On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
us to believe , that Shakspeare , though he painted so faithfully and fearfully the storms of passion , was a calm and cheerful man . The passions are too engrossed by their objects to meditate on themselves ; and none are more ignorant of theiir growth and subtile workings than their own victims . Nothing reveals to us the secrets of our own souls like religion ; and in disclosing to us , in ourselves , the tendency of passion to absorb
every energy , and to spread its hues over every thought , it gives us a key to all souls ; for in all , human nature is essentially one , having the same spiritual elements , and the same grand features . No man , it is believed , understands the wild and irregular motions of the mind , like him in whom a principle of divine order has begun to establish peace : No man knows the horror of thick darkness which gathers over the slaves of vehement passion , like him who is rising into the light and
dignity of virtue . There is indeed a selfish shrewdness , which is thought to give a peculiar and deep insight into human nature . But the knowledge of which it boasts is partial , distorted , and vulgar , and wholly unfit for the purposes of literature . We value it little . We believe that no qualification avails so much to a knowledge of human nature in all its forms , in its good and evil manifestations , as that enlightened , celestial charity which religion alone inspires ; for this establishes sympathies
between us and all men , and thus makes them intelligible to us . A man imbued with this spirit alone contemplates vice , as it really exists , and as it ought always to be described . In the most depraved fellowbeings , he sees partakers of his own nature . Amidst the terrible ravages of i \ ie passions , he sees conscience , though prostrate , not destroyed nor wholly powerless . He sees the proofs of an unextinguished moral life , in inward struggles , in occasional relentings , in sighings for lost innocence , in reviving throbs of early affections , in the sophistry
by which the guilty mind would become reconciled to itself , in remorse , in anxious forebodings , in despair , perhaps in studied recklessness and cherished eelf-forgetfulness . These conflicts between the passions and the moral nature , are the most interesting subjects ia the branch of literature to which we refer , and we believe that to portray them with truth and power , the man of genius can find in nothing such effectual aid , as in the developement of the moral and religious principles in his own breast . *
Untitled Article
404 Plato ' s Dialogues ; the Pharlrus .
Untitled Article
THE PH ^ DRUS . This is the most miscellaneous of all the longer dialogues of Plato . The subjects on which il touches are very numerous , and are held together by a very alight thread of connexion . It is not a controversial
dialogue , part of it being in long discourses , while even in the part which consists of conversations , Socrates does not combat the opinion of Ph » dru 9 , but states his own . None of the works of Plato tends more strongly to confirm the opinion , that the design of his speculations was rather to recommend a particular mode of inquiry , than to inculcate particular conclusions . Whatever in this dialogue has reference to methods of philosophizing * ( which is the case with a great and the
Untitled Article
NOTES OS SOME OF THE MORE POPULAR DIALOGUES OF PLATO . No . II .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1834, page 404, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2634/page/22/
-