A
noble aim,
Faithfully kept, is as a noble
deed.
Wordsworth.
To few men does life bring a brighter
day than that which places the crown upon their scholastic
labors, and bids them go forth from the halls of the
Alma Mater to the great world’s battlefield.
There is a freshness in these early triumphs which,
like the bloom and fragrance of the flower, is quickly
lost, never to be found again even by those for whom
Fortune reserves her most choice gifts. Fame,
though hymned by myriad tongues, is not so sweet as
the delight we drink from the tear-dimmed eyes of
our mothers and sisters, in the sacred hours when we
can yet claim as our own the love of higher things,
the faith and hope which make this mortal life immortal,
and fill a moment with a wealth of memories which
lasts through years. The highest joy is serious,
and in the midst of supreme delight there comes to
the soul a stillness which permits it to rise to the
serene sphere where truth is most gladly heard and
most easily perceived; and in such exaltation, the
young see that life is not what they take it to be.
They think it long; it is short. They think it
happy; it is full of cares and sorrows. This two-fold
illusion widens the horizon of life and tinges
it with gold. It gives to youth its charm and
makes of it a blessed time to which we ever turn regretful
eyes. But I am wrong to call illusion that which
in truth is but an omen of the divine possibilities
of man’s nature. To the young, life is
not mean or short, because the blessed freedom of youth
may make it noble and immortal. The young stand
upon the threshold of the world. Of the many
careers which are open to human activity, they will
choose one; and their fortunes will be various, even
though their merits should be equal. But if position,
fame, and wealth are often denied to the most persistent
efforts and the best ability, it is consoling to know
they are not the highest; and as they are not the
end of life, they should not be made its aim.
An aim, nevertheless, we must have, if we hope to
live to good purpose. All men, in fact, whether
or not they know it, have an ideal, base or lofty,
which molds character and shapes destiny. Whether
it be pleasure or gain or renown or knowledge, or several
of these, or something else, we all associate life
with some end, or ends, the attainment of which seems
to us most desirable.
This ideal, that which in our inmost
souls we love and desire, which we lay to heart and
live by, is at once the truest expression of our nature
and the most potent agency in developing its powers.
Now, in youth we form the ideals which we labor to
body forth in our lives. What in these growing
days we yearn for with all our being, is heaped upon
us in old age. All important, therefore, is the
choice of an ideal; for this more than rules or precepts
will determine what we are to become. The love
of the best is twin-born with the soul. What
is the best? What is the worthiest life-aim?
It must be something which is within the reach of
every one, as Nature’s best gifts air
and sunshine and water belong to all.
What only the few can attain, cannot be life’s
real end or the highest good. The best is not
far removed from any one of us, but is alike near
to the poor and the rich, to the learned and the ignorant,
to the shepherd and the king, and only the best can
give to the soul repose and contentment. What
then is the true life-ideal? Recalling to mind
the thoughts and theories of many men, I can find nothing
better than this, “Seek ye first the kingdom
of God.” “Love not pleasure,”
says Carlyle, “love God. This is the everlasting
Yea, wherein all contradiction is solved; wherein
whoso walks and works, it is well with him.”
To the high and aspiring heart of
youth, fame, honor, glory, appeal with such irresistible
power, and appear clad in forms so beautiful, that
at a time of life when all of us are unreal in our
sentiments and crude in our opinions, they are often
mistaken for the best. But fame is good only
in so far as it gives power for good. For the
rest, it is nominal. They who have deserved it
care not for it. A great soul is above all praise
and dispraise of men, which are ever given ignorantly
and without fine discernment. The popular breath,
even when winnowed by the winds of centuries, is hardly
pure.
And then fame cannot be the good of
which I speak, for only a very few can even hope for
it. To nearly all, the gifts which make it possible
are denied; and to others, the opportunities.
