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<h2><span>Lecture IX.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Discipline Of Mind. An Address To The Evening Classes.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
When I found that it was in my power to be present
here at the commencement of the new Session,
one of the first thoughts, Gentlemen, which thereupon
occurred to me, was this, that I should in consequence
have the great satisfaction of meeting you, of whom I
had thought and heard so much, and the opportunity of
addressing you, as Rector of the University. I can truly
say that I thought of you before you thought of the
University; perhaps I may say, long before;—for it was
previously to our commencing that great work, which is
now so fully before the public, it was when I first came
over here to make preparations for it, that I had to
encounter the serious objection of wise and good men,
who said to me, <span class="tei tei-q">“There is no class of persons in Ireland
who <em><span style="font-style: italic">need</span></em> a University;”</span> and again, <span class="tei tei-q">“Whom will you
get to belong to it? who will fill its lecture-rooms?”</span>
This was said to me, and then, without denying their
knowledge of the state of Ireland, or their sagacity, I
made answer, <span class="tei tei-q">“We will give lectures in the evening, we
will fill our classes with the young men of Dublin.”</span></p>
<p>
And some persons here may recollect that the very
first thing I did, when we opened the School of Philosophy
and Letters, this time four years, was to institute a
system of Evening Lectures, which were suspended after
a while, only because the singularly inclement season
which ensued, and the want of publicity and interest
incident to a new undertaking, made them premature.
And it is a satisfaction to me to reflect that the Statute,
under which you will be able to pass examinations and
take degrees, is one to which I specially obtained the
consent of the Academical Senate, nearly two years ago,
in addition to our original Regulations, and that you
will be the first persons to avail yourselves of it.</p>
<p>
Having thus prepared, as it were, the University for
you, it was with great pleasure that I received from a
number of you, Gentlemen, last May year, a spontaneous
request which showed that my original anticipations were
not visionary. You suggested then what we have since
acted upon,—acted upon, not so quickly as both you
might hope and we might wish, because all important
commencements have to be maturely considered—still
acted on at length according to those anticipations of
mine, to which I have referred; and, while I recur to
them as an introduction to what I have to say, I might
also dwell upon them as a sure presage that other and
broader anticipations, too bold as they may seem now,
will, if we are but patient, have their fulfilment in their
season.</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
For I should not be honest, Gentlemen, if I did not
confess that, much as I desire that this University
should be of service to the young men of Dublin, I do
not desire this benefit to you, simply for your own sakes.
For your own sakes certainly I wish it, but not on your
account only. Man is not born for himself alone, as the
classical moralist tells us. <em><span style="font-style: italic">You</span></em> are born for Ireland;
and, in your advancement, Ireland is advanced;—in
your advancement in what is good and what is true, in
knowledge, in learning, in cultivation of mind, in enlightened
attachment to your religion, in good name and
respectability and social influence, I am contemplating
the honour and renown, the literary and scientific aggrandisement,
the increase of political power, of the Island
of the Saints.</p>
<p>
I go further still. If I do homage to the many virtues
and gifts of the Irish people, and am zealous for their
full development, it is not simply for the sake of themselves,
but because the name of Ireland ever has been,
and, I believe, ever will be, associated with the Catholic
Faith, and because, in doing any service, however poor it
may be, to Ireland, a man is ministering, in his own
place and measure, to the cause of the Holy Roman
Apostolic Church.</p>
<p>
Gentlemen, I should consider it an impertinence in
me thus to be speaking to you of myself, were it not
that, in recounting to you the feelings with which I have
witnessed the establishment of these Evening Classes, I
am in fact addressing to you at the same time words of
encouragement and advice, such words as it becomes a
Rector to use in speaking to those who are submitted to
his care.</p>
<p>
I say, then, that, had I been younger than I was when
the high office which I at present hold was first offered
to me, had I not had prior duties upon me of affection
and devotion to the Oratory of St. Philip, and to my
own dear country, no position whatever, in the whole
range of administrations which are open to the ambition
of those who wish to serve God in their generation, and
to do some great work before they die, would have had
more attractions for me than that of being at the head
of a University like this. When I became a Catholic, one
of my first questions was, <span class="tei tei-q">“Why have not our Catholics a
University?”</span> and Ireland, and the metropolis of Ireland,
was obviously the proper seat of such an institution.</p>
<p>
Ireland is the proper seat of a Catholic University, on
account of its ancient hereditary Catholicity, and again
of the future which is in store for it. It is impossible,
