1
ZTbe ©pen Court !
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
S)ct>ote& to tbe Science ot TReligf on, tbe IReligion ot Science, anb tbc ]
Extension of tbe IRelioious parliament flOea i
Editor: Dr. Paul Carus. Associates: { m^SycSS^ I
VOL. XXL (No. 7.) JULY, 1907. NO. 614.
CONTENTS:
PAGB
Frontispiece. The Seven Gods of Bliss.
Ancient Mysticism and Recent Science. Charles Kassel 385
The Seven Gods of Bliss. Illustrated. Teitaro Suzuki 397
Schiller the Dramatist. Illustrated. (Concluded.) Editor 407
Questions from the Pew: Paul's Doctrine of Faith from the Old Testament.
Franklin N. Jewett 420
In the Mazes of Mathematics: A Series of Perplexing Questions. Wm. F.
White^ Ph. D.
X. Autographs of Mathematicians 428
XI. Bridges and Isles, Figure Tracing, Unicursal Signatures, Laby-
rinths 429
Goethe's Polytheism and Christianity. Illustrated. Editor 435
Book Reviews and Notes 444
CHICAGO
X^be ©pen Court publidbitid Company
LONDON : Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Company, Limited.
Per copy, lo cents (sixpence). Yearly, $1.00 (in tlie U. P. U., 5s. 6<I.)>
Copyright, 1907, by The Open Court Publishing Co. Entered at the Chicago Post OflSce as Second Class Matter.
ZTbe ©pen Court
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
H)evoteO to tbe Science of IRelfoion, tbe IReltoton ot Science, anD tbe
lEitension ot tbe IReliaious parliament UDea
Editor: Db. Paul Carus. Associates: { MiS/cStJ*
VOL. XXL (No. 7.) JULY, 1907. NO. 614.
CONTENTS:
PAGB
Frontispiece. The Seven Gods of Bliss.
Ancient Mysticism and Recent Science. Charles Kassel 385
The Seven Gods of Bliss. Illustrated. Teitaro Suzuki 397
Schiller the Dramatist. Illustrated. (Concluded.) Editor 407
Questions from the Pew : Paul's Doctrine of Faith from the Old Testament.
Franklin N. Jewett 420
In the Mazes of Mathematics: A Series of Perplexing Questions. Wm. F.
White, Ph. D.
X. Autographs of Mathematicians 428
XI. Bridges and Isles, Figure Tracing, Unicursal Signatures, Laby-
rinths 429
Goethe's Polytheism and Christianity. Illustrated. Editor 435
Book Reviews and Notes 444.
CHICAGO
Ube ©pen Court pubUsbino Company
LONDON : Kegak Paul, Trench, Teubner & Company, Limited.
Per copy, lo cents (sixpence). Yearly, $i.oo (in the U. P. U., 58. 6d.)>
Copyright, 1907, by The Open Court Publishing Co. Entered at the Chicago Post Office as Second Class Matter.
XLhc ©pen Court
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A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
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VOL. XXI. (No. 7) JULY, 1907. NO. 614.
Copyright by The Open Court Publishing Company, 1907.
ANCIENT MYSTICISM AND RECENT SCIENCE.
BY CHARLES KASSEL.
INGRAINED with us all, — wrought into our innermost fibers, —
is an abiding love of mystery and marvel. From the shadowy
ages before the earliest glimmer of history, stories of the weird and
the wonderful have exercised a surpassing charm over the imagina-
tion of man. Who does not recall how deeply in his nursery days the
tales of conjurors and wizards, of fairies and genii, of magic swords
and enchanted palaces, appealed to the childish fancy, and how vivid
and life-like seemed the image of AH Baba and Cinderella and Red
Riding Hood when the lessons of the school-room and the Sabbath-
class faded almost as fast as learned. Even in a devouter genera-
tion, when church and creed and sacred page were held in deeper
reverence, few children knew their Bibles nearly so well as they
knew their Arabian Nights, and the rich coloring literature every-
where has taken from those fictions of the Orient is token of their
no less singular fascination for the adult mind.
It is a striking truth that science, in its triumphs hitherto, has
been realizing one by one the fancies of fairy lore and magic. The
picture that moves and speaks — the chariot that bounds like a fiery
meteor through the air — the wizards catching each other's thoughts
across a continent's space, — all these have found themselves actual-
ized in the phonograph, the kinetoscope, the electric car and the
wireless telegraph. Scarce a century ago these wonders would have
been deemed a fakir's story, and a century earlier the idea of a steam
railroad, a sewing-machine or a cotton gin would have been ranked
with the magic lamp of Aladdin and the flying horse of Prince
Feroze-shah.
When modern science dawned the world was dark with super-
stition. Evervwhere, notions fantastic or barbarous fettered the
386 THE OPEN COURT.
human intellect. Witches, foul and hideous, that flew through the
air or lurked about the threshold, weaving with their bony hands the
spells of death and ruin, — black sorcerers, with their magic signs
and incantations, who cast enchantments over the reason or changed
to brutish forms the objects of their spite, — astrolog)- with its tra-
ditions and dogmas, — charms and amulets with their transforming
influence upon the affections, — omens with their boding messages of
blight and blood : these and other superstitions no less grotesque
and crude held the common mind in thrall.
IMingled with these ruder notions, however, were beliefs of a
nobler character which had come down from forgotten ages and
which made a strong appeal to the imaginations of the learned.
Such was the tradition of the Golden Age, with its universal good-
ness and innocence, in the far eras before recorded time. Such, too,,
was the faith of the alchemists in the transmutability of the baser
metals into the more precious, and in the magic elixir which should
confer the boon of perennial youth. Such, again, was the belief
in mesmeric influences. Such, also, was the idea of an invisible
world, permeating our own and interpenetrating our very flesh, in
which lived and moved, though viewless to the natural eye, the
spirits of the departed. Such, finally, was the belief in seers and
magi within whose ken it lay to commune by inter-projection of
thought across mountain chasms and pathless deserts, and who, in
the last triuni])h of their art, could vanish into air and re-appear,
like a flame puffed out and re-lit.
Against these ideas of the learned, no less than against the
gross superstitions of the vulgar, science declared war. The belief
in the transmutability of one element into another was opposed to
its fundamental conceptions. The transmission of thought through
leagues of barren space was cried out upon as impossible. The
casting of spells was sneered at contemptuously as unworthy of
discussion. The notion of a world of reality, interpenetrating the
natural world yet defying the grasp of the natural senses, was
brushed aside as a poetic fancy. The idea of physical matter being
rendered invisible at will was laughed away as making against the
principles upon wliirli all ])hysical and chemical science rested, —
the principles of inertia and of the conservation of mass.
It is noteworthy that during the past century, though our mate-
rial philosophers have remained steadfast in their attitude of fi.xed
resistance to the claims of the my.stics, the march of discovery has
been tending more and more toward the occult. P)eliefs once sneered
at by the savants have ripened into recognized tniilis. nr have found
ANCIENT MYSTICISM AND RECENT SCIENCE. 387
such striking analogies in modern research that scholars of the old
school have been given pause. Those familiar with the history of
hypnotism may recall the impatience of the scientists with early be-
lievers in this now well-attested phenomenon, forming, as it fre-
quently does, an aid to surgery and medicine. The principles of
science afforded no basis for so strange an influence of one mind
over another, and, with something of the dogmatism of theology,
the material thinkers denied what they could not explain.
Little less marked than the difference between the early and the
present attitude of science toward hypnotism has been the silent and
gradual change of sentiment toward the phenomena of telepathy.
Time was when the idea of thoughts flying from mind to mind
across stretches of barren space seemed wild and grotesque. There
was no law known to physics which would lend probability to so
strange a claim, but the triumphs of invention and discovery, which
give to the nineteenth century so splendid a page in history, supplied
analogies that have removed telepathy from the realm of the im-
probable and have made the idea familiar to our thought. The
electric telegraph suggested faintly the mysterious powers with
which legend clothed the ancient seers, but it was with the birth of
the telephone, — an invention which, before its discovery, would have
been pronounced impossible, — that the analogy grew striking ; and
with the advent of the wireless telegraph, pulsing its messages
through vacancy, the suggestion of the legends of old becomes
complete.
The belief which, perhaps, exercised the greatest fascination
over the inquiring minds of old was that which taught the possi-
bility of lengthening out, far beyond the natural span, the years of
man's sojourn upon earth. Intoxicated with the idea, some sought
under strange suns the fabled fountain of youth whose magic
waters should unbend the drooping frame and fire each failing sense
with perpetual life. Others, less credulous, strove to wrest from
alchemy the divine elixir which should yield this priceless gift.
How singular that the dream of the mediaeval philosophers should
find an echo in the utterances of one of the gravest of modern
scientists, — one whose teaching and temperament is without a touch
of mysticism and whose thought is the crystallization of a lifetime
of patient research. In his volume The Nature of Man, recently
translated into our tongue, Elie Metchnikoff, the Russian bacteriol-
ogist, and successor of the great Pasteur in the French Institute so
long identified with the name of the latter, pronounces old age ab-
normal and no part of ''healthy physiological function," and holds
388 THE OPEN COURT.
it well within the bounds of probability that in the fulness of time
the life of man upon the planet may be indefinitely prolonged.
The ancients knew nothing of the larger truths of physiology,
being ignorant, even, of the circulation of the blood, but the modem
student of that fascinating science, where he has paused to reflect
upon the mystery which enveils the processes of life, has been struck
by a singular phenomenon. From childhood to manhood, and thence
through the years of the bodily prime, the heart and lungs and di-
gestive machinery replace as fast as lost the wasted particles of the
frame ; but with the advent of old age the vital processes begin to
lag, the form droops, the eye dims, and the whole organism falls
slowly into decay. Why is it that the work of physical rejuvenation
so perfect in youth and manhood does not persist far beyond the
common span of life and that man's sojourn upon earth is not reck-
oned by centuries? Bacteriology, the latest great legacy of science
to the world, has let in the light upon this engrossing problem. In
the eyes of a Pasteur or a Metchnikofif, the body of man is the
theater of perpetual conflict. During every moment of earthly life,
and throughout every limb and organ, a deadly warfare wages be-
tween the bacteria which battle for the preservation and renewal
of the organism and the microbes which battle for its destruction ;
and old age, as the later researches of Metchnikoff and his con-
freres would seem to show, is but the giving way of the defenses
of the organism before the assaults of these swarming infusoria.
If this be true, it needs but to learn the habits of these tiny pillagers
of the frame, and to curb or neutralize their action, when the
prophecy of Metchnikoff and the beautiful fancy of the ancient
mysticists flowers into fact ! Who shall say that even this magnifi-
cent accomplishment is beyond the pale of possibility when he re-
calls the splendid conquests already won by science over the primal
forces of nature?
A figure familiar to the student of history is that of the al-
chemist, pale and bent, watching with eager and sleepless eye the
fiery crucible whose glow Hope tinged with a res])lcndent possi-
bility! The philosopher's stone! How richl\ interwoven is this
fancy of the elder day with poetry, romance and history ! How
many fine souls grew wrecked in health and maddened in brain in
the wild quest for the principle which should turn worthless metals
into gold! With the dawn of modern learning, the belief in the
possibility of transmutation passed, like thousands of superstitions,
into the limbo of forgotten creeds and systems ; yet, strangely enough,
with tin- ndvent of a still riper knowledge, the supposed delusion
ANCIENT MYSTICISM AND RECENT SCIENCE. 389
of the ancients begins to stir in its charnel-house and to show signs
of returning hfe! "It is interesting to observe," says a writer in
Chambers's Ewcj^do/'^^/a (Lippincott's American edition, igoi,Vo\.
I, page 131), "that the leading tenet of the alchemists' creed, namely,
the doctrine of the transmutability of other metals into gold and
silver, — a doctrine which it was thought modern chemistry had ex-
ploded and which was rejected as an impossibility by Sir Humphry
Davy, — receives not a little countenance from a variety of facts now
coming to light, especially in connection with allotropy." Were the
author of these lines writing at this hour he would find his language
much too moderate. The progress of discovery since these words
were penned has lent to the once derided theory of the ancients a
dignity which, but for the unfoldments of the past few years, it
could never have worn. "A strange confirmation of the faith in
transmutation entertained by the alchemists of old," exclaims George
lies in his introduction to the Little Masterpieces of Science,
(Doubleday, Page & Co., 1902), referring to the interesting facts
disclosed by the delicate lines of the spectroscope; and, twelve
months after, another writer could speak of new grounds for the
increasing respectability of the old alchemists' teaching. In a vol-
ume issued by Harpers in 1903, devoted to a sweeping survey of
the latest marvels in science, Carl Snyder observes: "Prof. J. J.
Thomson, of Cambridge, shows that ions, electrons or corpuscles
are at least one thousand times smaller than the smallest and lightest
atom; and from whatever source they come they are all alike iden-
tical in every way. Is this primal matter at last? Is here the stuff
from which all known substances are compounded? May we look
forward to a time when we may build up any substance, — gold, for
example, — from the elements of any other? Have we realized the
philosopher's stone?"
