The Roman and the Teuton
Preface
Page 1
THE ROMAN
AND THE TEUTON
A SERIES OF LECTURES
Delivered Before
The University of Cambridge
By
Charles Kingsley, M.A.
New Edition, with Preface, By
Professor F. Max Müller
London
Macmillan and Co.
1889
PREFACE
Never
shall I forget the moment when for the last time I gazed upon the manly
features of Charles Kingsley, features which Death had rendered calm,
grand, sublime. The constant struggle that in life seemed to allow no
rest to his expression, the spirit, like a caged lion, shaking the bars
of his prison, the mind striving for utterance, the soul wearying over
loving response,---all that was over. There remained only the satisfied
expression of triumph and peace, as of a soldier who had fought a good
fight, and who, while sinking into the stillness of the slumber of death,
listens to the distant sounds of music and to the shouts of victory. One
saw the ideal man, as Nature had meant him to be, and one felt that there
is no greater sculptor than Death.
As one looked on that
marble statue which only some weeks ago had so warmly pressed one's hand,
his whole life flashed through one's thoughts. One remembered the young
curate and the Saint's Tragedy; the chartist parson and Alton Locke; the
happy poet and the Sands of Dee; the brilliant novel-writer and Hypatia
and Westward-Ho; the Rector of Eversley and his Village Sermons; the beloved
professor of Cambridge, the busy canon at Chester, the powerful preacher
in Westminster Abbey. One thought of him by the Berkshire chalk-streams
and on the Devonshire coast, watching the beauty and wisdom of Nature,
reading her solemn lessons, chuckling too over her inimitable fun. One
saw him in town-alleys, preaching the Gospel of godliness and cleanliness,
while smoking his pipe with soldiers and navvies. One heard him in drawing-rooms,
listened to with patient silence, till one of his vigorous or quaint speeches
bounded forth, never to be forgotten. How children delighted in him! How
young, wild men believed in him, and obeyed him too! How women were captivated
by his chivalry, older men by his genuine humility and sympathy!
All that was now passing
away---was gone. But as one looked on him for the last time on earth,
one felt that greater than the curate, the poet, the professor, the canon,
had been the man himself, with his warm heart, his honest purposes, his
trust in his friends, his readiness to spend himself, his chivalry and
humility, worthy of a better age.
Of all this the world
knew little;---yet few men excited wider and stronger sympathies.
Who can forget that funeral
on the 28th Jan., 1875, and the large sad throng that gathered
round his grave? There was the representative of the Prince of Wales,
and close by the gipsies of the Eversley common, who used to call him
their Patrico-rai, their Priest-King. There was the old Squire of his
village, and the labourers, young and old, to whom he had been a friend
and a father. There were Governors of distant Colonies, officers, and
sailors, the Bishop of his diocese, and the Dean of his abbey; there were
the leading Nonconformists of the neighbourhood, and his own devoted curates,
Peers and Members of the House of Commons, authors and publishers; and
outside the church-yard, the horses and the hounds and the huntsman in
pink, for though as good a clergyman as any, Charles Kingsley had been
a good sportsman too, and had taken in his life many a fence as bravely
as he took the last fence of all, without fear or trembling. All that
he had loved, and all that had loved him was there, and few eyes were
dry when he was laid in his own yellow gravel bed, the old trees which
he had planted and cared for waving their branches to him for the last
time, and the grey sunny sky looking down with calm pity on the deserted
rectory, and on the short joys and the shorter sufferings of mortal men.
All went home feeling
that life was poorer, and every one knew that he had lost a friend who
had been, in some peculiar sense, his own. Charles Kingsley will be missed
in England, in the English colonies, in America, where he spent his last
happy year; aye, wherever Saxon speech and Saxon thought is understood.
He will be mourned for, yearned for, in every place in which he passed
some days of his busy life. As to myself, I feel as if another cable had
snapped that tied me to this hospitable shore.
When an author or a poet
dies, the better part of him, it is often said, is left in his works.
So it is in many cases. But with Kingsley his life and his works were
one. All he wrote was meant for the day when he wrote it. That was enough
for him. He hardly gave himself time to think of fame and the future.
Compared with a good work done, with a good word spoken, with a silent
grasp of the hand from a young man he had saved from mischief, or with
a 'Thank you, Sir,' from a poor woman to whom he had been a comfort, he
would have despised what people call glory, like incense curling away
in smoke. He was, in one sense of the word, a careless writer. He did
his best at the time and for the time. He did it with a concentrated energy
of will which broke through all difficulties. In his flights of imagination,
in the light and fire of his language he had few equals, if any; but the
perfection and classical finish which can be obtained by a sustained effort
only, and by a patience which shrinks from no drudgery, these are wanting
in most of his works.
However, fame, for which
he cared so little, has come to him. His bust will stand in Westminster
Abbey, in the Chapel of St. John the Baptist, by the side of his friend,
Frederick Maurice; and in the Temple of Fame which will be consecrated
to the period of Victoria and Albert, there will be a niche for Charles
Kingsley, the author of Alton Locke and Hypatia.
Sooner or later a complete
edition of his works will be wanted, though we may doubt whether he himself
would have wished all his literary works to be preserved. From what I
knew of him and his marvellous modesty, I should say decidedly not. I
doubt more especially, whether he would have wished the present book,
The Roman and the Teuton, to be handed down to posterity. None of his
books was so severely criticised as this volume of Lectures, delivered
before the University of Cambridge, and published in 1864. He himself
did not republish it, and it seems impossible to speak in more depreciatory
terms of his own historical studies than he does himself again and again
in the course of his lectures. Yet these lectures, it should be remembered,
were more largely attended than almost any other lectures at Cambridge.
