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JOHN
FISKE In a sinless
and painless world
the moral element would be lacking; the goodness would have no more
significance in our conscious life than that load of atmosphere which
we are
always carrying about with us. We are thus
brought to a striking
conclusion, the essential soundness of which can not be gainsaid. In a
happy
world there must be pain and sorrow, and in a moral world the knowledge
of evil
is indispensable. The stern necessity for this has been proved to
inhere in the
innermost constitution of the human soul. It is part and parcel of the
universe. We do not find
that evil has been
interpolated into the universe from without; we find that, on the
contrary, it
is an indispensable part of the dramatic whole. God is the creator of
evil, and
from the eternal scheme of things diabolism is forever excluded. From our
present standpoint we
may fairly ask, what would have been the worth of that primitive
innocence
portrayed in the myth of the Garden of Eden, had it ever been realized
in the
life of men? What would have been the moral value or significance of a
race of
human beings ignorant of sin, and doing beneficent acts with no more
consciousness or volition than the deftly contrived machine that picks
up raw
material at one end, and turns out some finished product at the other?
Clearly,
for strong and resolute men and women, an Eden would be but a fool's
paradise. "Through
Nature to God" JOHN FISKE arly in life
John Fiske aimed
high and thought himself capable of great things. He also believed that
the
world accepted a man at the estimate he placed upon himself.
Fiske was born
at Hartford in
Eighteen Hundred Forty-two. His mother's maiden name was Fiske and his
father's
name was Green, and until well-nigh manhood, John Fiske was called
Edmund
Green. His father died
while Edmund was
a baby, and the wee youngster was taken charge of by his grandmother
Fiske of
Middletown, Connecticut. When his mother
married again,
Edmund did not approve of the match. Parents often try to live their
children's
lives for them, and to hold the balance true, children occasionally
attempt to
dictate to parents in affairs of the heart. A young man by the name of
Hamlet
will be recalled who, having no special business of his own, became
much
distressed and had theories concerning the conduct of his mother. As a
general
proposition the person who looks after the territory directly under his
own hat
will find his time fairly well employed. They say Edmund
Green made
threats when his mother changed her name, but all he did was to follow
her
example and change his. Thereafter he was plain John Fiske. "I must
have a
name easy to take hold of: one that people can remember," he said. And
they do say that John Fiske's reverence for John Ruskin had something
to do
with his choice of name. Just here some
curious one of the
curious sex, which by the way holds no monopoly on curiosity, may ask
if the second
venture of Mrs. Green was fruitful and fortunate. So I will say, yes,
eminently
so; and in one way it seemed to serve, for John Fiske's stepfather
waived
John's displeasure with his stepfather's wife, and did something toward
sending
the young man to Harvard University, and also supplied the funds to
send him on
a tour around the world. However, the
second brood
revealed no genius, at sight of which the defunct Mr. Green from his
seat in
Elysium must have chortled in glee, assuming, of course, that
disembodied
spirits are cognizant of the doings of their late partners, as John
Fiske
seemed to think they were. If Alexander
Humboldt's mother
had not married again, we would have had no Alexander Humboldt. Second
marriages are like first ones in this: Sometimes they are happy and
sometimes
not. In any event, I occasionally think that mother-love has often been
much
exaggerated. Love is a most beautiful thing, and it does not seem to
make very
much difference who supplies it. Stepmother-love, Lincoln used to say,
was the
most precious thing that had ever come his way. I know a man who loves
his
mother-in-law, because she pitied him. Our Oneida friends had
"Community
Mothers," who took care of everybody's babies, just as if they were
their
own, and with marked success, for the genus hoodlum never evolved at
Oneida.
Grandmother-love served all purposes for little Isaac Newton, just as
it did
for John Fiske. John Fiske's
grandmother was his
first teacher, and she started out with the assumption that genius
always skips
one generation. She believed that she was dealing with a
record-breaker, and
she was. What she did not know about the classics was known by others
whom she
delegated to teach her grandchild. When her baby
genius was just out
of linsey-woolsey dresses and wore trousers buttoned to a calico waist,
she
began preparing him for college. The old lady had loved a college man
in her
youth, and she judged Harvard by the Harvard man she knew best. And the
Harvard
man she saw in her waking dreams, she created in her own image. Harvard
requires perspective, and viewed over the years through a mist of
melancholy it
is very beautiful. At close range we often get a Jarrett Bumball flavor
of
cigarettes and a sight of the foam that made Milwaukee famous. To a
great degree,
Gran'ma Fiske created her Harvard out of the stuff that dreams are made
of.
