Introductory Lecture given at Queen’s
College, London, 1848.
An introductory lecture must, I suppose,
be considered as a sort of art-exhibition, or advertisement
of the wares hereafter to be furnished by the lecturer.
If these, on actual use, should prove to fall far
short of the promise conveyed in the programme, hearers
must remember that the lecturer is bound, even to
his own shame, to set forth in all commencements the
most perfect method of teaching which he can devise,
in order that human frailty may have something at
which to aim; at the same time begging all to consider
that in this piecemeal world, it is sufficient not
so much to have realised one’s ideal, as earnestly
to have tried to realise it, according to the measure
of each man’s gifts. Besides, what may
not be fulfilled in a first course, or in a first
generation of teachers, may still be effected by those
who follow them. It is but fair to expect that
if this Institution shall prove, as I pray God it
may, a centre of female education worthy of the wants
of the coming age, the method and the practice of
the College will be developing, as years bring experience
and wider eye-range, till we become truly able to teach
the English woman of the nineteenth century to bear
her part in an era, which, as I believe, more and
more bids fair to eclipse, in faith and in art, in
science and in polity, any and every period of glory
which Christendom has yet beheld.
The first requisite, I think, for
a modern course of English Literature is, that it
be a whole course or none. The literary education
of woman has too often fallen into the fault of our
“Elegant Extracts,” and “Beauties
of British Poetry.” It has neither begun
at the beginning nor ended at the end. The young
have been taught to admire the laurels of Parnassus,
but only after they have been clipped and pollarded
like a Dutch shrubbery. The roots which connect
them with mythic antiquity, and the fresh leaves and
flowers of the growing present, have been generally
cut off with care, and the middle part only has been
allowed to be used too often, of course,
a sufficiently tough and dry stem. This method
is no doubt easy, because it saves teachers the trouble
of investigating antiquity, and saves them too the
still more delicate task of judging contemporaneous
authors but like all half measures, it has
bred less good than evil. If we could silence
a free press, and the very free tongues of modern
society; if we could clip the busy, imaginative, craving
mind of youth on the Procrustean bed of use and wont,
the method might succeed; but we can do neither the
young will read and will hear; and the
consequence is, a general complaint that the minds
of young women are outgrowing their mothers’
guidance, that they are reading books which their
mothers never dreamt of reading, of many of which
they never heard, many at least whose good and evil
they have had no means of investigating; that the authors
which really interest and influence the minds of the
young are just the ones which have formed no part
of their education, and therefore those for judging
of which they have received no adequate rules; that,
in short, in literature as in many things, education
in England is far behind the wants of the age.
Now this is all wrong and ruinous.
The mother’s mind should be the lodestar of
the daughter’s. Anything which loosens
the bond of filial reverence, of filial resignation,
is even more destructive, if possible, to womanhood
than to manhood the certain bane of both.
And the evil fruits are evident enough self-will
and self-conceit in the less gentle, restlessness
and dissatisfaction in many of the meekest and gentlest;
talents seem with most a curse instead of a blessing;
clever and earnest young women, like young men, are
beginning to wander up and down in all sorts of eclecticisms
and dilettanteisms one year they find out
that the dark ages were not altogether barbarous,
and by a revulsion of feeling natural to youth, they
begin to adore them as a very galaxy of light, beauty,
and holiness. Then they begin to crave naturally
enough for some real understanding of this strange
ever-developing nineteenth century, some real sympathy
with its new wonders, some real sphere of labour in
it; and this drives them to devour the very newest
authors any book whatever which seems to
open for them the riddle of the mighty and mysterious
present, which is forcing itself on their attention
through every sense. And so up and down, amid
confusions and oscillations from pole to pole, and
equally eclectic at either pole, from St. Augustin
and Mr. Pugin to Goethe and George Sand, and all intensified
and coloured by that tender enthusiasm, that craving
for something to worship, which is a woman’s
highest grace, or her bitterest curse wander
these poor Noah’s doves, without either ark
of shelter or rest for the sole of their foot, sometimes,
alas! over strange ocean-wastes, into gulfs of error too
sad to speak of here and will wander
more and more till teachers begin boldly to face reality,
and interpret to them both the old and the new, lest
they misinterpret them for themselves. The educators
of the present generation must meet the cravings of
the young spirit with the bread of life, or they will
gorge themselves with poison. Telling them that
they ought not to be hungry, will not stop their hunger;
shutting our eyes to facts, will only make us stumble
over them the sooner; hiding our eyes in the sand,
like the hunted ostrich, will not hide us from the
iron necessity of circumstances, or from the Almighty
will of Him, who is saying in these days to society,
in language unmistakable: “Educate, or
fall to pieces! Speak the whole truth
to the young, or take the consequences of your cowardice!”