As yet, however, science was without an actual demonstration,
though it had not long to wait. Carl Snyder's pages were scarce
dry from the press when the announcement was flashed across the
Atlantic that in studying the phenomena centering about the new
metal radium. Sir William Ramsey had found the gaslike, luminous
emanation from that metal transfusing through its singular changes
into a distinct element, itself discovered but a few years before
though known for a quarter of a century to exist in the sun, — he-
lium ! The birth of one element from another ! The scientific brain
reeled! The whole philosophy of chemistry and physics, so labor-
iously built up, seemed tottering, and the very pictures of the old
alchemists appeared to mock and jeer from their frames! Now
390 THE OPEN COURT.
comes Professor Rutherford, the eminent speciahst in the investi-
gation of radio-active phenomena, and ventures the idea that the
emanative changes of uranium, another of the radio-active sub-
stances, will be found to ultimate in the common metal Icodl If
this be true, then we have but to find the radio-active mass the
successive offbirths of which end in the King of Metals, and the
dream of the ancient alchemists is within our grasp !
The mention of radium and radio-activity leads naturallv to a
discussion of these absorbingly interesting phenomena, with their
shock to the accepted principles of chemistry and physics, and their
startling confirmation of ideas and theories wliich have long rested
under the taboo of science. The annals of discovery are without a
parallel for the consternation which has prevailed among the scien-
tists ever since Mme. Curie's remarkable discovery. The very
central teachings of chemical and physical science, — teachings so
long unchallenged they had crystallized into axioms, — have been
rudely shaken ; and tenets of mysticism long treated with contempt
by the savants have leaped into the pale of scientific truth. "We
have been taught," says Prof. A. E. Dolbear in the Popular Science
Monthly for July. 1905, "and have probably had no misgivings in
saying that matter is indestructible. Much philosophy is founded
upon that proposition. But we are now confronted with well-
vouched-for phenomena from two independent workers that under
certain conditions a certain mass of matter loses weight not by
mechanical removal of some of its molecules but by physical chan-
ges which take place in it. This is a piece of news that is almost
enough to paralyze a scientifically minded man, for stability of
atoms, unchanging quantity and quality, seems to be at the basis
of logical thinking on almost all matters." How complete has been
the overturn wrought by the new phenomena may be inferred from
the tone and tenor of scientific statements written before radio-
activity had disturbed the assurance of the scientific mind. Thus,
in a discussion of the doctrines of indcstructil)ility and inertia ap-
pearing in Chambers's Encyclopedia under the title of "Matter," it
is said, "One of the most remarkable of these (properties of mat-
ter) what has been called conscrwilion of matter, is the experimen-
tally ascertained fact that no process at the command of man can
destroy even a single particle of matter. Still less can it create a
new one. It is on this basis that tlu- great science of chemistry has
been securely built." And in the same article. "Quantity of matter,
or mass, as it is technically called, is measured by inertia, which
(as expressed in Newton's first law of motion) may be looked upon
ANCIENT MYSTICISM AND RECENT SCIENCE. 39I
as the fundamental property of matter. .. .It is in virtue of its
inertia that a body can possess energy of motion and that work is re-
quired in order to set in motion even the smallest particle of matter."
It was with these principles, now so much discredited, that
scientists met the spiritualists and the investigators of psychic phe-
nomena. A priori, and with manifest impatience, they stamped as
a fraud or an illusion every phenomenon which violated these laws.
Here and there, it is true, a lone thinker, like Camille Flammarion,
the astronomer, or Alfred Russel Wallace, the naturalist, remem-
bered that science had already touched the fringe of mysticism in
its theory of the universal ether, and paused from his labors to in-
quire what seeds of truth there might be in the claims of the psy-
chics ; but for the most part, the savants drew the mantle of their
learning about them and invoked the venerable maxims of their
science. It was left for a brilliant French woman, working patiently
in her laboratory, to shake them from their self-assurance into a
newer realization of the mysteries amidst which they stood, and of
which their science had caught but a faint and erring glimpse.
The discovery of radio-activity has flung wide the doors to
a new world of phenomena. The researches of the Curies, follow-
ing out a hint afforded by the discoveries of Becquerel, lifted the
veil from a species of matter wholly new, and possessing character-
istics strange, if not weird. These characteristics, as was first
thought^ applied only to radium and its kindred metals, but, as in-
vestigation proceeded, scientists, to their amazement, found indi-
cations of radio-activity in the common air and soil.
Nothing could be more extraordinary than the behavior of
radium. With no exciting cause, so far as investigation has dis-
closed, this element gives forth steadily an amount of energy enor-
mous when compared with its mass ; nor is the amount of heat
emitted lessened or interrupted by plunging the radium into liquid
air or sealing it within a leaden vessel. It has been estimated by
Professor Rutherford that one pound of radium emanation would
give forth energy corresponding to many thousand horse-power,
and Sir William Crookes, in the language of a recent writer, "sees
in radio-activity a possible source of light, heat and power sufficient
to supply the world, — possibly giving rise to a mighty industry like
electricity."
The gas-like emanation of radium, like the Rontgen ray, pos-
sesses a penetrative power which enables it to pass readily through
substances opaque to light. The distinctive feature of radium rays
consists in their visibility to the natural eye, but before their discov-
392 THE OPEN COURT.
ery the Becquerel radiations of uranium, which are invisible to the
eye, had been known for some years. All these radiations, science
has clearly established, are a form of matter and not merely etheric
vibrations of an order such as result in the light familiar to our
senses; and the problem which confronted the scientists was to
reconcile the phenomena of radium, its power of penetrating sub-
stances and the successive emanations to which the radiations give
rise, with the accepted notions of physical matter. The effort at a
reconciliation has been abandoned, and investigators have been
forced to adopt a w-holly new theory of matter, — the corpuscular or
ionic theory.
It is now taught that the ultimate atom, once supposed to be
simple in substance and indivisible, consists in reality of a multitude
of tinier atoms or corpuscles in rapid motion, all swinging about a
common center much as the orbs of our planetary system revolve
about the sun ; and that by reason of some disturbance a number
of these particles escape from the atom and, in conjunction with
like particles from contiguous atoms, make up the emanation which
the eye beholds. These corpuscles, moreover, being much smaller
than the atom which has heretofore been looked upon as the unit of
matter, pass readily through the interstices between the atoms of
grosser matter.
The following passage from an article in a recent issue of the
Popular Science Monthly, written by Professor Rutherford, the
author of the most authoritative work yet published upon radio-
activity, presents some interesting observations upon the character-
istics of radium : "Radio-activity is always accompanied by the
appearance of new types of radio-active matter which possess phys-
ical and chemical properties distinct from the parent clement. Ra-
dium emanation is a transition substance which disappears and is
changed into other types of matter. It emits during its changes
about a million times as much energy as is emitted tluring any
known chemical change." The fact that radium emanation remains
active for more than a thousand years, according to the estimate of
the scientists, suggests to us the ever-burning lamp of the ancients,
which in the light nf \hv latrst ninrvcls of science may, perhaps, not
be wholly fanciful.
How far toward the doctrines of the ancient mystics science
has been pushed by these discoveries may be seen when we place
side by side an utterance of the most celebrated of the alchemists
with that of a recent scientific authority. "He." says the writer
of the .'irticlo "Alchemv." referring to raraeelsiis. in the Encvclo-
ANCIENT MYSTICISM AND RECENT SCIENCE. 393
pedia from which we have already quoted, "iftculcates the dogma
that there is only one real elementary matter, — nobody knows what.
This one prime element of things he appears to have considered
to be the universal solvent of which the alchemists were in quest."
After centuries of experiment and discovery science seems now to
have made its own this once absurd teaching. Says Prof. Edward
L. Nichols, of Cornell University, in the November issue, 1904, of
the Popular Science Monthly: "The evidence obtained by J. J.
Thomson, and other students of ionization, that electrons from
different substances are identical, has greatly strengthened the con-
viction which for a long time has been in process of formation in
the minds of scientists that all matter is in its ultimate nature iden-
tical. This conception, necessarily speculative, has been held in
abeyance by the facts regarded as established and lying at the foun-
dation of the accepted system of chemistry of the conservation of
matter and the intransmutabilty of the elements. The phenomena
observed in recent investigations of radio-active substances have,
however, begun to shake our faith in this principle. If matter is to
be regarded as a product of certain operations upon the ether, there
is no theoretical difficulty about the transmutation of elements, varia-
tion of mass or even the complete disappearance or creation of mat-
ter. The absence of such phenomena in our experience has been the
real difficulty, and if the view of students of radio-activity concern-
ing the transmutations undergone by uranium, thorium and radium
are substantiated, the doctrines of the conservation of mass and
matter which lie at the foundation of the science of chemistry will
have to be modified." Just how would this "variation of mass" or
"complete disappearance or creation of matter" take place? Per-
haps, the following passage from Professor Rutherford's work on
radio-activity, quoted by Professor Nichols in the same article, may
afford a clue : "The electron or corpuscle is the body of smallest
mass yet known to science. . . .Its presence has only been detected
when in rapid motion. This apparent mass increases zvith the speed
as the velocity of light is approached."
Professor Nichols's article, it will be observed, was written in
1904, before the phenomena of radio-activity had become as fully
or widely known as they became in the year following. That all
doubt as to the character or significance of the new phenomena had
disappeared within less than a year may be seen from the paper
contributed to the July issue, 1905, of the same periodical by Prof,
A. E. Dolbear, a portion of which will be recognized as having
been already quoted: "We have all been taught, and have probably
394 THE OPEN COURT.
had no misgivings in saying, that matter is indestructible. Much
philosophy is founded upon that proposition. But we are now con-
fronted with well-vouched-for phenomena from two independent
workers that under certain conditions a certain mass of matter loses
weight, not by mechanical removal of some of its molecules, but by
physical changes which take place in it. This is a piece of news that
is almost enough to paralyze a scientifically minded man, for stabil-
ity of atoms, unchanging quantity and quality, seems to be at the
basis of logical thinking on almost all matters. In the Arabian
Nights we may expect that the unexpected will happen. — genii may
be summoned to do this or that, and matter may be annihilated at
will, — and the conception gives one pleasure though one knows it
to be impossible, and one thinks it impossible because he has never
known such changes in matter because one has been taught that
matter is indestructible."
We could scarce have believed a few decades ago, as we
thumbed the pages of Eastern lore and read of the mysterious en-
chanters who moved objects at a distance by gesture, or who pro-
fessed the power of communing with the beings of other planets
and, indeed, of transporting themselves to those spheres, that the
sober judgment of science could ever lend countenance to ideas so
far-fetched. Such, however, in some degree seems the case, and it
is fit matter of marvel that scientific speculation should venture upon
ground so long resigned to the chimeras of superstition. We can
not refrain from quoting another passage of the highly interesting
article by Professor Dolbear from which we have already drawn
so liberally. "It seems," he says, speaking of the latest deduc-
tions from the observed phenomena, "as if the atoms acted as trans-
formers of ether energy into ordinary and familiar forms, such as
heat and electricity, and, z'icc versa, transforming the latter into
ether energy. When we learn this secret we may likely enough be
able to artificially extract from the ether as much energy as we may
need for any purpose, for, as I have said, it is inexhaustible, and
every cubic inch of space has enough for all the needs of a man
for many days." We may close this portion of our paper with the
following remarkable sentence from an address on "Astro-physics"
by I'rof. W. W. Campbell, l^ircctor of the Lick (Observatory, Uni-
versity of California, ])ul)lishe(l in the February issue, 1005, of the
Popular Science Moiilhly: "The actual transport ami interchange
of matter in the form of small particles from one star to another
seems to be a i)lain and unavoidable conse(juencc of recently estab-
iishc'd jihysical facts."
ANCIENT ATYSTICISM AND RECENT SCIENCE. 395
How impressively do these utterances bring back the stories
upon which, through all the ages, the imagination of man has
loved to dwell ! The adept, causing himself to grow visible before
the eye and fading as rapidly into vacancy, — the wizard with his
magic rod, weaving about him a sphere of light or impulsing from
his hands a nameless energy before which animate beings fall away
as before a furnace flame, — the medium lending his atoms that
the spirits of the dead might be clothed upon for a brief hour with
a shadowy garment of flesh : these beliefs, and many others, bor-
rowed by modern spiritualism from ancient tradition, and long
laughed at by science as disproved by the simplest principles of
physics, have gained a singular dignity from the scientific unfold-
ments of the past few years. The doctrines, — or, as they may now
be more fittingly called, the dogmas, of the indestructibility of the
atom and of the inertia of matter,- — dread weapons as these have
ever been in the hands of the scientist against the claims of the spir-
itualist,— have suddenly lost their potency, and science stands now
abashed and swordless in its age-long battle against the psychics !
Why, the thoughtful mind must ask, these successive triumphs
over science of ancient notions disowned by the learned and which
we have been taught from infancy to rank with the superstitions
of the rudest and most barbaric ages? Whence the strange fore-
grasp of truths but just now breaking upon us and wdiich we find
germed in the hoary beliefs that have formed the mental heritage
of the race in every age and under every sun? The same enigma
has puzzled those who in studying the religions, mythologies and
customs of the world are startled by singular likenesses in ideas and
practices between widely sundered peoples. Who can fail to recall
the astonishment of the Spanish priests when they found the cross
a religious emblem in the land of the Incas,^ — a spectacle which they
could only explain as the work of the Devil ; and the universality
true of religious rites and symbols is equally true of magical rites
and symbols. "These instances," observes the writer of the article
"Magic" in the Encyclopccdia Britannica, "are selected to give an
idea of the sorcerers of the lower races and their modes of working,
which are remarkable for their uniformity in the most distant re-
gions, among tribes who can have had no communication or con-
nection since remote ages."
