short-lived Median Empire. ‘Soft
countries,’ said Cyrus himself so
runs the tale ’gave birth to small
men. No region produced at once delightful fruits
and men of a warlike spirit.’ Letters were
to them, probably then unknown. They borrowed
them in after years, as they borrowed their art, from
Babylonians, Assyrians, and other Semitic nations
whom they conquered. From the age of five to
that of twenty, their lads were instructed but in
two things to speak the truth and to shoot
with the bow. To ride was the third necessary
art, introduced, according to Xenophon, after they
had descended from their mountain fastnesses to conquer
the whole East.
Their creed was simple enough.
Ahura Mazda Ormuzd, as he has been called
since was the one eternal Creator, the source
of all light and life and good. He spake his
word, and it accomplished the creation of heaven,
before the water, before the earth, before the cow,
before the tree, before the fire, before man the truthful,
before the Devas and beasts of prey, before the whole
existing universe; before every good thing created
by Ahura Mazda and springing from Truth.
He needed no sacrifices of blood.
He was to be worshipped only with prayers, with offerings
of the inspiring juice of the now unknown herb Homa,
and by the preservation of the sacred fire, which,
understand, was not he, but the symbol as
was light and the sun of the good spirit of
Ahura Mazda. They had no images of the gods,
these old Persians; no temples, no altars, so says
Herodotus, and considered the use of them a sign of
folly. They were, as has been well said of them,
the Puritans of the old world. When they descended
from their mountain fastnesses, they became the iconoclasts
of the old world; and the later Isaiah, out of the
depths of national shame, captivity and exile, saw
in them brother-spirits, the chosen of the Lord, whose
hero Cyrus, the Lord was holding by his right hand,
till all the foul superstitions and foul effeminacies
of the rotten Semitic peoples of the East, and even
of Egypt itself, should be crushed, though alas! only
for a while, by men who felt that they had a commission
from the God of light and truth and purity, to sweep
out all that with the besom of destruction.
But that was a later inspiration.
In earlier, and it may be happier, times, the duty
of the good man was to strive against all evil, disorder,
uselessness, incompetence in their more simple forms.
’He therefore is a holy man,’ says Ormuzd
in the Zend-avesta, ’who has built a dwelling
on the earth, in which he maintains fire, cattle,
his wife, his children, and flocks and herds; he who
makes the earth produce barley, he who cultivates
the fruits of the soil, cultivates purity; he advances
the law of Ahura Mazda as much as if he had offered
a hundred sacrifices.’
To reclaim the waste, to till the
land, to make a corner of the earth better than they
found it, was to these men to rescue a bit of Ormuzd’s
world out of the usurped dominion of Ahriman; to rescue
it from the spirit of evil and disorder for its rightful
owner, the Spirit of Order and of Good.
For they believed in an evil spirit,
these old Persians. Evil was not for them a
lower form of good. With their intense sense
of the difference between right and wrong it could
be nothing less than hateful; to be attacked, exterminated,
as a personal enemy, till it became to them at last
impersonate and a person.
Zarathustra, the mystery of evil,
weighed heavily on them and on their great prophet,
Zoroaster splendour of gold, as I am told
his name signifies who lived, no man knows
clearly when or clearly where, but who lived and lives
for ever, for his works follow him. He, too,
tried to solve for his people the mystery of evil;
and if he did not succeed, who has succeeded yet?
Warring against Ormuzd, Ahura Mazda, was Ahriman,
Angra Mainyus, literally the being of an evil mind,
the ill-conditioned being. He was labouring
perpetually to spoil the good work of Ormuzd alike
in nature and in man. He was the cause of the
fall of man, the tempter, the author of misery and
death; he was eternal and uncreate as Ormuzd was.