They produced a permanent impression on many a young mind. They are asked
for again and again, and when the publishers wished for my advice as to
the expediency of bringing out a new and cheaper edition, I could not
hesitate as to what answer to give.
I am not so blinded by
my friendship for Kingsley as to say that these lectures are throughout
what academical lectures ought to be. I only wish some one would tell
me what academical lectures at Oxford and Cambridge can be, as long as
the present system of teaching and examining is maintained. It is easy
to say what these lectures are not. They do not profess to contain the
results of long continued original research. They are not based on a critical
appreciation of the authorities which had to be consulted. They are not
well arranged, systematic or complete. All this the suddenly elected professor
of history at Cambridge would have been the first to grant. 'I am not
here,' he says, 'to teach you history. I am here to teach you how to teach
yourselves history.' I must say even more. It seems to me that these lectures
were not always written in a perfectly impartial and judicial spirit,
and that occasionally they are unjust to the historians who, from no other
motive but a sincere regard for truth, thought it their duty to withhold
their assent from many of the commonly received statements of mediaeval
chroniclers.
But for all that, let
us see what these Lectures are, and whether there is not room for them
by the side of other works. First of all, according to the unanimous testimony
of those who heard them delivered at Cambridge, they stirred up the interest
of young men, and made them ask for books which Undergraduates had never
asked for before at the University libraries. They made many people who
read them afterwards, take a new interest in old and half-forgotten kings
and battles, and they extorted even from unfriendly critics the admission
that certain chapters, such as, for instance, 'The Monk as a Civiliser,'
displayed in an unexpected way his power of appreciating the good points
in characters, otherwise most antipathic to the apostle of Manly Christianity.
They contain, in fact, the thoughts of a poet, a moralist, a politician,
a theologian, and, before all, of a friend and counsellor of young men,
while reading for them and with them one of the most awful periods in
the history of mankind, the agonies of a dying Empire and the birth of
new nationalities. History was but his text, his chief aim was that of
the teacher and preacher, and as an eloquent interpreter of the purposes
of history before an audience of young men to whom history is but too
often a mere succession of events to be learnt by heart, and to be ready
against periodical examinations, he achieved what he wished to achieve.
Historians by profession would naturally be incensed at some portions
of this book, but even they would probably admit by this time, that there
are in it whole chapters full of excellence, telling passages, happy delineations,
shrewd remarks, powerful outbreaks of real eloquence, which could not
possibly be consigned to oblivion.
Nor would it have been
possible to attempt to introduce any alterations, or to correct what may
seem to be mistakes. The book is not meant as a text-book or as an authority,
any more than Schiller's History of the Thirty Years' War; it should be
read in future, as what it was meant to be from the first, Kingsley's
thoughts on some of the moral problems presented by the conflict between
the Roman and the Teuton. One cannot help wishing that, instead of lectures,
Kingsley had given us another novel, like Hypatia, or a real historical
tragedy, a Dietrich von Bern, embodying in living characters one of the
fiercest struggles of humanity, the death of the Roman, the birth of the
German world. Let me quote here what Bunsen said of Kingsley's dramatic
power many years ago:
'I do not hesitate (he
writes) to call these two works, the Saint's Tragedy and Hypatia, by far
the most important and perfect of this genial writer. In these more particularly
I find the justification of a hope which I beg to be allowed to express---that
Kingsley might continue Shakspeare's historical plays. I have for several
years made no secret of it, that Kingsley seems to me the genius of our
century, called to place by the side of that sublime dramatic series from
King John to Henry VIII, another series of equal rank, from Edward VI
to the Landing of William of Orange. This is the only historical development
of Europe which unites in itself all vital elements, and which we might
look upon without overpowering pain. The tragedy of St. Elizabeth shows
that Kingsley can grapple, not only with the novel, but with the more
severe rules of dramatic art. And Hypatia proves, on the largest scale,
that he can discover in the picture of the historical past, the truly
human, the deep, the permanent, and that he knows how to represent it.
How, with all this, he can hit the fresh tone of popular life, and draw
humourous characters and complications with Shakspearian energy, is proved
by all his works. And why should he not undertake this great task? There
is a time when the true poet, the prophet of the present, must bid farewell
to the questions of the day, which seem so great because they are so near,
but are, in truth, but small and unpoetical. He must say to himself, "Let
the dead bury their dead"----and the time has come that Kingsley
should do so.'
A great deal has been
written on mistakes which Kingsley was supposed to have made in these
Lectures, but I doubt whether these criticisms were always perfectly judicial
and fair. For instance, Kingsley's using the name of Dietrich, instead
of Theodoric, was represented as the very gem of a blunder, and some critics
went so far as to hint that he had taken Theodoric for a Greek word, as
an adjective of Theodorus. This, of course, was only meant as a joke,
for on page 120 Kingsley had said, in a note, that the name of Theodoric,
Theuderic, Dietrich, signifies 'king of nations.' He therefore knew perfectly
well that Theodoric was simply a Greek adaptation of the Gothic name Theode-reiks,
theod meaning people, reiks, according to Grimm, princeps. (1)
But even if he had called the king Theodorus, the mistake would not have
been unpardonable, for he might have appealed to the authority of Gregory
of Tours, who uses not only Theodoricus, but also Theodorus, as the same
name.
Endnotes
1. Grimm,
Grammatik, ii. p. 516. Back
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