May it be that the beliefs which have clung so tenaciously to
the race through all its history, and which in so many instances
have been justified by the later researches of science, are but broken
gleams of truths once known to man but since lost and forgotten?
396 THE OPEN' COURT.
Is it possible that in its ascent from the brute plane to the human.
mankind, scores of centuries ago. upon a continent now sunk, per-
haps, beneath the sea. reached a pitch of civilization and psychic
culture far more splendid than it has ever known since, but that
in some huge lapse from its high estate, long before historic time
began, the race sank back in night ; and that the stories handed
down to us of magicians who made pictures to move and speak and
strange fruits and plants to grow. — who rode the air in ficrv char-
iots,— who thrust aside the laws of heat and cold and overcame the
laws of gravitation. — and who, finally, could have converse across
unmeasured leagues of space and bring within sight and touch the
spirits of the departed, — are but faint and failing memories of facul-
ties and powers possessed by man in that far-ofif time? He might
be bold who would venture to assert that such is true, but such a
theory would assuredly gather into order and connection phenomena
which hitherto have given pause to the thoughtful, and yet would
accord with the leading facts of evolution. The Atlantis of the
Grecian sages which went down beneath the sea may be more than
a myth, — though it is hardly in the Atlantic that we must seek the
submerged continent which afforded the race its birth-place ; and the
tradition recorded in our scriptures of a great prehistoric cataclysm,
when every vestige of civilization was blotted from the earth, may
be but another facet of the same truth. \\' ho can forget that the
story of a buried city at the foot of Vesuvius was deemed a fable
and a fancy until the spade of the scientist in modern times disen-
tombed from their long oblivion the art and architecture of Pompeii
and Herculaneum ; and no lover of Grecian life and Grecian thought
can remember without a sigh that the civilization of that surpas-
singly great people, — the highest, perhaps, to which historic man
has attained, — is but a memory and a tale, and that through the
Dark Ages, until the re-birth of learning in lun'ope, Athens with
its matchless marbles, its oratory, its poetry and its philosophy, was
almost as much a myth as is for us the lost Atlantis !
It would be interesting to pursue in detail the theory of a pre-
historic continent, the birth-place of the race and the seat of its for-
gotten splendor, and to show how many facts familiar to science
and philosophy range themselves about the idea : hut space forbids.
Recalling, however, h<iw much our amazement has been wrought
upon by past discoveries, shall we feel sur])rise if the science of the
future siiow that the race in very decfl is but re-climbing, painfully
and tardily, a height which far back in the lost ages it reached and
passed ?
THE SEVEN GODS OF BLISS.
BY TEITARO SUZUKI.
THERE is in Japanese folklore a group of supernatural beings
popularly known as the seven gods of bliss, who in the order of
their popularity are as follows: Daikok (TheGreat Black One), Ebis
(The Stranger), Benzaiten (Goddess of Eloquence), Bishamonten
(Vaishravana), Hote (Linen-bag), Jurojin (Old Man), and Fuk-
rokju (Wealth and Long Life), or Kisshoten (goddess of Good).
One of them only (Ebis) is of native origin; four others have been
introduced from India and the three last mentioned from China.
But their real birthplaces have long been forgotten by the people,
and the gods have become thoroughly naturalized.
DAIKOK.
The first three, Daikok, Ebis, and Benzaiten, are almost equally
popular, and it is difficult to give any one of them a preference over
the other two. In Daikok we perceive a very peculiar and at the
same time a very interesting example of the development, or rather
transformation, of human fancy. Daikok is Mahakala of the Hindus
and as such he is far from being a god of bliss. He is one of the
most destructive and awe-inspiring deities in the Hindu pantheon.
But we can understand the paradox by what might be called the
law of opposition whereby two extremes frequently become inter-
changeable.
The Japanese Daikok is usually represented as either sitting
or standing on rice sacks, with a "hammer of plenty" in his right
hand and with a large bag on his left shoulder. He commonly wears
a flat cap like those which we occasionally see on the heads of little
American girls. He is always smiling as if ready to shake out any
earthly treasure from his- hammer according to the wishes of his
devotees. His color is black, as is indicated by his name (dai =
398 THE OPEX COURT.
"great," kok = "black"), but in his physiognomy there is not a
single sign that betrays his original nature as the god of destruc-
tion.
The Hindu god Mahakala Deva is a manifestation of Shiva,
the Hindu Chronos. for Kala means in Sanskrit "time." The fol-
lowing passage as quoted in Moor's Hindu Pantheon (p. 33) from
Paterson {As. Res., \'o\. VHI.. p. 61) gives us a vivid image of this
all-destroying god :
"Mahakala as represented in the caverns of Elephanta had
eight arms. In one he holds a human figure ; in another a sword
or sacrificial axe ; in a third he holds a basin of blood ; and with
a fourth he rings over it the sacrificial bell. Two other arms are
broken oflf ; with the two remaining he is drawing behind him a veil,
which extinguished the sun and involves the whole universe in one
undistinguished ruin. One of the titles of this tremendous deity is
Bhavara, the terrific; but his principal designation is Kala (time),
Agni (fire), Rudra (fate)."
How then did this awe-inspiring deity £ome to be known as
the Great Black One and revered as a god of bliss by the Japanese?
On account of the lack of authentic records, we have at present no
neans of historically ascertaining the process of this singularly inter-
esting transformation. It seems to have already taken place in
India, before the time of I-Tsing's pilgrimage (A. D. 671-695).
From his w^ork, Correspondence from the Southern Seas, we epito-
mize the following accounts :
"In all the great Western (Indian) monasteries there stands
by the kitchen pillar or post, or in front of a large store-room, a
wooden image of a god, two or three feet in height, carrying a
golden bag, and sitting on a small stool with one leg hanging down
toward the floor. He is constantly smeared with oil which gives
him a blackish appearance, and so he is called Mahakala, that is.
Great Black God. According to tradition he belongs to the group
of Mahadevas. He is very kindly disposed toward the Three Treas-
ures (triratna) and protects the five multitudes (of Buddhists)
against destruction. \\'hoever asks his favor is sure to be gratified
in his wishes. At meal time incense and fire are offered by the
cooks, and also all kinds of food and drink are displayed on his
altar."
I-Tsing concludes his remarks with the words: "All this was
personally observed by myself."
Then the Chinese traveler relates the following story by way of
an explanation of the foregoing. At a certain monastery about one
THE SEVEN GODS OF BLISS.
399
hundred monks used to be fed, but one time in the spring or fall,
when one of the great festivals was about to take place, there arrived
quite unexpectedly a multitude of monks numbering five hundred.
It was then found to the great dismay of the cooks that the pro-
vision prepared for the occasion was utterly insufficient, and they
were at a loss to know how to meet the emergency. At that time
there was among the crowd the old mother of a Brahmacharin, who
DAIKOK.
EBIS.'
said to them. "This is nothing unusual. Do not trouble yourselves."
.She burned incense and fire on the altar of Mahakala and made him
some offerings and prayed thus: "The great sage (Buddha) entered
Nirvana, but his followers are still here. Monks coming frorp all
quarters are desirous to pay homage to the holy places. Through
thy grace let them not suffer from want of provision." She bade
* The illustrations in the text are from photographs of actors who im-
personate these national gods in a mythological drama. The frontispiece of
this number of Tlie Open Court is a Japanese artist's idea of the same char-
acters painted according to the traditional interpretations.
400 THE OPEN COURT.
the people proceed as usual to distribute all the food they had at
the time among- the multitudes, and they found that it was more
than sufficient to feed every one of the new comers.
It is strange to observe that Mahakala. the god of time, has
here entirely lost his original significance, and that Kala is under-
Stood to mean "black" instead of "time." Coleman in his Hindu
Mythology says that ?^Iahakali, the female counterpart of Mahakala.
was commonly paiflt^-fela€k-"Or-4ark blue. Might it not then be
possible that the original meaning of the god having been forgotten,
he came to be known only by his conspicuously dark complexion
and that later generations gave him their own interpretation?
EBIS.
Ebis — in spite of his name which means "foreigner" or "stran-
ger"— is a thoroughly indigenous production of Japan. He belongs
to the mythical age of Japanese history. He was the third child of
Izanagi-no-Mikoto, the first mythical hero of Japan, and was the
younger brother of the famous sun-goddess Amateras. He some-
how incurred the displeasure of his elders and was expelled to the
Western sea, where he spent his remaining life as a fisherman. Ac-
cordingly, he always wears an ancient Japanese court dress, with a
fishing rod in his right hand and with a large reddish braize under
his left arm. This fish, which is zoologically known as pagrus
cardinalis or major, is considered by the Japanese the most delicious
provision on the table, and as indispensable at all important festivals
as is turkey at an American Thanksgiving dinner.
Ebis and Daikok are usually in the company of each other ;
Daikok may be said principally to be a patron of farmers, and Ebis
of merchants and tradesmen. The birthday of Ebis which falls in
November, is celebrated by the commercial people, especially the
dry-goods dealers, by offering the public a special sale. Some think
that any fancy needle work made of the material bought on Ebis
dav brings the owner good luck. One of the largest Japanese brew-
ing companies is named after this god and uses his picture for a
trade mark.
BENZMTEN.
Renzaiten's Sanskrit name is Sarasvati Devi, which means
"flowing water" or "eloquence." and her character has remained the
same in japan : rmlv the Japani-sc paint her in their own fashion, for
so far as the outside appearance goes, the identity between Saras-
THE SEVEN GODS OF BLISS.
401
vati and Benzaiten is hardly recognizable. Muir in his Original
Sanskrit Texts, V. 339, says of her:
"Sarasvati is a goddess of some though not of any great im-
portance in the Vedas. She is celebrated both as a river and a god-
dess. She was primarily a river deity, as her name Svatery' clearly
denotes; and in this capacity she is celebrated in a few separate
passages. . . .The Sarasvati thus appears to have been to the early
Indians what the Ganges is to their descendants."
BENZAITEN.
JUROJIN.
The tradition of Sarasvati or Benzaiten as water goddess is not
lost sight of in Japan, for we see her temples very frequently in iso-
lated islands or in caverns on the sea-coast.
That she was also the goddess of eloquence, learning, writing,
in short of general culture, is told by Sir W. Jones who says ( Works,
vol. XIII, p. 315) :
"Sarasvati Devi is adored as the patroness of the fine arts, espe-
cially of music and rhetoric, as the inventress of the Sanskrit Ian-
402 THE OPEN COURT.
giiage, of the Devanagari characters, and of the sciences which
writing perpetuates ; so that her attitudes correspond with thoSe of
Minerva ]\Iusica in Greece or Italy, who invented the flute and pre-
sided over literature. In this character she is addressed in the
ode ; and particularly as the goddess of harmony, since the Hindus
usually paint her with a musical instrument in her hand. The seven
notes, an artful combination of which constitutes music and variously
affects the passions, are feigned to be her earliest production."
Benzaiten in Japan is also the popular goddess of beauty. In
stories of ancient Japan we read that when a mother wished to have
handsome daughters, she went to the temple of Benzaiten, and con-
fining herself in a special room or cave, she fasted and prayed with
all her heart, generally for a period of seven days. In case her
urgent wish was granted, the goddess manifested herself in a dream,
and the child thus favored always surpassed all others in beauty and
wisdom.
As Benzaiten is associated with water, she is often represented
as standing or sitting on a dragon or sea-serpent, and sometimes
assumes the shape of her sacred animal. In Hindu mythology she
is pictured as riding on a peacock. In Japan as well as in India
she holds a musical instrument in her hand, but the Japanese com-
mon sense hesitated to let her have more than two arms, while the
fertile Indian imagination depicts her with four arms, though she
looks more luiman than some other Hindu deities.
BISHAMON.
Bishamonten, or Bishamon, was also originally a Hindu god,
whose Sanskrit name is \^aishravana. .He is the god of wealth
and one of the guardians of the four cardinal points of the universe.
He is the guardian of the North. His other name is Kuvera. We
read in Griffith's Raiiiayana, II, 20:
"Mny he uliose hands the thuiulor wicUl [Indraj,
P>o in tlio East thy gnard and shield :
May Yania's care the South hefriend,
Varuna's arm the West defend :
And let Kuvera, Lord of Gold.
The North with firm protection hold.'"
In I'.uddhism the Umv guardian-gods are differently named:
East. Dhrtarashlra ; West, \irupaksha; South, \'irudhaka ; and
Xortli, Vaishravana. Some Hindu scholars say that this last-men-
tioned god (\u\ not ])la\- a very important part in the Hindu pan-
theon, and in spite of being Lord of Gold, no images or pictures
THE SEVEN GODS OF BUSS. 4O3
are to be had of him. As a Buddhist god he is well known and in
all Buddhist countries his pictures and images are plentiful.