But that, perhaps, was a corruption of the purer and
older Zoroastrian creed. With it, if Ahriman
were eternal in the past, he would not be eternal
in the future. Somehow, somewhen, somewhere,
in the day when three prophets the increasing
light, the increasing truth, and the existing truth should
arise and give to mankind the last three books of
the Zend-avesta, and convert all mankind to the pure
creed, then evil should be conquered, the creation
become pure again, and Ahriman vanish for ever; and,
meanwhile, every good man was to fight valiantly for
Ormuzd, his true lord, against Ahriman and all his
works.
Men who held such a creed, and could
speak truth and draw the bow, what might they not
do when the hour and the man arrived? They were
not a big nation. No; but they were a
great nation, even while they were eating barley-bread
and paying tribute to their conquerors the Mèdes,
in the sterile valleys of Farsistan.
And at last the hour and the man came.
The story is half legendary differently
told by different authors. Herodotus has one
tale, Xenophon another. The first, at least,
had ample means of information. Astyages is
the old shah of the Median Empire, then at the height
of its seeming might and splendour and effeminacy.
He has married his daughter, the princess Mandane,
to Cambyses, seemingly a vassal-king or prince of
the pure Persian blood. One night the old man
is troubled with a dream. He sees a vine spring
from his daughter, which overshadows all Asia.
He sends for the Magi to interpret; and they tell
him that Mandane will have a son who will reign in
his stead. Having sons of his own, and fearing
for the succession, he sends for Mandane, and, when
her child is born, gives it to Harpagus, one of his
courtiers, to be slain. The courtier relents,
and hands it over to a herdsman, to be exposed on
the mountains. The herdsman relents in turn,
and brings the babe up as his own child.
When the boy, who goes by the name
of Agradates, is grown, he is at play with the other
herd-boys, and they choose him for a mimic king.
Some he makes his guards, some he bids build houses,
some carry his messages. The son of a Mede of
rank refuses, and Agradates has him seized by his
guards and chastised with the whip. The ancestral
instincts of command and discipline are showing early
in the lad.
The young gentleman complains to his
father, the father to the old king, who of course
sends for the herdsman and his boy. The boy answers
in a tone so exactly like that in which Xenophon’s
Cyrus would have answered, that I must believe that
both Xenophon’s Cyrus and Herodotus’ Cyrus
(like Xenophon’s Socrates and Plato’s
Socrates) are real pictures of a real character; and
that Herodotus’ story, though Xenophon says nothing
of it, is true.
He has done nothing, the noble boy
says, but what was just. He had been chosen
king in play, because the boys thought him most fit.
The boy whom he had chastised was one of those who
chose him. All the rest obeyed: but he
would not, till at last he got his due reward.
’If I deserve punishment for that,’ says
the boy, ‘I am ready to submit.’
The old king looks keenly and wonderingly
at the young king, whose features seem somewhat like
his own. Likely enough in those days, when an
Iranian noble or prince would have a quite different
cast of complexion and of face from a Turanian herdsman.
A suspicion crosses him; and by threats of torture
he gets the truth from the trembling herdsman.
To the poor wretch’s rapture
the old king lets him go unharmed. He has a
more exquisite revenge to take, and sends for Harpagus,
who likewise confesses the truth. The wily old
tyrant has naught but gentle words. It is best
as it is. He has been very sorry himself for
the child, and Mandane’s reproaches had gone
to his heart. ’Let Harpagus go home and
send his son to be a companion to the new-found prince.
To-night there will be great sacrifices in honour
of the child’s safety, and Harpagus is to be
a guest at the banquet.’
Harpagus comes; and after eating his
fill, is asked how he likes the king’s meat?
He gives the usual answer; and a covered basket is
put before him, out of which he is to take in
Median fashion what he likes. He finds
in it the head and hands and feet of his own son.
Like a true Eastern he shows no signs of horror.
The king asks him if he knew what flesh he had been
eating. He answers that he knew perfectly.
That whatever the king did pleased him.
