Our Stage and Its Critics eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about Our Stage and Its Critics.

Our Stage and Its Critics eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about Our Stage and Its Critics.

Dr. Draper writes as follows:  “We are, as we often say, the creatures of circumstances.  In that expression there is a higher philosophy than might at first appear.  From this more accurate point of view we should therefore consider the course of these events, recognizing the principle that the affairs of men pass forward in a determinate way, expanding and unfolding themselves.  And hence we see that the things of which we have spoken as if they were matters of choice, were in reality forced upon their apparent authors by the necessity of the times.  But in truth they should be considered as the presentation of a certain phase of life which nations in their onward course sooner or later assume.  To the individual, how well we know that a sober moderation of action, an appropriate gravity of demeanor, belonging to the mature period of life, change from the wanton willfulness of youth, which may be ushered in, or its beginnings marked by many accidental incidents; in one perhaps by domestic bereavements, in another by the loss of fortune, in a third by ill-health.  We are correct enough in imputing to such trials the change of character; but we never deceive ourselves by supposing that it would have failed to take place had these incidents not occurred.  There runs an irresistible destiny in the midst of these vicissitudes.  There are analogies between the life of a nation, and that of an individual, who, though he may be in one respect the maker of his own fortunes, for happiness or for misery, for good or for evil, though he remains here or goes there as his inclinations prompt, though he does this or abstains from that as he chooses, is nevertheless held fast by an inexorable fate—­a fate which brought him into the world involuntarily, so far as he was concerned, which presses him forward through a definite career, the stages of which are absolutely invariable,—­infancy, childhood, youth, maturity, old age, with all their characteristic actions and passions,—­and which removes him from the scene at the appointed time, in most cases against his will.  So also is it with nations; the voluntary is only the outward semblance, covering but hardly hiding the predetermined.  Over the events of life we may have control, but none whatever over the law of its progress.  There is a geometry that applies to nations an equation of their curve of advance.  That no mortal man can touch.”

This remarkable passage, just quoted, shows how the close observers of history note the rise and fall of the tides of human race progress, although ignorant of the real underlying causing energy or force.  A study of the Occult Teachings alone gives one the hidden secret of human actions and throws the bright light of Truth upon the dark corners of phenomena.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Stage and Its Critics from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.