AN ADDRESS INTRODUCTORY
TO THE FRANKLIN LECTURES,
DELIVERED AT BOSTON, SEPT., 1838
This Address was intended to make two
lectures; but the author was led to abridge it and deliver it as one, partly
by the apprehension, that some passages were too abstract for a popular
address, partly to secure the advantages of presenting the whole subject at
once and in close connexion, and for other reasons which need not be named.
Most of the passages which were omitted, are now published. The author
respectfully submits the discourse to those for whom it was particularly
intended, and to the public, in the hope, that it will at least bring a
great subject before the minds of some, who may not as yet have given to it
the attention it deserves.
My Respected Friends:
By the invitation of the committee of arrangements for the Franklin
Lectures, I now appear before you to offer some remarks introductory to this
course. I My principal inducement for doing so is my deep interest in those
of my fellow-citizens, for whom these lectures are principally designed. I
understood that they were to be attended chiefly by those who are occupied
by manual labor; and, hearing this, I did not feel myself at liberty to
decline the service to which I had been invited. I wished by compliance to
express my sympathy with this large portion of my race. I wished to express
my sense of obligation to those, from whose industry and skill I derive
almost all the comforts of life. I wished still more to express my joy in
the efforts they are making for their own improvement, and my firm faith in
their success. These motives will give a particular character and bearing to
some of my remarks. I shall speak occasionally as among those who live by
the labor of their hands . But I shall not speak as one separated from them.
I belong rightfully to the great fraternity of working men. Happily in this
community we all are bred and born to work; and this honorable mark, set on
us all, should bind together the various portions of the community.
I have expressed my strong interest in the
mass of the people; and this is founded, not on their usefulness to the
community, so much as on what they are in themselves. Their condition is
indeed obscure; but their importance is not on this account a whit the less.
The multitude of men cannot, from the nature of the case, be distinguished;
for the very idea of distinction is, that a man stands out from the
multitude. They make little noise and draw little notice in their narrow
spheres of action; but still they have their full proportion of personal
worth and even of greatness. Indeed every man, in every condition, is great.
It is only our own diseased sight which makes him little. A man is great as
a man, be he where or what he may. The grandeur of his nature turns to
insignificance all outward distinctions. His powers of intellect, of
conscience, of love, of knowing God, of perceiving the beautiful, of acting
on his own mind, on outward nature, and on his fellow-creatures, these are
glorious prerogatives. Through the vulgar error of undervaluing what is
common, we are apt indeed to pass these by as of little worth. But as in the
outward creation, so in the soul, the common is the most precious. Science
and art may invent splendid modes of illuminating the apartments of the
opulent; but these are all poor and worthless, compared with the common
light which the sun sends into all our windows, which he pours freely,
impartially over hill and valley, which kindles daily the eastern and
western sky; and so the common lights of reason, and conscience, and love,
are of more worth and dignity than the rare endowments which give celebrity
to a few. Let us not disparage that nature which is common to all men; for
no thought can measure its grandeur. It is the image of God, the image even
of his infinity, for no limits can be set to its unfolding. He who possesses
the divine powers of the soul is a great being, be his place what it may.
You may clothe him with- rags, may immure him in a dungeon, may chain him to
slavish tasks. But he is still great. You may shut him out of your houses;
but God opens to him heavenly mansions. He makes no show indeed in the
streets of a splendid city; but a clear thought, a pure affection, a
resolute act of a virtuous will, have a dignity of quite another kind and
far higher than accumulations of brick and granite and plaster and stucco,
however cunningly put together, or though stretching far beyond our sight.
Nor is this all. If we pass over this grandeur of our common nature, and
turn our thoughts to that comparative greatness, which draws chief
attention, and which consists in the decided superiority of the individual
to the general standard of power and character, we shall find this as free
and frequent a growth among the obscure and unnoticed as in more conspicuous
walks of life. The truly great are to be found everywhere, nor is it easy to
say, in what condition they spring up most plentifully. Real greatness has
nothing to do with a man's sphere. It does not lie in the magnitude of his
outward agency, in the extent of the effects which he produces. The greatest
men may do comparatively little abroad. Perhaps the greatest in our city at
this moment are buried in obscurity. Grandeur of character lies wholly in
force of soul, that is, in the force of thought, moral principle, and love,
and this may be found in the humblest condition of life. A man brought up to
an obscure trade, and hemmed in by the wants of a growing family, may, in
his narrow sphere, perceive more clearly, discriminate more keenly, weigh
evidence more wisely, seize on the right means more decisively, and have
more presence of mind in difficulty, than another who has accumulated vast
stores of knowledge by laborious study; and he has more of intellectual
greatness. Many a man, who has gone but a few miles from home, understands
human nature better, detects motives and weighs character more sagaciously,
than another, who has travelled over the known world, and made a name by his
reports of different countries. It is force of thought which measures
intellectual, and so it is force of principle which measures moral
greatness, that highest of human endowments, that brightest manifestation of
the Divinity. The greatest man is he who chooses the Right with invincible
resolution, who resists the sorest temptations from within and without, who
bears the heaviest burdens cheerfully, who is calmest in storms and most
fearless under menace and frowns, whose reliance on truth, on virtue, on
God, is most unfaltering; and is this a greatness, which is apt to make a
show, or which is most likely to abound in conspicuous station? The solemn
conflicts of reason with passion; the victories of moral and religious
principle over urgent and almost irresistible solicitations to
self-indulgence; the hardest sacrifices of duty, those of deep-seated
affection and of the heart's fondest hopes; the consolations, hopes, joys,
and peace, of disappointed, persecuted, scorned, deserted virtue; these are
of course unseen; so that the true greatness of human life is almost wholly
out of sight. Perhaps in our presence, the most heroic deed on earth is done
in some silent spirit, the loftiest purpose cherished, the most generous
sacrifice made, and we do not suspect it. I believe this greatness to be
most common among the multitude, whose names are never heard. Among common
people will be found more of hardship borne manfully, more of unvarnished
truth, more of religious trust, more of that generosity which gives what the
giver needs himself, and more of a wise estimate of life and death, than
among the more prosperous.-And even in regard to influence over other
beings, which is thought the peculiar prerogative of distinguished station,
I believe, that the difference between the conspicuous and the obscure does
not amount to much. Influence is to be measured, not by the extent of
surface it covers, but by its kind. A man may spread his mind, his
feelings, and opinions, through a great extent; but if his mind be a low
one, he manifests no greatness. A wretched artist may fill a city with
daubs, and by a false, showy style achieve a reputation; but the man of
genius, who leaves behind him one grand picture, in which immortal beauty is
embodied, and which is silently to spread a true taste in his art, exerts an
incomparably higher influence. Now the noblest influence on earth is that
exerted on character; and he who puts forth this, does a great work, no
matter how narrow or obscure his sphere. The father and mother of an
unnoticed family, who, in their seclusion, awaken the mind of one child to
the idea and love of perfect goodness, who awaken in him a strength of will
to repel all temptation, and who send him out prepared to profit by the
conflicts of life, surpass in influence a Napolean breaking the world to his
sway. And not only is their work higher in kind; who knows, but that they
are doing a greater work even as to extent or surface than the conqueror?
Who knows, but that the being, whom they inspire with holy and disinterested
principles, may communicate himself to others; and th will see why I
feel and express a deep interest in the obscure, in the mass of men. The
distinctions of society vanish before the light of these truths. I attach
myself to the multitude, not because they are voters and have political
power; but because they are men, and have within their reach the most
glorious prizes of humanity.
In this country the mass of the people are
distinguished by possessing means of improvement, of self-culture, possessed
nowhere else. To incite them to the use of these, is to render them the best
service they can receive. Accordingly I have chosen for the subject of this
lecture, Self-culture, or the care which every man owes to himself, to the
unfolding and perfecting of his nature. I consider this topic as
particularly appropriate to the introduction of a course of lectures, in
consequence of a common disposition to regard these and other like means of
instruction, as able of themselves to carry forward the hearer. Lectures
have their use. They stir up many, who, but for such outward appeals, might
have slumbered to the end of life. But let it be remembered, that little is
to be gained simply by coming to this place once a-week, and giving up the
mind for an hour to be wrought upon by a teacher. Unless we are roused to
act upon ourselves, unless we engage in the work of self-improvement, unless
we purpose strenuously to form and elevate our own minds, unless what we
hear is made a part of ourselves by conscientious reflection, very little
permanent good is received.
Self-culture, I am aware, is a topic too
extensive for a single discourse, and I shall be able to present but a few
views which seem to me most important. My aim will be, to give first the
Idea of self-culture, next its Means, and then to consider some objections
to the leading views which I am now to lay before you.
Before entering on the discussion, let me
offer one remark. Self-culture is something possible. It is not a dream. It
has foundations in our nature. Without this conviction, the speaker will but
declaim, and the hearer listen without profit. There are two powers of the
human soul which make self-culture possible, the self-searching and the
self-forming power. We have first the faculty of turning the mind on itself,
of recalling its past, and watching its present operations; of learning its
various capacities and susceptibilities; what it can do and bear, what it
can enjoy and suffer; and of thus learning in general what our nature is,
and what it was made for. It is worthy of observation, that we are able to
discern not only what we already are, but what we may become, to see in
ourselves germs and promises of a growth to which no bounds can be set, to.
dart beyond what we have actually gained to the idea of Perfection as the
end of our being. It is by this self-comprehending power that we are
distinguished from the brutes, which give no signs of looking into
themselves. Without this there would be no self-culture, for we should not
know the work to be done; and one reason why self-culture is so little
proposed is, that so few penetrate into their own nature. To most men, their
own spirits are shadowy, unreal, compared with what is outward. When they
happen to cast a glance inward, they see there only a dark, vague chaos.
They distinguish perhaps some violent passion, which has driven them to
injurious excess; but their highest powers hardly attract a thought; and
thus multitudes live and die as truly strangers to themselves, as to
countries of which they have heard the name, but which human foot has never
trodden.
But self-culture is possible, not only
because we can enter into and search ourselves. We have a still nobler
power, that of acting on, determining and forming ourselves. This is a
fearful as well as glorious endowment, for it is the ground of human
responsibility. We have the power not only of tracing our powers, but of
guiding and impelling them; not only of watching our passions, but of
controlling them; not only of seeing our faculties grow, but of applying to
them means and influences to aid their growth. We can stay or change the
current of thought. We can concentrate the intellect on objects which we
wish to comprehend. We can fix our eyes on perfection, and make almost
everything speed us toward it. This is indeed a noble prerogative of our
nature. Possessing this, it matters little what or where we are now, for we
can conquer a better lot, and even be happier for starting from the lowest
point. Of all the discoveries which men need to make, the most important at
the present moment, is that of the self-forming power treasured up in
themselves. They little suspect its extent, as little as the savage
apprehends the energy which the mind is created to exert on the material
world. It transcends in importance all our power over outward nature. There
is more of divinity in it, than in the force which impels the outward
universe; and yet how little we comprehend it! How it slumbers in most men
unsuspected, unused! This makes self-culture possible, and binds it on us as
a solemn duty.
