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Alexandria and her Schools

by Charles Kingsley




PREFACE



I should not have presumed to choose for any lectures of mine such a subject as that which I have tried to treat in this book。  The subject was chosen by the Institution where the lectures were delivered。  Still less should I have presumed to print them of my own accord; knowing how fragmentary and crude they are。  They were printed at the special request of my audience。  Least of all; perhaps; ought I to have presumed to publish them; as I have done; at Cambridge; where any inaccuracy or sciolism (and that such defects exist in these pages; I cannot but fear) would be instantly detected; and severely censured:  but nevertheless; it seemed to me that Cambridge was the fittest place in which they could see the light; because to Cambridge I mainly owe what little right method or sound thought may be found in them; or indeed; in anything which I have ever written。  In the heyday of youthful greediness and ambition; when the mind; dazzled by the vastness and variety of the universe; must needs know everything; or rather know about everything; at once and on the spot; too many are apt; as I have been in past years; to complain of Cambridge studies as too dry and narrow:  but as time teaches the student; year by year; what is really required for an understanding of the objects with which he meets; he begins to find that his University; in as far as he has really received her teaching into himself; has given him; in her criticism; her mathematics; above all; in Plato; something which all the popular knowledge; the lectures and institutions of the day; and even good books themselves; cannot give; a boon more precious than learning; namely; the art of learning。  That instead of casting into his lazy lap treasures which he would not have known how to use; she has taught him to mine for them himself; and has by her wise refusal to gratify his intellectual greediness; excited his hunger; only that he may be the stronger to hunt and till for his own subsistence; and thus; the deeper he drinks; in after years; at fountains wisely forbidden to him while he was a Cambridge student; and sees his old companions growing up into sound…headed and sound…hearted practical men; liberal and expansive; and yet with a firm standing… ground for thought and action; he learns to complain less and less of Cambridge studies; and more and more of that conceit and haste of his own; which kept him from reaping the full advantage of her training。

These Lectures; as I have said; are altogether crude and fragmentary how; indeed; could they be otherwise; dealing with so vast a subject; and so long a period of time?  They are meant neither as Essays nor as Orations; but simply as a collection of hints to those who may wish to work out the subject for themselves; and; I trust; as giving some glimpses of a central idea; in the light of which the spiritual history of Alexandria; and perhaps of other countries also; may be seen to have in itself a coherence and organic method。

I was of course compelled; by the circumstances under which these Lectures were delivered; to keep clear of all points which are commonly called 〃controversial。〃  I cannot but feel that this was a gain; rather than a loss; because it forced me; if I wished to give any interpretation at all of Alexandrian thought; any Theodicy at all of her fate; to refer to laws which I cannot but believe to be deeper; wider; more truly eternal than the points which cause most of our modern controversies; either theological or political; laws which will; I cannot but believe also; reassert themselves; and have to be reasserted by all wise teachers; very soon indeed; and it may be under most novel embodiments; but without any change in their eternal spirit。

For I may say; I hope; now (what if said ten years ago would have only excited laughter); that I cannot but subscribe to the opinion of the many wise men who believe that Europe; and England as an integral part thereof; is on the eve of a revolution; spiritual and political; as vast and awful as that which took place at the Reformation; and that; beneficial as that revolution will doubtless be to the destinies of mankind in general; it depends upon the wisdom and courage of each nation individually; whether that great deluge shall issue; as the Reformation did; in a fresh outgrowth of European nobleness and strength or usher in; after pitiable confusions and sorrows; a second Byzantine age of stereotyped effeminacy and imbecility。  For I have as little sympathy with those who prate so loudly of the progress of the species; and the advent of I know…not…what Cockaigne of universal peace and plenty; as I have with those who believe on the strength of 〃unfulfilled prophecy;〃 the downfall of Christianity; and the end of the human race to be at hand。  Nevertheless; one may well believe that prophecy will be fulfilled in this great crisis; as it is in every great crisis; although one be unable to conceive by what method of symbolism the drying up of the Euphrates can be twisted to signify the fall of Constantinople:  and one can well believe that a day of judgment is at hand; in which for every nation and institution; the wheat will be sifted out and gathered into God's garner; for the use of future generations; and the chaff burnt up with that fire unquenchable which will try every man's work; without being of opinion that after a few more years are over; the great majority of the human race will be consigned hopelessly to never…ending torments。

If prophecy be indeed a divine message to man; if it be anything but a cabbala; useless either to the simple…minded or to the logical; intended only for the plaything of a few devout fancies; it must declare the unchangeable laws by which the unchangeable God is governing; and has always governed; the human race; and therefore only by understanding what has happened; can we understand what will happen; only by understanding history; can we understand prophecy; and that not merely by picking outtoo often arbitrarily and unfairlya few names and dates from the records of all the ages; but by trying to discover its organic laws; and the causes which produce in nations; creeds; and systems; health and disease; growth; change; decay and death。  If; in one small corner of this vast field; I shall have thrown a single ray of light upon these subjectsif I shall have done anything in these pages towards illustrating the pathology of a single people; I shall believe that I have done better service to the Catholic Faith and the Scriptures; than if I did really 〃know the times and the seasons; which the Father has kept in His own hand。〃  For by the former act I may have helped to make some one man more prudent and brave to see and to do what God requires of him; by the latter I could only add to that paralysis of superstitious fear; which is already but too common among us; and but too likely to hinder us from doing our duty manfully against our real foes; whether it be pestilence at home or tyranny abroad。

These last words lead me to another subject; on which I am bound to say a few words。  I have; at the end of these Lectures; made some allusion to the present war。  To have entered further into political questions would have been improper in the place where those Lectures were delivered:  but I cannot refrain from saying here something more on this matter; and that; first; because all political questions have their real root in moral and spiritual ones; and not (as too many fancy) in questions merely relating to the balance of power or commercial economy; and are (the world being under the guidance of a spiritual; and not a physical Being) finally decided on those spiritual grounds; and according to the just laws of the kingdom of God; and; therefore; the future political horoscope of the East depends entirely on the present spiritual state of its inhabitants; and of us who have (and rightly) taken up their cause; in short; on many of those questions on which I have touched in these Lectures:  and next; because I feel bound; in justice to myself; to guard against any mistake about my meaning or supposition that I consider the Turkish empire a righteous thi
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