Gentlemen, to doubt that a future is in store for Ireland,
for more reasons than can here be enumerated. First,
there is the circumstance, so highly suggestive, even if
there was nothing else to be said, viz., that the Irish
have been so miserably ill-treated and misused hitherto;
for, in the times now opening upon us, nationalities are
waking into life, and the remotest people can make
themselves heard into all the quarters of the earth. The
lately invented methods of travel and of intelligence
have destroyed geographical obstacles; and the wrongs
of the oppressed, in spite of oceans or of mountains, are
brought under the public opinion of Europe,—not before
kings and governments alone, but before the tribunal of
the European populations, who are becoming ever more
powerful in the determination of political questions. And
thus retribution is demanded and exacted for past crimes
in proportion to their heinousness and their duration.</p>
<p>
And in the next place, it is plain that, according as
intercommunion grows between Europe and America, it
is Ireland that must grow with it in social and political
importance. For Ireland is the high road by which that
intercourse is carried on; and the traffic between hemispheres
must be to her a source of material as well as
social benefit,—as of old time, though on the minute
geographical scale of Greece, Corinth, as being the
thoroughfare of commerce by sea and land, became and
was called <span class="tei tei-q">“the rich.”</span></p>
<p>
And then, again, we must consider the material resources
of Ireland, so insufficiently explored, so poorly
developed,—of which it belongs to them rather to speak,
who by profession and attainments are masters of the
subject.</p>
<p>
That this momentous future, thus foreshadowed, will
be as glorious for Catholicity as for Ireland we cannot
doubt from the experience of the past; but, as Providence
works by means of human agencies, that natural
anticipation has no tendency to diminish the anxiety and
earnestness of all zealous Catholics to do their part in
securing its fulfilment. And the wise and diligent cultivation
of the intellect is one principal means, under the
Divine blessing, of the desired result.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
Gentlemen, the seat of this intellectual progress must
necessarily be the great towns of Ireland; and those
great towns have a remarkable and happy characteristic,
as contrasted with the cities of Catholic Europe. Abroad,
even in Catholic countries, if there be in any part of
their territory scepticism and insubordination in religion,
cities are the seat of the mischief. Even Rome itself
has its insubordinate population, and its concealed free-thinkers;
even Belgium, that nobly Catholic country,
cannot boast of the religious loyalty of its great towns.
Such a calamity is unknown to the Catholicism of Dublin,
Cork, Belfast, and the other cities of Ireland; for, to say
nothing of higher and more religious causes of the difference,
the very presence of a rival religion is a perpetual
incentive to faith and devotion in men who, from
the circumstances of the case, would be in danger of
becoming worse than lax Catholics, unless they resolved
on being zealous ones.</p>
<p>
Here, then, is one remarkable ground of promise in
the future of Ireland, that that large and important class,
members of which I am now addressing,—that the
middle classes in its cities, which will be the depositaries
of its increasing political power, and which elsewhere are
opposed in their hearts to the Catholicism which they
profess,—are here so sound in faith, and so exemplary
in devotional exercises, and in works of piety.</p>
<p>
And next I would observe, that, while thus distinguished
for religious earnestness, the Catholic population
is in no respect degenerate from the ancient fame of
Ireland as regards its intellectual endowments. It too
often happens that the religiously disposed are in the
same degree intellectually deficient; but the Irish ever
have been, as their worst enemies must grant, not only a
Catholic people, but a people of great natural abilities,
keen-witted, original, and subtle. This has been the
characteristic of the nation from the very early times,
and was especially prominent in the middle ages. As
Rome was the centre of authority, so, I may say, Ireland
was the native home of speculation. In this respect
they were as remarkably contrasted to the English as they
are now, though, in those ages, England was as devoted
to the Holy See as it is now hostile. The Englishman
was hard-working, plodding, bold, determined, persevering,
practical, obedient to law and precedent, and, if he
cultivated his mind, he was literary and classical rather
than scientific, for Literature involves in it the idea of
authority and prescription. On the other hand, in Ireland,
the intellect seems rather to have taken the line of
Science, and we have various instances to show how fully
this was recognized in those times, and with what success it
was carried out. <span class="tei tei-q">“Philosopher,”</span> is in those times almost
the name for an Irish monk. Both in Paris and Oxford,
the two great schools of medieval thought, we find the
boldest and most subtle of their disputants an Irishman,—the
monk John Scotus Erigena, at Paris, and Duns
Scotus, the Franciscan friar, at Oxford.</p>
<p>
Now, it is my belief, Gentlemen, that this character of
mind remains in you still. I think I rightly recognize in
the Irishman now, as formerly, the curious, inquisitive
observer, the acute reasoner, the subtle speculator. I