1. 1 am first to unfold the idea of
self-culture; and this, in its most general form, may easily be seized. To
cultivate any thing, be it a plant, an animal, a mind, is to make grow.
Growth, expansion is the end. Nothing admits culture, but that which has a
principle of life, capable of being expanded. He, therefore, who does what
he can to unfold all his powers and capacities, especially his nobler ones,
so as to become a well proportioned, vigorous, excellent, happy being,
practises self-culture.
This culture, of course, has various
branches corresponding to the different capacities of human nature; but,
though various, they are intimately united and make progress together. The
soul, which our philosophy divides into various capacities, is still one
essence, one life; and it exerts at the same moment, and blends in the same
act, its various energies of thought, feeling, and volition. Accordingly, in
a wise self-culture, all the principles of our nature grow at once by joint,
harmonious action, just as all parts of the plant are unfolded together .2
When therefore you hear of different branches of self-improvement, you will
not think of them as distinct processes going on independently of each
other, and requiring each its own separate means. Still a distinct
consideration of these is needed to a full comprehension of the subject, and
these I shall proceed to unfold.
First, self-culture is Moral, a branch of
singular importance. When a man looks into himself, he discovers two
distinct orders or kinds of principles, which it behoves him especially to
comprehend. He discovers desires, appetites, passions, which terminate in
himself, which crave and seek his own interest, gratification, distinction;
and he discovers another principle, an antagonist to these, which is
Impartial, Disinterested, Universal, enjoining on him a regard to the rights
and happiness of other beings, and laying on him obligations which must
be discharged, cost what they may, or however they may clash with his
particular pleasure or gain. No man, however narrowed to his own interest,
however hardened by selfishness, can deny, that there springs up within him
a great idea in opposition to interest, the idea of Duty, that an inward
voice calls him more or less distinctly, to revere and exercise Impartial
Justice, and Universal Good-will. This disinterested principle in human
nature we call sometimes reason, sometimes conscience, sometimes the moral
sense or faculty. But, be its name what it may, it is a real principle in
each of us, and it is the supreme power within us, to be cultivated above
all others, for on its culture the right developement of all others depends
.3 The passions indeed may be stronger than the conscience, may lift up a
louder voice; but their clamor differs wholly from the tone of command in
which the conscience speaks. They are not clothed with its authority, its
binding power. In their very triumphs they are rebuked by the moral
principle, and often cower before its still, deep, menacing voice. No part
of self-knowledge is more important than to discern clearly these two great
principles, the self-seeking and the disinterested; and the most important
part of self-culture is to depress the former, and to exalt the latter, or
to enthrone the sense of duty within us. There are no limits to the growth
of this moral force in man, if he will cherish it faithfully. There have
been men, whom no power in the universe could turn from the Right, by whom
death in its most dreadful forms has been less dreaded, than transgression
of the inward law of universal justice and love.
In the next place, self-culture is
Religious. When we look into ourselves, we discover powers, which link us
with this outward, visible, finite, ever-changing world. We have sight and
other senses to discern, and limbs and various faculties to secure and
appropriate the material creation. And we have, too, a power, which cannot
stop at what we see and handle, at what exists within the bounds of space
and time, which seeks for the Infinite, Uncreated Cause, which cannot rest
till it ascend to the Eternal, All-comprehending Mind. This we call the
religious principle, and its grandeur cannot be exaggerated by human
language; for it marks out a being destined for higher communion than with
the visible universe. To develope this, is eminently to educate ourselves.
The true idea of God, unfolded clearly and livingly within us, and moving us
to adore and obey him, and to aspire after likeness to him, is the noblest
growth in human, and, I may add, in celestial natures. The religious
principle, and the moral, are intimately connected, and grow together. The
former is indeed the perfection and highest manifestation of the latter.
They are both disinterested. It is the essence of true religion to recognise
and adore in God the attributes of Impartial Justice and Universal Love, and
to hear him commanding us in the conscience to become what we adore.
Again. Self-culture is Intellectual. We
cannot look into ourselves without discovering the intellectual principle,
the power which thinks, reasons, and judges, the power of seeking and
acquiring truth. This, indeed, we. are in no danger of overlooking. The
intellect being the great instrument by which men compass their wishes, it
draws more attention than any of our other powers. When we speak to men of
improving themselves, the first thought which occurs to them is, that they
must cultivate their understanding, and get knowledge and skill. By
education, men mean almost exclusively intellectual training. For this,
schools and colleges are instituted, and to this the moral and religious
discipline of the young is sacrificed. Now I reverence, as much as any man,
the intellect; but let us never exalt it above the moral principle. With
this it is most intimately connected. In this its culture is founded, and to
exalt this is its highest aim. Whoever desires that his intellect may grow
up to soundness, to healthy vigor, must begin with moral discipline. Reading
and study are not enough to perfect the power of thought. One thing above
all is needful, and that is, the Disinterestedness which is the very soul of
virtue. To gain truth, which is the great object of the understanding, I
must seek it disinterestedly. Here is the first and grand condition of
intellectual progress. I must choose to receive the truth, no matter how it
bears on myself. I must follow it, no matter where it leads, what interests
it opposes, to what persecution or loss it lays me open, from what party it
severs me, or to what party it allies. Without this fairness of mind, which
is only another phrase for disinterested love of truth, great native powers
of understanding are perverted and led astray; genius runs wild; "the light
within us becomes darkness. 114 The subtilest reasoners, for want of this,
cheat themselves as well as others, and become entangled in the web of their
own sophistry. It is a fact well known in the history of science and
philosophy, that men, gifted by nature with singular intelligence, have
broached the grossest errors, and even sought to undermine the grand
primitive truths on which human virtue, dignity, and hope depend. And, on
the other hand, I have known instances of men of naturally moderate powers
of mind, who, by a disinterested love of truth and their fellow-creatures,
have gradually risen to no small force and enlargement of thought. Some of
the most useful teachers in the pulpit and in schools, have owed their power
of enlightening others, not so much to any natural superiority, as to the
simplicity, impartiality, and disinterestedness of their minds, to their
readiness to live and die for the truth. A man, who rises above himself,
looks from an eminence on nature and providence, on society and life.
Thought expands, as by a natural elasticity, when the pressure of
selfishness is removed. The moral and religious principles of the soul,
generously cultivated, fertilize the intellect. Duty, faithfully performed,
opens the mind to truth, both being of one family, alike immutable,
universal, and everlasting.
I have enlarged on this subject, because
the connexion between moral and intellectual culture is often overlooked,
and because the former is often sacrificed to the latter. The exaltation of
talent, as it is called, above virtue and religion, is the curse of the age.
Education is now chiefly a stimulus to learning, and thus men acquire power
without the principles which alone make it a good. Talent is worshipped;
but, if divorced from rectitude, it will prove more of a demon than a god.
Intellectual culture consists, not
chiefly, as many are apt to think, in accumulating information, though this
is important, but in building up a force of thought which may be turned at
will on any subjects, on which we are called to pass judgment. This force is
manifested in the concentration of the attention, in accurate, penetrating
observation, in reducing complex subjects to their elements, in diving
beneath the effect to the cause, in detecting the more subtile differences
and resemblances of things, in reading the future in the present, and
especially in rising from particular facts to general laws or universal
truths. This last exertion of the intellect, its rising to broad views and
great principles, constitutes what is called the philosophical mind, and is
especially worthy of culture. What it means, your own observation must have
taught you. You must have taken note of two classes of men, the one always
employed on details, on particular facts, and the other using these facts as
foundations of higher, wider truths. The latter are philosophers. For
example, men had for ages seen pieces of wood, stones, metals falling to the
ground. Newton seized on these particular facts, and rose to the idea, that
all matter tends, or is attracted, towards all matter, and then defined the
law according to which this attraction or force acts at different distances,
thus giving us a grand principle, which, we have reason to think, extends to
and controls the whole outward creation. One man reads a history, and can
tell you all its events, and there stops. Another combines these events,
brings them under one
view, and learns the great causes which
are at work on this or another nation, and what are its great tendencies,
whether to freedom or despotism, to one or another form of civilization. So,
one man talks continually about the particular actions of this or another
neighhour; whilst another looks beyond the acts to the inward principle from
which they spring, and gathers from them larger views of human nature. In a
word, one man sees all things apart and in fragments, whilst another strives
to discover the harmony, connexion, unity of all. One of the great evils of
society is, that men, occupied perpetually with petty details, want general
truths, want broad and fixed principles. Hence many, not wicked, are
unstable, habitually inconsistent, as if they were overgrown children rather
than men. To build up that strength of mind, which apprehends and cleaves to
great universal truths, is the highest intellectual self-culture; and here I
wish you to observe how entirely this culture agrees with that of the moral
and the religious principles of our nature, of which I have previously
spoken. In each of these, the improvement of the soul consists in raising it
above what is narrow, particular, individual, selfish, to the universal and
unconfined. To improve a man, is to liberalize, enlarge him in thought,
feeling, and purpose. Narrowness of intellect and heart, this is the
degradation from which all culture aims to rescue the human being.
Again. Self-culture is social, or one of
its great offices is to unfold and purify the affections, which spring up
instinctively in the human breast, which bind together husband and wife,
parent and child, brother and sister; which bind a man to friends and
neighbours, to his country, and to the suffering who fall under his eye,
wherever they belong. The culture of these is an important part of our work,
and it consists in converting them from instincts into principles, from
natural into spiritual attachments, in giving them a rational, moral, and
holy character. For example, our affection for our children is at first
instinctive; and if it continue such, it rises little above the brute's
attachment to its young. But when a parent infuses into his natural love for
his offspring, moral and religious principle, when he comes to regard his
child as an intelligent, spiritual, immortal being, and honors him as such,
and desires first of all to make him disinterested, noble, a worthy child of
God and the friend of his race, then the instinct rises into a generous and
holy sentiment. It resembles God's paternal love for his spiritual family. A
like purity and dignity we must aim to give to all our affections.