Many, indeed, love and win notoriety, but such as
they need not detain us here. A lower race of
youth, in whom the blood is warmer than the soul, think
pleasure life’s best gift, and are content to
let occasion die, while they revel in the elysium
of the senses. But to make pleasure an end is
to thwart one’s purpose, for joy is good only
when it comes unbidden. The pleasure we seek
begins already to pall. It is good, indeed, if
it come as refreshment to the weary, solace to the
heavy-hearted, and rest to the careworn; but if sought
for its own sake, it is “the honey of poison
flowers and all the measureless ill.” Only
the young, or the depraved, can believe that to live
for pleasure is not to be foreordained to misery.
Whoso loves God or freedom or growth of mind or strength
of heart, feels that pleasure is his foe.
“A king of feasts and
flowers, and wine and revel,
And love and mirth, was never
King of glory.”
Of money, as the end or ideal of life,
it should not be necessary to speak. As a fine
contempt for life, a willingness to throw it away in
defence of any just cause or noble opinion, is one
of the privileges of youth, so the generous heart
of the young holds cheap the material comforts which
money procures. To be young is to be free, to
be able to live anywhere on land or sea, in the midst
of deserts or among strange people; is to be able
to fit the mind and body to all circumstance, and
to rise almost above Nature’s iron law.
He who is impelled by this high and heavenly spirit
will dream of flying and not of hobbling through life
on golden crutches. Let the feeble and the old
put their trust in money; but where there is strength
and youth, the soul should be our guide.
And yet the very law and movement
of our whole social life seem to point to riches as
the chief good.
“What is that which
I should turn to, lighting upon days like these?
Every door is barred with
gold, and opens but to golden keys.”
Money is the god in whom we put our
trust, to whom instinctively we pay homage. We
believe that the rich are fortunate, are happy, that
the best of life has been given to them. We have
faith in the power of money, in its sovereign efficacy
to save us not only from beggary, from sneers and
insults, but we believe that it can transform us, and
take away the poverty of mind, the narrowness of heart,
the dullness of imagination, which make us weak, hard,
and common. Even our hatred of the rich is but
another form of the worship of money. The poor
think they are wretched, because they think money
the chief good; and if they are right, then is it
a holy work to strive to overthrow society as it is
now constituted. Buckle and Strauss find fault
with the Christian religion because it does not inculcate
the love of money. But in this, faith and reason
are in harmony. Wealth is not the best, and to
make it the end of life is idolatry, and as Saint
Paul declares, the root of evil. Man is more than
money, as the workman is more than his tools.
The soul craves quite other nourishment than that
which the whole material universe can supply.
Man’s chief good lies in the infinite world of
thought and righteousness. Fame and wealth and
pleasure are good when they are born of high thinking
and right living, when they lead to purer faith and
love; but if they are sought as ends and loved for
themselves, they blight and corrupt. The value
of culture is great, and the ideal it presents points
in the right direction in bidding us build up the being
which we are. But since man is not the highest,
he may not rest in himself, and culture therefore
is a means rather than an end. If we make it
the chief aim of life, it degenerates into a principle
of exclusion, destroys sympathy, and terminates in
a sort of self-worship.
What remains, then, but the ideal
which I have proposed? “Seek ye first
the Kingdom of God.” Unless the light of
Heaven fall along our way, thick darkness gathers
about us, and in the end, whatever our success may
have been, we fail, and are without God and without
hope. So long as any seriousness is left, religion
is man’s first and deepest concern; to be indifferent
is to be dull or depraved, and doubt is disease.
Difficulties assuredly there are, underlying not only
faith, but all systems of knowledge. How am I
certain that I know anything? is a question, debated
in all past time, debatable in all future time; but
we are none the less certain that we know. The
mind is governed by laws which neither science nor
philosophy can change, and while theories and systems
rise and pass away, the eternal problems present themselves
ever anew clothed in the eternal mystery. But
little discernment is needed to enable us to perceive
how poor and symbolic are the thoughts of the multitude.