recognize in you talents which are fearfully mischievous,
when used on the side of error, but which, when wielded
by Catholic devotion, such as I am sure will ever be the
characteristic of the Irish disputant, are of the highest importance
to Catholic interests, and especially at this day,
when a subtle logic is used against the Church, and demands
a logic still more subtle on the part of her defenders
to expose it.</p>
<p>
Gentlemen, I do not expect those who, like you, are
employed in your secular callings, who are not monks or
friars, not priests, not theologians, not philosophers, to
come forward as champions of the faith; but I think
that incalculable benefit may ensue to the Catholic cause,
greater almost than that which even singularly gifted
theologians or controversialists could effect, if a body of
men in your station of life shall be found in the great towns
of Ireland, not disputatious, contentious, loquacious, presumptuous
(of course I am not advocating inquiry for
mere argument's sake), but gravely and solidly educated
in Catholic knowledge, intelligent, acute, versed in their
religion, sensitive of its beauty and majesty, alive to the
arguments in its behalf, and aware both of its difficulties
and of the mode of treating them. And the first step in
attaining this desirable end is that you should submit
yourselves to a curriculum of studies, such as that which
brings you with such praiseworthy diligence within these
walls evening after evening; and, though you may not
be giving attention to them with this view, but from the
laudable love of knowledge, or for the advantages which
will accrue to you personally from its pursuit, yet my
own reason for rejoicing in the establishment of your
classes is the same as that which led me to take part
in the establishment of the University itself, viz., the
wish, by increasing the intellectual force of Ireland, to
strengthen the defences, in a day of great danger, of the
Christian religion.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
Gentlemen, within the last thirty years, there has been,
as you know, a great movement in behalf of the extension
of knowledge among those classes in society whom
you represent. This movement has issued in the establishment
of what have been called Mechanics' Institutes
through the United Kingdom; and a new species of
literature has been brought into existence, with a view,
among its objects, of furnishing the members of these
institutions with interesting and instructive reading. I
never will deny to that literature its due praise. It has
been the production of men of the highest ability and
the most distinguished station, who have not grudged,
moreover, the trouble, and, I may say in a certain sense,
the condescension, of presenting themselves before the
classes for whose intellectual advancement they were
showing so laudable a zeal; who have not grudged, in
the cause of Literature, History, or Science, to make a
display, in the lecture room or the public hall, of that
eloquence, which was, strictly speaking, the property, as
I may call it, of Parliament, or of the august tribunals of
the Law. Nor will I deny to the speaking and writing,
to which I am referring, the merit of success, as well as
that of talent and good intention, so far as this,—that it
has provided a fund of innocent amusement and information
for the leisure hours of those who might otherwise
have been exposed to the temptation of corrupt reading
or bad company.</p>
<p>
So much may be granted,—and must be granted in
candour: but, when I go on to ask myself the question,
what <em><span style="font-style: italic">permanent</span></em> advantage the mind gets by such desultory
reading and hearing, as this literary movement encourages,
then I find myself altogether in a new field of
thought, and am obliged to return an answer less favourable
than I could wish to those who are the advocates of
it. We must carefully distinguish, Gentlemen, between
the mere diversion of the mind and its real education.
Supposing, for instance, I am tempted to go into some
society which will do me harm, and supposing, instead, I
fall asleep in my chair, and so let the time pass by, in
that case certainly I escape the danger, but it is as if by
accident, and my going to sleep has not had any real
effect upon me, or made me more able to resist the
temptation on some future occasion. I wake, and I am
what I was before. The opportune sleep has but removed
the temptation for this once. It has not made me better;
for I have not been shielded from temptation by any act
of my own, but I was passive under an accident, for such
I may call sleep. And so in like manner, if I hear a
lecture indolently and passively, I cannot indeed be elsewhere
<em><span style="font-style: italic">while</span></em> I am here hearing it,—but it produces no
positive effect on my mind,—it does not tend to create
any power in my breast capable of resisting temptation
by its own vigour, should temptation come a second time.</p>
<p>
Now this is no fault, Gentlemen, of the books or the
lectures of the Mechanics' Institute. They could not do
more than they do, from their very nature. They do
their part, but their part is not enough. A man may
hear a thousand lectures, and read a thousand volumes,
and be at the end of the process very much where he was,
as regards knowledge. Something more than merely
<em><span style="font-style: italic">admitting</span></em> it in a negative way into the mind is necessary,
if it is to remain there. It must not be passively received,
but actually and actively entered into, embraced, mastered.