Again. Self-culture is Practical, or it
proposes, as one of its
chief ends, to fit us for action, to make
us efficient in whatever we undertake, to train us to firmness of purpose
and to fruitfulness of resource in common life, and especially in
emergencies, in times of difficulty, danger, and trial. But passing over
this and other topics for which I have no time, I shall confine myself to
two branches of self-culture which have been almost wholly overlooked in the
education of the people, and which ought not to be so slighted.
In looking at our nature, we discover,
among its admirable endowments, the sense or perception of Beauty. We see
the germ of this in every human being, and there is no power which admits
greater cultivation; and why should it not be cherished in all? It deserves
remark, that the provision for this principle is infinite in the universe.
There is but a very minute portion of the creation which we can turn into
food and clothes, or gratification for the body; but the whole creation may
be used to minister to the sense of beauty. Beauty is an all-pervading
presence. It unfolds in the numberless flowers of the spring. It waves in
the branches of the trees and the green blades of grass. It haunts the
depths of the earth and sea, and gleams out in the hues of the shell and the
precious stone. And not only these minute objects, but the ocean, the
mountains, the clouds, the heavens, the stars, the rising and setting sun,
all overflow with beauty. The universe is its temple; and those men, who are
alive to it, cannot lift their eyes without feeling themselves encompassed
with it on every side. Now this beauty is so precious, the enjoyments it
gives are so refined and pure, so congenial with our tenderest and noble
feelings, and so akin to worship, that it is painful to think of the
multitude of men as living in the midst of it, and living almost as blind to
it, as if, instead of this fair earth and glorious sky, they were tenants of
a dungeon. An infinite joy is lost to the world by the want of culture of
this spiritual endowment. Suppose that I were to visit a cottage, and to see
its walls lined with the choicest pictures of Raphael, and every spare nook
filled with statues of the most exquisite workmanship, and that I were to
learn, that neither man, woman, nor child ever cast an eye at these miracles
of art, how should I feel their privation; how should I want to open their
eyes, and to help them to comprehend and feel the loveliness and grandeur
which in vain courted their notice! But every husbandman is living in sight
of the works of a diviner Artist; and how much would his existence be
elevated, could he see the glory which shines forth in their forms, hues,
proportions, and moral expression! I have spoken only of the beauty of
nature, but how much of this mysterious charm is found in the elegant arts,
and especially in literature? The best books have most beauty. The greatest
truths are wronged if not linked with beauty, and they win their way most
surely and deeply into the soul when arrayed in this their natural and fit
attire. Now no man receives the true culture of a man, in whom the
sensibility to the beautiful is not cherished; and I know of no condition in
life from which it should be excluded. Of all luxuries, this is the cheapest
and most at hand; and it seems to me to be most important to those
conditions, where coarse labor tends to give a grossness to the mind. From
the diffusion of the sense of beauty in ancient Greece, and of the taste for
music in modem Germany, we learn that the people at large may partake of
refined gratifications, which have hitherto been thought to be necessarily
restricted to a few.
What beauty is, is a question which the
most penetrating minds have not satisfactorily answered; nor, were I able,
is this the place for discussing it. But one thing I would say; the beauty
of the outward creation is intimately related to the lovely, grand,
interesting attributes of the soul. It is the emblem or expression of these.
Matter becomes beautiful to us, when it seems to lose its material aspect,
its inertness, finiteness, and grossness, and by the etherial lightness of
its forms and motions seems to approach spirit; when it images to us pure
and gentle affections; when it spreads out into a vastness which is a shadow
of the Infinite; or when in more awful shapes and movements it speaks of the
Omnipotent. Thus outward beauty is akin to something deeper and unseen, is
the reflection of spiritual attributes; and of consequence the way to see
and feel it more and more keenly, is to cultivate those moral, religious,
intellectual, and social principles of which I have already spoken, and
which are the glory of the spiritual nature; and I name this, that you may
see, what I am anxious to show, the harmony which subsists among all
branches of human culture, or how each forwards and is aided by all.
There is another power, which each man
should cultivate according to his ability, but which is very much neglected
in the mass of the people, and that is, the power of Utterance. A man was
not made to shut up his mind in itself; but to give it voice and to exchange
it for other minds. Speech is one of our grand distinctions from the brute.
Our power over others lies not so much in the amount of thought within us,
as in the power of bringing it out. A man, of more than ordinary
intellectual vigor, may, for want of expression, be a cipher, without
significance, in society. And not only does a man influence others, but he
greatly aids his own intellect, by giving distinct and forcible utterance to
his thoughts. We undertand ourselves better, our conceptions grow clearer,
by the very effort to make them clear to another. Our social rank, too,
depends a good deal on our power of utterance. The principal distinction
between what are called gentlemen and the vulgar lies in this, that the
latter are awkward in manners, and are especially wanting in propriety,
clearness, grace, and force of utterance. A man who cannot open his lips
without breaking a rule of grammar, without showing in his dialect or brogue
or uncouth tones his want of cultivation, or without darkening his meaning
by a confused, unskilful mode of communication, cannot take the place to
which, perhaps, his native good sense entitles him. To have intercourse with
respectable people, we must speak their language. On this account, I am glad
that grammar and a correct pronunciation are taught in the common schools of
this city. These are not trifles; nor are they superfluous to any class of
people. They give a man access to social advantages, on which his
improvement very much depends. The power of utterance should be included by
all in their plans of self-culture.
I have now given a few views of the
culture, the improvement, which every man should propose to himself. I have
all along gone on the principle, that a man has within him capacities of
growth, which deserve and will reward intense, unrelaxing toil. I do not
look on a human being as a machine, made to be kept in action by a foreign
force, to accomplish an unvarying succession of motions, to do a fixed
amount of work, and then to fall to pieces at death, but as a being of free
spiritual powers; and I place little value on any culture, but that which
aims to bring out these and to give them perpetual impulse and expansion. I
am aware, that this view is far from being universal. The common notion has
been, that the mass of the people need no other culture than is necessary to
fit them for their various
trades; and, though this error is passing
away, it is far from being exploded. But the ground of a man's culture lies
in his nature, not in his calling. His powers are to be unfolded on account
of their inherent dignity, not their outward direction. He is to be
educated, because he is a man, not because he is to make shoes, nails, or
pins. A trade is plainly not the great end of his being, for his mind cannot
be shut up in it; his force of thought cannot be exhausted on it. He has
faculties to which it gives no action, and deep wants it cannot answer.
Poems, and systems of theology and philosophy, which have made some noise in
the world, have been wrought at the work-bench and amidst the toils of the
field. How often, when the arms are mechanically plying a trade, does the
mind, lost in reverie or daydreams, escape to the ends of the earth! How
often does the pious heart of woman mingle the greatest of all thoughts,
that of God, with household drudgery! Undoubtedly a man is to perfect
himself in his trade, for by it he is to earn his bread and to serve the
community. But bread or subsistence is not his highest good; for, if it
were, his lot would be harder than that of the inferior animals, for whom
nature spreads a table and weaves a wardrobe, without a care of their own.
Nor was he made chiefly to minister to the wants of the community. A
rational, moral being cannot, without infinite wrong, be converted into a
mere instrument of others' gratification. He is necessarily an end, not a
means. A mind, in which are sown the seeds of wisdom, disinterestedness,
firmness of purpose, and piety, is worth more than all the outward material
interests of a world. It exists for itself, for its own perfection, and must
not be enslaved to its own or others' animal wants. You tell me, that a
liberal culture is needed for men who are to fill high stations, but not for
such as are doomed to vulgar labor. I answer, that Man is a greater name
than President or King. Truth and goodness are equally precious, in whatever
sphere they are found. Besides, men of all conditions sustain equally the
relations, which give birth to the highest virtues and demand the highest
powers. The laborer is not a mere laborer. He has close, tender, responsible
connections with God and his fellow-creatures. He is a son, husband, father,
friend, and Christian. He belongs to a home, a country, a church, a race;
and is such a man to be cultivated only for a trade? Was he not sent into
the world for a great work? To educate a child perfectly requires profounder
thought, greater wisdom, than to govern a state; and for this plain reason,
thatthe interests and wants of the latter are more superficial, coarser, and
more obvious, than the spiritual capacities, the growth of thought and
feeling, and the subtile laws of the mind, which must all be studied and
comprehended, before the work of education can be thoroughly performed; and
yet to all conditions this greatest work on earth is equally committed by
God. What plainer proof do we need that a higher culture, than has yet been
dreamed of, is needed by our whole race?
II. 1 now proceed to inquire into the
Means, by which the selfculture, just described, may be promoted; and here I
know not where to begin. The subject is so extensive, as well as important,
that I feel
myself unable to do any justice to it,
especially in the limits to which I am confined. I beg you to consider me as
presenting but hints, and such as have offered themselves with very little
research to my own mind.
And, first, the great means of
self-culture, that which includes all the rest, is to fasten on this culture
as our Great End, to determine deliberately and solemnly, that we will make
the most and the best of the powers which God has given us. Without this
resolute purpose, the best means are worth little, and with it the poorest
become mighty. You may see thousands, with every opportunity of improvement
which wealth can gather, with teachers, libraries, and apparatus, bringing
nothing to pass, and others, with few helps, doing wonders; and simply
because the latter are in earnest, and the former not. A man in earnest
finds means, or, if he cannot find, creates them. A vigorous purpose makes
much out of little, breathes power into weak instruments, disarms
difficulties, and even turns them into assistances. Every condition has
means of progress, if we have spirit enough to use them. Some volumes have
recently been published, giving examples or histories of "knowledge acquired
under difficulties"; and it is most animating to see in these what a
resolute man can do for himself. A great idea, like this of Self-culture, if
seized on clearly and vigorously, bums like a living coal in the soul. He
who deliberately adopts a great end, has, by this act, half accomplished it,
has scaled the chief barrier to success.
One thing is essential to the strong
purpose of self-culture now insisted on, namely, faith in the
practicableness of this culture. A great object, to awaken resolute choice,
must be seen to be within our reach. The truth, that progress is the very
end of our being, must not be received as a tradition, but comprehended and
felt as a reality. Our minds are apt to pine and starve, by being imprisoned
within what we have already attained. A true faith, looking up to something
better, catching glimpses of a distant perfection, prophesying to ourselves
improvements proportioned to our conscientious labors, gives energy of
purpose, gives wings to the soul; and this, faith will continually grow, by
acquainting ourselves with our own nature, and with the promises of Divine
help and immortal life which abound in Revelation.
