a dream that Providence has rebuked among all successive
conquerors. There may have been need of the universal
monarchy of the Caesars, that Christianity might spread
in peace, and be protected by a reign of law and order.
This at least is one of the platitudes of historians.
Froude himself harps on it in his life of Caesar.
Historians are fond of exalting the glories of imperialism,
and everybody is dazzled by the splendor and power
of ancient Roman emperors. They do not, I think,
sufficiently consider the blasting influence of imperialism
on the life of nations, how it dries up the sources
of renovation, how it necessarily withers literature
and philosophy, how nothing can thrive under it but
pomp and material glories, how it paralyzes all virtuous
impulses, how it kills all enthusiasm, how it crushes
out all hope and lofty aspirations, how it makes slaves
of its best subjects, how it fills the earth with
fear, how it drains national resources to support
standing armies, how it mocks all enterprises which
do not receive imperial approbation, how everything
is concentrated to reflect the glory of one man or
family; how impossible, under its withering shade,
is manly independence, or the free expression of opinions
or healthy growth; how it buries up, under its armies,
discontents and aspirations alike, and creates nothing
but machinery which must ultimately wear out and leave
a world in ruins, with nothing stable to take its place.
Law and order are good things, the preservation of
property is desirable, the punishment of crime is
necessary; but there are other things which are valuable
also. Nothing is so valuable as the preservation
of national life; nothing is so healthy as scope for
energies; nothing is so contemptible and degrading
as universal sycophancy to official rule. There
are no tyrants more oppressive than the tools of absolute
power. See in what a state imperialism left
the Roman Empire when it fell. There were no
rallying forces; there was no resurrection of heroes.
Vitality had fled. Where would Turkey be to-day
without the European powers, if the Sultan’s
authority were to fall? It would be in the state
of ancient Babylon or Persia when those empires fell.
There is another side to imperialism besides dreaded
anarchies. Moreover, the whole progress of civilization
has been counter to it. The fiats of eternal
justice have pronounced against it, because it is
antagonistic to the dignity of man and the triumphs
of reason. I would not fall in with the cant
of the dignity of man, because there is no dignity
to man without aid from God Almighty through His spirit
and the message he has sent in Christianity.
But there is dignity in man with the aid of a regenerating
gospel. Some people talk of the triumphs of
Christianity under the Roman emperors; but see how
rapidly it was corrupted by them when they sought
the aid of its institutions to bolster up their power.
The power of Christianity is in its truths; in its