The mind must go half-way to meet what comes to it
from without.</p>
<p>
This, then, is the point in which the institutions I am
speaking of fail; here, on the contrary, is the advantage
of such lectures as you are attending, Gentlemen, in our
University. You have come, not merely to be taught,
but to learn. You have come to exert your minds. You
have come to make what you hear your own, by putting
out your hand, as it were, to grasp it and appropriate it.
You do not come merely to hear a lecture, or to read a
book, but you come for that catechetical instruction,
which consists in a sort of conversation between your
lecturer and you. He tells you a thing, and he asks you
to repeat it after him. He questions you, he examines
you, he will not let you go till he has proof, not only that
you have heard, but that you know.</p>
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
Gentlemen, I am induced to quote here some remarks
of my own, which I put into print on occasion of those
Evening Lectures, already referred to, with which we
introduced the first terms of the University. The attendance
upon them was not large, and in consequence
we discontinued them for a time, but I attempted to explain
in print what the object of them had been; and
while what I then said is pertinent to the subject I am
now pursuing, it will be an evidence too, in addition to
my opening remarks, of the hold which the idea of these
Evening Lectures has had upon me.</p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“I will venture to give you my thoughts,”</span> I then said,
writing to a friend,<SPAN id="noteref_50" name="noteref_50" href="#note_50"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">50</span></span></SPAN>
<span class="tei tei-q">“on the <em><span style="font-style: italic">object</span></em> of the Evening Public
Lectures lately delivered in the University House, which,
I think, has been misunderstood.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“I can bear witness, not only to their remarkable merit
as lectures, but also to the fact that they were very satisfactorily
attended. Many, however, attach a vague or
unreasonable idea to the word <span class="tei tei-q">‘satisfactory,’</span> and maintain
that no lectures can be called satisfactory which do
not make a great deal of noise in the place, and they are
disappointed otherwise. This is what I mean by misconceiving
their object; for such an expectation, and
consequent regret, arise from confusing the ordinary with
the extraordinary object of a lecture,—upon which point
we ought to have clear and definite ideas.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“The <em><span style="font-style: italic">ordinary</span></em> object of lectures is <em><span style="font-style: italic">to teach</span></em>; but there
<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">is</span></span> an object, sometimes demanding attention, and not
incongruous, which, nevertheless, cannot be said properly
to belong to them, or to be more than occasional. As
there are kinds of eloquence which do not aim at any
thing beyond their own exhibition, and are content with
being eloquent, and with the sensation which eloquence
creates; so in Schools and Universities there are seasons,
festive or solemn, anyhow extraordinary, when
academical acts are not directed towards their proper
ends, so much as intended to amuse, to astonish, and to
attract, and thus to have an effect upon public opinion.
Such are the exhibition days of Colleges; such the
annual Commemoration of Benefactors at one of the
English Universities, when Doctors put on their gayest
gowns, and Public Orators make Latin Speeches. Such,
too, are the Terminal Lectures, at which divines of the
greatest reputation for intellect and learning have before
now poured forth sentences of burning eloquence into the
ears of an audience brought together for the very sake
of the display. The object of all such Lectures and
Orations is to excite or to keep up an interest and reverence
in the public mind for the Institutions from which the
exhibition proceeds:”</span>—I might have added, such are the
lectures delivered by celebrated persons in Mechanics'
Institutes.</p>
<p>
I continue: <span class="tei tei-q">“Such we have suitably had in the new
University;—such were the Inaugural Lectures. Displays
of strength and skill of this kind, in order to succeed,
<em><span style="font-style: italic">should</span></em> attract attention, and if they do not attract attention,
they have failed. They do not invite an audience,
but an attendance; and perhaps it is hardly too much to
say that they are intended for seeing rather than for
hearing.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“Such celebrations, however, from the nature of the
case, must be rare. It is the novelty which brings, it is
the excitement which recompenses, the assemblage. The
academical body which attempts to make such extraordinary
acts the normal condition of its proceedings, is
putting itself and its Professors in a false position.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“It is, then, a simple misconception to suppose that
those to whom the government of our University is confided
have aimed at an object, which could not be contemplated
at all without a confusion or inadvertence, such
as no considerate person will impute to them. Public
lectures, delivered with such an object, could not be successful;
and, in consequence, our late lectures have, I
cannot doubt (for it could not be otherwise), ended unsatisfactorily
in the judgment of any zealous person who has
assumed for them an office with which their projectors
never invested them.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“What their object really was the very meaning of
academical institutions suggests to us. It is, as I said
when I began, <em><span style="font-style: italic">to teach</span></em>. Lectures are, properly speaking,
not exhibitions or exercises of art, but matters of business;
they profess to impart something definite to those who
attend them, and those who attend them profess on their
part to receive what the lecturer has to offer. It is a
case of contract:—<span class="tei tei-q">‘I will speak, if you will listen.’</span>—<span class="tei tei-q">‘I