Some are discouraged from proposing to
themselves improvement, by the false notion, that the study of books, which
their situation denies them, is the all-important, and only sufficient
means. Let such consider, that the grand volumes, of which all our books are
transcripts, I mean nature, revelation, the human soul, and human life, are
freely unfolded to every eye. The great sources of wisdom are experience and
observation; and these are denied to none. To open and fix our eyes upon
what passes without and within us, is the most fruitful study. Books are
chiefly useful, as they help us to interpret what we see and experience.
When they absorb men, as they sometimes do, and turn them from observation
of nature and life, they generate a learned folly, for which the plain sense
of the laborer could not be exchanged but at great loss. It deserves
attention that the greatest men have been formed without the studies, which
at present are thought by many most needful to improvement. Homer, Plato,
Demosthenes, never heard the name of chemistry, and knew less of the solar
system than a boy in our common schools. Not that these sciences are
unimportant; but the lesson is, that human I improvement never wants the
means, where the purpose of it is deep and earnest in the soul.
The purpose of self-culture, this is the
life and strength of all the methods we use for our own elevation. I
reiterate this principle on account of its great importance; and I would add
a remark to prevent its misapprehension. When I speak of the purpose of
self-culture, I mean, that it should be sincere. In other words, we must
make self-culture really and truly our end, or choose it for its own sake,
and not merely as a means or instrument of something else. And here I touch
a common and very pernicious error. Not a few persons desire to improve
themselves only to get property and to rise in the world; but such do not
properly choose improvement, but something outward and foreign to
themselves; and so low an impulse can produce only a stinted, partial,
uncertain growth. A man, as I have said, is to cultivate himself because he
is a man. He is to start with the conviction, that there is something
greater within him than in the whole material creation, than in all the
worlds which press on the eye and ear; and that inward improvements have a
worth and dignity in themselves, quite distinct from the power they give
over outward things. Undoubtedly a man is to labor to better his condition,
but first to better himself. If he knows no higher use of his mind than to
invent and drudge for his body, his case is desperate as far as culture is
concerned.
In these remarks, I do not mean to
recommend to the laborer indifference to his outward lot. I hold it
important, that every man in every class should possess the means of
comfort, of health, of neatness in food and apparel, and of occasional
retirement and leisure. These are good in themselves, to be sought for their
own sakes, and still more, they are important means of the self-culture for
which I am pleading. A clean, comfortable dwelling, with wholesome meals, is
no small aid to intellectual and moral progress. A man living in a damp
cellar or a garret open to rain and snow, breathing the foul air of a filthy
room, and striving without success to appease hunger on scanty or unsavory
food, is in danger of abandoning himself to a desperate, selfish
recklessness. Improve then your lot. Multiply comforts, and still more get
wealth if you can by honorable means, and if it do not cost too much. A true
cultivation of the mind is fitted to forward you in your worldly concerns,
and you ought to use it for this end. Only, beware, lest this end master
you; lest your motives sink as your condition improves; lest you fall
victims to the miserable passion of vying with those around you in show,
luxury, and expense. Cherish a true respect for yourselves. Feel that your
nature is worth more than every thing which is foreign to you. He who has
not caught a glimpse of his own rational and spiritual being, of something
within himself superior to the world and allied to the divinity, wants the
true spring of that purpose of self-culture, on which I have insisted as the
first of all the means of improvement.
I proceed to another important means of
self-culture, and this is the control of the animal appetites. To raise the
moral and intellec *** nature, we must put down the animal. Sensuality is
the abyss in which very many souls are plunged and lost. Among the most
prosperous classes, what a vast amount of intellectual life is drowned in
luxurious excesses! It is one great curse of wealth, that it is used to
pamper the senses; and among the poorer classes, though luxury is wanting ,
yet a gross feeding often prevails, under which the spirit is whelmed. It is
a sad sight to walk through our streets, and to see how many countenances
bear marks of a lethargy and a brutal coarseness, induced by unrestrained
indulgence. Whoever would cultivate the soul, must restrain the appetites. I
am not an advocate for the doctrine, that animal food was not meant for man;
but that this is used among us to excess; that as a people we should gain
much in cheerfulness, activity, and buoyancy of mind, by less gross and
stimulating food, I am strongly inclined to believe. Above all, let me urge
on those, who would bring out and elevate their higher nature, to abstain
from the use of spirituous liquors. This bad habit is distinguished from all
others by the ravages it makes on the reason, the intellect; and this effect
is produced to a mournful extent, even when drunkenness is escaped. Not a
few men, called temperate, and who have thought themselves such, have
learned, on abstaining from the use of ardent spirits, that for years their
minds had been clouded, impaired by moderate drinking, without their
suspecting the injury. Multitudes in this city are bereft of half their
intellectual energy, by a degree of indulgence which passes for innocent. Of
all the foes of the working class, this is the deadliest. Nothing has done
more to keep down this class, to destroy their self-respect, to rob them of
their just influence in the community, to render profitless the means of
improvement within t heir reach, than the use of ardent spirits as a drink.
They are called on to withstand this practice, as they regard their honor,
and would take their just place in society. They are under solemn
obligations to give their sanction to every effort for its suppression. They
ought to regard as their worst enemies (though unintentionally such), as the
enemies of their rights, dignity, and influence, the men who desire to flood
city and country with distilled poison. I lately visited a flourishing
village, and on expressing to one of the respected inhabitants the pleasure
I felt in witnessing so many signs of progress, he replied, that one of the
causes of the prosperity I witnessed, was the disuse of ardent spirits by
the people. And this reformation we may be assured wrought something higher
than outward prosperity. In almost every family so improved, we cannot doubt
that the capacities of the parent for intellectual and moral improvement
were enlarged, and the means of education made more effectual to the child.
I call on working men to take hold of the cause of temperance as peculiarly
their cause. These remarks are the more needed, in consequence of the
efforts made far and wide, to annul at the present moment a recent law for
the suppression of the sale of ardent spirits in such quantities as favor
intemperance. I know, that there are intelligent and good men, who believe,
that, in enacting this law, government transcended its limits, left its true
path, and established a precedent for legislative interference with all our
pursuits and pleasures. No one here looks more jealously on government than
myself. But I maintain, that this is a case which stands by itself, which
can be confounded with no other, and on which government from its very
nature and end is peculiarly bound to act. Let it never be forgotten, that
the great end of government, its highest function, is, not to make roads,
grant charters, originate improvements, but to prevent or repress Crimes
against individual rights and social order. For this end it ordains a penal
code, erects prisons, and inflicts fearful punishments. Now if it be true,
that a vast proportion of the crimes, which government is instituted to
prevent and repress, have their origin in the use of ardent spirits; if our
poor-houses, work-houses, jails, and penitentiaries, are tenanted in a great
degree by those whose first and chief impulse to crime came from the
distillery and dram-shop; if murder and theft, the most fearful outrages on
property and life, are most frequently the issues and consummation of
intemperance, is not government bound to restrain by legislation the vending
of the stimulus to these terrible social wrongs? Is government never to act
as a parent, never to remove the causes or occasions of wrong-doing? Has it
but one instrument for repressing crime, namely, public, infamous
punishment, an evil only inferior to crime? Is government a usurper, does it
wander beyond its sphere, by imposing restraints on an article, which does
no imaginable good, which can plead no benefit conferred on body or mind,
which unfits the citizen for the discharge of his duty to his country, and
which, above all, stirs up men to the perpetration of most of the crimes,
from which it is the highest and most I come now to another important
measure of self-culture, and this is, intercourse with superior minds. I
have insisted on our own activity as essential to our progress; but we were
not made to live or advance alone. Society is as needful to us as air or
food. A child doomed to utter loneliness, growing up without sight or sound
of human beings, would not put forth equal power with many brutes; and a
man, never brought into contact with minds superior to his own, will
probably run one and the same dull round of thought and action to the end of
life.
It is chiefly through books that we enjoy
intercourse with superior minds, and these invaluable means of communication
are in the reach of all. In the best books, great men talk to us, give us
their most precious thoughts, and pour their souls into ours. God be thanked
for books. They are the voices of the distant and the dead, and make us
heirs of the spiritual life of past ages. Books are the true levellers. They
give to all, who will faithfully use them, the society, the spiritual
presence, of the best and greatest of our race. No matter how poor I am. No
matter though the prosperous of my own time will not enter my obscure
dwelling. If the Sacred Writers will enter and take up their abode under my
roof, if Milton will cross my threshold to sing to me of Paradise, and
Shakspeare to open to me the worlds of imagination and the workings of the
human heart, and Franklin to enrich me with his practical wisdom, I shall
not pine for want of intellectual companionship, and I may become a
cultivated man though excluded from what is called the best society in the
place where I live.
To make this means of culture effectual, a
man must select good books, such as have been written by right-minded and
strongminded men, real thinkers, who instead of diluting by repetition what
others say, have something to say for themselves, and write to give relief
to full, earnest souls; and these works must not be skimmed over for
amusement, but read with fixed attention and a reverential love of truth. In
selecting books, we may be aided much by those who have studied more than
ourselves. But, after all, it is best to be determined in this particular a
good deal by our own tastes. The best books for a man are not always those
which the wise recommend, but oftener those which meet the peculiar wants,
the natural thirst of his mind, and therefore awaken interest and rivet
thought. And here it may be well to observe, not only in regard to books but
in other respects, that self-culture must vary with the individual. All
means do not equally suit us all. A man must unfold himself freely, and
should respect the peculiar gifts or biases by which nature has
distinguished him from others. Self-culture does not demand the sacrifice of
individuality. It does not regularly apply an established machinery, for the
sake of torturing every man into one rigid shape, called perfection. As the
human countenance, with the same features in us all, is diversified without
end in the race, and is never the same in any two individuals, so the human
soul, with the same grand powers and laws, expands into an infinite variety
of forms, and would be wofully stinted by modes of culture requiring all men
to learn the same lesson or to bend to the same rules.
I know how hard it is to some men,
especially to those who spend much time in manual labor, to fix attention on
books. Let them strive to overcome the difficulty, by choosing subjects of
deep interest, or by reading in company with those whom they love. Nothing
can supply the place of books. They are cheering or soothing companions in
solitude, illness, affliction. The wealth of both continents would not
compensate for the good they impart. Let every man, if possible, gather some
good books under his roof, and obtain access for himself and family to some
social library. Almost any luxury should be sacrificed to this.