When her little charge was six years old, she began preparing him for
Harvard
by teaching him to say, "amo, amas, amat." At seven years
of age he was
reading Cæsar's "Commentaries" and making wise comments over his bowl
of bread-and-milk about the Tenth Legion; and he also had his opinions
concerning the relationship of Cæsar with Cleopatra. At this time he
read
Josephus for rest, and discovered for himself that the famous passage
about
Jesus of Nazareth was an interpolation. When he was
eight, he was
familiar with Plato, had read all of Shakespeare's plays, and
propounded a few
hypotheses concerning the authorship of the "Sonnets." At nine he
spoke Greek with an
Attic accent. When ten he had read Prescott, Gibbon and Macaulay; and
about
this time, as a memory test he wrote a history of the world from the
time of
Moses down to the date of his own birth, giving a list of the greatest
men who
had ever lived, with a brief mention of what they had done, with the
date of
their birth and death. This book is
still in existence
and so far as I know has never been equaled by the performance of any
infant
prodigy, save possibly John Stuart Mill. When twelve
years of age he had
read Vergil, Sallust, Tacitus, Ovid, Juvenal and Catullus. He had also
mastered
trigonometry, surveying, navigation, geometry and differential calculus. Before his
grandmother had him
discard knee-breeches, he kept his diary in Spanish, spoke German at
the table,
and read German philosophy in the original. The year he was sixteen he
wrote
poems after Dante in Italian and translated Cervantes into English. At seventeen he
read the Hebrew
scriptures like a Rabbi, and was familiar with Sanskrit. Now, let no
carpist imagine I
have dealt in hyperbole, or hand-illumined the facts: I have merely
stated some
simple truths about the early career of John Fiske. One might
imagine that with all
his wonderful achievements this youth would be top-heavy and a most
insufferable prig. The fact was, he was a fine, rollicking, healthy
young man
much given to pranks, and withal generous and lovable. He was admitted
to Harvard
without examination, for his fame had preceded him. Students and
professors
alike looked at him in wonder. At Cambridge,
as if to keep good
his record, he studied thirteen hours a day, for twelve months in the
year. He
ranged through every subject in the catalog, and all recorded knowledge
was to
him familiar. Prophecies were
freely made that
he would eclipse Sir Isaac Newton and Humboldt. But there were others
who had a
clearer vision. John Fiske made
a decided success
in life and left his personality distinctly impressed upon his time,
but it is
no disparagement to say of him that Autumn did not fulfil the promise
of Spring.
And Fiske himself in his single original contribution to the evolution
crusade
explains the reason why. Professor
Santayanna of Harvard
once said that John Fiske made three great scientific discoveries, as
follows: 1. As you
lengthen a pigeon's bill,
you increase the size of its feet. 2. White
tomcats with blue eyes
are always deaf. 3. The extent
of mental
development in any animal is in proportion to its infancy or the length
of time
involved in its reaching physical maturity. Waiving Numbers
One and Two as of
doubtful value, Number Three is Fiske's sole original discovery,
according to
his confession. Further, Huxley quotes Fiske on this theme, and adds,
"The
delay of adolescence and the prolonging of the period of infancy form a
subject, as expressed by Mr. Fiske, which is worthy of our most careful
consideration." Rareripes fall
early. John
Fiske's name was coupled, as we have seen, with those of Newton and
Humboldt.
Newton died at eighty-six, Humboldt at ninety. These men developed
slowly: the
hothouse methods were not for them. Fiske at twenty knew more than any
of them
did at forty. Fiske at twenty-five was a better man mentally and
physically
than he was at thirty-five. At forty he was refused life-insurance
because his
measurement east and west was out of proportion to his measurement
north and
south. He used often
to sit at his desk
for fifteen hours a day, writing and studying. The sedentary habit grew
upon
him; the vital organs got clogged with adipose tissue. The doctor told
him that
"his diaphragm was too close to his lungs" — a cheerful proposition,
well worthy of a small, mouse-colored medicus who dare not run the risk
of
displeasing a big patient by telling him the truth, that is, that deep
breathing and active exercise in the open air can never be replaced
through the
use of something poured out of a bottle. People who eat
too much, drink
too much, smoke too much, and do not exercise enough, have to pay for
their
privileges, even though they are able to work differential calculus
with one
hand and recite Xenophon's "Anabasis" backward. They all have the
liver and lungs too close to the diaphragm, because that damnable
invention of
Sir Isaac Newton's slumbers not nor sleeps, and all the vital organs
droop and
drop when we neglect deep breathing. Inertia is a vice. The gods
cultivate
levitation, which is a different thing from levity, meaning skyey
gravitation,
uplift, aspiration expressed in bodily attitude. When levitation lets
go,
gravity doubles its grip. The Yogi of the East know vastly more about this theme than we do, and have made of deep breathing an art. Carry the crown of your head high, hold your chin in, and fill the top of your lungs by cultivating levitation. We are gods in the biscuit! fter four years
at Harvard and the regulation two years at the Harvard
Law School, John Fiske opened an office in Boston and gave his shingle
to the
breeze. No clients came, and this was well — for the clients. Also, for
John.