In the Japanese group of the seven gods Bishamon has lost his
qualification as god of wealth. He is known only as the patron of
knowledge, and it is in this capacity that he is sometimes called by
the Japanese the God of Great Learning. Some of the great men in
the history of Japan are believed to have been incarnations of this
guardian of the North. Perhaps the Sanskrit name Vaishravana,
which would be interpreted as being a derivative of the root shru,
"to hear," might have suggested the rendering of his name by
"much hearing," that is, "great learning."
Bishamon is not so popular as the preceding three, though many
temples are dedicated to him and annual festivals are celebrated in
his honor, In pictures and images he appears as holding a minia-
ture tower or castle in his left hand and a spear in his right, which
evidently symbolizes his function as guardian warrior-god.
It is not exactly known when all these Hindu deities were intro-
duced into the Island Empire. The probability is that when Vaj-
rabodhi, Amogha, and other representatives of the Mantra sect came
from India to China in the eighth century, they brought along all
these gods with many others. As this sect is a sort of hybrid of
Buddhist and Tantric beliefs, it incorporated a great number of
Hindu deities. When it was imported to Japan soon after its estab-
lishment in China, these wonderful creations of the Hindu mind
proved very attractive to the popular conception of the masses.
HOTE.
Hote, or Pu Tai in Chinese, was a wandering hermit of China
who is believed to have lived in the latter part of the Tung dynasty
(620-905 A. D.) One legend considers him an incarnation of Mai-
treya Buddha. He carries a large linen bag on his shoulders, and,
a Japanese Santa Claus, is a great favorite with children, and
wherever he appears they flock around him. Occasionally he may
be seen among them distributing gifts dear to their hearts. He has
no special name of his own. He is called Hote, which is "linen
bag," because the large bag on his back is very conspicuous and
he is never seen without it. Aside from these meager accounts, the
history of this Buddhist saint is lost in oblivion, and nobody now
knows how it came to pass that he was admitted to our group of the
seven gods of bliss. Probably, he signifies, the spiritual bliss of
lovinsfkindness and childlike cheer.
404 THE OPEN COURT.
Properly speaking, Hote is not a god at all, and I do not believe
the Japanese regard him as such. Nobody worships him, nobody
prays to him for special favors, spiritual or material. Most likely
it is as a jolly old fellow who is able to impart something humor-
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HOTE.
ous to the severity of our daily struggle for existence, that he has
been initiated into the congregation of the seven gods.
JUROJIN.
Next comes Jurojin which means "old venerable man." He
symbolizes longevity and stands for the star Canopus which is called
by the Chinese the star of longevity. We do not know at present
how the luminary came to signalize the bliss of longevity. Jurojin is
thus of Chinese origin. The ])(>pular concc]ili<in of him is to depict
him as carrying a long staff made of natural wood and accompanied
by a white stag, — the staff and the animal being symbols of holiness.
Like Hote just precciliiig, lie is not really a god.
FUKROKJU.
The sevcntli god of bliss according to one tradition is Fukrokju,
and according to another Kisshoten (Shridevi). Fukrokju is not
THE SEVEN GODS OF BLISS.
405
a historical figure nor is he a Hindu deity. He is simply a personi-
fication of the combined ideas, fuk, rok and ju, that is, Bliss, Wealth
and Longevity, — these three being considered by the Chinese the
most desirable things in the world. The most prominent physical
mark of this mythical personage, as pictured by the Japanese, is
his extraordinarily long head, as if our ordinary-sized cranium was
not large enough to hold all his virtues, knowledge, and happiness,
FUKROJU.
BISHAMON.
which were added to him as he advanced in age. Other than as a
mere symbol of bliss, he plays no interesting role in Japanese popu-
lar belief.
KISSHOTEN.
Kisshoten is a goddess borrowed from India, her Sanskrit name
being Shridevi. According to a Hindu scholar, she was the wife of
Daksha by whom she had one hundred and one daughters. One of
them w^as given her in answer to her earnest prayer to have a child
406 THE OPEN COURT.
exactly like herself. This her duplicate named Sati was married to
Mahadeva. In Japan as in India she has done nothing important
or significant. She is sometimes represented as scattering gems of
luck, and people who own any one of them may use it, like Alad-
din's lamp, to procure at their request all kinds of earthly treasures.
All these seven gods or genii travel on board a ship called
Takara-bune, "boat of treasure." and pictures of it are sold on New
Year's Eve. For there is an ancient custom in which superstitious
people (and perhaps others also) are wont to indulge — to place the
picture under their pillows at night in the hope that a pleasant dream
will disclose all the good luck which the new year has in store for
them. When the voice of the picture peddler rings through the
cold clear night of December, many Japanese youths tremble with
excitement to enjoy a glimpse at their future fortune, and the old
feel rejuvenated by the festive sentiment that prevails. It is a night
full of romantic imaginings — so dear to the Japanese of all classes.
SCHILLER THE DRAMATIST.
BY THE EDITOR.
[conclusion.]
IN "William Tell" Schiller dramatizes the national hero of Switzer-
land, and the Swiss have always been grateful to the German poet
for having given a final shape to the saga of the liberty-loving
archer. The drama is based upon a legend which was localized in
Switzerland about two hundred years after the incidents with which
it has become associated. The legend itself is an ancient myth, and
folklorists have gathered evidences that prove it to be the last echo
of a primitive practice in which a human sacrifice had to be offered
to the gods, but was given a chance of being ransomed by the dex-
terity and courage of a deliverer, who at the risk of his own life
would be allowed to liberate the victim out of the clutches of death
by his prowess and his skill in archery. Among some savage tribes
this custom is still represented in dramatic performances in which
both the offering of the sacrifice and its liberation have been changed
into a religious ritual or a popular feast.
We may add that critics have always admired the poet's imagi-
nation in picturing in his drama not only the character of the Swiss,
but also the details of the scenery of Switzerland, which is the more
remarkable since Schiller had never set foot on Swiss ground, and
yet his ideas of the country are as perfect as if he had been a native
son of the Swiss mountains.
The spirit of the mountaineers is well characterized in a poem
sung by Walter, Tell's little son, hence called "Walter's Song,"
which reads in an English translation thus :*
• * The first and third stanzas are from Bowring's translation, and the
second is the author's version.
4o8
THE OPEX COURT.
"Bow and arrow bearing,
Over hills and streams
Moves the hunter daring,
Soon as daylight gleams.
"Like a king, the eagle
Realms of air surveys;
Hunter so with beagle,
Crag and mountain sways.
"Over space he reigneth,
And he makes his prize
All his bolt attaineth,
All that creeps or flies."
M^^
FACSIMILE OF SCHILLER S 1I.\N I )\\K1TI XG.
IV al tiler's Lied.
The drama "William Tell" treats again the ideal of liberty and
the struggle for independence against tyranny.
Switzerland is oppressed by Emperor Albrecht I, who wants
to add the country of the free mountaineers to his own private
dominion. The spirit of rebellion spreads from the hearts of a few
men wJio have suffered wrong and pledge their honor by an oath
of fidelity to the cause of freedom. Tell, however, keeps aloof;
he can not be induced to join a conspiracy ; though he is a ready
deliverer of the oppressed in time of need. When others refuse
assistance on accoimt of the raging storm, Tell ferries a fugitive
SCHILLER THE DRAMATIST.
409
over the lake through the foaming billows and rescues him from
the wrath of Gessler, the imperial governor.
In the meantime Tell, himself, falls into the hands of the
tyrant's mercenaries by heedlessly passing by the hat put up on a
staff for salutation without bowing to this emblem of despotism.
Gessler happens to pass by and promises the offender his life if he
should shoot the apple from the head of his little son Walter. With
great reluctance Tell yields to the request, but takes out two arrows.
THE OATH.
Having accomplished the famous shot, he confesses that the second
arrow was destined for the tyrant's heart, if the first one by accident
should have hit his child. Thereupon the governor has Tell arrested
and carried over the lake to the dungeon of his stronghold, Kiiss-
nacht. A storm comes up and the oarsmen despair. The man at
the helm declares that Tell alone can save the ship. So the prisoner
is unbound and steers the boat through the surge around the famous
point of the rocky bank, now called Tell's Ledge. At the moment
4IO
THE OPEN' COURT.
when they pass the dangerous spot lie quickly seizes his bow and
quiver and leaps ashore, with his foot throwing the boat back into
the lake. Now at last in self-defense he is forced to turn against
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THE DELUEKEK 1\ THE TIME OF NEED.
the tyrant and he shoots him in tlu' liollnw road that leads to Kiiss-
nacht.
schillp:r the dramatist.
411
THE SHOT AT THE APPLE.
412
THE OPEN COURT.
At the same time the Swiss peasants take the several castles of
their usurpers, and the venerable Baron Attinghausen. too old to
take part in the war for liberty, rejoices to hear the good tidings.
TKl.L S E.SCA1'E.
With his last breath he exhorts the people to unity, and his words:
"Scid citiiii, ciiiii::;, cinig!" become to them a sacred heritage.
SCHILLER THE DRAMATIST.
413
Schiller's drama "William Tell" has always been one of the
favorite dramas of the German public although it has been officially
prohibited at the Royal Theater of Berlin, because it might spread
THE DYING BARON S EXHORTATION.
the spirit of rebellion among the people. But it may be confidently
asserted that the old narrow-mindedness and the fear of Schiller's
love for liberty has passed away, making room for a due (and let
414
THE OPEX COURT.
US hope a lasting) appreciation of the great poet and his ideals. The
imputation that Schiller is an anarchist is wrong, for he is careful
to distinguish between the revolution for a righteous cause, and acts
of lawlessness done for paltry and selfish motives in rebellion against
established authority. A special scene is introduced in which Schil-
ler plainly indicates that he does not wish to encourage assassination
of sovereigns or representatives of authority, and so he contrasts
TELL AND JOHN rAKUlCID.V.
Tell willi JMJin i'arricida. wlio assassinattil liis uncle, I'jnperor Al-
brecht I ( .Ma\. i.V*'^'- '"'' ]"'ivate and personal reasons.
The '■jlride of Messina" is a i)la\' in which Schiller reproduces
tlu- old classical drama with its choruses, where fate rules su])reme
accMrding to the irrefragable law of cause and effect, and men are
mere puppets of their destiny. The subject-matter of the drama is
the struggle between twin brothers, the princes of Messina, for the
possession of a mai(l<.'n win mi tlie\ both lo\e .and who tinallv is
recognized as their own sister. An or.iele bad foretold that she
SCHILI-KR THE DRAMATIST.
415
would be the cause of their destruction, and the very methods em-
ployed by the parents to prevent the misfortune, the concealment
of the princess in a nunnery, and the i,e:norancc in which her two
THE PRINCELY HUNTER MEETS THE MYSTERIOUS MAIDEN.
brothers are kept about the very existence of their sister, leads to the
actualization of their doom. Both brothers find her, love her, fight
for her possession and die in combat for her.
4i6
THE OPEN COURT.
THE DESPAIR OF THE FRATRICIDE.
scijii.i.i:k iiik dk amaiist.
417
Among the plans of new dramas which Schiller intended to
elaborate is one entitled "Demetrios" that appears to have been of
great promise. It was intended to represent a pretender to the
throne of the Czar, who thinks he is the real heir, and who is suc-
cessful in his fight so long as he is convinced of his right, but the
catastrophe sets in when the assassin of the real Demetrios makes
himself known to him as the person who had substituted another
child for the dead prince and now he threateningly demands his
reward of the successful pseudo-Demetrios. This new turn in his
4l8 THE OPEN COURT.
destiny changes the character of the pretender. He quarrels with
his benefactor and stabs him. This is the first deed that casts a
shadow upon his career. Forthwith he is another man ; he has lost
faith in himself and others. His ideal, his veracity, his trust in the
justice of his cause are gone, and falsehood, cunning, treachery and
dark deeds of terrorism take their place preparing his final downfall.
Schiller as a dramatist dififers from Shakespeare. While the
English poet introduces on the stage characters such as they were
or might be in actual life, Schiller superadds thereto his own per-
sonality, usually represented by one or two leading characters.
Shakespeare is a realist. Schiller himself always speaks through the
mouth of his hero or heroine. His dramas preach the gospel of the
eternally beautiful, the true, and the good, and some character pro-
nounces Schiller's message to the world in unmistakable language.
Shakespeare, -to be sure, always preaches moral lessons, but he does
it by indirection ; the spectator has to make his own application.
Shakespeare paints life with all its shadows and bright sides, and
rarely, if ever, introduces ideal characters such as Max Piccolomini,
or Thecla ; while Schiller feels always urged to introduce in some
way or other his own ideals voiced by a personality like unto himself.
We will not criticize here, but allow each poet to apply his own
method and to follow his own inclination. Either way is perfectly
justified ; but we wish to insist on the greatness of Schiller who,
together with Shakespeare and Goethe, must be recognized as one
of the greatest dramatists of the world.
A SUGGESTION FOR THE AMERICAN STAGE.
America does not yet possess a national drama. All productions
which have so far passed over the American stage are mere business
enterprises, being written for the purpose of making money. What
we need is a drama of character written by a poet who will hold up
to the nation the eternal ideals in a similar spirit and with the same
seriousness as did the great dramatists of the past, Shakespeare,
Goethe and ."^chiller.