On these grounds I should wish to
see established in this College a really entire course
of English Literature, such as shall give correct,
reverent, and loving views of every period, from the
earliest legends and poetry of the Middle Age, up to
the latest of our modern authors, and in the case
of the higher classes, if it should hereafter be found
practicable, lectures devoted to the criticism of
such authors as may be exercising any real influence
upon the minds of English women. This, I think,
should be our ideal. It must be attempted cautiously
and step by step. It will not be attained at
the first trial, certainly not by the first lecturer.
Sufficient, if each succeeding teacher shall leave
something more taught, some fresh extension of the
range of knowledge which is thought fit for his scholars.
I said that the ages of history were
analogous to the ages of man, and that each age of
literature was the truest picture of the history of
its day; and for this very reason English literature
is the best perhaps, the only teacher of English history,
to women especially. For it seems to me that
it is principally by the help of such an extended
literary course, that we can cultivate a just and enlarged
taste, which will connect education with the deepest
feelings of the heart. It seems hardly fair,
or reasonable either, to confine the reading of the
young to any certain fancied Augustan age of authors,
I mean those of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries;
especially when that age requires, in order to appreciate
it, a far more developed mind, a far greater experience
of mankind and of the world, than falls to the lot
of one young woman out of a thousand. Strong
meat for men, and milk for babes. But why are
we to force on any age spiritual food unfitted for
it? If we do we shall be likely only to engender
a lasting disgust for that by which our pupils might
have fully profited, had they only been introduced
to it when they were ready for it. And this
actually happens with English literature: by
having the so-called standard works thrust upon them
too early, and then only in a fragmentary form, not
fresh and whole, but cut up into the very driest hay,
the young too often neglect in after-life the very
books which then might become the guides of their taste.
Hence proceed in the minds of the young sudden and
irregular révulsions of affection for different
schools of writing: and all revolutions in the
individual as well as in the nation are sure to be
accompanied by some dead loss of what has been already
gained, some disruption of feelings, some renunciation
of principles, which ought to have been preserved;
something which might have borne fruit is sure to be
crushed in the earthquake. Many before me must
surely have felt this. Do none here remember
how, when they first escaped from the dry class-drudgery
of Pope and Johnson, they snatched greedily at the
forbidden fruit of Byron, perhaps of Shelley, and sentimental
novel-writers innumerable? How when the luscious
melancholy of their morbid self-consciousness began
to pall on the appetite, they fled for refuge as suddenly
to mere poetry of description and action, to Southey,
Scott, the ballad-literature of all ages? How
when the craving returned (perhaps unconsciously to
themselves) to understand the wondrous heart of man,
they tried to satisfy it with deep draughts of Wordsworth’s
celestial and pure simplicity? How again, they
tired of that too gentle and unworldly strain, and
sought in Shakespeare something more exciting, more
genial, more rich in the facts and passions of daily
life? How even his all-embracing genius failed
to satisfy them, because he did not palpably connect
for them their fancy and their passions with their
religious faith and so they wandered out
again over the sea of literature, heaven only knows
whither, in search of a school of authors yet, alas!
unborn. For the true literature of the nineteenth
century, the literature which shall set forth in worthy
strains the relation of the two greatest facts, namely,
of the universe and of Christ, which shall transfigure
all our enlarged knowledge of science and of society,
of nature, of art, and man, with the eternal truths
of the gospel, that poetry of the future is not yet
here: but it is coming, ay even at the doors,
when this great era shall become conscious of its
high vocation, and the author too shall claim his
priestly calling, and the poets of the world, like
the kingdoms of the world, shall become the poets of
God and of His Christ.
But to return. Should we not
rather in education follow that method which Providence
has already mapped out for us? If we are bound,
as of course we are, to teach our pupils to breathe
freely on the highest mountain-peaks of Shakespeare’s
art, how can we more certainly train them to do so,
than by leading them along the same upward path by
which Shakespeare himself rose through the
various changes of taste, the gradual developments
of literature, through which the English mind had
been passing before Shakespeare’s time?
For there was a literature before Shakespeare.
