of selfish prudence; yet his hope was steadfast, like
that hope which rests on the Rock of Ages, and his
conduct was as unerring as though the light that led
him was a light from heaven. He never anticipated
action by theories of self-sacrificing virtue; and
yet, in the moments of intense activity, he from the
abodes of ideal truth brought down and applied to
the affairs of life the principles of goodness, as
unostentatiously as became the man who with a kite
and hempen string drew lightning from the skies.
He separated himself so little from his age that he
has been called the representative of materialism;
and yet, when he thought on religion, his mind passed
beyond reliance on sects to faith in God; when he wrote
on politics, he founded freedom on principles that
know no change; when he turned an observing eye on
nature, he passed from the effect to the cause, from
individual appearances to universal laws; when he reflected
on history, his philosophic mind found gladness and
repose in the clear anticipation of the progress of
humanity.
End of Volume III.