The law is a business proposition: its essence is the adjustment of
differences
between men, the lubrication of exchange, getting things on! Learned
men very
seldom make good lawyers. Law is a very practical matter, and as for
"Law
Latin," it can be learned in a week and then should be mostly
forgotten.
The lawyer who asks his client about the "causa sine qua non," or
harangues the jury concerning the "ipse dixit" of "de
facto" and "de jure," will probably be mulcted for costs on
general principles.
"I always rule
hard against
the lawyer who quotes Latin," said a Brooklyn judge to me the other
day.
Happily, Law Latin is now not used to any extent, except in Missouri. No more clients
came to John
Fiske than did to Wendell Phillips, who once had a law-office on the
same
street. So John sent letters to the newspapers, wrote book-reviews, and
contributed essays to the "Atlantic Monthly." Occasionally, he would
lecture for scientific clubs or societies. While still in
the Law School he
had discounted the future and married a charming young woman, who
believed in
him to an extent that would have made the average man pause. Marriages do
not always keep pace
exactly with the price of corn. Receipts in the
Fiske law-office
were not active. John Fiske was twenty-six; his grandmother was dead,
and
family cares were coming along apace, all according to the Law of
Malthus. He accepted an
offer to give
substitute lectures at Harvard on history, for a professor who had gone
abroad
for his health. This he continued, speaking for any absentee on any
subject,
and tutoring rich laggards for a consideration. Good boys, low on
phosphorus,
used to get him to start their daily themes, and those overtaken in the
throes
of trigonometry he often rescued from disgrace. Darwinism was
in the saddle. Asa
Gray was mildly defending it. Agassiz stood aloof, clinging to his
early Swiss
parsonage teachings, and the Theological Department marched in solid
phalanx
and scoffed and scorned. Yale, always having more theology than
Harvard, threw
out challenges. Fiske had saturated himself with the ideas of Darwin
and Wallace,
and his intellect was great enough to perceive the vast and magnificent
scope
of "The Origin of Species." He prepared and read a lecture on the
subject, all couched in gentle and judicial phrase, but with a finale
that gave
forth no uncertain sound. The Overseers
decided to ask
Fiske to amplify the subject and give a course of lectures on the Law
of
Evolution. The subject
grew under his hands
and the course extended itself into thirty-five lectures, covering the
whole
field of natural history, with many short excursions into the realms of
biology, embryology, botany, geology and cosmogony. Fiske was made
assistant
librarian at a salary of one thousand dollars a year. It was not much
money,
but it gave him a fixed position, with time to help the erring freshman
and the
mentally recalcitrant sophomore handicapped by rich parents. For seven
years
Fiske held this position of assistant librarian, and hardly a student
at
Harvard during those years but acknowledged the personal help he
received at
the hands of John Fiske. Knowledge consists in having an assistant
librarian
who knows where to find the thing. Fiske's
thirty-five lectures had
evolved into that excellent book, "Outlines of Cosmic Philosophy."
The public were buying it. Evolution was
fast taking its
place as a fixed fact. And John Fiske was moving into public favor on
the
flood-tide. There were demands for his lectures from various schools,
colleges
and lyceums, throughout the United States. He resigned his
position so as to
give all his time to writing and speaking. And Harvard, proud of her
gifted
son, elected him an Overseer of the University, which position he held
until
his death. John Fiske died in Nineteen Hundred One, suddenly, aged
fifty-nine. ext to the
originator of a great thought is the man who quotes it,"
says Ralph Waldo Emerson. Next to the discoverer of a great scientific
truth is
the man who recognizes and upholds it. The service done science by
Fiske is
beyond calculation. Fiske was not a Columbus upon the sea of science:
he followed
the course laid out by others, and was really never out of sight of a
buoy. He
comes as near being a great scientist, perhaps, as any man that America
has
ever produced.