Had there not been, neither would there have been
a Shakespeare. Critics are now beginning to
see that the old fancy which made Shakespeare spring
up at once, a self-perfected poet, like Minerva full-armed
from the head of Jove, was a superstition of pedants,
who neither knew the ages before the great poet, nor
the man himself, except that little of him which seemed
to square with their shallow mechanical taste.
The old fairy superstition, the old legends and ballads,
the old chronicles of feudal war and chivalry, the
earlier moralities and mysteries, and tragi-comic
attempts these were the roots of his poetic
tree they must be the roots of any literary
education which can teach us to appreciate him.
These fed Shakespeare’s youth; why should they
not feed our children’s? Why indeed?
That inborn delight of the young in all that is marvellous
and fantastic has that a merely evil root?
No surely! It is a most pure part of their spiritual
nature; a part of “the heaven which lies about
us in our infancy;” angel-wings with which the
free child leaps the prison-walls of sense and custom,
and the drudgery of earthly life like the
wild dreams of childhood, it is a God-appointed means
for keeping alive what noble Wordsworth calls
those obstinate
questionings
Of sense and outward things,
Fallings from us, vanishings;
Blank misgivings of a creature
Moving about in worlds not realised;
by which
Though inland far we be,
Our souls have sight of that immortal
sea
Which brought us hither:
Can in a moment travel thither,
And see the children sporting on the shore,
And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore.
And those old dreams of our ancestors
in the childhood of England, they are fantastic enough,
no doubt, and unreal, but yet they are most true and
most practical, if we but use them as parables and
symbols of human feeling and everlasting truth.
What, after all, is any event of earth, palpable
as it may seem, but, like them, a shadow and a ghostly
dream, till it has touched our hearts, till
we have found out and obeyed its spiritual lesson?
Be sure that one really pure legend or ballad may
bring God’s truth and heaven’s beauty more
directly home to the young spirit than whole volumes
of dry abstract didactic morality. Outward things,
beauty, action, nature, are the great problems for
the young. God has put them in a visible world,
that by what they see they may learn to know
the unseen; and we must begin to feed their
minds with that literature which deals most with visible
things, with passion manifested in action, which we
shall find in the early writing of our Middle Ages;
for then the collective mind of our nation was passing
through its natural stages of childhood and budding
youth, as every nation and every single individual
must at some time or other do; a true “young
England,” always significant and precious to
the young. I said there was a literary art before
Shakespeare an art more simple, more childlike,
more girlish as it were, and therefore all the more
adapted for young minds. But also an art most
vigorous and pure in point of style: thoroughly
fitted to give its readers the first elements of taste,
which must lie at the root of even the most complex
aesthetics. I know no higher specimens of poetic
style, considering the subject, and the belief of
the time about them, than may be found in many of
our old ballads. How many poets are there in
England now, who could have written “The Twa
Bairns,” or “Sir Patrick Spens?”
How many such histories as old William of Malmesbury,
in spite of all his foolish monk miracles? As
few now as there were then; and as for lying legends they
had their superstitions, and we have ours; and the
next generation will stare at our strange doings as
much as we stare at our forefathers. For our
forefathers they were; we owe them filial reverence,
thoughtful attention, and more we must know
them ere we can know ourselves. The only key
to the present is the past.
But I must go farther still, and after
premising that the English classics, so called, of
the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries will of course
form the bulk of the lectures, I must plead for some
instruction in the works of recent and living authors.
I cannot see why we are to teach the young about
the past and not about the present. After all,
they have to live now, and at no other time; in this
same nineteenth century lies their work: it may
be unfortunate, but we cannot help it. I do
not see why we should wish to help it. I know
no century which the world has yet seen so well worth
living in. Let us thank God that we are here
now, and joyfully try to understand where we
are, and what our work is here. As for
all superstitions about “the good old times,”
and fancies that they belonged to God, while
this age belongs only to man, blind chance, and the
Evil One, let us cast them from us as the suggestions
of an evil lying spirit, as the natural parents of
laziness, pedantry, popery, and unbelief. And
therefore let us not fear to tell our children the
meaning of this present day, and of all its different
voices. Let us not be content to say to them,
as we have been doing: “We will see you
well instructed in the past, but you must make out
the present for yourselves.” Why, if the
past is worth explaining, far more is the present the
pressing, noisy, complex present, where our work-field
lies, the most intricate of all states of society,
and of all schools of literature yet known, and therefore
the very one requiring most explanation.
How rich in strange and touching utterances
have been the last fifty years of English literature.
Do you think that God has been teaching us nothing
in them? Will He not make our children
listen to that teaching, whether we like or not?
