that the sense of immortality, if not a co-existent
and twin birth with Reason, is among the earliest
of her offspring: and we may further assert,
that from these conjoined, and under their countenance,
the human affections are gradually formed and opened
out. This is not the place to enter into the
recesses of these investigations; but the subject
requires me here to make a plain avowal, that, for
my own part, it is to me inconceivable, that the sympathies
of love towards each other, which grow with our growth,
could ever attain any new strength, or even preserve
the old, after we had received from the outward senses
the impression of death, and were in the habit of having
that impression daily renewed and its accompanying
feeling brought home to ourselves, and to those we
love; if the same were not counteracted by those communications
with our internal Being, which are anterior to all
these experiences, and with which revelation coincides,
and has through that coincidence alone (for otherwise
it could not possess it) a power to affect us.
I confess, with me the conviction is absolute, that,
if the impression and sense of death were not thus
counterbalanced, such a hollowness would pervade the
whole system of things, such a want of correspondence
and consistency, a disproportion so astounding betwixt
means and ends, that there could be no repose, no joy.
Were we to grow up unfostered by this genial warmth,
a frost would chill the spirit, so penetrating and
powerful, that there could be no motions of the life
of love; and infinitely less could we have any wish
to be remembered after we had passed away from a world
in which each man had moved about like a shadow.—If,
then, in a creature endowed with the faculties of foresight
and reason, the social affections could not have unfolded
themselves uncountenanced by the faith that Man is
an immortal being; and if, consequently, neither could
the individual dying have had a desire to survive
in the remembrance of his fellows, nor on their side
could they have felt a wish to preserve for future
times vestiges of the departed; it follows, as a final
inference, that without the belief in immortality,
wherein these several desires originate, neither monuments
nor epitaphs, in affectionate or laudatory commemoration
of the deceased, could have existed in the world.
Simonides, it is related, upon landing in a strange country, found the corpse of an unknown person lying by the sea-side; he buried it, and was honoured throughout Greece for the piety of that act. Another ancient Philosopher, chancing to fix his eyes upon a dead body, regarded the same with slight, if not with contempt; saying, ’See the shell of the flown bird!’ But it is not to be supposed that the moral and tender-hearted Simonides was incapable of the lofty movements of thought, to which that other Sage gave way at the moment while his soul was intent only upon the indestructible being; nor, on the other hand, that he, in whose sight