Like an Eastern courtier, he knew
how to dissemble, but not to forgive, and bided his
time. The Magi, to their credit, told Astyages
that his dream had been fulfilled, that Cyrus as
we must now call the foundling prince had
fulfilled it by becoming a king in play, and the boy
is let to go back to his father and his hardy Persian
life. But Harpagus does not leave him alone,
nor perhaps, do his own thoughts. He has wrongs
to avenge on his grandfather. And it seems not
altogether impossible to the young mountaineer.
He has seen enough of Median luxury
to despise it and those who indulge in it. He
has seen his own grandfather with his cheeks rouged,
his eyelids stained with antimony, living a womanlike
life, shut up from all his subjects in the recesses
of a vast seraglio.
He calls together the mountain rulers;
makes friends with Tigranes, an Armenian prince, a
vassal of the Mede, who has his wrongs likewise to
avenge. And the two little armies of foot-soldiers the
Persians had no cavalry defeat the innumerable
horsemen of the Mede, take the old king, keep him
in honourable captivity, and so change, one legend
says, in a single battle, the fortunes of the whole
East.
And then begins that series of conquests
of which we know hardly anything, save the fact that
they were made. The young mountaineer and his
playmates, whom he makes his generals and satraps,
sweep onward towards the West, teaching their men
the art of riding, till the Persian cavalry becomes
more famous than the Median had been. They gather
to them, as a snow-ball gathers in rolling, the picked
youth of every tribe whom they overcome. They
knit these tribes to them in loyalty and affection
by that righteousness that truthfulness
and justice for which Isaiah in his grandest
lyric strains has made them illustrious to all time;
which Xenophon has celebrated in like manner in that
exquisite book of his the Cyropaedia.
The great Lydian kingdom of Croesus Asia
Minor as we call it now goes down before
them. Babylon itself goes down, after that world-famed
siege which ended in Belshazzar’s feast; and
when Cyrus died still in the prime of life,
the legends seem to say he left a coherent
and well-organised empire, which stretched from the
Mediterranean to Hindostan.
So runs the tale, which to me, I confess,
sounds probable and rational enough. It may
not do so to you; for it has not to many learned men.
They are inclined to ‘relegate it into the region
of myth;’ in plain English, to call old Herodotus
a liar, or at least a dupe. What means those
wise men can have at this distance of more than 2000
years, of knowing more about the matter than Herodotus,
who lived within 100 years of Cyrus, I for myself,
cannot discover. And I say this without the
least wish to disparage these hypercritical persons.
For there are and more there ought to
be, as long as lies and superstitions remain on this
earth a class of thinkers who hold in just
suspicion all stories which savour of the sensational,
the romantic, even the dramatic. They know the
terrible uses to which appeals to the fancy and the
emotions have been applied, and are still applied
to enslave the intellects, the consciences, the very
bodies of men and women. They dread so much from
experience the abuse of that formula, that a thing
is so beautiful it must be true, that they are inclined
to reply, ’Rather let us say boldly, it is so
beautiful that it cannot be true. Let us mistrust,
or even refuse to believe a priori, and at
first sight, all startling, sensational, even poetic
tales, and accept nothing as history, which is not
as dull as the ledger of a dry goods’ store.’
But I think that experience, both in nature and in
society, are against that ditch-water philosophy.
The weather, being governed by laws, ought always
to be equable and normal, and yet you have whirlwinds,
droughts, thunderstorms. The share-market, being
governed by laws, ought to be always equable and normal,
and yet you have startling transactions, startling
panics, startling disclosures, and a whole sensational
romance of commercial crime and folly. Which
of us has lived to be fifty years old, without having
witnessed in private life sensation tragedies, alas!
sometimes too fearful to be told, or at least sensational
romances, which we shall take care not to tell, because
we shall not be believed? Let the ditch-water
philosophy say what it will, human life is not a ditch,
but a wild and roaring river, flooding its banks,
and eating out new channels with many a landslip.