And suppose our most modern writers had added
nothing to the stock of national knowledge, which
I most fervently deny, yet are they not actually influencing
the minds of the young? and can we prevent their doing
so either directly or indirectly? If we do not
find them right teaching about their own day, will
they not be sure to find self-chosen teachers about
it themselves, who will be almost certainly the first
who may come to hand, and therefore as likely as not
to be bad teachers? And do we not see
every day that it is just the most tender, the most
enthusiastic, the most precious spirits, who are most
likely to be misled, because their honest disgust
at the follies of the day has most utterly outgrown
their critical training? And that lazy wholesale
disapprobation of living writers, so common and convenient,
what does it do but injure all reverence for parents
and teachers, when the young find out that the poet,
who, as they were told, was a bungler and a charlatan,
somehow continues to touch the purest and noblest
nerves of their souls, and that the author who was
said to be dangerous and unchristian, somehow makes
them more dutiful, more earnest, more industrious,
more loving to the poor? I speak of actual cases.
Would to God they were not daily ones!
Is it not then the wiser, because
the more simple and trustful method, both to God and
our children, to say: “You shall read living
authors, and we will teach you how to read them; you,
like every child that is born into the world, must
eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and
evil; we will see that you have your senses exercised
to discern between that good and that evil. You
shall have the writers for whom you long, as far as
consists with common prudence and morality, and more,
you shall be taught them: all we ask of you
is to be patient and humble; believe us, you will never
really appreciate these writers, you will not even
rationally enjoy their beauties, unless you submit
to a course of intellectual training like that through
which most of them have passed, and through which
certainly this nation which produced them has passed,
in the successive stages of its growth.”
The best method, I think, of working
out these principles would be to devote a few lectures
in the last term of every complete course, to the
examination of some select works of recent writers,
chosen under the sanction of the Educational Committee.
But I must plead for whole works. “Extracts”
and “Select Beauties” are about as practical
as the worthy in the old story, who, wishing to sell
his house, brought one of the bricks to market as
a specimen. It is equally unfair on the author
and on the pupil; for it is impossible to show the
merits or demerits of a work of art, even to explain
the truth or falsehood of any particular passage,
except by viewing the book as an organic whole.
And as for the fear of raising a desire to read more
of an author than may be proper when a work
has once been pointed out as really hurtful, the rest
must be left to the best safeguard which I have yet
discovered, in man or woman the pupil’s
own honour.
Such a knowledge of English literature
would tend no less, I think, to the spread of healthy
historic views among us. The literature of every
nation is its autobiography. Even in its most
complex and artistic forms, it is still a wonderfully
artless and unconscious record of its doubts and its
faith, its sorrows and its triumphs, at each era of
its existence. Wonderfully artless and correct because
all utterances which were not faithful to their time,
which did not touch some sympathetic chord in their
heart’s souls, are pretty sure to have been
swept out into wholesome oblivion, and only the most
genuine and earnest left behind for posterity.
The history of England indeed is the literature of
England but one very different from any
school history or other now in vogue. You will
find it neither a mere list of acts of parliament
and record-office, like some; nor yet an antiquarian
gallery of costumes and armour, like others; nor a
mere war-gazette and report of killed and wounded from
time to time; least of all not a “Debrett’s
Peerage,” and catalogue of kings and queens
(whose names are given, while their souls are ignored),
but a true spiritual history of England a
picture of the spirits of our old forefathers, who
worked, and fought, and sorrowed, and died for us;
on whose accumulated labours we now here stand. That
I call a history not of one class of offices
or events, but of the living human souls of English
men and English women. And therefore one most
adapted to the mind of woman; one which will call
into fullest exercise her blessed faculty of sympathy,
that pure and tender heart of flesh, which teaches
her always to find her highest interest in mankind,
simply as mankind; to see the Divine most completely
in the human; to prefer the incarnate to the disembodied,
the personal to the abstract, the pathetic to the intellectual;
to see, and truly, in the most common tale of village
love or sorrow, a mystery deeper and more divine than
lies in all the theories of politicians or the fixed
ideas of the sage.
Such a course of history would quicken
women’s inborn personal interest in the
actors of this life-drama, and be quickened by it in
return, as indeed it ought: for it is thus that
God intended woman to look instinctively at the world.