will come here to learn, if you have any thing worth
teaching me.’</span> In an oratorical display, all the effort is
on one side; in a lecture, it is shared between two parties,
who co-operate towards a common end.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“There should be ever something, on the face of the
arrangements, to act as a memento that those who come,
come to gain something, and not from mere curiosity. And
in matters of fact, such were the persons who did attend, in
the course of last term, and such as those, and no others,
will attend. Those came who wished to gain information
on a subject new to them, from informants whom they
held in consideration, and regarded as authorities. It
was impossible to survey the audience which occupied
the lecture-room without seeing that they came on what
may be called business. And this is why I said, when
I began, that the attendance was satisfactory. That
attendance is satisfactory,—not which is numerous, but—which
is steady and persevering. But it is plain, that to
a mere by-stander, who came merely from general interest
or good will to see how things were going on, and
who did not catch the object of advertising the Lectures,
it would not occur to look into the faces of the audience;
he would think it enough to be counting their heads; he
would do little more than observe whether the staircase
and landing were full of loungers, and whether there
was such a noise and bustle that it was impossible to
hear a word; and if he could get in and out of the room
without an effort, if he could sit at his ease, and actually
hear the lecturer, he would think he had sufficient
grounds for considering the attendance unsatisfactory.</span></p>
<p>
<span class="tei tei-q">“The stimulating system may easily be overdone, and
does not answer on the long run. A blaze among the
stubble, and then all is dark. I have seen in my time
various instances of the way in which Lectures really
gain upon the public; and I must express my opinion
that, even were it the sole object of our great undertaking
to make a general impression upon public opinion,
instead of that of doing definite good to definite persons,
I should reject that method, which the University indeed
itself has <em><span style="font-style: italic">not</span></em> taken, but which young and ardent minds
may have thought the more promising. Even did I
wish merely to get the intellect of all Dublin into our
rooms, I should not dream of doing it all at once, but
at length. I should not rely on sudden, startling effects,
but on the slow, silent, penetrating, overpowering effects
of patience, steadiness, routine, and perseverance. I
have known individuals set themselves down in a neighbourhood
where they had no advantages, and in a place
which had no pretensions, and upon a work which had
little or nothing of authoritative sanction; and they have
gone on steadily lecturing week after week, with little
encouragement, but much resolution. For months they
were ill attended, and overlooked in the bustle of the
world around them. But there was a secret, gradual
movement going on, and a specific force of attraction,
and a drifting and accumulation of hearers, which at
length made itself felt, and could not be mistaken. In
this stage of things, a friend said in conversation to me,
when at the moment I knew nothing of the parties:
<span class="tei tei-q">‘By-the-bye, if you are interested in such and such a
subject, go by all means, and hear such a one. So and
so does, and says there is no one like him. I looked in
myself the other night, and was very much struck. Do
go, you can't mistake; he lectures every Tuesday night, or
Wednesday, or Thursday,’</span> as it might be. An influence
thus gradually acquired endures; sudden popularity
dies away as suddenly.”</span></p>
<p>
As regards ourselves, the time is passed now, Gentlemen,
for such modesty of expectation, and such caution
in encouragement, as these last sentences exhibit. The
few, but diligent, attendants upon the Professors' lectures,
with whom we began, have grown into the diligent and
zealous many; and the speedy fulfilment of anticipations,
which then seemed to be hazardous, surely is a call on
us to cherish bolder hopes and to form more extended
plans for the years which are to follow.</p>
<h3><span>6.</span></h3>
<p>
You will ask me, perhaps, after these general remarks,
to suggest to you the particular intellectual benefit which
I conceive students have a right to require of us, and
which we engage by means of our evening classes to provide
for them. And, in order to this, you must allow
me to make use of an illustration, which I have heretofore
employed,<SPAN id="noteref_51" name="noteref_51" href="#note_51"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">51</span></span></SPAN>
and which I repeat here, because it is
the best that I can find to convey what I wish to impress
upon you. It is an illustration which includes in its
application all of us, teachers as well as taught, though
it applies of course to some more than to others, and to
those especially who come for instruction.</p>
<p>
I consider, then, that the position of our minds, as far
as they are uncultivated, towards intellectual objects,—I
mean of our minds, before they have been disciplined and
formed by the action of our reason upon them,—is analogous
to that of a blind man towards the objects of vision,
at the moment when eyes are for the first time given to
him by the skill of the operator. Then the multitude of
things, which present themselves to the sight under a multiplicity
of shapes and hues, pour in upon him from the
external world all at once, and are at first nothing else
but lines and colours, without mutual connection, dependence,
or contrast, without order or principle, without
drift or meaning, and like the wrong side of a piece of
tapestry or carpet. By degrees, by the sense of touch,
by reaching out the hands, by walking into this maze of
colours, by turning round in it, by accepting the principle
of perspective, by the various slow teaching of experience,
the first information of the sight is corrected,
and what was an unintelligible wilderness becomes a landscape
or a scene, and is understood to consist of space,
and of bodies variously located in space, with such consequences