The stage can become a religious institution ; it ought to be (as
Lessing wanted it) a pulpit from which the poet speaks to the
people, proclaiming the gospel of art, the religion of truth, of good-
ness, of beauty. A true poet is a preacher, a teacher and an edu-
cator. Schiller has been such to the German nation, and let us hope
that he will find a successor in the mw world worthy of ]nn-suing
the same aim and accomplisliing llu- s;unc kind of wt^-k on a larger
SCHILLER THE DRAMATIST. 4I9
scale for the people of the future destined to actualize the next
higher stage in the evolution of mankind.
We will not finish this article without making a suggestion to
our wealthy fellow-citizens, if happily there be one among them
who might feel in his soul the noble aspiration to become a Maecenas
of dramatic art. What is sorely needed in our national development
is a stage supported by a sufficient donation so as to be absolutely
independent of financial success, destined to serve the highest ideal
of genuine art. Our public is willing to support that which is good,
and would gladly lend a hand, but they are too easily misguided by
the mercantile press reviews of theatrical affairs, and so the man-
ager of a stage has to offer what is wanted, not what is needed. He
has to heed the taste of the masses, not of the few worthy to judge,
the few presenting a spiritual aristocracy. The result is that a
great poet would not be encouraged while the frivolous trifler with
showy attractions is always sure of success. Shakespeare still draws
because he has the name and the fame. Our public are willing to
see his dramas because they are convinced that they are good. But
if a new Shakespeare would rise, still unknown and untried, he
would have a hard time to find recognition and he would have to
adapt himself to the requirements of the present age ; he must cater
to the taste of the masses. An endowed stage could bring before the
public the products of a genius who would address himself to the
elect few and having passed the ordeal of competent criticism would
then easily find also the applause of the masses.
Germany would never have developed that unusual wealth of
literature so brilliantly represented by Goethe and Schiller, had not
geniuses been fostered and protected by German princes. If our
civilization shall be worthy of the great hope that we have of its
future, if it shall surpass the culture of the old world and rise
superior to the great achievements of the past we must adopt the
methods that have proved beneficial in former days. We must guide
the people, educate the artistic judgment of the public, and give
genius a chance to assert itself.
QUESTIONS FROM THE PEW.
DV FRAXKTJN N. JEWKTT.
PAUL'S DOCTRINE OF FAITH FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT.
THIS topic leads to a consideration of Paul's references to
Abraham. His argumentation from the history of Abraham
is very prominent, both in Galatians and Romans.
In Gal. iii. 6 we read, "Even as Abraham believed God, and it
was reckoned unto him for righteousness." The argument based
upon the passage is greatly extended in the fourth chapter of
Romans. Chief importance is attached to the fact that Abraham
was thus accepted before the rite of circumcision was instituted.
Therefore his acceptance with God was not dependent upon it. In
Paul's words the argument is, "To Abraham his faith was reck-
"oned for righteousness. How then was it reckoned? When he
"was in circumcision, or in uncircumcision? Not in circumcision,
"but in uncircumcision : and he received the sign of circumcision,
"a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had while he was
"in uncircumcision : that he might be the father of all them that
"believe, though they be in uncircumcision, that righteousness might
"be reckoned unto them ; and the father of circumcision to them
"who not only are of the circumcision, but who also walk in the
"steps of that faith of our father Abraham which he had in circum-
■'cision. For not through (the) law was the promise to Abraham,
"or to his seed, that he should be heir of the world, but through the
"righteousness of faith." (Rom. iv. 9. b.-i3.)
In Galatians Paul is writing to Gentile converts. They had been
led away from faith in Christ as sufficient for salvation, which
was the Gospel that Paul had preached to them. They had been
told that the observance of the Jewish law. or especially of the rite
of circumcision, was essential. Panl is cndravoring to bring them
bark to their former belief and prariirc His position is that their
QUESTIONS FROM THE PEW. 421
observance of the Jewish law, so far from being essential to their
salvation, would be seriously, if not fatally, detrimental to it. He
goes so far as to say (v. 2), "Behold, I Paul say unto you that, if
ye receive circumcision, Christ will profit you nothing."
At this time of course, Christianity had not yet been separated
from Judaism. The Christians were continuing with the Jews in
the temple worship at Jerusalem ; and the former seem to have been
quite as zealous for the law as the latter. In the account of Paul's
last visit to Jerusalem (Acts xxi. 18-21) we read: "And the day
"following Paul went in with us unto James; and all the elders
"were present. And when he had saluted them, he rehearsed one
"by one the things which God had wrought among the Gentiles by
"his ministry. And they, when they heard it, glorified God; and
"they said unto him, Thou seest, brother, how many thousands there
"are among the Jews of them who have believed ; and they are all
"zealous for the law : and they have been informed concerning thee,
"that thou teachest all the Jews who are among the Gentiles to for-
"sake Moses, telling them not to circumcise their children, neither
"to walk after the customs."
It seems very naturally to have been claimed by Jewish Chris-
tians that in order to participate in the blessings to be conferred by
Christ, who was believed to be Messiah, Gentile nations or indi-
viduals must observe the Jewish law, must virtually join, or become,
the people of Jehovah. Proselytism was familiar, and involved
the fulfilment of such conditions, and, prominently, submission to
the rite of circumcision. The Jews were to be a blessing to many
or to all nations ; but this was, very largely at least, to be due to the
acceptance by them of the Jewish law. "For out of Zion shall go
forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem." (Is. ii. 3.)
"And the isles (or, coastlands) shall wait for his law." (Is. xlii. 4.)
Now we are told in Genesis that circumcision was instituted to
be observed forever. "And I will establish my covenant between
"me and thee and between thy seed after thee throughout their
"generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee
"and to thy seed after thee. . . . And God said unto Abraham, And
"as for thee, thou shalt keep my covenant, thou, and thy seed after
"thee throughout their generations. This is my covenant which ye
"shall keep, between me and you and thy seed after thee; every
"male among you shall be circumcised,. . . .and my covenant shall
"be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant. And the uncircum-
"cised male that soul shall be cut off from his people; he hath
422 THE OPEX COURT.
"broken my covenant." Can there be any doubt about the intended
perpetuity of this rite? (Gen. xvii. 7-14.)
A passage from the twelfth chapter of Exodus is also pertinent
in this connection as showing the relation between the observance of
this rite and participation in the privileges of Israel. Verses 43,
44 and 48 read : "And the Lord said unto Moses and Aaron, This is
"the ordinance of the passover ; there shall no alien eat thereof : but
"every man's servant that is bought for money, when thou hast cir-
"cumcised him, then he shall eat thereof. .. .And when a stranger
"shall sojourn with thee, and will keep the passover to the Lord,
"let all his males be circumcised, and then let him come near and
"keep it ; and he shall be as one that is born in the land : but no un-
circumcised person shall eat thereof."
The time of Paul's letter to the Galatians was a momentous
one in the history of the Church. It w^as a time of transition and of
much conflict. The latter can hardly be considered surprising, in
view of the circumstances. The above passage from which Paul
quotes, in his use of the faith of Abraham is Gen. xv. 5, 6: "And he
"(the Lord) brought him forth abroad, and said. Look now toward
"heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to tell them : and he said
"unto him. So shall thy seed be. And he believed in the Lord ; and
"he counted it to him for righteousness."
Now the pertinency of Paul's calling attention to Abraham for
the purpose of enjoining belief in God is manifest; but the faith
which Paul preached was far from being identical with the belief re-
ported of Abraham. The latter was belief in a promise that had been
directly made to him by God ; Paul was preaching faith in Christ
as a sacrificial and sufficient saviour for all who should believe in
him as such.
As regards the example of Abraham, could not Paul with
equal, in fact with greater, cogency have referred to him as one who
unswervingly obeyed every commandment of God, and so have
used his history as a conclusive argument for the observance of
circumcision? How could Abraham's belief in God and his accept-
ance or merit, because of it be used as an argument for not observ-
ing the Lord's ordinances? Was Abraham's reported belief of such
a kind that he might, or would, excuse himself from obedience
because of it? Certainly not. Then how could his example furnish
a valid arL;nnu'nt for such neglect at a later date? Why could not
the Jews and Judaizing Christians jiroporly say, as they doubtless
did say, that those who had faith like Abraham would obey like
QUESTIONS FROM THE PEW. 423
Abraham ? Faith, of course, leads to obedience ; and its possession
is a strange reason indeed to j^ive for disobedience.
In further connection with y\braham, Paul's argument in Gal.
iii. 15-18 is to be noticed. This argument is made in support of his
doctrine of faith in Christ and of the insufficiency of the law. He
says that the promises were made to Abraham and his seed, which
was Christ. Therefore the coming of the law centuries afterward
could not invalidate the promise, considered as a covenant. He
says: "Brethren, I speak after the manner of men (i. e., using the
"acts and conceptions common among men) : Though it be but a
"man's covenant, yet when it hath been confirmed, no one maketh
"it void or addeth thereto. Now to Abraham were the promises
"spoken, and to his seed. He saith not. And to seeds, as of many ;
"but as of one. And to thy seed, which is Christ. Now this I say ;
"A covenant confirmed beforehand by God, the law, which came
"four hundred and thirty years after, doth not disannul, so as to
"make the promise of none effect. For if the inheritance is of the
"law, it is no more of promise : but God hath granted it to Abraham
by promise."
Obviously the identification of Christ wit'n the "seed" of the
promises referred to is essential to the validity of this argument.
Paul carefully excludes a plural or collective meaning of the word,
and makes it signify one, "which is Christ." Has the argument
any validity? The word "seed" in such connections, is a collective
term, having precisely the meaning of "many," which Paul rejects.
To have used the plural form, "seeds," in order to convey the
meaning of "many," would have been not only unnecessary but im-
proper. We understand furthermore, that the case is precisely the
same in the original Hebrew, that the Hebrew word here has the
singular form and collective meaning, the same as the English one.
This certainly seems to leave Paul's argument here without foun-
dation, even without reading the original passages at any length.
But turning to these, in order to see what meaning the connection,
in the several instances, may show for this word seed, we read
(Gen. xiii. 14-16) : "And the Lord said unto Abram, after that Lot
"was separated from him. Lift up now thine eyes, and look from the
"place where thou art, northward and southward and eastward and
"westward: for all the land which thou seest, to thee will I give it,
"and to thy seed forever." Gen. xv. 5 : "And he brought him forth
"abroad, and said. Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if
"thou be able to tell them ; and he said unto him. So shall thy seed
"be." Gen. xvii. 7-9 : "And I will establish my covenant between me
424 THE OPKX COURT.
"and thee and thy seed after thee throughout their generations for
"an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee and to thy seed
"after thee. And I will give unto thee and to thy seed after thee,
"the land of thy sojourns, all the land of Canaan, for an ever-
"lasting possession: and I will be their God. And God said unto
"Abraham. And as for thee, thou shalt keep my covenant, thou, and
"thy seal after thee throughout their generations." Gen. xxii. i6-
18: "P.y myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, because thou hast done
"this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son: that in
"blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thv
"seed, as the stars of heaven, and as the sand which is upon the
"sea-shore ; and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies ; and
"in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed (or. bless
"themselves) ; because thou hast obeyed my voice."
Could any thing be plainer? May we be excused the super-
fluity of calling attention again to the latter part of xvii. 9 : "And
as for thee, thou shalt keep my covenant, thou, and thy seed after
thee throughout their generations"?
To say that Christ was the spiritual Israel, and hence was in-
cluded in the "seed," if a.dmittedly true, would not answer here.
Paul's argument is very different. It turns upon the form of a
word. It excludes the meaning of "many." It does not admit such
conception as that of "their" above. Can it have any validity what-
ever ?
Another passage of prominence in Paul's support of his doctrine
from the Old Testament is quoted in Gal. iii. 11 and Romans i. 17.
Rom.: "For therein (in the Gospel) is revealed a righteousness of
"God from faith unto faith: as it is written. But the righteous shall
"live by faith." Gal.: "Now that no man is justified by (or, in)
"the law in the sight of God is evident: for the righteous shall live
"by faith; and the law is not of faith." The words are taken from
Habakkuk ii. 4. Paul uses the passage as a proof text. Does
it sustain his proposition? Verses 2-4 arc: "And the Lord answered
"me, and said. Write the vision, and make it plain upon tables, that
"he may run that readeth it. For the vision is yet for the appointed
"time, and it hastcth toward the end. and shall not lie: though it
"tarry, wait for it ; because it will surely come, it will not delay.
"Behold, his soul is puffed up, it is not upright in him: but the just
"shall live by his faith. (Margin, in his faithfulness.)" "Con-
stancv" is also given as a proper translation of the word translated
"faith."
If the word means faith in (he sen.se of faithfulness, fidelity,
OUliSTlONS FROM THE PEW. 425
constancy, then Paul is entirely wide of the mark in quoting it ; for
in his doctrine which in the passages under consideration he is espe-
cially endeavoring to sustain, a person's constancy, fidelity, faith-
fulness, as a ground of his justification, are explicitly excluded. We
understand that the word in question, if ap])lied to the body as a
noun, would mean "firmness," "steadfastness," as in Exod. xvii. 12.
Moses's hands, with the assistance of Aaron and Hur, were "steady."
The word is used of God in Deut. xxxii. 4: "A God of faithfulness,"
and it is used of men in Prov. xii. 22 : "Lying lips are an abomi-
nation to the Lord ; but they that deal truly, (or do faithfulness)
are his delight."