One of the very interesting features of
our times, is the multiplication of books, and their distribution through
all conditions of society. At a small expense, a man can now possess himself
of the most precious treasures of English literature. Books, once confined
to a few by their costliness, are now accessible to the multitude; and in
this way a change of habits is going on in society, highly favorable to the
culture of the people. Instead of depending on casual rumor and loose
conversation for most of their knowledge and objects of thought; instead of
forming their judgments in crowds, and receiving their chief excitement from
the voice of neighbours, men are now learning to study and reflect alone, to
follow out subjects continuously, to determine for themselves what shall
engage their minds, and to call to their aid the knowledge, original views,
and reasonings of men of all countries and ages; and the results must be, a
deliberateness and independence of judgment, and a thoroughness and extent
of information, unknown in former times. The diffusion of these silent
teachers, books, through the whole community, is to work greater effects
than artillery, machinery, and legislation. Its peaceful agency is to
supersede stormy revolutions. The culture, which it is to spread, whilst an
unspeakable good to the individual, is also to become the stability of
nations.
Another important means of self-culture,
is to free ourselves from the power of human opinion and example, except as
far as this is sanctioned by our own deliberate judgment. We are all prone
to keep the level of those we live with, to repeat their words, and dress
our minds as well as bodies after their fashion; and hence the spiritless
tameness of our characters and lives. Our greatest danger, is not from the
grossly wicked around us, but from the worldly, unreflecting multitude, who
are borne along as a stream by foreign impulse, and bear us along with them.
Even the influence of superior minds may harm us, by bowing us to servile
acquiescence and damping our spiritual activity. The great use of
intercourse with other minds, is to stir up our own, to whet our appetite
for truth, to carry our thoughts beyond their old tracks. We need connexions
with great thinkers to make us thinkers too. One of the chief arts of
self-culture, is to unite the childlike teachableness, which gratefully
welcomes light from every human being who can give it, with manly resistance
of opinions however current, of influences however generally revered, which
do not approve themselves to our deliberate judgment. You ought indeed
patiently and conscientiously to strengthen your reason by other men's
intelligence, but you must not prostrate it before them. Especially if there
springs up within you any view of God's word or universe, any sentiment or
aspiration which seems to you of a higher order than what you meet abroad,
give reverent heed to it; inquire into it earnestly, solemnly. Do not trust
it blindly, for it may be an illusion; but it may be the Divinity moving
within you, a new revelation, not supernatural but still most precious, of
truth or duty; and if, after inquiry, it so appear, then let no clamor, or
scorn, or desertion turn you from it. Be true to your own highest
convictions. Intimations from our own souls of something more perfect than
others teach, if faithfully followed, give us a consciousness of spiritual
force and progress, never experienced by the vulgar of high life or low
life, who march, as they are drilled, to the step of their times.
Some, I know, will wonder, that I should
think the mass of the people capable of such intimations and glimpses of
truth, as I have just supposed. These are commonly thought to be the
prerogative of men of genius, who seem to be born to give law to the minds
of the multitude. Undoubtedly nature has her nobilty, and sends forth a few
to be eminently "lights of the world. 116 But it is also true that a portion
of the same divine fire is given to all; for the many could not receive with
a loving reverence the quickening influences of the few, were there not
essentially the same spiritual life in both. The minds of the multitude are
not masses of passive matter, created to receive impressions unresistingly
from abroad. They are not wholly shaped by foreign instruction; but have a
native force, a spring of thought in themselves. Even the child's mind
outruns its lessons, and overflows in questionings which bring the wisest to
a stand. Even the child starts the great problems, which philosophy has
labored to solve for ages. But on this subject I cannot now enlarge. Let me
only say, that the power of original thought is particularly manifested in
those who thirst for progress, who are bent on unfolding their whole nature.
A man who wakes up to the consciousness of having been created for progress
and perfection, looks with new eyes on himself and on the world in which he
lives. This great truth stirs the soul from its depths, breaks up old
associations of ideas, and establishes new ones, just as a mighty agent of
chemistry, brought into contact with natural substances, dissolves the old
affinities which had bound their particles together, and arranges them anew.
This truth particularly aids us to penetrate the mysteries of human life. By
revealing to us the end of our being, it helps us to comprehend more and
more the wonderful, the infinite system, to which we belong. A man in the
common walks of life, who has faith in perfection, in the unfolding of the
human spirit, as the great purpose of God, possesses more the secret of the
universe, perceives more the harmonies or mutual adaptations of the world
without and the world within him, is a wiser interpreter of Providence, and
reads nobler lessons of duty in the events which pass before him, than the
profoundest philosopher who wants this grand central truth. Thus
illuminations, inward suggestions, are not confined to a favored few, but
visit all who devote themselves to a generous self-culture.
Another means of self-culture may be found
by every man in his Condition or Occupation, be it what it may. Had I time,
I might go through all conditions of life, from the most conspicuous to the
most obscure, and might show how each furnishes continual aids to
improvement. But I will take one example, and that is, of a man living by
manual labor. This may be made the means of self-culture. For instance, in
almost all labor, a man exchanges his strength for an equivalent in the form
of wages, purchase-money, or some other product. In other words, labor is a
system of contracts, bargains, imposing mutual obligations. Now the man,
who, in working, no matter in what way, strives perpetually to fulfil his
obligations thoroughly, to do his whole work faithfully, to be honest not
because honesty is the best policy, but for the sake of justice, and that he
may render to every man his due, such a laborer is continually building up
in himself one of the greatest principles of morality and religion. Every
blow on the anvil, on the earth, or whatever material he works upon,
contributes something to the perfection of his nature.
Nor is this all. Labor is a school of
benevolence as well as justice. A man to support himself must serve others.
He must do or produce something for their comfort or gratification. This is
one of the beautiful ordinations of Providence, that, to get a living, a man
must be useful. Now this usefulness ought to be an end in his labor as truly
as to earn his living. He ought to think of the benefit of those he works
for, as well as of his own; and in so doing, in desiring amidst his sweat
and toil to serve others as well as himself, he is exercising and growing in
benevolence, as truly as if he were distributing bounty with a large hand to
the poor. Such a motive hallows and dignifies the commonest pursuit. It is
strange, that laboring men do not think more of the vast usefulness of their
toils, and take a benevolent pleasure in them on this account. This
beautiful city, with its houses, furniture, markets, public walks, and
numberless accommodations, has grown up under the hands of artisans and
other laborers, and ought they not to take a disinterested joy in their
work? One would think, that a carpenter or mason, on passing a house which
he had reared, would say to himself, "This work of mine is giving comfort
and enjoyment every day and hour to a family, and will continue to be a
kindly shelter, a domestic gathering-place, an abode of affection, for a
century or more after I sleep in the dust;" and ought not a generous
satisfaction to spring up at the thought? It is by thus interweaving
goodness with common labors, that we give it strength and make it a habit of
the soul.
Again. Labor may be so performed as to be
a high impulse to the mind. Be a man's vocation what it may, his rule should
be to do its duties perfectly, to do the best he can, and thus to make
perpetual progress in his art. In other words, Perfection should be
proposed; and this I urge not only for its usefulness to society, nor for
the sincere pleasure which a man takes in seeing a work well done. This is
an important means of self-culture. In this way the idea of Perfection takes
root in the mind, and spreads far beyond the man's trade. He gets a tendency
towards completeness in whatever he undertakes. Slack, slovenly performance
in any department of life is more apt to offend him. His standard of action
rises, and every thing is better done for his thoroughness in his common
vocation.
There is one circumstance attending all
conditions of life, which may and ought to be turned to the use of
self-culture. Every condition, be it what it may, has hardships, hazards,
pains. We try to escape them; we pine for a sheltered lot, for a smooth
path, for cheering friends, and unbroken success. But Providence ordains
storms, disasters, hostilities, sufferings; and the great question,
whether we shall live to any purpose or
not, whether we shall grow strong in mind and heart, or be weak and
pitiable, depends on nothing so much as on our use of these adverse
circumstances. Outward evils are designed to school our passions, and to
rouse our faculties and virtues into intenser action. Sometimes they seem to
create new powers. Difficulty is the element, and resistance the true work
of a man. Self-culture never goes on so fast, as when embarrassed
circumstances, the opposition of men or the elements, unexpected changes of
the times, or other forms of suffering, instead of disheartening, throw us
on our inward resources, turn us for strength to God, clear up to us the
great purpose of life, and inspire calm resolution. No greatness or goodness
is worth much, unless tried in these fires. Hardships are not on this
account to be sought for. They come fast enough of themselves, and we are in
more danger of sinking under, than of needing them. But when God sends them,
they are noble means of self-culture, and as such, let us meet and bear them
cheerfully. Thus all parts of our condition may be pressed into the service
of self-improvement.
I have time to consider but one more means
of self-culture. We find it in our Free Government, in our Political
relations and duties. It is a great benefit of free institutions, that they
do much to awaken and keep in action a nation's mind. We are told, that the
education of the multitude is necessary to the support of a republic; but it
is equally true, that the republic is a powerful means of educating the
multitude. It is the people's University. In a free state, solemn
responsibilities are imposed on every citizen; great subjects are to be
discussed; great interests to be decided. The individual is called to
determine measures affecting the well-being of millions and the destinies of
posterity. He must consider not only the internal relations of his native
land, but its connexion with foreign states, and judge of a policy which
touches the whole civilized world. He is called by his participation in the
national sovereignty, to cherish public spirit, a regard to the general
weal. A man who purposes to discharge faithfully these obligations, is
carrying on a generous self-culture. The great public questions, which
divide opinion around him and provoke earnest discussion, of necessity
invigorate his intellect, and accustom him to look beyond himself. He grows
up to a robustness, force, enlargement of mind, unknown under despotic rule.
It may be said that I am describing what
free institutions ought to do for the character of the individual, not their
actual effects; and the objection, I must own, is too true. Our institutions
do not cultivate us, as they might and should; and the chief cause of the
failure is plain. It is the strength of party-spirit; and so blighting is
its influence, so fatal to self-culture, that I feel myself bound to warn
every man against it, who has any desire of improvement. I do not tell you
it will destroy your country. It wages a worse war against yourselves.
Truth, justice, candor, fair dealing, sound judgment, self-control, and kind
affections, are its natural and perpetual prey.