Half in pity, half in contempt, we rise to higher regions
only to discover that wherever we may be there also
are the laws and the limitations of our being; and
that in whatsoever sanctuaries we may take refuge,
we are still of the crowd. We cannot grasp the
Infinite; language cannot express even what we know
of the Divine Being, and hence there remains a background
of darkness, where it is possible to adore, or to
mock. But religion dispels more mystery than it
involves. With it, there is twilight in the world;
without it, night. We are in the world to act,
not to doubt. Leaving quibbles to those who can
find no better use for life, the wise, with firm faith
in God and man, strive to make themselves worthy to
do brave and righteous work. Distrust is the last
wisdom a great heart learns; and noble natures feel
that the generous view is, in the end, the true view.
For them life means good; they find strength and joy
in this wholesome and cheerful faith, and if they are
in error, it can never be known, for if death end all,
with it knowledge ceases. Perceiving this, they
strive to gain spiritual insight, they look to God;
toward him they turn the current of their thought and
love; the unseen world of truth and beauty becomes
their home; and while matter flows on and breaks and
remakes itself to break again, they dwell in
the presence of the Eternal, and become co-workers
with the Infinite Power which makes goodness good,
and justice right. They love knowledge, because
God knows all things; they love beauty, because he
is its source; they love the soul, because it brings
man into conscious communion with him and his universe.
If their ideal is poetical, they catch in the finer
spirit of truth which the poet breathes, the fragrance
of the breath of God; if it is scientific, they discover
in the laws of Nature the harmony of his attributes;
if it is political and social, they trace the principles
of justice and liberty to him; if it is philanthropic,
they understand that love which is the basis, aim,
and end of life is also God.
The root of their being is in him,
and the illusory world of the senses cannot dim their
vision of the real world which is eternal. By
self-analysis the mind is sublimated until it becomes
a shadow in a shadowy universe; and the criticism
of the reason drives us to doubt and inaction, from
which we are redeemed by our necessary faith in our
own freedom, in our power to act, and in the duty
of acting in obedience to higher law. Knowledge
comes of doing. Never to act is never to know.
The world of which we are conscious is the world against
which we throw ourselves by the power of the will;
hence life is chiefly conduct, and its ideal is not
merely religious, but moral. The duty of obedience
to our better self determines the purpose and end
of action, for the better self is under the impulse
of God. Whether we look without or within, we
find things are as they should not be; and there awakens
the desire, nay, the demand that they be made other
and better. The actual is a mockery unless it
may be looked upon as the means of a higher state.
If all things come forth only to perish and again
come forth as they were before; if life is a monster
which destroys itself that it may again be born, again
to destroy itself, were it not better that
the tragedy should cease? For many centuries
men have been struggling for richer and happier life;
and yet when we behold the sins, the miseries, the
wrongs, the sorrows, of which the world is full, we
are tempted to think that progress means failure.
The multitude are still condemned to toil from youth
to age to provide the food by which life is kept in
the body; immortal spirits are still driven by hard
necessity to fix their thoughts upon matter from which
they with much labor dig forth what nourishes the
animal. Like the savage, we still tremble before
the pitiless might of Nature. Floods, hurricanes,
earthquakes, untimely frosts, destroy in a moment
what with long and painful effort has been provided.
Pestilence still stalks through the earth to slay and
make desolate. Each day a hundred thousand human
beings die; and how many of these perish as the victims
of sins of ignorance, of selfishness, of sensuality.
To-day, as of old, it would seem man’s
worst enemy is man. What hordes still wander
through Asia and Africa, seeking opportunity for murder
and rapine; what multitudes are still hunted like
beasts, caught and sold into slavery. In Europe
millions of men stand, arms in hand, waiting for the
slaughter. They still believe, because they were
born on different sides of a river and speak different
languages, that they are natural enemies, made to
destroy one another. And in our own country, what
other sufferings and wrongs, greed, sensuality,
injustice, deceit, make us enemies one
of another! There is a general struggle in which
each one strives to get the most, heedless of the
misery of others. We trade upon the weaknesses,
the vices, and the follies of our fellow-men; and every
attempt at reform is met by an army of upholders of
abuse. When we consider the murders, the suicides,
the divorces, the adulteries, the prostitutions,
the brawls, the drunkenness, the dishonesties, the
political and official corruptions, of which
our life is full, it is difficult to have complacent
thoughts of ourselves. Consider, too, our prisons,
our insane asylums, our poor-houses; the multitudes
of old men and women, who having worn out strength
and health in toil which barely gave them food and
raiment, are thrust aside, no longer now fit to be
bought and sold; the countless young people, who have,
as we say, been educated, but who have not been taught
the principles and habits which lead to honorable
living; the thousands in our great cities who are
driven into surroundings which pervert and undermine
character. And worse still, the good, instead
of uniting to labor for a better state of things,
misunderstand and thwart one another. They divide
into parties, are jealous and contentious, and waste
their time and exhaust their strength in foolish and
futile controversies. They are not anxious that
good be done, nor asking nor caring by whom; but they
seek credit for themselves, and while they seem to
be laboring for the general welfare, are striving
rather to satisfy their own selfish vanity.