The "vision" in Habakkuk was one of coming destruction, but
in the midst of it all, the righteous man should live in his faithful-
ness, or constancy. He would be saved by it, which is a familiar
Old Testament conception. This seems exactly to fit the situation
as well as to be in accord with the meaning of the word elsewhere.
This meaning of the word prevails also in its use in Hebrews
X. 36-38. The writer is exhorting to confidence and constancy amid
severe trials. He says: "For ye have need of patience (or stead-
"fastness), that, having done the will of God, ye may receive the
"promise. For yet a very little while. He that cometh shall come,
"and shall not tarry. But my (or, the) righteous one shall live by
"faith : And if he shrink back, my soul hath no pleasure in him."
Paul plainly quotes from the common Greek translation of the
Old Testament, as does also the writer of Hebrews ; and in this the
common word for faith is used in this place. This fact, however,
has no bearing upon whether or not the original passage sustains
Paul's use of it. Can it be said to do so?
Another passage in Paul's support of his special doctrine from
the Old Testament is Romans x. 6-9. It may be noted that in this
epistle Paul is writing, in part certainly, to Jews ; and in chapters
ix-xi he is writing of them particularly. That God's people had not
accepted their Messiah presented to Paul a very painful problem.
How could God's promises so fail of fulfilment? He concludes
that the Jews failed to receive the blessing because they sought it
by works, by the keeping of the law. He says: "But Israel, follow-
"ing after a law of righteousness, did not arrive at that law. Where-
"fore? Because they sought it not by faith, but as it were by works."
Paul quotes from Deuteronomy to show the contrast.
He prefaces this quotation, however, by giving a portion of
Lev. xviii. 5, a passage of course generally well known: "For Moses
writeth that the man that doeth the righteousness which is of the
426 THE OPEN COURT.
law shall live thereby." But Paul repeatedly says that by works of
the law shall no flesh be justified. The seeming" opposition between
the two statements is adjusted by the claim, both made and implied,
that nothing less than perfect obedience would be sufficient, and that
this no man can render ; "There is none that doeth good, no, not so
much as one."
Verses 6-9, above referred to, of the tenth chapter of Romans
are: "But the righteousness which is of faith saith thus. Say not in
"thy heart. Who shall ascend into heaven (that is to bring Christ
"down:) or, Who shall descend into the abyss? (that is to bring
"Christ up from the dead.) But what saith it? The word is nigh
"thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart : that is, the word of faith
"which we preach: because if thou shalt confess with thy mouth
"Jesus as Lord, and shalt believe in thy heart that God raised him
"from the dead, thou shalt be saved."
The words in the parentheses are explanatory matter introduced
by Paul. The original passage from which Paul quotes, Deut. xxx.
11-14, is: "For this commandment which I command thee this day,
"it is not too hard for thee, neither is it far ofT. It is not in heaven,
"that thou shouldst say. Who shall go up for us to heaven, and
"bring it unto us, and make us to hear it, that we may do it ? Neither
"is it beyond the sea, that thou shouldst say, ^^4^o shall go over the
"sea for us, and bring it into us, and make us to hear it, that we
"may do it? But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and
"in thy heart, that thou mayest do it."
We submit that we are here in the midst of ideas which are
very different from those which Paul presents by his use of the
passage. Here we have the law. the commandment, and the repeated
injunction that the people were to do it. Paul leaves this out.
The commandment and the doing of it are still further empha-
sized by the context in Deuteronomy, both before and after. This
point is made so emphatic that further quotations may w^ell be
given. The opening verses of the chapter arc : "And it shall come
"to pass, when all these things are come upon thee, the blessing
"and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call
"them to mind among all the nations, whither the Lord thy God
"hath driven thee and shalt return unto the Lord thy God, and shalt
"obey his voice according to all that I command thee this day. thou
"and thy children, with all thine heart, and with all thy soul ; that
"then the Lord thy God will turn thy captivity, and have com-
"passion upon thee, and will return a!id gather thee from all the
"peoples, whither the Lord thy God hath scattered thee." Immc-
QUESTIONS FROM THE PEW. 427
diately preceding the passage from which Paul quotes we find, "And
'thou shalt return and obey the voice of the Lord, and do all his
'commandments which I command thee this day. And the Lord
'thy God will make thee plenteous in all the work of thine hand,. . . .
'if thou shalt obey the voice of the Lord thy God, to keep his com-
'mandments and his statutes which are written in the book of the
'law; if thou turn unto the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and
'with all thy soul." And immediately after the passage we find :
'See, I have set before thee this day life and good, and death and
'evil ; in that I command thee this day to love the Lord thy God,
'to walk in his ways and to keep his commandments and his statutes
'and his judgments,. .. .that the Lord thy God may bless thee in
'the land whither thou goest in to possess it."
How can one fail to be convinced that Paul's use of this Deu-
teronomy passage was most unfortunate?
IN THE MAZES OF MATHEMATICS.
A SERIES OF PERPLEXING QUESTIONS.
BY WM. F. WHITE, PH. D.
X. AUTOGRAPHS OF MATHEMATICIANS.
FOR the photograph from which this cut was made the writer is
indebted to Prof. David Eugene Smith. As an explorer in the
bypaths of mathematical history and a collector of interesting speci-
mens therefrom. Dr. Smith is, perhaps, without a peer.
The reader will be interested to see a facsimile of the hand-
writing of Eulcr and joliann IV-rnoulli, Lagrange and Laplace and
IN THE MAZES OK MATHEMATICS.
429
Legendre, Clifford and Dodgson, and William Rowan Hamilton,
and others of the immortals, grouped together on one page. In the
upper right corner is the autograph of Moritz Cantor, the historian
of mathematics. On the sheet overlapping that, the name over the
verses is faint; it is that of J. J. Sylvester, late professor in Johns
Hopkins University.
One who tries to decipher some of these documents may feel
that he is indeed "In the Mazes of Mathematics." Mathematicians
are not as a class noted for the elegance or the Icgibilitv of their
chirography, and these exami:)lcs are not submitted as models oi
penmanship. But each bears the sign manual of one of the builders
of the proud structure of modern mathematics.
XI. BRIDGES AND ISLES, FIGURE TRACING, UNICURSAL
SIGNATURES, LABYRINTHS.
This section presents a few of the more elementary results of
the application of mathematical methods to these interesting puzzle
questions.*
Fig. I.
The city of Konigsberg is near the mouth of the Pregel river,
which has at that point an island called Kneiphof. The situation
of the seven bridges is shown in the figure. A discussion arose as
to whether it is possible to cross all the bridges in a single prom-
* For a more extended discussion, and for proofs of the theorems here
stated, see Euler's Solutio Prohlematis ad Geometriam Situs Pertinoitis,
Listing's Vorstudien sur Topologie, Ball's Mathematical Recreations and Es-
says, Lucas's Recreations Matliematiques, and the references given in notes
by the last two writers named. To these two the present writer is especially
indebted.
430
THE OPEN COURT.
enade without crossing any bridge a second time. Euler's famous
memoir was presented to the Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburg
in 1736 in answer to this question. Rather, the Konigsberg problem
furnished him the occasion to solve the general problem of any
number and combination of isles and bridges.
Conceive the isles to shrink to points, and the problem may
be stated more conveniently with reference to a diagram as the
problem of tracing a given
figure without removing the
pencil from the paper and'
without retracing any part;
or, if not possible to do so
with one stroke, to deter-
mine Jwzc many such strokes
are necessars-. Fig. 2 is a
diagrammatic representation
of Fig. I, the isle Kneiphof
- being at point K.
The number of lines
proceeding from any point
of a figure may be called the order of that point. Every point will
therefore be of either an even order or an odd order. E. g., as
there are 3 lines from point A of Fig. 3, the order of the point
is odd ; the order of point E is even. The well-known conclusions
reached bv Euler may now be stated as follows :
Fig. 2.
In a closed figure (one with no free point or "loose end") the
number of points of odd order is even, whether the figure is uni-
cursal or not. E. g., Fig. 3. a multicursal closed figure, has four
points of odd order.
A figure of which every point is of even order can be traced
IN THE MAZES OF MATHEMATICS.
431
by one stroke starting from any point of the figure. E. g., Fig. 4,
the magic pentagon, symbol of the Pythagorean school, and Fig. 5,
a "magic hexagram commonly called the
shield of David and frequently used on
synagogues" (Carus), have no points of
odd order; each is therefore unicursal.
A figure zvith only tzvo points of odd
order can he traced by one stroke by
starting at one of those points. E. g..
Fig. 6 (taken originally from Listing's
Topologie) has but two. points of odd
order, A and Z ; it may therefore be
traced by one stroke beginning at either
of these two points and ending at the
other. One may make a game of it by drawing a figure, as Lucas
suggests, like Fig. 6 but in a larger scale on cardboard, placing a
small counter on the middle of each line that joins two neighboring
Fig. 6.
points, and setting the problem to determine the course to follow
in removing all the counters successively (simply tracing contin-
uously and removing each counter as it is passed, an objective
method of recording which lines have been traced).
A figure with more than tzvo points of odd order is mult i cur sal.
E. g., Fig. 7 has more than two points of odd order and requires
more than one course or stroke, to tra-
verse it.
The last two theorems just stated
are special cases of Listing's :
Let 2.n represent the number of
points of odd order; then n strokes are
Fig. 7-
necessary and sufficient to trace the figure. E. g., Fig. 6, with
2 points of odd order, requires i stroke ; Fig. 7. representing a frag-
ment of masonry, has 8 points of odd order and requires 4 strokes.
Return noAV to the Konigsberg problem of Fig. i. By ref-
432
THE OPEN COURT.
erence to the diagram in Fig. 2, it is seen that there are 4 points of
odd order. Hence it is not possible to cross every bridge once and
but once without taking two strolls.
An interesting application of these theorems is the considera-
tion of the number of strokes necessary to describe an n-gon and its
diagonals. As the points of intersection of the diagonals are all of
even order, wc need to consider only the vertexes. Since from each
vertex there is a line to e^•x?ry other vertex, the number of lines
from each vertex is ;/ — i. Hence, if ti is odd, every point is of
even order, and the entire figure can be traced unicursally beginning
at anv point; e. g.. Fig. 8, a pentagon with its diagonals. If ;; is
cypji ;; — I is odd. every vertex is of odd order, the number of
points of odd order is n, and the figure can not
be described in less than 11/2 courses ; e. g.. Fig.
3, quadrilateral, requires 2 strokes.
Uiiiciirsal Signatures. A signature (or other
writing) is of course subject to the same laws
as are other figures with respect to the number
of times the pen must be put to the paper. Since
the terminal point could have been connected
with the point of starting without lifting the pen,
the signature may be counted as a closed figure
if it has no free end but these two. The number of points of odd
order will be found to be even. The dot over an /, the cross of a /,
or any other mark leaving a free point, makes the signature multi-
cursal. There are so many names not requiring separate strokes
that one would expect more unicursal signatures than arc actualK
Fig. 8.
Fig. 9.
F\ii. 10.
found. De Morgan's (as shown in tlu' cut in the preceding section)
is one; but most of the signatures there shown were made with
several strokes each. ' M' the signatures to \hv Declaration of Inde-
pi-ndencc tlicre is not i.ue that is strictl\ unicursal; though that of
IN THE MAZES OF MATHEMATICS.
433
Th Jefferson looks as if the end of the h and the beginning of the J
might often have been completely joined, and in that case his signa-
ture would have been written in a single course of the pen.
Fig. 9, formed of two crescents, is "the so-called sign-manual
of Mohammed, said to have been originally traced in the sand by
the point of his scimetar without taking the scimetar off the ground
or retracing any part of the figure," which can easily be done be-
ginning at any point of the figure, as it contains no point of odd
order. The mother of the writer suggests that, if the horns of Mo-
hammed's crescents be omitted, a figure (Fig. lo) is left which can
not be traced unicursally. There are then four points of odd order ;
hence two strokes are requisite to describe the figure.
Labyrinths such as the very simple one shown in Fig. ii (pub-
lished in 1706 by London and Wise) are familiar, as drawings, to
Fig. II.
every one. In some of the more complicated mazes it is not so easy
to thread one's way, even in the drawing, where the entire maze is in
sight, while in the actual labyrinth, where walls or hedges conceal
everything but the path one is taking at the moment, the difficulty
is greatly increased and one needs a rule of procedure.
The mathematical principles involved are the same as for
tracing other figures ; but in their application several differences
are to be noticed in the conditions of the two problems. A labyrinth
as it stands, is not a closed figure ; for the entrance and the center
are free ends, as are also the ends of any blind alleys that the maze
may contain. These are therefore points of odd order. There are
usually other points of odd order. Hence in a single trip the maze
can not be completely traversed. But it is not required to do so.
The problem here is to go from the entrance to the center, the
434
THE OPEN COURT,
shorter the route found the better. Moreover, the rules of the game
do not forbid retracing one's course.