I do not say, that you must take no side
in politics. The parties which prevail around you differ in character,
principles, and spirit, though far less than the exaggeration of passion
affirms; and, as far as conscience allows, a man should support that which
he thinks best. In one respect, however, all parties agree. They all foster
that pestilent spirit, which I now condemn. In all of them, party-spirit
rages. Associate men together for a common cause, be it good or bad, and
array against them a body resolutely pledged to an opposite interest, and a
new passion, quite distinct from the original sentiment which brought them
together, a fierce, fiery zeal, consisting chiefly of aversion to those who
differ from them, is roused within them into fearful activity. Human nature
seems incapable of a stronger, more unrelenting passion. It is hard enough
for an individual, when contending all alone for an interest or an opinion,
to keep down his pride, wilfulness, love of victory, anger, and other
personal feelings. But let him join a multitude in the same warfare, and,
without singular self-control, he receives into his single breast, the
vehemence, obstinacy, and vindictiveness of all. The triumph of his party
becomes immeasurably dearer to him than the principle, true or false, which
was the original ground of division. The conflict becomes a struggle, not
for principle, but for power, for victory; and the desperateness, the
wickedness of such struggles, is the great burden of history. In truth, it
matters little what men divide about, whether it be a foot of land or
precedence in a procession. Let them but begin to fight for it, and
self-will, ill-will, the rage for victory, the dread of mortification and
defeat, make the trifle as weighty as a matter of life and death. The Greek
or Eastern empire was shaken to its foundation by parties, which differed
only about the merits of charioteers at the amphitheatre. Party spirit is
singularly hostile to moral independence. A man, in proportion as he drinks
into it, sees, hears, judges by the senses and understandings of his party.
He surrenders the freedom of a man, the right of using and speaking his own
mind, and echoes the applauses or maledictions, with which the leaders or
passionate partisans see fit that the country should ring. On all points,
parties are to be distrusted; but on no one so much as on the character of
opponents. These, if you may trust what you hear, are always men without
principle and truth, devoured by selfishness, and thirsting for their own
elevation, though on their country's ruin. When I was young, I was
accustomed to hear pronounced with abhorrence, almost with execration, the
names of men, who are now hailed by their former foes as the champions of
grand principles, and as worthy of the highest public trusts. This lesson of
early experience, which later years have corroborated, will never be
forgotten.
Of our present political divisions I have
of course nothing to say. But among the current topics of party, there are
certain accusations and recriminations, grounded on differences of social
condition, which seem to me so unfriendly to the improvement of individuals
and the community, that I ask the privilege of giving them a moment's
notice. On one side we are told, that the rich are disposed to trample on
the poor; and on the other, that the poor look with evil eye and hostile
purpose on the possessions of the rich. These outcries seem to me alike
devoid of truth and alike demoralizing. As for the rich, who constitute but
a handful of our population, who possess not one peculiar privilege, and,
what is more, who possess comparatively little of the property of the
country, it is wonderful, that they should be objects of alarm. The vast and
ever-growing property of this country, where is it? Locked up in a few
hands? hoarded in a few strong boxes? It is diffused like the atmosphere,
and almost as variable, changing hands with the seasons, shifting from rich
to poor, not by the violence but by the industry and skill of the latter
class. The wealth of the rich is as a drop in the ocean; and it is a
well-known fact, that those men among us, who are noted for their opulence,
exert hardly any political power on the community. That the rich do their
whole duty; that they adopt, as they should, the great object of the social
state, which is the elevation of the people in intelligence, character, and
condition, cannot be pretended; but that they feel for the physical
sufferings of their brethren, that they stretch out liberal hands for the
succour of the poor, and for the support of useful public institutions,
cannot be denied. Among them are admirable specimens of humanity. There is
no warrant for holding them up to suspicion as the people's foes.
Nor do I regard as less calumnious the
outcry against the working classes, as if they were aiming at the subversion
of property. When we think of the general condition and character of this
part of our population, when we recollect, that they were born and have
lived amidst schools and churches, that they have been brought up to
profitable industry, that they enjoy many of the accommodations of life,
that most of them hold a measure of property and are hoping for more, that
they possess unprecedented means of bettering their lot, that they are bound
to comfortable homes by strong domestic affections, that they are able to
give their children an education which places within their reach the prizes
of the social state, that they are trained to the habits, and familiarized
to the advantages of a high civilization; when we recollect these things,
can we imagine that they are so insanely blind to their interests, so deaf
to the claims of justice and religion, so profligately thoughtless of the
peace and safety of their families, as to be prepared to make a wreck of
social order, for the sake of dividing among themselves the spoils of the
rich, which would not support the community for a month? Undoubtedly there
is insecurity in all stages of society, and so there must be, until
communities shall be regenerated by a higher culture, reaching and
quickening all classes of the people; but there is not, I believe, a spot on
earth, where property is safer than here, because, nowhere else is it so
equally and righteously diffused. In aristocracies, where wealth exists in
enormous masses, which have been entailed for ages by a partial legislation
on a favored few, and where the multitude, after the sleep of ages, are
waking up to intelligence, to self-respect, and to a knowledge of their
rights, property is exposed to shocks which are not to be dreaded among
ourselves. Here indeed as elsewhere, among the less prosperous members of
the community, there are disappointed, desperate men, ripe for tumult and
civil strife; but it is also true, that the most striking and honorable
distinction of this country is to be found in the intelligence, character,
and condition of the great working class. To me it seems, that the great
danger to property here is not from the laborer, but from those who are
making haste to be rich. For example, in this commonwealth, no act has been
thought by the alarmists or the conservatives so subversive of the rights of
property, as a recent law, authorizing a company to construct a free bridge,
in the immediate neighbourhood of another, which had been chartered by a
former legislature, and which had been erected in the expectation of an
exclusive right. And with whom did this alleged assault on property
originate? With levellers? with needy laborers? with men bent on the
prostration of the rich? No; but with men of business, who are anxious to
push a more lucrative trade. Again, what occurrence among us has been so
suited to destroy confidence, and to stir up the people against the moneyed
class, as the late criminal mismanagement of some of our banking
institutions? And whence came this? from the rich, or the poor? From the
agrarian, or the man of business? Who, let me ask, carry on the work of
spoliation most extensively in society? Is not more property wrested from
its owners by rash or dishonest failures, than by professed highwaymen and
thieves? Have not a few unprincipled speculators sometimes inflicted wider
wrongs and sufferings, than all the tenants of a state prison? Thus property
is in more danger from those who are aspiring after wealth, than from those
who live by the sweat of their brow. I do not believe, however, that the
institution is in serious danger from either. All the advances of society in
industry, useful arts, commerce, knowledge, jurisprudence, fraternal union,
and practical Christianity, are so many hedges around honestly acquired
wealth, so many barriers against revolutionary violence and rapacity. Let us
not torture ourselves with idle alarms, and still more, let us not inflame
ourselves against one an-other by mutual calumnies. Let not class array
itself against class, where all have a common interest. One way of provoking
men to crime, is to suspect them of criminal designs. We do not secure our
property against the poor, by accusing them of schemes of universal robbery;
nor render the rich better friends of the community, by fixing on them the
brand of hostility to the people. Of all parties, those founded on different
social conditions are the most pernicious; and in no country on earth are
they so groundless as in our own.
Among the best people, especially among
the more religious, there are some, who, through disgust with the violence
and frauds of parties, withdraw themselves from all political action. Such,
I conceive, do wrong. God has placed them in the relations, and imposed on
them the duties of citizens; and they are no more authorized to shrink from
these duties than from those of sons, husbands, or fathers. They owe a great
debt to their country, and must discharge it by giving support to what they
deem the best men and the best measures. Nor let them say, that they can do
nothing. Every good man, if faithful to his convictions, benefits his
country. All parties are kept in check by the spirit of the better portion
of people whom they contain. Leaders are always compelled to ask what their
party will bear, and to modify their measures, so as not to shock the men of
principle within their ranks. A good man, not tamely subservient to the body
with which he acts, but judging it impartially, criticizing it freely,
bearing testimony against its evils, and withholding his support from wrong,
does good to those around him, and is cultivating generously his own mind.
I respectfully counsel those whom I
address, to take part in the politics of their country. These are the true
discipline of a people, and do much for their education. I counsel you to
labor for a clear understanding of the subjects which agitate the community,
to make them your study, instead of wasting your leisure in vague,
passionate talk about them. The time thrown away by the mass of the people
on the rumors of the day, might, if better spent, give them a good
acquaintance with the constitution, laws, history, and interests of their
country, and thus establish them in those great principles by which
particular measures are to be determined. In proportion as the people thus
improve themselves, they will cease to be the tools of designing
politicians. Their intelligence, not their passions and jealousies, will be
addressed by those who seek their votes. They will exert, not a nominal, but
a real influence on the government and the destinies of the country, and at
the same time will forward their own growth in truth and virtue.
I ought not to quit this subject of
politics, considered as a means of self-culture, without speaking of
newspapers; because these form the chief reading of the bulk of the people.
They are the literature of multitudes. Unhappily, their importance is not
understood; their bearing on the intellectual and moral cultivation of the
community little thought of. A newspaper ought to be conducted by one of our
most gifted men, and its income should be such as to enable him to secure
the contributions of men as gifted as himself. But we must take newspapers
as they are; and a man, anxious for self-culture, may turn them to account,
if he will select the best within his reach. He should exclude from his
house such as are venomous or scurrilous, as he would a pestilence. He
should be swayed in his choice, not merely by the ability with which a paper
is conducted, but still more by its spirit, by its justice, fairness, and
steady adherence to great principles. Especially, if he would know the
truth, let him hear both sides. Let him read the defence as well as the
attack. Let him not give his ear to one party exclusively. We condemn
ourselves, when we listen to reproaches thrown on an individual and turn
away from his exculpation; and is it just to read continual, unsparing
invectives against large masses of men, and refuse them the opportunity of
justifying themselves?
A new class of daily papers has sprung up
in our country, sometimes called cent papers, and designed for circulation
among those who cannot afford costlier publications. My interest in the
working class induced me some time ago to take one of these, and I was
gratified to find it not wanting in useful matter. Two things however gave
me pain. The advertising columns were devoted very much to patent medicines;
and when I considered that a laboring man's whole fortune is his health, I
could not but lament, that so much was done to seduce him to the use of
articles, more fitted, I fear, to undermine than to restore his
constitution. I was also shocked by accounts of trials in the police court.
These were written in a style adapted to the
most uncultivated minds, and intended to
turn into matters of sport the most painful and humiliating events of life.
Were the newspapers of the rich to attempt to extract amusement from the
vices and miseries of the poor, a cry would be raised against them, and very
justly. But is it not something worse, that the poorer classes themselves
should seek occasions of laughter and merriment in the degradation, the
crimes, the woes, the punishments of their brethren, of those who are doomed
to bear like themselves the heaviest burdens of life, and who have sunk
under the temptations of poverty? Better go to the hospital, and laugh over
the wounds and writhings of the sick or the ravings of the insane, than
amuse ourselves with brutal excesses and infernal passions, which not only
expose the criminal to the crushing penalties of human laws, but incur the
displeasure of Heaven, and, if not repented of, will be followed by the
fearful retribution of the life to come.