But the knowledge of all this does
not discourage him who, guided by the light of true
ideals, labors to make reason and the will of God prevail.
If things are bad he knows they have been worse.
Never before have the faith and culture which make
us human, which make us strong and wise, been the
possession of so large a portion of the race.
Religion and civilization have diffused themselves,
from little centres from Athens and Jerusalem
and Rome until people after people, whole
continents, have been brought under their influence.
And in our day this diffusion is so rapid that it
spreads farther in a decade than formerly in centuries.
For ages, mountains and rivers and oceans were barriers
behind which tribes and nations entrenched themselves
against the human foe. But we have tunneled the
mountains; we have bridged the rivers; we have tamed
the oceans. We hitch steam and electricity to
our wagons, and in a few days make the circuit of
the globe. All lands, all seas, are open to us.
The race is getting acquainted with itself. We
make a comparative study of all literatures, of all
religions, of all philosophies, of all political systems.
We find some soul of goodness in whatever struggles
and yearnings have tried man’s heart. As
the products of every clime are carried everywhere,
like gifts from other worlds, so the highest science
and the purest religion are communicated and taught
throughout the earth: and as a result, national
prejudices and antagonisms are beginning to disappear;
wars are becoming less frequent and less cruel; established
wrongs are yielding to the pressure of opinion; privileged
classes are losing their hold upon the imagination;
and opportunity offers itself to ever-increasing numbers.
Now, in all this, what do we perceive
but the purpose of God, urging mankind to wider and
nobler life? History is his many-chambered school.
Here he has taught this lesson, and there another,
still leading his children out of the darkness of
sin and ignorance toward the light of righteousness
and love, until his kingdom come, until his will be
done on earth as it is in heaven. To believe
in God and in this divine education, and to make co-operation
with his providential guidance of the race a life-aim
is to have an ideal which is not only the highest,
but which also blends all other true ideals into harmony.
And the lovers of culture should be the first to perceive
that intellectual good is empty, illusory, unless
there be added to it the good of the heart, the good
of conscience. To live for the cultivation of
one’s mind, is, after all, to live for one’s
self, and therefore out of harmony with the eternal
law which makes it impossible for us to find ourselves
except in what is not ourselves. “It is
the capital fault of all cultivated men,” says
Goethe, “that they devote their whole energies
to the carrying out of a mere idea, and seldom or
never to the realization of practical good.”
Whatever may be said in praise of culture, of its power
to make its possessor at home in the world of the
best thought, the purest sentiment, the highest achievements
of the race; of the freedom, the mildness, the reasonableness
of the temper it begets; of its aim at completeness
and perfection, it is nevertheless true,
that if it be sought apart from faith in God and devotion
to man, its tendency is to produce an artificial and
unsympathetic character. The primal impulse of
our nature is to action; and unless we can make our
thought a kind of deed, it seems to be vain and unreal;
and unless the harmonious development of all the endowments
which make the beauty and dignity of human life, give
us new strength and will to work with God for the good
of men, sadness and a sense of failure fall upon us.
To have a cultivated mind, to be able to see things
on many sides, to have wide sympathy and the power
of generous appreciation, is most desirable,
and without something of all this, not only is our
life narrow and uninteresting, but our energy is turned
in wrong directions, and our very religion is in danger
of losing its catholicity.