It is readily seen (as first suggested by Euler) that by going
over each line twice the maze becomes a closed figure, terminating
where it begins, at the entrance, including the center as one point in
the course, and containing only points of even order. Hence every
labyrinth can be completely traversed by going over every path twice
— once in each direction. It is only necessary to have some means
of marking the routes already taken (and their direction) to avoid
the possibility of losing one's way. This duplication of the entire
course permits no failure and is so general a method that one does
not need to know anything about the particular labyrinth in order to
traverse it successfully and confidently. But if a plan of the laby-
rinth can be had. a course mav be found that is shorter.
Fig. 12.
Fig. 12 presents one of the most famous labyrinths, though by
no means among the most puzzling. It is described in the Encyclo-
pcrdia Britannica (article "Labyrinth") as follows:
"The maze in the gardens at Hampton Court Palace is consid-
ered to be one of the finest examples in England. It was planted in
the early part of the rf^ign of William III, though it has been sup-
posed that a maze had existed there since the time of Henry VIII.
It is constructed on the hedge and alley system, and was. we believe,
originally planted with hornbeam, but many of the plants have died
out, and been replaced by hollies, yews, etc.. so that the vegetation
is mixed. The walks are about half a mile in length, and the ex-
tent of ground occupied is a little over a quarter of an acre. The
center contains two large trees, with a seat beneath each. The key
to reach this resting place is to keep the right hand continuously in
contact with the hedge from first to last, going around all the stops."
GOETHE'S POLYTHEISM AND CHRISTIANITY.
BY THE EDITOR.
C"^ OETHE was sometimes a pantheist after the heart of Spinoza,
Tand sometimes a polytheist who found the most perfect exposition
of his religious views in Greek mythology, and then again a Chris-
tian and a theist. To be sure he did not believe in the gods of Greece
in the crude sense of paganism or idolatry, but recognized their pres-
ence in life after the fashion of the Greek sages, or perhaps better,
of modern naturalists, conceiving the gods as factors that shape our
lives. Goethe himself calls them "blissfully creating forces."^
Goethe discussed the nature of the deity with his friend Jacobi
and it is well known that the poet's pagan spirit frequently proved
offensive to the piety of this devout Christian ; but it would be wrong
to think that Goethe was an enemy to Christianity, for he was both
Christian and pagan at once.
Goethe's religious attitude has mostly been misunderstood.
Though he gave ample evidence of his sympathy with Christian senti-
ment, he was not a Christian in the narrow sense of the word. To him
Christianity was one form of religion like others, and he attributed
greater importance to polytheism on account of its creative and
artistic tendencies than to any doctrine of monotheism. Goethe had
no objection to Christianity itself, but in his Christian friends he
denounced the narrow spirit which would brook no other religions
and would condemn as an object of abomination any different at-
tempt at comprehending the divine. The Christian god-conception
was to him one aspect only which needed correction by considering
the truth of the pagan view, and, argued Goethe : Is not the Chris-
tian view after all quite abstract and imaginary in comparison to
the concrete figures of the Olympian pantheon? If God is a spirit,
his existence must be purely spiritual, i. e., he must live in the brain
of man.
^Selig mitscliaffende Krdfte. "Unterhaltung mit Falk," January 25, 1813.
436
THE OPEN COURT.
DIAXA OF THE EPHESIANS.
From an illustration by H. Knackfuss in Diintzer's German edition
of Goethe's Works.
GOETHE S POLYTHEISM AND CHRISTIANITY. 437
...."behind
Man's foolish forehead, in his mind."
This spirit God would be subjective and could not be found out-
side in nature, in the concrete world of objective existence.
This idea is expressed in the poem "Great is Diana of the
Ephesians," in which the artist's attitude represents Goethe's own
sentiment. The artist chisels his ideal, the great goddess of the
Ephesians, while Paul is preaching against idols.
GREAT IS DIANA OF THE EPHESIANS.
(Acts xix. 28.)
"At Ephesus in his workshop sat
A goldsmith, filing and beating
A golden statue; he wrought thereat,
Still improving and further completing.
As boy and as youth at the goddess's shrine,
He had knelt and adored her form so divine ;
Below the girdle there under her breast.
He saw so many creatures rest,
And faithfully at home he wrought
The image, as his father taught.
So did the artist with skill and patience
Conduct his life and art aspirations.
"And once he heard a raging crowd,
Howl through the streets, and clamor loud
That somewhere existed a God behind
Man's foolish forehead in his mind.
And that He was greater and loftier too,
Than the breadth and the depth of the gods he knew.
"The artist scarce noted the words of the throng, —
He let his prentice boy run along.
But he himself continued to file
The stags of Diana without guile,
Hoping that worthily and with grace.
He might succeed to chisel her face.
Should any one hold a different view,
He might in all as he pleases do;
But the craft of the master he must not despise.
For in disgrace he'll end otherwise."
Tr. by P. C.
With reference to this poem Goethe writes to Jacobi (March
10, 1812) :
"I am indeed one of the Ephesian artists who spends his whole
life in the temple of the goddess, contemplating and wondering and
worshiping, and representing her in her mysterious formations. Thus
438 THE OPEN COURT.
it is impossible for me to be pleased with an apostle who forces
upon his fellow citizens another and indeed a formless god. Ac-
cordingly if I published some similar writing (to Jacobi's book On
God) in praise of the great Artemis, which, however, I will not do
because I belong to those who prefer to live quietly and do not care
to stir people to mutiny, I should have written on the reverse of the
title page, 'No one can become acquainted with what he does not
love, and the more perfect our knowledge, the stronger, the more
vigorous, and the more vital must be our love, yea, our passion.' " -
In the same spirit Goethe writes in his diary of 1812:
"Jacobi's book Oil Dhinc Things does me no good. How could
I welcome the book of a dearly beloved friend in which I found the
proposition that 'nature conceals God'? Is it not natural that ac-
cording to my pure, and deep, and inborn, and expert conception
which has taught me unfalteringly to see God in nature and nature
in God, so that this conception constitutes the foundation of my en-
tire existence, — is it not natural that such a strange and onesided
and limited exposition must alienate me from the noble man whose
heart I dearly love? However, I did not indulge my painful dis-
appointment, but sought refuge in my old asylum, making Spinoza's
Ethics for several weeks my daily entertainment."
Goethe mentions his love of polytheism in his autobiography
when speaking of the poem "Prometheus." He says:
"The Titans are the foil of polytheism, as the devil is the foil
of monotheism, but neither the devil nor the one-sided God whom
the devil opposed are striking figures. Milton's Satan, although he
is characterized as sufficiently goody-goody,^ labors under the disad-
vantage of subordination when he attempts to destroy the glorious
creation of a supreme being. Prometheus, however, possesses the
advantage that, in spite of superior beings, he shows himself capable
of creating. Moreover, it is a beautiful and poetic thought which
provides that men be produced not by the highest ruler of the uni-
verse, but by an intermediate character who, however, being a
fiescendant-of the oldest dynasty, is worthy of and great enough for
the task."
* Translated l)y the author.
A convenient collection of all the passages that have reference to Goethe's
world-conception and religion is found in Max Heynacher's book, Goethe's
Philosophie. For the present quotations see pp. 72-73.
* Goethe here uses the word brav, and I regret that the bww gciiug is
almost untranslatable in English. The word brav in German means "good"
or "goody" in the sense of Sunday-school morality. A good boy is called
brav, and the use of this word in its application to Satan is extremely humor-
ous.
Goethe's polytheism and Christianity. 439
Goethe speaks of Satan's "subordination," because in the Chris-
tion conception God alone is sovereign, and Satan lacks independ-
ence and freedom. He is a mere puppet in the hands of the Al-
mighty, for even his revolt is ultimately the result of God's plan of
creation.
Prometheus is not the only rebel whom Goethe admires. He
adds further down in the same passage:
"The other heroes of the same kind, Tantalus, Ixion and Sis-
yphus, also belonged to my saints. Having been received into the
society of the gods, they did not show sufficient submissiveness, and
as overbearing guests, provoked the wrath of their condescending
hosts, whereby they were forced into a dreary exile."
Goethe had to suffer not a little from the narrow spirit of the
dogmatic Christians among his contemporaries, and not the least
irritations consisted in ill-advised attempts at converting the "great
pagan," as he was called by pietists. He smiled at the impudence
and folly of those who concerned themselves about his future des-
tiny, for he was confident that the cloven foot of his paganism would
not render him unacceptable to God, the Father of all mankind, Jew
and Gentile. Here is the fable which Goethe intended as an answer
to his Christian friends :
"In the wilderness a holy man
To his surprise met a servant of Pan,
A goat-footed faun, who spoke with grace :
'Lord, pray for me and for my race,
That we in heaven find a place :
We thirst for God's eternal bliss.'
The holy man made answer to this :
'How can I grant thy bold petition,
For thou canst hardly gain admission
In heaven yonder where angels salute :
For lo ! thou hast a cloven foot.'
Undaunted the wild man made the plea :
'Why should my foot offensive be?
I've seen great numbers that went straight
With asses' heads through heaven's gate.' "
—Tr. by P. C.
Goethe devoted another short poem to the pious ass who in all
religions will remain an ass forever. He says :*
"If the ass that bore the Saviour
Were to Mecca driven, he
Would not alter, but would be
Still an ass in his behavior."
— Tr. by Bowring.
* Hikmet Nameth, Book of Proverbs.
440 THE OPEN COURT.
Goethe was more of a Christian than is generally assumed or
might be inferred from his own preference for paganism. To be
sure he was not a dogmatic Christian in the sense in which the term
Christianity was used in those days. But Goethe would have been
rejected also by polytheists and pagans, by Greek as well as Oriental
devotees, on account of his latitudinarianism, for he was a sym-
pathizer with all religions and could not be counted exclusively an
adherent of any special faith.
How greatly Goethe appreciated Christianity appears from many
poems and prose passages of his writings. If we consider that as
a matter of principle he never wrote poetry unless he had experienced
the sentiment himself, w^e will understand how devoted he must have
been in the days of his youth when he still accepted the Christian
miracles and mysteries in unquestioning faith. He outgrew the
childlike confidence in the supernatural and lost his belief in mir-
acles, but he remembered the sacredness of his devotion and the
hours of pious bliss, — a reminiscence well described in the first scene
of his "Faust." When Faust in his despair decides to drink poison,
he is interrupted by the Easter message of the angelic choirs and
the ringing of the Easter bells, and the sweet recollection of the
faith of his youth restores in him the love of life.
What deep sentiment is also expressed in the third scene of
"Faust" ! He has returned from his walk with Wagner, his famulus,
and sits down to find comfort in the Gospel of St. John. The mono-
logue is again and again interrupted by the noise of a poodle, in
which shape Mephistopheles approaches him. The diabolic nature
of the animal appears in growls by which he expresses his dis-
satisfaction with Faust's religious sentiments. The passage reads
in Bayard Taylor's translation as follows :
(Faust entering with poodle.)
"Behind me, field and meadow sleeping,
I leave in deep, prophetic night.
Within whose dread and holy keeping
The better soul awakes to light.
The wild desires no longer win us,
The deeds of passion cease to chain ;
Tlie love of Man revives witliin us,
The love of God revives again.
"Be still, thou poodle! make not such racket and riot!
Why at the threshold wilt snuffing be?
Behind the stove repose thee in quiet!
My softest cushion I give thee.
As thou, up yoncKr, with nmniiii; and leaping
Goethe's polytheism and Christianity. 441
Amused us hast, on the mountain's crest,
So now I take thee into my keeping,
A welcome, but also a silent, guest.
"Ah, when, within our narrow chamber
The lamp with friendly lustre glows.
Flames in the breast each faded ember.
And in the heart, itself that knows.
Then Hope again lends sweet assistance,
And Reason then resumes her speech :
One yearns, the rivers of existence,
The very founts of Life, to reach.
"Snarl not, poodle! To the sound that rises,
The sacred tones that now my soul embrace,
This bestial noise is out of place.
We are used to see, that Man despises
What he never comprehends,
And the Good and the Beautiful vilipends.
Finding them often hard to measure :
Will the dog, like man, snarl his displeasure?
"But ah ! I feel, though will thereto be stronger,
Contentment flows from out my breast no longer.
Why must the stream so soon run dry and fail us.
And burning thirst again assail us?
Therein I've borne so much probation !
And yet, this want may be supplied us ;
We pine and thirst for Revelation,
Which nowhere worthier is, more nobly sent,
Than here, in our New Testament.
I feel impelled, its meaning to determine, —
With honest purpose, once for all,
The hallowed Original
To change to my beloved German.
( He opens a volume and commences.)
" 'T is written : 'In the Beginning was the Word.'
Here am I balked : who, now, can help afford ?
The Word? — impossible so high to rate it;
And otherwise must I translate it.
If by the Spirit I am truly taught.
Then thus : 'In the Beginning was the Thought.'
This first line let me weigh completely,
Lest my impatient pen proceed too fleetly.
Is it the Thought which works, creates, indeed?
'In the Beginning was the Power,' I read.
Yet, as I write, a warning is suggested,
That I the sense may not have fairly tested.
442 THE OPEN COURT.
The Spirit aids me: now I see the Hght!
'In the Beginning was the Act,'* I zi'i'itc."
In addition to this scene which incorporates Faust's retninis-
censes of his former faith, we will quote a few poems and sentences
from his rhymed proverbs, which characterize Goethe's Christianity
in his mature years. Here is Longfellow's translation of Goethe's
two songs, each entitled "The \\'anderer's Night Song," of which
the second has been most beautifully set to music by Schubert:
"Thou that from the heavens art,
Every pain and sorrow stillest,
And the doubly wretched heart
Doubly with refreshment fillest,
I am weary with contending !