It is a strange world, and man, a strange animal,
guided, it is true, usually by most commonplace motives;
but, for that reason, ready and glad at times to escape
from them and their dulness and baseness; to give
vent, if but for a moment, in wild freedom, to that
demoniac element, which, as Goethe says, underlies
his nature and all nature; and to prefer for an hour,
to the normal and respectable ditch-water, a bottle
of champagne or even a carouse on fire-water, let the
consequences be what they may.
How else shall we explain such a phenomenon
as those old crusades? Were they undertaken
for any purpose, commercial or other? Certainly
not for lightening an overburdened population.
Nay, is not the history of your own Mormons, and
their exodus into the far West, one of the most startling
instances which the world has seen for several centuries,
of the unexpected and incalculable forces which lie
hid in man? Believe me, man’s passions,
heated to igniting point, rather than his prudence
cooled down to freezing point, are the normal causes
of all great human movement. And a truer law
of social science than any that political economists
are wont to lay down, is that old ‘Dov’
e la Donna’ of the Italian judge, who used to
ask, as a preliminary to every case, civil or criminal,
which was brought before him, ‘Dov’ e la
Donna?’ ’Where is the lady?’ certain,
like a wise old gentleman, that a woman was most probably
at the bottom of the matter.
Strangeness? Romance?
Did any of you ever read if you have not
you should read Archbishop Whately’s
Historic Doubts about the Emperor Napoleon the
First? Therein the learned and witty Archbishop
proved, as early as 1819, by fair use of the criticism
of Mr. Hume and the Sceptic School, that the whole
history of the great Napoleon ought to be treated
by wise men as a myth and a romance, that there is
little or no evidence of his having existed at all;
and that the story of his strange successes and strange
defeats was probably invented by our Government in
order to pander to the vanity of the English nation.
I will say this, which Archbishop
Whately, in a late edition, foreshadows, wittily enough that
if one or two thousand years hence, when the history
of the late Emperor Napoleon the Third, his rise and
fall, shall come to be subjected to critical analysis
by future Philistine historians of New Zealand or
Australia, it will be proved by them to be utterly
mythical, incredible, monstrous and that
all the more, the more the actual facts remain to
puzzle their unimaginative brains. What will
they make, two thousand years hence, of the landing
at Boulogne with the tame eagle? Will not that,
and stranger facts still, but just as true, be relegated
to the region of myth, with the dream of Astyages,
and the young and princely herdsman playing at king
over his fellow-slaves?
But enough of this. To me, these
bits of romance often seem the truest, as well as
the most important, portions of history.
When old Herodotus tells me how, King
Astyages having guarded the frontier, Harpagus sent
a hunter to young Cyrus with a fresh-killed hare,
telling him to open it in private; and how, sewn up
in it was the letter, telling him that the time to
rebel was come, I am inclined to say, That must be
true. So beneath the dignity of history, so quaint
and unexpected, it is all the more likely not
to have been invented.
So with that other story How
young Cyrus giving out that his grandfather had made
him general of the Persians, summoned them all, each
man with a sickle in his hand, into a prairie full
of thorns, and bade them clear it in one day; and
how when they, like loyal men, had finished, he bade
them bathe, and next day he took them into a great
meadow and feasted them with corn and wine, and all
that his father’s farm would yield, and asked
them which day they liked best; and, when they answered
as was to be expected, how he opened his parable and
told them, ’Choose, then, to work for the Persians
like slaves, or to be free with me.’
Such a tale sounds to me true.
It has the very savour of the parables of the Old
Testament; as have, surely, the dreams of the old Sultan,
with which the tale begins. Do they not put
us in mind of the dreams of Nebuchadnezzar, in the
Book of Daniel?
Such stories are actually so beautiful
that they are very likely to be true. Understand
me, I only say likely; the ditch-water view of history
is not all wrong. Its advocates are right in
saying great historic changes are not produced simply
by one great person, by one remarkable event.