Culture, then, is necessary.
We need it as a corrective of the tendency to seek
the good of life in what is external, as a means of
helping us to overcome our vulgar self-complacency,
our satisfaction with low aims and cheap accomplishments,
our belief in the sovereign potency of machines and
measures. We need it to make our lives less unlovely,
less hard, less material; to help us to understand
the idolatry of the worship of steam and electricity,
the utter insufficiency of the ideals of industrialism.
But if culture is to become a mighty transforming
influence it must be wedded to religious faith, without
which, while it widens the intellectual view, it weakens
the will to act. To take us out of ourselves
and to urge us on to labor with God that we may leave
the world better because we have lived, religion alone
has power. It gives new vigor to the cultivated
mind; it takes away the exclusive and fastidious temper
which a purely intellectual habit tends to produce;
it enlarges sympathy; it teaches reverence; it nourishes
faith, inspires hope, exalts the imagination, and
keeps alive the fire of love. To lead a noble,
a beautiful, and a useful life, we should accept and
follow the ideals both of religion and of culture.
In the midst of the transformations of many kinds
which are taking place in the civilized world, neither
the uneducated nor the irreligious mind can be of help.
Large and tolerant views are necessary; but not less
so is the enthusiasm, the earnestness, the charity
of Christian faith. They who are to be leaders
in the great movements upon which we have entered,
must both know and believe. They must understand
the age, must sympathize with whatever is true and
beneficent in its aspirations, must hail with thankfulness
whatever help science, and art, and culture can bring;
but they must also know and feel that man is of the
race of God, and that his real and true life is in
the unseen, infinite, and eternal world of thought
and love, with which the actual world of the senses
must be brought into ever-increasing harmony.
Liberty and equality are good, wealth is good, and
with them we can do much, but not all that needs to
be done. The spirit of Christ is not merely the
spirit of liberty and equality; it is more essentially
the spirit of love, of sympathy, of goodness; and
this spirit must breathe upon our social life until
it becomes as different from what it is as is fragrant
spring from cheerless winter. Sympathy must become
universal; not merely as a sentiment prompting to
deeds of helpfulness and mercy, but as the informing
principle of society until it attains such perfectness
that whatever is loss or gain for one, shall be felt
as loss or gain for all. The narrow, exclusive
self must lose itself in wider aims, in generous deeds,
in the comprehensive love of God and man. The
good must no longer thwart one another; the weak must
be protected; the wicked must be surrounded by influences
which make for righteousness; and the forces of Nature
itself must more and more be brought under man’s
control. Pestilence and famine must no longer
bring death and desolation; men must no longer drink
impure water and adulterated liquors, no longer must
they breathe the poisonous air of badly constructed
houses; dwellings which are now made warm in winter,
must be made cool in summer; miasmatic swamps must
be drained; saloons, which stand like painted harlots
to lure men to sin and death, must be closed.
Women must have the same rights and privileges as
men; children must no longer be made the victims of
mammon and offered in sacrifice in his temple, the
factory; ignorance, which is the most fruitful cause
of misery, must give place to knowledge; war must
be condemned as public murder, and our present system
of industrial competition must be considered worse
than war; the social organization, which makes the
few rich, and dooms the many to the slavery of poorly
paid toil, must cease to exist; and if the political
state is responsible for this cruelty, it must find
a remedy, or be overthrown; society must be made to
rest upon justice and love, without which it is but
organized wrong. These principles must so thoroughly
pervade our public life that it can no more be the
interest of any one to wrong his fellow, to grow rich
at the cost of the poverty and misery of another.
Life must be prolonged both by removing many of the
physical causes of death, and by making men more rational
and religious, more willing and able to deny themselves
those indulgences which are but a kind of slow suicide.