America has had
but four men of
unmistakable originality. These are: Franklin, Emerson, Whitman and
Edison.
Each worked in a field particularly his own, and the genius of each was
recognized in Europe before we were willing to acknowledge it here. But
the
word "scientist" can hardly be properly applied to any of these men.
For want of a better name we call John Fiske our greatest scientist. He
was the
most learned man of his day. In the realm of Physical Geography no
American
could approach him. The combined knowledge of everybody else was his:
he had a
passion for facts, a memory like a daybook, and his systematic mind was
disciplined until it was a regular Dewey card-index. Louis Agassiz
was born in Europe,
but he was ours by adoption, and he might dispute with Fiske the title
to first
place in the American Pantheon of Science, were it not for the fact
that the
Law of Evolution was beyond his ken, being obscured by a marked,
myopic,
theological, stigmatic squint. Agassiz died in
his sins,
unconvinced unrepentant, refusing the rite of extreme unction that Asa
Gray
offered him, his sensitive spirit writhing at mention of the word
"Darwin." On his tomb, Clio with moving finger has carved one of his
own sentences, nor all your tears shall blot a line of it. And these
are the
words of Agassiz: "Darwinism seeks to dethrone God, and replace Him by
a
blind force called the Law of Evolution." So passed away the great soul
of
Louis Agassiz. Fiske has been
called the Huxley
of America; but Fiske was like Agassiz in this, he never had the
felicity to
achieve the ill-will of the many. Fiske has also been called the
Drummond of
America, but Fiske was really a Henry Drummond and a Louis Agassiz
rolled into
one, the mass well seasoned with essence of Huxley. John Fiske made the
science
of Darwin and Wallace palatable to orthodox theology, and it is to the
earnest
and eloquent words of Fiske that we owe it that Evolution is taught
everywhere
in the public schools and even in the sectarian colleges of America
today. The almost
universal opposition
to Darwin's book arose from the idea that its acceptance would destroy
the
Christian religion. This was the plaintive plea put forth when Newton
advanced
his discovery of the Law of Gravitation, and also when Copernicus
proclaimed
the movements of the earth: these things were contrary to the Bible!
Copernicus
was a loyal Catholic; Sir Isaac Newton was a staunch Churchman; but
both kept
their religion in water-tight compartments, so that it never got mixed
with
their science. Gladstone never allowed his religion to tint his
statesmanship,
and we all know businessmen who follow the double-entry scheme. That famous
French toast,
"Here's to our wives and sweethearts — may they never meet!" would
suit most lawyers just as well if expressed this way. "Here's to our
religion and our business — God knows they never meet." To Sir Isaac
Newton, religion was
something to be believed, not understood. He left religion to the
specialists,
recognizing its value as a sort of police protection for the State, and
as his
share in the matter he paid tithes, and attended prayers as a matter of
patriotic duty and habit. Voltaire
recognized the greatness
of Newton's intellect, but he could not restrain his aqua fortis, and
so he
said this: "All the scientists were jealous of Newton when he
discovered
the Law of Gravitation, but they got even with him when he wrote his
book on
the Hebrew Prophecies!" Newton wrote that book in his water-tight
compartment. But Newton was
no hypocrite. The
attitude of the Primrose Sphinx who bowed his head in the Church of
England
Chapel — the Jew who rose to the highest office Christian England had
to offer
— and repeated Ben Ezra's prayer, was not the attitude of Newton.
Darwin waived
religion, and if he ever heard of the Bible no one knew it from his
writings. Huxley danced
on it. Tyndall and
Spencer regarded the Bible as a valuable and more or less interesting
collection of myths, fables and folklore tales. Wallace sees in it a
strain of
prophetic truth and regards it as gold-bearing quartz of a low grade. Fiske regarded
it as the word of
God, Holy Writ, expressed often vaguely, mystically, and in the
language of
poetry and symbol, but true when rightly understood. And so John
Fiske throughout his
life spoke in orthodox pulpits to the great delight of Christian
people, and at
the same time wrote books on science and dedicated them to Thomas
Huxley,
Bishop of all Agnostics. To the
scientist the word
"supernatural" is a contradiction. Everything that is in the Universe
is natural; the supernatural is the natural not yet understood. And
that which
is called the supernatural is often the figment of a disordered,
undisciplined
or undeveloped imagination. Simple people
think of
imagination as that quality of mind which revels in tales of fairies
and
hobgoblins, but imagination of this character is undisciplined and
undeveloped.