They have been preparing, perhaps, for centuries.
They are the result of numberless forces, acting
according to laws, which might have been foreseen,
and will be foreseen, when the science of History is
more perfectly understood.
For instance, Cyrus could not have
conquered the Median Empire at a single blow, if first
that empire had not been utterly rotten; and next,
if he and his handful of Persians had not been tempered
and sharpened, by long hardihood, to the finest cutting
edge.
Yes, there were all the materials
for the catastrophe the cannon, the powder,
the shot. But to say that the Persians must have
conquered the Mèdes, even if Cyrus had never
lived, is to say, as too many philosophers seem to
me to say, that, given cannon, powder, and shot, it
will fire itself off some day if we only leave it
alone long enough.
It may be so. But our usual
experience of Nature and Fact is, that spontaneous
combustion is a rare and exceptional phenomenon; that
if a cannon is to be fired, someone must arise and
pull the trigger. And I believe that in Society
and Politics, when a great event is ready to be done,
someone must come and do it do it, perhaps,
half unwittingly, by some single rash act like
that first fatal shot fired at Fort Sumter which
makes, as by an electric spark, a whole nation flash
into enduring flame.
But to return to Cyrus and his Persians.
I know not whether the Cyropaedia
is much read in your schools and universities.
But it is one of the books which I should like to
see, either in a translation or its own exquisite
Greek, in the hands of every young man. It is
not all fact. It is but a historic romance.
But it is better than history. It is an ideal
book, like Sidney’s Arcadia or Spenser’s
Fairy Queen the ideal self-education
of an ideal hero. And the moral of the book ponder
it well, all young men who have the chance or the
hope of exercising authority among your fellow-men,
the noble and most Christian moral of that heathen
book is this: that the path to solid and beneficent
influence over our fellow-men lies, not through brute
force, not through cupidity, but through the highest
morality; through justice, truthfulness, humanity,
self-denial, modesty, courtesy, and all which makes
man or woman lovely in the eyes of mortals or of God.
Yes, the Cyropaedia is a noble
book, about a noble personage. But I cannot
forget that there are nobler words by far concerning
that same noble personage, in the magnificent series
of Hebrew Lyrics, which begins, ’Comfort ye,
comfort ye, my people, saith the Lord’ in
which the inspired poet, watching the rise of Cyrus
and his Puritans, and the fall of Babylon, and the
idolâtries of the East, and the coming deliverance
of his own countrymen, speaks of the Persian hero
in words so grand that they have been often enough
applied, and with all fitness, to one greater than
Cyrus, and than all men:
Who raised up the righteous
man from the East,
And called him to attend his
steps?
Who subdued nations at his
presence,
And gave him dominion over
kings?
And made them like the dust
before his sword,
And the driven stubble before
his bow?
He pursueth them, he passeth
in safety,
By a way never trodden before
by his feet.
Who hath performed and made
these things,
Calling the generations from
the beginning?
I, Jéhovah, the first and
the last, I am the same.
Behold my servant, whom I
will uphold;
My chosen, in whom my soul
delighteth;
I will make my spirit rest
upon him,
And he shall publish judgment
to the nations.
He shall not cry aloud, nor
clamour,
Nor cause his voice to be
heard in the streets.
The bruised reed he shall
not break,
And the smoking flax he shall
not quench.
He shall publish justice,
and establish it.
His force shall not be abated,
nor broken,
Until he has firmly seated
justice in the earth,
And the distant nations shall
wait for his Law.
Thus saith the God, even Jéhovah,
Who created the heavens, and
stretched them out;
Who spread abroad the earth,
and its produce,
I, Jéhovah, have called thee
for a righteous end,
And I will take hold of thy
hand, and preserve thee,
And I will give thee for a
covenant to the people,
And for a light to the nations;
To open the eyes of the blind,
To bring the captives out
of prison,
And from the dungeon those
who dwell in darkness.