Never before have questions so vast,
so complex, so pregnant with meaning, so fraught with
the promise of good, presented themselves; and it
can hardly be vanity or conceit which prompts us to
believe that in this mighty movement toward a social
life in harmony with our idea of God and with the
aspirations of the soul, America is the divinely appointed
leader. But if this faith is not to be a mere
delusion, it must become for the best among us the
impulse to strong and persevering effort. Not
by millionaires and not by politicians shall this salvation
be wrought; but by men who to pure religion add the
best intellectual culture. The American youth
must learn patience; he must acquire that serene confidence
in the power of labor, which makes workers willing
to wait. He must not, like a foolish child, rush
forward to pluck the fruit before it is ripe, lest
this be his epitaph: The promise of his early
life was great, his performance insignificant.
Do not our young men lack noble ambition?
Are they not satisfied with low aims? To be a
legislator; to be a governor; to be talked about; to
live in a marble house, seems to them a
thing to be desired. Unhappy youths from whom
the power and goodness of life are hidden, who, standing
in the presence of the unseen, infinite world of truth
and beauty, can only dream some aldermanic nightmare.
They thrust themselves into the noisy crowd, and are
thrown into contact with disenchanting experience
at a time of life when the mind and heart should draw
nourishment and wisdom from communion with God and
with great thoughts. Amid the universal clatter
of tongues, and in the overflowing ceaseless stream
of newspaper gossip, the soul is bewildered and stifled.
In a blatant land, the young should learn to be silent.
The noblest minds are fashioned in secrecy, through
long travail like,
“Wines that, Heaven
knows where,
Have sucked the fire of some
forgotten sun
And kept it thro’ a
hundred years of gloom
Yet glowing in a heart of
ruby.”
Is it not worth the labor and expectation
of a life-time to be able to do, even once, the right
thing excellently well? The eager passion for
display, the desire to speak and act in the eyes of
the world, is boyish. Will is concentration,
and a great purpose works in secrecy. Oh, the
goodness and the seriousness of life, the illimitable
reach of achievement, which it opens to the young
who have a great heart and noble aims! With them
is God’s almighty power and love, and his very
presence is hidden from them by a film only. From
this little islet they look out upon infinite worlds;
heaven bends over them, and earth bears them up as
though it would have them fly. How is it possible
to remain inferior when we believe in God and know
that this age is the right moment for all high and
holy work? The yearning for guidance has never
been so great. We have reached heights where the
brain swims, and thoughts are confused, and it is
held to be questionable whether we are to turn backward
or to move onward to the land of promise; whether we
are to be overwhelmed by the material world which we
have so marvelously transformed, or with the aid of
the secrets we have learned, are to rise Godward to
a purer and fairer life of knowledge, justice, and
love.
Is the material progress of the nineteenth
century a cradle or a grave? Are we to continue
to dig and delve and peer into matter until God and
the soul fade from our view and we become like the
things we work in? To put such questions to the
multitude were idle. There is here no affair
of votes and majorities. Human nature has not
changed, and now, as in the past, crowds follow leaders.
What the best minds and the most energetic characters
believe and teach and put in practice, the millions
will come to accept. The doubt is whether the
leaders will be worthy, the real permanent
leaders, for the noisy apparent leaders can never
be so. And here we touch the core of the problem
which Americans have to solve. No other people
has such numbers who are ready to thrust themselves
forward as leaders, no other has so few who are really
able to lead. In mitigation of this fact, it
may be said with truth, that nowhere else is it so
difficult to lead; for nowhere else does force rule
so little. Every one has opinions; the whole nation
is awakened; thousands are able to discuss any subject
with plausibility; and to be simply keen-witted and
versatile is to be of the crowd. We need men
whose intellectual view embraces the history of the
race, who are familiar with all literature, who have
studied all social movements, who are acquainted with
the development of philosophic thought, who are not
blinded by physical miracles and industrial wonders,
but know how to appreciate all truth, all beauty,
all goodness. And to this wide culture they must
join the earnestness, the confidence, the charity,
and the purity of motive which Christian faith inspires.
We need scholars who are saints, and saints who are
scholars. We need men of genius who live for
God and their country; men of action who seek for light
in the company of those who know; men of religion
who understand that God reveals himself in science,
and works in Nature as in the soul of man, for the
good of those who love him. Let us know the right
moment, and let us know that it comes for those alone
who are prepared.