as thence necessarily follow. The knowledge is
at length gained of things or objects, and of their relation
to each other; and it is a kind of knowledge, as is
plain, which is forced upon us all from infancy, as to the
blind on their first seeing, by the testimony of our other
senses, and by the very necessity of supporting life; so
that even the brute animals have been gifted with the
faculty of acquiring it.</p>
<p>
Such is the case as regards material objects; and it is
much the same as regards intellectual. I mean that
there is a vast host of matters of all kinds, which address
themselves, not to the eye, but to our mental sense; viz.,
all those matters of thought which, in the course of life
and the intercourse of society, are brought before us,
which we hear of in conversation, which we read of in
books; matters political, social, ecclesiastical, literary,
domestic; persons, and their doings or their writings;
events, and works, and undertakings, and laws, and institutions.
These make up a much more subtle and
intricate world than that visible universe of which I was
just now speaking. It is much more difficult in this
world than in the material to separate things off from
each other, and to find out how they stand related to
each other, and to learn how to class them, and where
to locate them respectively. Still, it is not less true
that, as the various figures and forms in a landscape
have each its own place, and stand in this or that direction
towards each other, so all the various objects which
address the intellect have severally a substance of their
own, and have fixed relations each of them with everything
else,—relations which our minds have no power of
creating, but which we are obliged to ascertain before
we have a right to boast that we really know any thing
about them. Yet, when the mind looks out for the first
time into this manifold spiritual world, it is just as much
confused and dazzled and distracted as are the eyes of
the blind when they first begin to see; and it is by a
long process, and with much effort and anxiety, that we
begin hardly and partially to apprehend its various contents
and to put each in its proper place.</p>
<p>
We grow up from boyhood; our minds open; we go
into the world; we hear what men say, or read what
they put in print; and thus a profusion of matters of all
kinds is discharged upon us. Some sort of an idea we
have of most of them, from hearing what others say;
but it is a very vague idea, probably a very mistaken
idea. Young people, especially, because they are young,
colour the assemblage of persons and things which they
encounter with the freshness and grace of their own
springtide, look for all good from the reflection of their
own hopefulness, and worship what they have created.
Men of ambition, again, look upon the world as a theatre
for fame and glory, and make it that magnificent scene
of high enterprise and august recompence which Pindar
or Cicero has delineated. Poets, too, after their wont,
put their ideal interpretation upon all things, material
as well as moral, and substitute the noble for the true.
Here are various obvious instances, suggestive of the
discipline which is imperative, if the mind is to grasp
things as they are, and to discriminate substances from
shadows. For I am not concerned merely with youth,
ambition, or poetry, but with our mental condition generally.
It is the fault of all of us, till we have duly
practised our minds, to be unreal in our sentiments and
crude in our judgments, and to be carried off by fancies,
instead of being at the trouble of acquiring sound knowledge.</p>
<p>
In consequence, when we hear opinions put forth on
any new subject, we have no principle to guide us in
balancing them; we do not know what to make of them;
we turn them to and fro, and over, and back again, as if
to pronounce upon them, if we could, but with no means
of pronouncing. It is the same when we attempt to
speak upon them: we make some random venture; or
we take up the opinion of some one else, which strikes
our fancy; or perhaps, with the vaguest enunciation
possible of any opinion at all, we are satisfied with ourselves
if we are merely able to throw off some rounded
sentences, to make some pointed remarks on some other
subject, or to introduce some figure of speech, or flowers
of rhetoric, which, instead of being the vehicle, are the
mere substitute of meaning. We wish to take a part in
politics, and then nothing is open to us but to follow
some person, or some party, and to learn the commonplaces
and the watchwords which belong to it. We
hear about landed interests, and mercantile interests,
and trade, and higher and lower classes, and their rights,
duties, and prerogatives; and we attempt to transmit
what we have received; and soon our minds become
loaded and perplexed by the incumbrance of ideas which
we have not mastered and cannot use. We have some
vague idea, for instance, that constitutional government
and slavery are inconsistent with each other; that there
is a connection between private judgment and democracy,
between Christianity and civilization; we attempt to find
arguments in proof, and our arguments are the most
plain demonstration that we simply do not understand the
things themselves of which we are professedly treating.</p>
<h3><span>7.</span></h3>
<p>
Reflect, Gentlemen, how many disputes you must have
listened to, which were interminable, because neither party
understood either his opponent or himself. Consider the
fortunes of an argument in a debating society, and the
need there so frequently is, not simply of some clear
thinker to disentangle the perplexities of thought, but of
capacity in the combatants to do justice to the clearest
explanations which are set before them,—so much so,
that the luminous arbitration only gives rise, perhaps, to
more hopeless altercation. <span class="tei tei-q">“Is a constitutional government
better for a population than an absolute rule?”</span>
What a number of points have to be clearly apprehended
before we are in a position to say one word on such a
question! What is meant by <span class="tei tei-q">“constitution”</span>? by <span class="tei tei-q">“constitutional
government”</span>? by <span class="tei tei-q">“better”</span>? by <span class="tei tei-q">“a population”</span>?
