and the late Mr. Clough. But let the mention
of Mr. Tennyson suggest such other names, and stand
as a sufficient protest against our absurd habit of
omitting such in a connection like the present.
As if, forsooth, when a writer passed into verse,
he were to be abandoned as utterly out of calculable
relationship to all on this side of the boundary, and
no account were to be taken of his thoughts and doings,
except in a kind of curious appendix at the end of
the general register? What if philosophy, at a
certain extreme range, and of a certain kind, tends
of necessity to pass into poesy, and can hardly help
being passionate and metrical? If so, might not
the omission of poets, purely as being such, from a
conspectus of the speculative writers of any time,
lead to erroneous conclusions, by giving an undue
prominence in the estimate of all such philosophizing
as could most easily, by its nature, refrain from
passionate or poetic expression? Thus, would philosophy,
or one kind of philosophy in comparison with another,
have seemed to had been in such a diminished condition
in Britain about the year 1830, if critics had been
in the habit of counting Wordsworth in the philosophic
list as well as Coleridge, Mackintosh, Bentham, and
James Mill? Was there not more of what you might
call Spinozaism in Wordsworth than even in Coleridge,
who spoke more of Spinoza? But that hardly needs
all this justification, so far as Mr. Tennyson is
concerned, of our reckoning
him in the present
list. He that would exclude In “Memoriam”
(1850) and “Maud” (1855) from the conspectus
of the philosophical literature of our time, has yet
to learn what philosophy is. Whatever else “In
Memoriam” may be, it is a manual for many of
the latest hints and questions in British Metaphysics.”
The soi-disant philosophers and classifiers of the
sciences and arts who will not permit such poets as
Shelley and Tennyson to be put in the category of
philosophers, remind one very forcibly of the passage
in Macbeth: “The earth has bubbles, as the
water has, and these are of them!”
As a poet and not as a poet, as an acknowledged legislator
for the race, as a philosopher, (a searcher after,
or lover of wisdom) and as a political and social
reformer, it is my intention to treat Shelley this
evening, and having finished my prefatory remarks,
will now regard him in those attributes which peculiarly
should enshrine him in your hearts and mine.
The philosophical theories of advanced thinkers are
always tinged with the reflex of that which called
them forth, or impeded them in their development,
consequently social bondage and the “anarch custom”
being always present to Shelley, the great idea ever
uppermost to him was that true happiness is only attainable
in perfect freedom: the atrocious system of fagging,
now almost extinct in the English Public Schools and
the tyrannical venality of ushers, deeply impressed
themselves on the mind of Shelley, and he tells us,
in the beautiful lines to his wife, of the remembrance
of his endeavors to overthrow these abominations having
failed, of flying from “the harsh and grating
strife of tyrants and of foes” and of the high
and noble resolves which inspired him: