living colors. We see them in their dress, their
feasts, their dwellings, their language, their habits,
and their manners. Amid all the changes in human
thought and in social institutions the characters
appeal to our common humanity, essentially the same
under all human conditions. The men and women
of the fourteenth century love and hate, eat and drink,
laugh and talk, as they do in the nineteenth.
They delight, as we do, in the varieties of dress,
of parade, and luxurious feasts. Although the
form of these has changed, they are alive to the same
sentiments which move us. They like fun and
jokes and amusement as much as we. They abhor
the same class of defects which disgust us,—
hypocrisies, shams, lies. The inner circle of
their friendship is the same as ours to-day, based
on sincerity and admiration. There is the same
infinite variety in character, and yet the same uniformity.
The human heart beats to the same sentiments that
it does under all civilizations and conditions of
life. No people can live without friendship
and sympathy and love; and these are ultimate sentiments
of the soul, which are as eternal as the ideas of
Plato. Why do the Psalms of David. written for
an Oriental people four thousand years ago, excite
the same emotions in the minds of the people of England
or France or America that they did among the Jews?
It is because they appeal to our common humanity,
which never changes,—the same to-day as
it was in the beginning, and will be to the end.
It is only form and fashion which change; men remain
the same. The men and women of the Bible talked
nearly the same as we do, and seem to have had as
great light on the primal principles of wisdom and
truth and virtue. Who can improve on the sagacity
and worldly wisdom of the Proverbs of Solomon?
They have a perennial freshness, and appeal to universal
experience. It is this fidelity to nature which
is one of the great charms of Shakspeare. We
quote his brief sayings as expressive of what we feel
and know of the certitudes of our moral and intellectual
life. They will last forever, under every variety
of government, of social institutions, of races, and
of languages. And they will last because these
every-day sentiments are put in such pithy, compressed,
unique, and novel form, like the Proverbs of Solomon
or the sayings of Epictetus. All nations and
ages alike recognize the moral wisdom in the sayings
of those immortal sages whose writings have delighted
and enlightened the world, because they appeal to
consciousness or experience.
Now it must be confessed that the Poetry of Chaucer does not abound in the moral wisdom and spiritual insight and profound reflections on the great mysteries of human life which stand out so conspicuously in the writings of Dante, Shakspeare, Milton, Goethe, and other first-class poets. He does not describe the inner life, but the outward habits and condition of the people of his times. He is not serious