and by <span class="tei tei-q">“absolutism”</span>? The ideas represented
by these various words ought, I do not say, to be as perfectly
defined and located in the minds of the speakers
as objects of sight in a landscape, but to be sufficiently,
even though incompletely, apprehended, before they have
a right to speak. <span class="tei tei-q">“How is it that democracy can admit
of slavery, as in ancient Greece?”</span> <span class="tei tei-q">“How can Catholicism
flourish in a republic?”</span> Now, a person who knows
his ignorance will say, <span class="tei tei-q">“These questions are beyond me;”</span>
and he tries to gain a clear notion and a firm hold of
them; and, if he speaks, it is as investigating, not as
deciding. On the other hand, let him never have tried
to throw things together, or to discriminate between them,
or to denote their peculiarities, in that case he has no
hesitation in undertaking any subject, and perhaps has
most to say upon those questions which are most new to
him. This is why so many men are one-sided, narrow-minded,
prejudiced, crotchety. This is why able men
have to change their minds and their line of action in
middle age, and to begin life again, because they have
followed their party, instead of having secured that faculty
of true perception as regards intellectual objects which
has accrued to them, without their knowing how, as regards
the objects of sight.</p>
<p>
But this defect will never be corrected,—on the contrary,
it will be aggravated,—by those popular institutions to
which I referred just now. The displays of eloquence, or
the interesting matter contained in their lectures, the
variety of useful or entertaining knowledge contained in
their libraries, though admirable in themselves, and advantageous
to the student at a later stage of his course, never
can serve as a substitute for methodical and laborious
teaching. A young man of sharp and active intellect, who
has had no other training, has little to show for it besides
a litter of ideas heaped up into his mind anyhow. He
can utter a number of truths or sophisms, as the case
may be, and one is as good to him as another. He is up
with a number of doctrines and a number of facts, but
they are all loose and straggling, for he has no principles
set up in his mind round which to aggregate and locate
them. He can say a word or two on half a dozen sciences,
but not a dozen words on any one. He says one thing
now, and another thing presently; and when he attempts
to write down distinctly what he holds upon a point in
dispute, or what he understands by its terms, he breaks
down, and is surprised at his failure. He sees objections
more clearly than truths, and can ask a thousand questions
which the wisest of men cannot answer; and withal,
he has a very good opinion of himself, and is well satisfied
with his attainments, and he declares against others,
as opposed to the spread of knowledge altogether, who
do not happen to adopt his ways of furthering it, or the
opinions in which he considers it to result.</p>
<p>
This is that barren mockery of knowledge which comes
of attending on great Lecturers, or of mere acquaintance
with reviews, magazines, newspapers, and other literature
of the day, which, however able and valuable in itself, is
not the instrument of intellectual education. If this is
all the training a man has, the chance is that, when a few
years have passed over his head, and he has talked to the
full, he wearies of talking, and of the subjects on which
he talked. He gives up the pursuit of knowledge, and
forgets what he knew, whatever it was; and, taking
things at their best, his mind is in no very different condition
from what it was when he first began to improve
it, as he hoped, though perhaps he never thought of more
than of amusing himself. I say, <span class="tei tei-q">“at the best,”</span> for perhaps
he will suffer from exhaustion and a distaste of the
subjects which once pleased him; or perhaps he has
suffered some real intellectual mischief; perhaps he has
contracted some serious disorder, he has admitted some
taint of scepticism, which he will never get rid of.</p>
<p>
And here we see what is meant by the poet's maxim,
<span class="tei tei-q">“A little learning is a dangerous thing.”</span> Not that
knowledge, little or much, if it be real knowledge, is
dangerous; but that many a man considers a mere hazy
view of many things to be real knowledge, whereas it
does but mislead, just as a short-sighted man sees only
so far as to be led by his uncertain sight over the
precipice.</p>
<p>
Such, then, being true cultivation of mind, and such the
literary institutions which do not tend to it, I might proceed
to show you, Gentlemen, did time admit, how, on
the other hand, that kind of instruction of which our
Evening Classes are a specimen, is especially suited to
effect what they propose. Consider, for instance, what
a discipline in accuracy of thought it is to have to construe
a foreign language into your own; what a still
severer and more improving exercise it is to translate
from your own into a foreign language. Consider, again,
what a lesson in memory and discrimination it is to get
up, as it is called, any one chapter of history. Consider
what a trial of acuteness, caution, and exactness, it is to
master, and still more to prove, a number of definitions.