I am Jéhovah that
is my name;
And my glory will I not give
to another,
Nor my praise to the graven
idols.
Who saith to Cyrus Thou
art my shepherd,
And he shall fulfil all my
pleasure:
Who saith to Jerusalem Thou
shalt be built;
And to the Temple Thou
shalt be founded.
Thus saith Jéhovah to his
anointed,
To Cyrus whom I hold fast
by his right hand,
That I may subdue nations
under him,
And loose the loins of kings;
That I may open before him
the two-leaved doors,
And the gates shall not be
shut;
I will go before thee
And bring the mountains low.
The gates of brass will I
break in sunder,
And the bars of iron hew down.
And I will give thee the treasures
of darkness,
And the hoards hid deep in
secret places,
That thou mayest know that
I am Jéhovah.
I have surnamed thee, though
thou knowest not me.
I am Jéhovah and none else:
Beside me there is no God.
I will gird thee, though thou
hast not known me,
That they may know from the
rising of the sun,
And from the west, that there
is none beside me;
I am Jéhovah, and none else;
Forming light, and creating
darkness;
Forming peace, and creating
evil.
I, Jéhovah, make all these.
This is the Hebrew prophet’s
conception of the great Puritan of the Old World who
went forth with such a commission as this, to destroy
the idols of the East, while
The isles saw that, and feared,
And the ends of the earth
were afraid;
They drew near, they came
together;
Everyone helped his neighbour,
And said to his brother, Be
of good courage.
The carver encouraged the
smith,
He that smoothed with the
hammer
Him that smote on the anvil;
Saying of the solder, It is
good;
And fixing the idol with nails,
lest it be moved;
But all in vain; for as the poet goes on
Bel bowed down, and Nebo stooped;
Their idols were upon the
cattle,
A burden to the weary beast.
They stoop, they bow down
together;
They could not deliver their
own charge;
Themselves are gone into captivity.
And what, to return, what was the
end of the great Cyrus and of his empire?
Alas, alas! as with all human glory,
the end was not as the beginning.
We are scarce bound to believe positively
the story how Cyrus made one war too many, and was
cut off in the Scythian deserts, falling before the
arrows of mere savages; and how their queen, Tomyris,
poured blood down the throat of the dead corpse, with
the words, ’Glut thyself with the gore for which
thou hast thirsted.’ But it may be true for
Xenophon states it expressly, and with detail that
Cyrus, from the very time of his triumph, became an
Eastern despot, a sultan or a shah, living apart from
his people in mysterious splendour, in the vast fortified
palace which he built for himself; and imitating and
causing his nobles and satraps to imitate, in
all but vice and effeminacy, the very Mèdes whom
he had conquered. And of this there is no doubt that
his sons and their empire ran rapidly through that
same vicious circle of corruption to which all despotisms
are doomed, and became within 250 years, even as the
Mèdes, the Chaldeans, the Lydians, whom they had
conquered, children no longer of Ahura Mazda, but
of Ahriman, of darkness and not of light, to be conquered
by Alexander and his Greeks even more rapidly and more
shamefully than they had conquered the East.
This is the short epic of the Persian
Empire, ending alas! as all human epics are wont to
end, sadly, if not shamefully.
But let me ask you, Did I say too
much, when I said, that to these Persians we owe that
we are here to-night?
I do not say that without them we
should not have been here. God, I presume, when
He is minded to do anything has more than one way of
doing it.
But that we are to-night the last
link in a chain of causes and effects which reaches
as far back as the emigration of the Persians southward
from the plateau of Pamir, we cannot doubt.
For see. By the fall of Babylon
and its empire the Jews were freed from their captivity large
numbers of them at least and sent home to
their own Jerusalem. What motives prompted Cyrus,
and Darius after him, to do that deed?
