was a novel undertaking in that sixth lustrum of the
past century, even by a man of Mr. Ruskin’s
eminence and fame in the world of letters. But
Mr. Ruskin was a bold and earnest man, as well as
a genius; and he had too much to tell his heedless,
laissez-faire age to keep silent on themes,
remote as they were from those he had hitherto taught,
and of which he desired to deliver his soul, whatever
ridicule it might provoke and however adverse the
criticism levelled against him. His humanity and
moral sense were outraged by the manner in which the
mass of his countrymen lived, and trenchant was his
castigation of this and eager as well as righteous
his desire to amend their condition and elevate and
inspire their minds. As an economist, it is true,
there was not a little that was false as well as eccentric
in what he preached; moreover, much of his counsel
was directly socialistic in its trend, repugnant in
large degree to his English readers and hearers; but
all this was atoned for by the honesty and philanthropy
of his motives, by his phenomenal fervor and eloquence,
and by the literary beauty and charm of every page
he wrote. Nevertheless, as in Carlyle—for
in these depreciations the style of the seer of Chelsea
was deeply upon him—the note of calamity
and the wail of despair are too much in evidence in
Ruskin’s writings at this period, while, like
Carlyle also, he was equally precipitate and impulsive
in his attacks on things as they were. Yet in
the economic condition just then of England, and in
the circumstances environing the labor world, there
was, possibly, justification for the rebukes and objurgations
of onlookers of the type of both of these men, and
very humanitarian as well as practically helpful were
Ruskin’s counsel and aid to labor and to all
who sought to raise and expand their outlook and better
their condition in life. Towards politics Ruskin
was never drawn, but had he been more prosaic and
less given to anathematizing, most valuable would
have been his aid in legislation at this era of political
and moral reform. But if political science, or
science in any other of its branches or departments,
did not come within his purview, great was the revolution
he wrought in the working-man’s surroundings,
and immense the illumination he shed upon industry
and on the spirit in which the laborer should think
and work.
Referring to Ruskin at this period of his career, and to his influence as a social and moral exhorter, Frederic Harrison, from whom we have already quoted, has an admirable passage on “Ruskin as Prophet,” [2] which, as it is presumably too little known, we take pleasure in embodying in these pages.
[Footnote 2: “Tennyson, Ruskin, Mill, and other Literary Estimates,” by Frederic Harrison; London and New York: Macmillan & Co. 1900.]