Would to God that she would teach us men to look
at it thus likewise! Would to God that she would
in these days claim and fulfil to the uttermost her
vocation as the priestess of charity! that
woman’s heart would help to deliver man from
bondage to his own tyrannous and all-too-exclusive
brain from our idolatry of mere dead laws
and printed books from our daily sin of
looking at men, not as our struggling and suffering
brothers, but as mere symbols of certain formulae),
incarnations of sets of opinions, wheels in some iron
liberty-grinding or Christianity-spinning machine,
which we miscall society, or civilisation, or, worst
misnomer of all, the Church!
This I take to be one of the highest
aims of woman to preach charity, love,
and brotherhood: but in this nineteenth century,
hunting everywhere for law and organisation, refusing
loyalty to anything which cannot range itself under
its theories, she will never get a hearing, till her
knowledge of the past becomes more organised and methodic.
As it is now, for want of large many-sided views of
the past, her admiration is too apt to attach itself
to some two or three characters only in the hero-list
of all the ages. Then comes the temptation to
thrust aside all which interferes with her favourite
idols, and so the very heart given her for universal
sympathy becomes the organ of an exclusive bigotry,
and she who should have taught man to love, too often
only embitters his hate. I claim, therefore,
as necessary for the education of the future, that
woman should be initiated into the thoughts and feelings
of her countrymen in every age, from the wildest legends
of the past to the most palpable naturalism of the
present; and that not merely in a chronological order,
sometimes not in chronological order at all; but in
a true spiritual sequence; that knowing the hearts
of many, she may in after life be able to comfort
the hearts of all.
But there is yet another advantage
in an extended study of English literature I
mean the more national tone which it ought to give
the thoughts of the rising generation. Of course
to repress the reading of foreign books, to strive
after any national exclusiveness, or mere John-Bullism
of mind, in an age of railroads and free press, would
be simply absurd and more, it would be
fighting against the will of God revealed in events.
He has put the literary treasures of the Continent
into our hands; we must joyfully accept them, and earnestly
exhaust them. This age is craving for what it
calls catholicity; for more complete interchange and
brotherhood of thought between all the nations of
the earth. This spirit is stirring in the young
especially, and I believe that God Himself has inspired
it, because I see that He has first revealed the means
of gratifying the desire, at that very time in which
it has arisen.
But every observant person must be
aware that this tendency has produced its evils as
well as its good. There is a general complaint
that the minds of young women are becoming un-English;
that their foreign reading does not merely supply
the deficiencies of their English studies, but too
often completely supersedes them; that the whole tone
of their thoughts is too often taken from French or
German writings; that by some means or other, the
standard works of English literature are becoming
very much undervalued and neglected by the young people
of this day; and that self-will and irregular eclecticism
are the natural results.
I must say that I consider the greater
part of these evils as the natural consequence of
past mis-education; as the just punishment
of the old system, which attached the most disproportionate
importance to mere acquirements, and those mostly
of foreign languages, foreign music, and so forth,
while the “well of English undefiled,”
and not only that, but English literature, history,
patriotism, too often English religion, have been
made quite minor considerations. Therefore so
few of the young have any healthy and firm English
standard whereby to try and judge foreign thought.
Therefore they fancy, when they meet with anything
deep and attractive in foreign works, that because
they have no such thoughts put before them in English
authors, no such thoughts exist in them.
But happily we may do much towards
mending this state of things, by making our pupils
thoroughly conversant with the aesthetic treasures
of English literature. From them I firmly believe
they may derive sufficient rules whereby to separate
in foreign books the true from the false, the necessary
from the accidental, the eternal truth from its peculiar
national vesture. Above all, we shall give them
a better chance of seeing things from that side from
which God intended English women to see them:
for as surely as there is an English view of everything,
so surely God intends us to take that view; and He
who gave us our English character intends us to develop
its peculiarities, as He intends the French woman
to develop hers, that so each nation by learning to
understand itself, may learn to understand, and therefore
to profit, by its neighbour. He who has not
cultivated his own plot of ground will hardly know
much about the tillage of his neighbour’s land.
And she who does not appreciate the mind of her own
countrymen will never form any true judgment of the
mind of foreigners. Let English women be sure
that the best way to understand the heroines of the
Continent is not by mimicking them, however noble
they may be, not by trying to become a sham Rahel,
or a sham De Sevigne, but a real Elizabeth Fry, Felicia
Hemans, or Hannah More. What indeed entitles
either Madame de Sevigne or Rahel to fame, but their
very nationality that intensely local style
of language and feeling which clothes their genius
with a living body instead of leaving it in the abstractions
of a dreary cosmopolitism? The one I suppose
would be called the very beau-ideal, not of woman,
but of the French woman the other the ideal,
not even of the Jewess, but of the German Jewess.