The scientist who deals with the sternest of facts must be highly
imaginative,
or his work is vain. The engineer sees his structure complete, ere he
draws his
plans. So the scientist divines the thing first and then looks for it
until he
finds it. Were this not so, he would not be able to recognize things
hitherto
unknown, when he saw them; nor could he fit fact to fact, like bones in
a
skeleton, and build a complete structure, if it all did not first exist
as a
thought. To reprove and
punish children
for flights of imagination, John Fiske argued, was one of the things
done only
by a barbaric people. Children first
play at the thing,
which later they are to do well. Play is preparation. The man of
imagination is
the man of sympathy, and only such are those who benefit and bless
mankind and
help us on our way. John Fiske had
imagination enough
to follow closely and hold fellowship with the greatest minds the world
has
ever known. John Fiske believed that we live in a natural universe, and
that
God works through Nature, and that, in fact, Nature is the spirit of
God at
work. Doubts never
disturbed John
Fiske. Things that were not true technically and literally were true to
him if
taken in a spiritual or poetic way. God, to him, was a personal being,
creating
through the Law of Evolution because He chose to. The six days of
Creation were
six eons or geological periods. No man has ever
been more in
sympathy with the discoverers in Natural History than John Fiske. No
man ever
knew so much about his work as John Fiske. His knowledge was colossal,
his
memory prodigious. And in all of the realm of science and philosophy,
from
microscopy and the germ theory to advanced astronomy and the birth of
worlds,
his glowing imagination saw the work of a beneficent Creator who stood
above
and beyond and outside of Natural Law, and with Infinite Wisdom and
Power did
His own Divine Will. Little
theologians who feared
Science, on account of danger to pet texts, received from him kindly
pats on
the head, as he showed them how both Science and Scripture were true. He didn't do
away with texts, he
merely changed their interpretation. And often he discovered that the
text
which seemed to contradict science was really prophetic of it. John
Fiske did
not take anything away from anybody, unless he gave them something
better in
return. "A man's belief
is a part of
the man," he said. "Take it away by force and he will bleed to death;
but if the time comes when he no longer needs it, he will either slough
it or
convert it into something more useful." Every good
thing begins as
something else. Evolution is at work on the creeds as well as in
matter. A
monkey-man will have a monkey belief. He evolves the
thing he needs,
and the belief that fits one man will not fit another. Religious
opinions are
never thrown away: they evolve into something else, and we use the old
symbols
and imagery to express new thoughts. John Fiske,
unlike John Morley,
considered "Compromise" a great thing. "Truth is a point of
view: let us get together," he used to say. And so he worked to keep
the
old, as a foundation for the new. I once heard
him interrupted in a
lecture by a questioner who asked, "Why would you keep the Church
intact?" The question stung him into impassioned speech which was
better
than anything in his manuscript. I can not attempt to reproduce his
exact
language; but the intent was that as the Church was the chief
instrument in
preserving for us the learning of Greece and Rome, so has she been the
mother
of art, the inspirer of music and the protector of the outcast.
Colleges,
hospitals, libraries, art-galleries and asylums, all come to us through
the
medium of religion. The convent was
first a place of
protection for oppressed womanhood. To discard
religion would be like
repudiating our parents because we did not like their manners and
clothes. The
religious impulse is the art impulse, and both are manifestations of
love, and
love is the basis of our sense of sublimity. We surely will
abandon certain
phases of religion. We will purify, refine and beautify our religion,
just as
we have our table etiquette and our housekeeping. The millennium will
come only
through the scientific acceptance of piety. When Church and State
separated it
was well, but when Science and Religion joined hands it was better.
Science
stands for the head; Religion for the heart. All things are dual, and
through
the marriage of these two principles, one the masculine and the other
the
feminine, will come a renaissance of advancement such as this tired old
world
on her zigzag journeys has never seen. Sociology is the religious
application
of economics. Demonology has been replaced by psychology, and the
betterment of
man's condition on earth is now fast becoming the chief solicitude of
the
Church. It will thus be
seen that John
Fiske's hope for the future was bright and strong. The man was an
optimist by
nature, and his patience and good-nature were always in evidence. He
made
friends, and he held them. Huxley, who of all men hated piety that was
flavored
with hypocrisy, loved John Fiske and once wrote this: "There was a man
sent from God by the name of John Fiske. Now John holds in his great
and
generous heart the best of all the Church has to offer; hence I no
longer go to
prayers, but instead, I invite John Fiske to come and dine with us
every
Sunday, so are we made better — Amen." |