One important topic remains. That great
means of self-improvement, Christianity, is yet untouched, and its greatness
forbids me now to approach it. I will only say, that if you study
Christianity in its original records, and not in human creeds; if you
consider its clear revelations of God, its life-giving promises of pardon
and spiritual strength, its correspondence to man's reason, conscience, and
best affections, and its adaptation to his wants, sorrows, anxieties, and
fears; if you consider the strength of its proofs, the purity of its
precepts, the divine greatness of the character of its author, and the
immortality which it opens before us, you will feel yourselves bound to
welcome it joyfully, gratefully, as affording aids and incitements to
self-culture, which would vainly be sought in all other means.
I have thus presented a few of the means
of self-culture. The topics, now discussed, will I hope suggest others to
those who have honored me with their attention, and create an interest which
will extend beyond the present hour. I owe it however to truth to make one
remark. I wish to raise no unreasonable hopes. I must say, then, that the
means now recommended to you, though they will richly reward every man of
every age who will faithfully use them, will yet not produce their full and
happiest effect, except in cases where early education has prepared the mind
for future improvement. They, whose childhood has been neglected, though
they may make progress in future life, can hardly repair the loss of their
first years; and I say this, that we may all be excited to save our children
from this loss, that we may prepare them, to the extent of our power, for an
effectual use of all the means of self-culture, which adult age may bring
with it. With these views, I ask you to look with favor on the recent
exertions of our legislature and of private citizens, in behalf of our
public schools, the chief hope of our country. The legislature has of late
appointed a board of education, with a secretary, who is to devote his whole
time to the improvement of public schools. An individual more fitted to his
responsible office, than the gentleman who now fills it,* cannot, I believe,
be found in our community; and if his labors shall be crowned with success,
he will earn a title to the gratitude of the good people of this State,
unsurpassed by that of any other living citizen .7 Let me also recall to
your minds a munificent individual," who, by a generous donation, has
encouraged the legislature to resolve on the establishment of one or more
institutions called Normal Schools, the object of which is, to prepare
accomplished teachers of youth, a work, on which the progress of education
depends more than on any other measure. 8 The efficient friends of education
are the true benefactors of their country, and their names deserve to be
handed down to that posterity, for whose highest wants they are generously
providing.
There is another mode of advancing
education in our whole country, to which I ask your particular attention.
You are aware of the vast extent and value of the public lands of the Union.
By annual sales of these, large amounts of money are brought into the
national treasury, which are applied to the current expenses of the
Government. For this application there is no need. In truth, the country has
received detriment from the excess of its revenues. Now, I ask, why shall
not the public lands be consecrated (in whole or in part, as the case may
require) to the education of the people? This measure would secure at once
what the country most needs, that is, able, accomplished, quickening
teachers of the whole rising generation. The present poor remuneration of
instructors is a dark omen, and the only real obstacle which the cause of
education has to contend with. We need for our schools gifted men and women,
worthy, by their intelligence and their moral power, to be intrusted with a
nation's youth;
*Horace Mann, Esq.
**Edmund Dwight, Esq.
and, to gain these, we must pay them
liberally, as well as afford other proofs of the consideration in which we
hold them. In the present state of the country, when so many paths of wealth
and promotion are opened, superior men cannot be won to an office so
responsible and laborious as that of teaching, without stronger inducements
than are now offered, except in some of our large cities. The office of
instructor ought to rank and be recompensed as one of the most honorable in
society; and I see not how this is to be done, at least in our day, without
appropriating to it the public domain. This is the people's property, and
the only part of their property which is likely to be soon devoted to the
support of a high order of institutions for public education. This object,
interesting to all classes of society, has peculiar claims on those whose
means of improvement are restricted by narrow circumstances. The mass of the
people should devote themselves to it as one man, should toil for it with
one soul. Mechanics, Farmers, Laborers! let the country echo with your
united cry, "The Public Lands for Education." Send to the public councils
men who will plead this cause with power. No party triumphs, no
trades-unions, no associations, can so contribute to elevate you as the
measure now proposed. Nothing but a higher education can raise you in
influence and true dignity. The resources of the public domain, wisely
applied for successive generations to the culture of society and of the
individual, would create a new people, would awaken through this community
intellectual and moral energies, such as the records of no country display,
and as would command the respect and emulation of the civilized world. In
this grand object, the working men of all parties, and in all divisions of
the land, should join with an enthusiasm not to be withstood. They should
separate it from all narrow and local strifes. They should not suffer it to
be mixed up with the schemes of politicians. In it, they and their children
have an infinite stake. May they be true to themselves, to posterity, to
their country, to freedom, to the cause of mankind.
III. I am aware, that the whole doctrine
of this discourse will meet with opposition. There are not a few who will
say to me, "What you tell us sounds well; but it is impracticable. Men, who
dream in their closets, spin beautiful theories; but actual life scatters
them, as the wind snaps the cobweb. You would have all men to be Cultivated;
but necessity wills that most men shall work; and which of the two is likely
to prevail? A weak sentimentality may shrink from the truth; still it is
true, that most men were made, not for self-culture, but for toil. "
I have put the objection into strong
language, that we may all look it fairly in the face. For one I deny its
validity. Reason, as well as sentiment, rises up against it. The presumption
is certainly very strong, that the All-wise Father, who has given to every
human being reason and conscience and affection, intended that these should
be unfolded; and it is hard to believe, that He, who, by conferring this
nature on all men, has made all his children, has destined the great
majority to wear out a life of drudgery and unimproving toil, for the
benefit of a few. God cannot have made spiritual beings to be dwarfed. In
the body we see no organs created to shrivel by disuse; much less are the
powers of the soul given to be locked up in perpetual lethargy.
Perhaps it will be replied, that the
purpose of the Creator is to be gathered, not from theory, but from facts;
and that it is a plain fact, that the order and prosperity of society, which
God must be supposed to intend, require from the multitude the action of
their hands, and not the improvement of their minds. I reply, that a social
order, demanding the sacrifice of the mind, is very suspicious, that it
cannot indeed be sanctioned by the Creator. Were I, on visiting a strange
country, to see the vast majority of the people maimed, crippled, and bereft
of sight, and were I told that social order required this mutilation, I
should say, Perish this order. Who would not think his understanding as well
as best feelings insulted, by hearing this spoken of as the intention of
God? Nor ought we to look with less aversion on a social system which can
only be upheld by crippling and blinding the Minds of the people.
But to come nearer to the point. Are labor
and self-culture irreconcilable to each other? In the first place, we have
seen that a man, in the midst of labor, may and ought to give himself to the
most important improvements, that he may cultivate his sense of justice, his
benevolence, and the desire of perfection. Toil is the school for these high
principles; and we have here a strong presumption, that, in other respects,
it does not necessarily blight the soul. Next we have seen, that the most
fruitful sources of truth and wisdom are not books, precious as they are,
but experience and observation; and these belong to all conditions. It is
another important consideration, that almost all labor demands intellectual
activity, and is best carried on by those who invigorate their minds; so
that the two interests, toil and self-culture, are friends to each other. It
is Mind, after all, which does the work of the world, so that the more there
is of mind, the more work will be accomplished. A man, in proportion as he
is intelligent, makes a given force accomplish a greater task, makes skill
take the place of muscles, and, with less labor, gives a better product.
Make men intelligent, and they become inventive. They find shorter
processes. Their knowledge of nature helps them to turn its laws to account,
to understand the substances on which they work, and to seize on useful
hints, which experience continually furnishes. It is among workmen, that
some of the most useful machines have been contrived. Spread education, and,
as the history of this country shows, there will be no bounds to useful
inventions. You think, that a man without culture will do all the better
what you call the drudgery of life. Go then to the Southern plantation.
There the slave is brought up to be a mere drudge. He is robbed of the
rights of a man, his whole spiritual nature is starved, that he may work,
and do nothing but work; and in that slovenly agriculture, in that worn-out
soil, in the rude state of the mechanic arts, you may find a comment on your
doctrine, that, by degrading men, you make them more productive laborers.
But it is said, that any considerable
education lifts men above their work, makes them look with disgust on their
trades as mean and low, makes drudgery intolerable. I reply, that a man
becomes interested in labor, just in proportion as the mind works with the
hands. An enlightened fanner, who understands agricultural chemistry, the
laws of vegetation, the structure of plants, the properties of manures, the
influences of climate, who looks intelligently on his work, and brings his
knowledge to bear on exigencies, is a much more cheerful, as well as more
dignified laborer, than the peasant, whose mind is akin to the clod on which
he treads, and whose whole life is the same dull, unthinking, unimproving
toil. But this is not all. Why is it, I ask, that we call manual labor low,
that we associate with it the idea of meanness, and think that an
intelligent people must scorn it? The great reason is, that, in most
countries, so few intelligent people have been engaged in it. Once let
cultivated men plough, and dig, and follow the commonest labors, and
ploughing, digging, and trades, will cease to be mean. It is the man who
determines the dignity of the occupation, not the occupation which measures
the dignity of the man. Physicians and surgeons perform operations less
cleanly than fall to the lot of most mechanics. I have seen a distinguished
chemist covered with dust like a laborer. Still these men were not degraded.
Their intelligence gave dignity to their work, and so our laborers, once
educated, will give dignity to their toils.-Let me add, that I see little
difference in point of dignity, between the various vocations of men. When I
see a clerk, spending his days in adding figures, perhaps merely copying, or
a teller of a bank counting money, or a merchant selling shoes and hides, I
cannot see in these occupations greater respectableness than in making
leather, shoes, or furniture. I do not see in them greater intellectual
activity than in several trades. A man in the fields seems to have more
chances of improvement in his work, than a man behind the counter, or a man
driving the quill. It is the sign of a narrow mind, to imagine, as many seem
to do, that there is a repugnance between the plain, coarse exterior of a
laborer, and mental culture, especially the more refining culture. The
laborer, under his dust and sweat, carries the grand elements of humanity,
and he may put forth its highest powers. I doubt not, there is as genuine
enthusiasm in the contemplation of nature, and in the perusal of works of
genius, under a homespun garb as under finery. We have heard of a
distinguished author, who never wrote so well, as when he was full dressed
for company. But profound thought, and poetical inspiration, have most
generally visited men, when, from narrow circumstances or negligent habits,
the rent coat and shaggy face have made them quite unfit for polished
saloons. A man may see truth, and may be thrilled with beauty, in one
costume or dwelling as well as another; and he should respect himself the
more, for the hardships under which his intellectual force has been
developed.