We may admire wherever we find worth; but if we try
to imitate, we only caricature. Excellence grows
in all climes, transplants to none: the palm
luxuriates only in the tropics, the Alp-rose only
beside eternal snows. Only by standing on our
own native earth can we enjoy or even see aright the
distant stars: if we try to reach them, we shall
at once lose sight of them, and drop helpless in a
new element, unfitted for our limbs.
Teach, then, the young, by an extended
knowledge of English literature, thoroughly to comprehend
the English spirit, thoroughly to see that the English
mind has its peculiar calling on God’s earth,
which alone, and no other, it can fulfil. Teach
them thoroughly to appreciate the artistic and intellectual
excellences of their own country; but by no means
in a spirit of narrow bigotry: tell them fairly
our national faults teach them to unravel
those faults from our national virtues; and then there
will be no danger of the prejudiced English woman
becoming by a sudden revulsion an equally prejudiced
cosmopolite and eclectic, as soon as she discovers
that her own nation does not monopolise all human
perfections; and so trying to become German, Italian,
French woman, all at once a heterogeneous
chaos of imitations, very probably with the faults
of all three characters, and the graces of none.
God has given us our own prophets, our own heroines.
To recognise those prophets, to imitate those heroines,
is the duty which lies nearest to the English woman,
and therefore the duty which God intends her to fulfil.
I should wish therefore in the first
few lectures on English literature to glance at the
character of our old Saxon ancestors, and the legends
connected with their first invasion of the country;
and above all at the magnificent fables of King Arthur
and his times which exercised so great an influence
on the English mind, and were in fact, although originally
Celtic, so thoroughly adopted and naturalised by the
Saxon, as to reappear under different forms in every
age, and form the keynote of most of our fictions,
from Geoffrey of Monmouth and the medieval ballads,
up to Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, and at last Milton
and Blackmore. This series of legends will,
I think, as we trace its development, bring us in
contact one by one with the corresponding developments
of the English character; and, unless I am much mistaken,
enable us to explain many of its peculiarities.
Of course nothing more than sketches
can be given; but I think nothing more is required
for any one but the professed historian. For
young people especially, it is sufficient to understand
the tone of human feeling expressed by legends, rather
than to enter into any critical dissertations on their
historic truth. They need, after all, principles
rather than facts. To educate them truly we must
give them inductive habits of thought, and teach them
to deduce from a few facts a law which makes plain
all similar ones, and so acquire the habit of extracting
from every story somewhat of its kernel of spiritual
meaning. But again, to educate them truly we
must ourselves have faith; we must believe that in
every one there is a spiritual eye which can perceive
those great principles when they are once fairly presented
to it, that in all there are some noble instincts,
some pure yearnings after wisdom, and taste, and usefulness,
which, if we only appeal to them trustfully through
the examples of the past, and the excitements of the
present, will wake into conscious life. Above
all, both pupils and teachers must never forget that
all these things were written for their examples; that
though circumstances and creeds, schools and tastes,
may alter, yet the heart of man, and the duty of man,
remain unchanged; and that while
The old order changes, giving place to the new,
And God fulfils himself in many ways
yet again
Through the ages one unaltered purpose runs
and the principles of truth and beauty
are the same as when the everlasting Spirit from whom
they come “brooded upon the face” of the
primeval seas.
But once more, we must and will by
God’s help try to realise the purpose of this
College, by boldly facing the facts of the age and
of our own office. And therefore we shall not
shrink from the task, however delicate and difficult,
of speaking to our hearers as to women. Our
teaching must be no sexless, heartless abstraction.
We must try to make all which we tell them bear on
the great purpose of unfolding to woman her own calling
in all ages her especial calling in this
one. We must incite them to realise the chivalrous
belief of our old forefathers among their Saxon forests,
that something Divine dwelt in the counsels of woman;
but, on the other hand, we must continually remind
them that they will attain that divine instinct, not
by renouncing their sex, but by fulfilling it; by becoming
true women, and not bad imitations of men; by educating
their heads for the sake of their hearts, not their
hearts for the sake of their heads; by claiming woman’s
divine vocation, as the priestess of purity, of beauty,
and of love; by educating themselves to become, with
God’s blessing, worthy wives and mothers of a
mighty nation of workers, in an age when the voice
of the ever-working God is proclaiming through the
thunder of falling dynasties, and crumbling idols:
“He that will not work, neither shall he eat.”