Those who like to impute the lowest
motives may say if they will, that Daniel and the
later Isaiah found it politic to worship the rising
sun, and flatter the Persian conquerors: and
that Cyrus and Darius in turn were glad to see Jerusalem
rebuilt, as an impregnable frontier fortress between
them and Egypt. Be it so; I, who wish to talk
of things noble, pure, lovely and of good report,
would rather point you once more to the magnificent
poetry of the later Isaiah which commences at the 40th
chapter of the Book of Isaiah, and say There,
upon the very face of the document, stands written
the fact that the sympathy between the faithful Persian
and the faithful Jew the two Puritans of
the Old World, the two haters of lies, idolâtries,
superstitions was actually as intense
as it ought to have been, as it must have been.
Be that as it may, the return of the
Jews to Jerusalem preserved for us the Old Testament,
while it restored to them a national centre, a sacred
city, like that of Delphi to the Greeks, Rome to the
Romans, Mecca to the Muslim, loyalty to which prevented
their being utterly absorbed by the more civilised
Eastern races among whom they had been scattered abroad
as colonies of captives.
Then another, and a seemingly needful
link of cause and effect ensued: Alexander of
Macedon destroyed the Persian Empire, and the East
became Greek, and Alexandria, rather than Jerusalem,
became the head-quarters of Jewish learning.
But for that very cause, the Scriptures were not left
inaccessible to the mass of mankind, like the old Pehlevi
liturgies of the Zend-avesta, or the old Sanscrit
Védas, in an obsolete and hieratic tongue, but
were translated into, and continued in, the then all
but world-wide Hellenic speech, which was to the ancient
world what French is to the modern.
Then the East became Roman, without
losing its Greek speech. And under the wide
domination of that later Roman Empire which
had subdued and organised the whole known world, save
the Parthian descendants of those old Persians, and
our old Teutonic forefathers, in their German forests
and on their Scandinavian shores that Divine
book was carried far and wide, East and West, and
South, from the heart of Abyssinia to the mountains
of Armenia, and to the isles of the ocean, beyond Britain
itself to Ireland and to the Hebrides.
And that book so strangely
coinciding with the old creed of the earlier Persians that
book, long misunderstood, long overlain by the dust,
and overgrown by the parasitic fungi of centuries,
that book it was which sent to these trans-Atlantic
shores the founders of your great nation. That
book gave them their instinct of freedom, tempered
by reverence for Law. That book gave them their
hatred of idolatry; and made them not only say but
act upon their own words, with these old Persians and
with the Jewish prophets alike, Sacrifice and burnt-offering
thou wouldst not; then said we, Lo, we come.
In the volume of the book it is written of us, that
we come to do thy will, O God. Yes, long and
fantastic is the chain of causes and effects, which
links you here to the old heroes who came down from
Central Asia, because the land had grown so wondrous
cold, that there were ten months of winter to two
of summer; and when simply after warmth and life,
and food for them and for their flocks, they wandered
forth to found and help to found a spiritual kingdom.
And even in their migration, far back
in these dim and mystic ages, have we found the earliest
link of the long chain? Not so. What if
the legend of the change of climate be the dim recollection
of an enormous physical fact? What if it, and
the gradual depopulation of the whole north of Asia
be owing, as geologists now suspect, to the slow and
age-long uprise of the whole of Siberia, thrusting
the warm Arctic sea further and further to the northward,
and placing between it and the Highlands of Thibet
an ever-increasing breadth of icy land, destroying
animals, and driving whole races southward, in search
of the summer and the sun?
What if the first link in the chain,
as yet conceivable by man, should be the cosmic changes
in the distribution of land and water, which filled
the mouths of the Siberian rivers with frozen carcases
of woolly mammoth and rhinoceros; and those again,
doubt it not, of other revolutions, reaching back
and back, and on and on, into the infinite unknown.
Why not? For so are all human destinies
Bound with gold chains unto
the throne of God.