But it will be asked, how can the laboring
classes find time for self-culture? I answer, as I have already intimated,
that an earnest purpose finds time or makes time. It seizes on spare
moments, and turns larger fragments of leisure to golden account. A man, who
follows his calling with industry and spirit, and uses his earnings
economically, will always have some portion of the day at command; and it is
astonishing, how fruitful of improvement a short season becomes, when
eagerly seized and faithfully used. it has often been observed, that they,
who have most time at their disposal, profit by it least. A single hour in
the day, steadily given to the study of an interesting subject, brings
unexpected accumulations of knowledge. The improvements made by
well-disposed pupils, in many of our country schools, which are open but
three months in the year, and in our Sunday-schools, which are kept but one
or two hours in the week, show what can be brought to pass by slender means.
The affections, it is said, sometimes crowd years into moments, and the
intellect has something of the same power. Volumes have not only been read,
but written, in flying journeys. I have known a man of vigorous intellect,
who had enjoyed few advantages of early education, and whose mind was almost
engrossed by the details of an extensive business, but who composed a book
of much original thought, in steam-boats and on horseback, while visiting
distant customers. The succession of the seasons gives to many of the
working class opportunities for intellectual improvement. The winter brings
leisure to the husbandman, and winter evenings to many laborers in the city.
Above all, in Christian countries, the seventh day is released from toil.
The seventh part of the year, no small portion of existence, may be given by
almost every one to intellectual and moral culture. Why is it that Sunday is
not made a more effectual means of improvement? Undoubtedly the seventh day
is to have a religious character; but religion connects itself with all the
great subjects of human thought, and leads to and aids the study of all. God
is in nature. God is in history. Instruction in the works of the Creator, so
as to reveal his perfection in their harmony, beneficence, and grandeur;
instruction in the histories of the church and the world, so as to show in
all events his moral government, and to bring out the great moral lessons in
which human life abounds; instruction in the lives of philanthropists, of
saints, of men eminent for piety and virtue; all these branches of teaching
enter into religion, and are appropriate to Sunday; and, through these, a
vast amount of knowledge may be given to the people. Sunday ought not to
remain the dull and fruitless season that it now is to multitudes. It may be
clothed with a new interest and a new sanctity. It may give a new impulse to
the nation's soul.I have thus shown, that time may be found for improvement;
and the fact is, that, among our most improved people, a considerable part
consists of persons, who pass the greatest portion of every day at the desk,
in the countingroom, or in some other sphere, chained to tasks which have
very little tendency to expand the mind. In the progress of society, with
the increase of machinery, and with other aids which intelligence and
philanthropy will multiply, we may expect that more and more time will be
redeemed from manual labor, for intellectual and social occupations.
But some will say, "Be it granted that the
working classes may find some leisure; should they not be allowed to spend
it in relaxation? Is it not cruel, to summon them from toils of the hand to
toils of the mind? They have earned pleasure by the day's toil, and ought to
partake it." Yes, let them have pleasure. Far be it from me to dry up the
fountains, to blight the spots of verdure, where they refresh themselves
after life's labors. But I maintain, that self-culture multiplies and
increases their pleasures, that it creates new capacities of enjoyment, that
it saves their leisure from being, what it too often is, dull and wearisome,
that it saves them from rushing for excitement to indulgences destructive to
body and soul. It is one of the great benefits of self-improvement, that it
raises a people above the gratifications of the brute, and gives them
pleasures worthy of men. In consequence of the present intellectual culture
of our country, imperfect as it is, a vast amount of enjoyment is
communicated to men, women, and children, of all conditions, by books, an
enjoyment unknown to ruder times. At this moment, a number of gifted writers
are employed in multiplying entertaining works. Walter Scott, a name
conspicuous among the brightest of his day, poured out his inexhaustible
mind in fictions, at once so sportive and thrilling, that they have taken
their place among the delights of all civilized nations. How many millions
have been chained to his pages! How many melancholy spirits has he steeped
in forgetfulness of their cares and sorrows! What multitudes, wearied by
their day's work, have owed some bright evening hours and balmier sleep to
his magical creations! And not only do fictions give pleasure. In proportion
as the mind is cultivated, it takes delight in history and biography, in
descriptions of nature, in travels, in poetry, and even graver works. Is the
laborer then defrauded of pleasure by improvement? There is another class of
gratifications to which self-culture introduces the mass of the people. I
refer to lectures, discussions, meetings of associations for benevolent and
literary purposes, and to other like methods of passing the evening, which
every year is multiplying among us. A popular address from an enlightened
man, who has the tact to reach the minds of the people, is a high
gratification, as well as a source of knowledge. The profound silence in our
public halls, where these lectures are delivered to crowds, shows that
cultivation is no foe to enjoyment. -- I have a strong hope, that by the
progress of intelligence, taste, and morals among all portions of society, a
class of public amusements will grow up among us, bearing some resemblance
to the theatre, but purified from the gross evils which degrade our present
stage, and which, I trust, will seal its ruin. Dramatic performances and
recitations are means of bringing the mass of the people into a quicker
sympathy with a writer of genius, to a profounder comprehension of his
grand, beautiful, touching conceptions, than can be effected by the reading
of the closet. No commentary throws such a light on a great poem or any
impassioned work of literature, as the voice of a reader or speaker, who
brings to the task a deep feeling of his author and rich and various powers
of expression. A crowd, electrified by a sublime thought, or softened into a
humanizing sorrow, under such a voice, partake a pleasure at once exquisite
and refined; and I cannot but believe, that this and other amusements, at
which the delicacy of woman and the purity of the Christian can take no
offence, are to grow up under a higher social culture.-Let me only add,
that, in proportion as culture spreads among a people, the cheapest and
commonest of all pleasures, conversation, increases in delight. This, after
all, is the great amusement of life, cheering us round our hearths, often
cheering our work, stirring our hearts gently, acting on us like the balmy
air or the bright light of heaven, so silently and continually, that we
hardly think of its influence. This source of happiness is too often lost to
men of all classes, for want of knowledge, mental activity, and refinement
of feeling; and do we defraud the laborer of his pleasure, by recommending
to him improvements which will place the daily, hourly, blessings of
conversation within his reach?
I have thus considered some of the common
objections which start up when the culture of the mass of men is insisted
on, as the great end of society. For myself, these objections seem worthy of
little notice. The doctrine is too shocking to need refutation, that the
great majority of human beings, endowed as they are with rational and
immortal powers, are placed on earth, simply to toil for their own animal
subsistence, and to minister to the luxury and elevation of the few. It is
monstrous, it approaches impiety, to suppose that God has placed insuperable
barriers to the expansion of the free, illimitable soul. True, there are
obstructions in the way of improvement. But in this country, the chief
obstructions lie, not in our lot, but in ourselves, not in outward
hardships, but in our worldly and sensual propensities; and one proof of
this is, that a true self-culture is as little thought of on exchange as in
the workshop, as little among the prosperous as among those of narrower
conditions. The path to perfection is difficult to men in every lot; there
is no royal road for rich or poor. But difficulties are meant to rouse, not
discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict. And how much has
it already overcome! Under what burdens of oppression has it made its way
for ages! What mountains of difficulty has it cleared! And with all this
experience, shall we say, that the progress of the mass of men is to be
despaired of, that the chains of bodily necessity are too strong and
ponderous to be broken by the mind, that servile, unimproving drudgery is
the unalterable condition of the multitude of the human race?
I conclude with recalling to you the
happiest feature of our age, and that is, the progress of the mass of the
people in intelligence, self-respect, and all the comforts of life. What a
contrast does the present form with past times! Not many ages ago, the
nation was the property of one man, and all its interests were staked in
perpetual games of war, for no end but to build up his family, or to bring
new territories under his yoke. Society was divided into two classes, the
high-born and the vulgar, separated from one another by a great gulf, as
impassable as that between the saved and the lost. The people had no
significance as individuals, but formed a mass, a machine, to be wielded at
pleasure by their lords. In war, which was the great sport of the times,
those brave knights, of whose prowess we hear, cased themselves and their
horses in armour, so as to be almost invulnerable, whilst the common people
on foot were left, without protection, to be hewn in pieces or trampled down
by their betters. Who, that compares the condition of Europe a few years
ago, with the present state of the world, but must bless God for the change.
The grand distinction of modem times is, the emerging of the people from
brutal degradation, the gradual recognition of their rights, the gradual
diffusion among them of the means of improvement and happiness, the creation
of a new power in the state, the power of the people. And it is worthy
remark, that this revolution is due in a great
degree to religion, which, in the hands of
the crafty and aspiring, had bowed the multitude to the dust, but which, in
the fulness of time, began to fulfil its mission of freedom. It was
religion, which by teaching men their near relation to God, awakened in them
the consciousness of their importance as individuals. It was the struggle
for religious rights, which opened men's eyes to all their rights. It was
resistance to religious usurpation, which led men to withstand political
oppression. It was religious discussion, which roused the minds of all
classes to free and vigorous thought. It was religion, which armed the
martyr and patriot in England against arbitrary power, which braced the
spirits of our fathers against the perils of the ocean and wilderness, and
sent them to found here the freest and most equal state on earth.
Let us thank God for what has been gained.
But let us not think every thing gained. Let the people feel that they have
only started in the race. How much remains to be done! What a vast amount of
ignorance, intemperance, coarseness, sensuality, may still be found in our
community! What a vast amount of mind is palsied and lost! When we think,
that every house might be cheered by intelligence, disinterestedness, and
refinement, and then remember, in how many houses the higher powers and
affections of human nature are buried as in tombs, what a darkness gathers
over society! And how few of .us are moved by this moral desolation? How few
understand, that to raise the depressed, by a wise culture, to the dignity
of men, is the highest end of the social state? Shame on us, that the worth
of a fellow-creature is so little felt.
I would, that I could speak with an
awakening voice to the people, of their wants, their privileges, their
responsibilities. I would say to them, You cannot, without guilt and
disgrace, stop where you are. The past and the present call on you to
advance. Let what you have gained be an impulse to something higher. Your
nature is too great to be crushed. You were not created what you are, merely
to toil, eat, drink, and sleep, like the inferior animals. If you will, you
can rise. No power in society, no hardship in your condition can depress
you, keep you down, in knowledge, power, virtue, influence, but by your own
consent. Do not be lulled to sleep by the flatteries which you hear, as if
your participation in the national sovereignty made you equal to the noblest
of your race. You have many and great deficiencies to be remedied; and the
remedy lies, not in the ballot-box, not in the exercise of your political
powers, but in the faithful education of yourselves and your children. These
truths you have often heard and slept over. Awake! Resolve earnestly on
Self-culture. Make yourselves worthy of your free institutions, and
strengthen and perpetuate them by your intelligence and your virtues.