Again, what an exercise in logic is classification, what
an exercise in logical precision it is to understand and
enunciate the proof of any of the more difficult propositions
of Euclid, or to master any one of the great
arguments for Christianity so thoroughly as to bear examination
upon it; or, again, to analyze sufficiently, yet
in as few words as possible, a speech, or to draw up a
critique upon a poem. And so of any other science,—chemistry,
or comparative anatomy, or natural history;
it does not matter what it is, if it be really studied and
mastered, as far as it is taken up. The result is a formation
of mind,—that is, a habit of order and system, a
habit of referring every accession of knowledge to what
we already know, and of adjusting the one with the
other; and, moreover, as such a habit implies, the actual
acceptance and use of certain principles as centres of
thought, around which our knowledge grows and is
located. Where this critical faculty exists, history is no
longer a mere story-book, or biography a romance;
orators and publications of the day are no longer infallible
authorities; eloquent diction is no longer a
substitute for matter, nor bold statements, or lively
descriptions, a substitute for proof. This is that faculty
of perception in intellectual matters, which, as I have
said so often, is analogous to the capacity we all have of
mastering the multitude of lines and colours which pour
in upon our eyes, and of deciding what every one of
them is worth.</p>
<h3><span>8.</span></h3>
<p>
But I should be transgressing the limits assigned to
an address of this nature were I to proceed. I have
not said any thing, Gentlemen, on the religious duties
which become the members of a Catholic University,
because we are directly concerned here with your studies
only. It is my consolation to know that so many of you
belong to a Society or Association, which the zeal of
some excellent priests, one especially, has been so instrumental
in establishing in your great towns. You
do not come to us to have the foundation laid in your
breasts of that knowledge which is highest of all: it has
been laid already. You have begun your mental training
with faith and devotion; and then you come to us
to add the education of the intellect to the education of
the heart. Go on as you have begun, and you will be
one of the proudest achievements of our great undertaking.
We shall be able to point to you in proof that
zeal for knowledge may thrive even under the pressure
of secular callings; that mother-wit does not necessarily
make a man idle, nor inquisitiveness of mind irreverent;
that shrewdness and cleverness are not incompatible
with firm faith in the mysteries of Revelation; that
attainment in Literature and Science need not make
men conceited, nor above their station, nor restless, nor
self-willed. We shall be able to point to you in proof
of the power of Catholicism to make out of the staple of
great towns exemplary and enlightened Christians, of
those classes which, external to Ireland, are the problem
and perplexity of patriotic statesmen, and the natural
opponents of the teachers of every kind of religion.</p>
<br>* * * * *
<p>
As to myself, I wish I could by actual service and
hard work of my own respond to your zeal, as so many
of my dear and excellent friends, the Professors of the
University, have done and do. They have a merit, they
have a claim on you, Gentlemen, in which I have no
part. If I admire the energy and bravery with which
you have undertaken the work of self-improvement, be
sure I do not forget their public spirit and noble free
devotion to the University any more than you do. I
know I should not satisfy you with any praise of this
supplement of our academical arrangements which did
not include those who give to it its life. It is a very
pleasant and encouraging sight to see both parties, the
teachers and the taught, co-operating with a pure <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">esprit-de-corps</span></span>
thus voluntarily,—they as fully as you can do—for
a great object; and I offer up my earnest prayers to
the Author of all good, that He will ever bestow on you
all, on Professors and on Students, as I feel sure He will
bestow, Rulers and Superiors, who, by their zeal and
diligence in their own place, shall prove themselves
worthy both of your cause and of yourselves.</p>
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