Why this rapture and unrest?
Peace descending
Come, ah, come into my breast !"
"O'er all the hill-tops
Is quiet now,
In all the tree-tops
Hearest thou
Hardly a breath ;
The birds are asleep in the trees :
Wait : soon like these
Thou, too, shalt rest."
Under the title "God, Sentiment and the World"^ Goethe pub-
lished some rhymes which breathe a simple and almost childlike
confidence in God. One of them reads :"
"Who on God is grounded.
Has his house well founded."
Another rhyme is translated by Bowring thus:
"This truth may be by all believed !
Whom God deceives, is well deceived."
Goethe was one of the few poets who dared to introduce the
Good Lord upon the stage, which he did in the Prologue to "Faust."
This remarkable scene reveals before our eyes the heavens where
God is enthroned among the angels that appear before him in praise
* Perhaps "Deed" would be a better translation.
" Colt, Gcmilth und Welt.
" Bowring's translation,
"Who trusts in God,
Fears not his rod." *
is perhaps better English, but does not render the original wliich reads,
"Wer Gott vertraut,
1st schon auferbaut."
Goethe's polytheism and Christianity. 443
of his creation. There has scarcely been in Christian literature a
more dignified description of God in poetical form, over which even
Milton can not claim superiority.
The Lord is greeted by the three archangels in these three
stanzas which we quote after Bayard Taylor's translation :
RAPHAEL.
"The sun-orb sings, in emulation,
'Mid brother-spheres, his ancient round:
His path predestined through Creation
He ends with step of thunder-sound.
The angels from his visage splendid
Draw power, whose measure none can say ;
The lofty works, uncomprehended,
Are bright as on the primal day.
GABRIEL.
"And swift, and swift beyond conceiving,
The splendor of the world goes round,
Day's Eden-brightness still relieving
Night's darkness awful and profound:
The ocean-tides in foam are breaking.
Against the rocks' deep bases hurled, .
And both, the spheric race partaking,
Eternal, swift, are onward whirled !
MICHAEL.
"And rival storms abroad are surging
From sea to land, from land to sea.
A chain of deepest action forging
Round all, in wrathful energy.
There flames a desolation, blazing
Before the Thunder's crashing way:
Yet, Lord, Thy messengers are praising
The gentle movement of Thy Day.
THE THREE.
"Though still by them uncomprehended.
From these the angels draw their power,
And all Thy works are grand and splendid.
As in Creation's primal hour."
MISCELLANEOUS.
BOOK REVIEWS AND NOTES.
Sonnets and Poems. By William Ellery Leonard. Boston: 1906. For sale
by tlie author at Madison, Wis. Pp. 67. Price, $1.00.
The author who is a philologist of extensive attainments proves in this
small volume that he is also a poet. More than half of the verses are in son-
net form many of which are on different aspects of nature and love. The
volume is dedicated to the poet's parents in the following sonnet:
"Ye gave me life and will for life to crave :
Desires for mighty suns, or high, or low,
For moons mysterious over cliffs of snow.
For the wild foam upon the midsea wave;
Swift joy in freeman, swift contempt for slave;
Though which would bind and name the stars and know ;
Passion that chastened in mine overthrow ;
And speech, to justify my life, ye gave.
"Life of my life, this late return of song
I give to you before the close of day ;
Life of your life! which everlasting wrong
Shall have no power to baffle or betray,
O father, mother ! — for ye watched so long,
Ye loved so long, and I was far away."
One of the miscellaneous poems entitled "The Jester" though in no sense
a parody recalls Kipling's "Vampire" in the use of parentheses, and e\on
somewhat in its theme, as witness the stanza:
"For all the year he'd rhyme and dream
(O that's a fool his part),
'My lady's fair as fair may seem
And loves me without art,' —
Until the heart leapt up in him
(A fool may have a heart!)"
But after
'Tlu- lady (if tiic laud did grieve
l-'or hours twenty-four;
Another fool she did receive
Long ere the iie.xt was o'er:
MISCELLANEOUS. 445
For every lady, I believe,
Must have one fool — or more."
"Heraclitus the Obscure" is based upon the "Fragments," and "Three
Fragments of Empedocles" arc also translated in verse, and "Creation of the
Morrow" is retold from a Sanskrit legend. In general the subjects are so
diverse that it would take an enumeration to classify them.
Nature Lyrics and Other Poems. By Martha Martin. Boston: The Gor-
ham Press, 1907. Pp. 89.
This little book contains many poems of remarkable delicacy of sentiment
and expression. Perhaps one of the most original in its imagery is the "Son-
net" with which the volume opens :
"Far down the western slope the weary day
Looks out upon the world with dreamy eyes.
As o'er her sunny curls she loosely ties
Her crimson hood, and gently slips away;
Meanwhile from out the east the twilight grey
Lingers a m.oment, till the embracing skies
Enfold her — for the solemn Night doth rise,
Descending like a monk in dark array
Of long, black, flowing gown, and piously
He utters prayers in soft, low murmurings ;
Then Earth takes up hei* dewdrop rosary.
And contrite at his feet herself she flings.
While on the altar of blue Heaven high,
Each little star a golden censor swings."
One "Slumber Song" is especially attractive because of the restful effect
produced by the cadence of the last line of each stanza :
"Sleep, my darling; sleep my son.
Close thine eyes, my little one,
Nestled at thy mother's breast.
Be at rest, at rest.
"All about us is so still,
And the sun far down the hill,
Blowing out his great, red light,
Call 'good-night, good-night.'
"Cradled on thy mother's arm,
Nought shall come to thee of harm.
Hush my baby, sink to sleep.
Soft and deep, and deep.
"Birds into their nest have flown,
Weary flowers their heads hang down.
Stars shine dimly in the sky.
Rock-a-bye, a-bye.
446 THE OPEN COURT.
"Eyelids drooped and cheeks quite flushed,
See my child in dreams now hushed,
Watch o'er him, kind Power above,
With thy love, thy love."
There are a number of translations of stray bits of German verse, and
a number of German folktales retold, notably "The Robber Zaun."
A TR.w'ERS LE F/VR-WEST. SouvENiRS DES Etats-Unis. Par Comtc Coblct
d'Alviella. Brussels: Weissenbruch, 1906. Pp. 236.
We Americans are noted among Europeans for our self-satisfied attitude
toward our vast country, its institutions, and its people — ourselve.*;. We are
apt to feel a little defiant when wc pick up a new book in which a guest upon
our shores has recorded his fugitive "impressions." If he relates incidents or
statistics which are not to our credit we deem it the evidence of ignorance on his
part, or at least base ingratitude, while on the other hand if his remarks abound
with more or less subtle flattery we accept it complacently as nothing more
than our due. It is natural that the element of praise should be at a maximum
in such books as are written by foreign travelers in our own tongue or to be
translated into it immediately for our especial delectation unless the author
should have some definite grudge against which he wishes to retaliate, or
should be one of those "frank" people whose joy it is to point out his friends'
shortcomings ; but those of us who have the sincere desire to "see oursels as
ithers see us," will enjoy the perusal of this book of memories of the United
States which Comte d'Alviella, the author of many works along the line of
the study of religions, has written for the information of his compatriots.
In his introduction he makes some generalizations on the entire country ad-
mitting that our large cities, especially in the East, have the disadvantages
of European cities without their advantages, that they are practically Europe
plus the fever for money and minus the esthetic quality of an Old World
metropolis. He thinks that the distinctive characteristics of our country
are to be found in the West and has much to say of its grandeur of scenery
as well as the manifestations of social equality apparent among the travelers
with whom he was thrown in contact. He makes the statement : "I do not
think that there is any country where so many things can be seen in so short
a time, and (I will add at the risk of surprising many people) with so little
expense." He then gives a detailed description of traveling and hotel life
here with many sallies at the expense of Pullman discomforts and time-saving
customs.
The book itself is mostly occupied with the Rockies and the states lying
between the mountains and the Pacific. The author writes in some detail of
the Mormons, — their cities, their history and their ceremonials and then pro-
ceeds with a description of various parts of California, its agricultural and
horticultural development, with a special chapter on the universities of the
State introduced by a short record of the history of higher education in
.America. In an appendix he treats of the religious progress of the United
States dealing with the general tendency of the religious movement, the five
revivals of religious enthusiasm that have swept the country, the Parliament
of Religions, and statistics and history of each of many denominations,
MISCELLANEOUS. 447
Catholic, Unitarian, Ethical Cultnrist, the various evangelical faiths, Spir-
itualists and Theosophists and Christian Scientists.
Hildreth's Japan as It Was and Is. Edited with supplementary notes by
Ernest W. Clement. Introduction by Wm. Elliot GrifHs. Two volumes,
Chicago: McClurg, 1906. Pp. xxxi, 401, 388.
The author of A Handbook of Modern Japan has undertaken to edit this
"Handbook of Old Japan," whose value as a compilation from all the im-
portant European writings of old Japan has been acknowledged. Hildreth's
work is of as much importance historically to-day as it was half a century
ago when it first appeared, but the value of the early editions is greatly dimin-
ished by the old-fashioned modes of transcription, which were then only in the
experimental stage. Mr. Clement, therefore, by harmonizing the spelling of
Japanese words with the modern system of romanization, and adding some
explanatory notes of his own, has given this old authority the appearance and
worth of a book of to-day.
My pilgrimage to the Wise Men of the East. By Moncure D. Conzvay.
Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1906. Pages, 416. Price, $3.00 net.
Postage, 21 cents.
This collection of Mr. Conway's experiences in Oriental lands was origin-
ally intended as a part of his autobiography but it soon extended to sufficiently
large proportions to maks a complete book in itself, with an especial unity.
In Mr. Conway's charming conversational style the book relates incidents of
his travels first westward across our continent, then successively in Australia,
Ceylon, Madras, Calcutta, Bengal, Delhi, Bombay and then homeward by way
of Europe. Everywhere he came in contact with people interested in religious
matters, and his trip around the world only seemed to strengthen his belief
in the geographical universailty of truth. In the chapter "Seeking the Be-
loved" he sums up his opinion in regard to many details of the Christian re-
ligion. He thinks that perhaps the most un-Christian thing about the Chris-
tianity of to-day is the motive of sacrifice that runs through it all thus bring-
ing gloom where there ought to be sunshine to the minds of men. He says :
"Now let a chorus be heard in the churches, — stop the sacrifice ! Cease
to immolate one seventh of human time to the Sabbath idol ! Unbind those
hearts fettered on the marriage altar by chains forged out of antiquated no-
tions of divorce ! Stop beating that child with a rod from some ancient pro-
verb, instructing him to beat others smaller than himself! Cease to sacrifice
social welfare and justice to a barbaric text enjoining the punishment of a
murderer by imitating him ! Cease to call love and generosity 'self-sacrifice,'
— sweep all these sacrificial savageries out of good hearts and healthy minds,
and out of our language, so that the woman may find fair measures of honest
meal in which to mingle her leaven of civilization ! There is no other hope
of a better world !"
The Churches and Modern Thought. An Inquiry Into the Grounds of
Unbelief and an Appeal for Candour. By Philip Vivian. London :
Watts, 1907. Pp. XV, 418. Price, 3s. 6d. net.
The book is a fitting exponent of the position of its publishers, and is a
448 THE OPKX COURT.
strong presentation of the humanitarian and rationaHstic point of view. The
author considers the questions, "What if the majority of men find that Chris-
tianity no longer gives them either intellectual satisfaction or moral support?
What if they finally arrive at the conclusion that Christianity and all super-
natural beliefs are but the survival of primitive superstitions which can no
longer bear the light of modern knowledge?" In discussing these questions
his endeavor is to set forth the constructive as well as the destructive results
of a search for truth. The destructive results may be summed up in the
following statements adduced as evidence that "modern knowledge forces us
to admit that the Christian faith cannot be true."
"The dismal failure of Christianity after nearly two thousand years'
trial : the apparent impossibility of and complete want of evidence for the
miracles on which Christianity is founded; the destructive criticism of the
Bible, which cannot be gainsaid; the intensely grave suspicions thrown upon
the originality of Cliristianity by the revelations of comparative mythology;
the various dilemmas arising from the accepted doctrine of evolution ; the
inadequacy and conflicting character of the so-called Theistic proofs."
Mr. Vivian then tries to outline an ethical system to replace a code de-
pendent on religious faith, and to consider the question as to whether the un-
believer should keep his views to himself, or whether he should speak out
plainly. As he announces his book to be a "plea for candor," his militant
position is easily inferred. "Our present course is clearly defined ; we should
search out and expose all false premises of belief. Only in this way can we
hope to arrive a little nearer to the ultimate truth."
The Old Roof Tree. Letters of Ishbcl to her half-brother Mark Latimer.
London : Longmans, Green & Co., 1901. Pp. 271.
The hope of the anonymous author of tliese intimate letters is that they.
niay "be ranked with the little lame ant who for a time was thought to be lost,
but who arrived at sunset, carrying a small grain of nourishment to add to
the common store." She aims to "touch one here and there, to more critical
examination of the strange chaos of misery that underlies Britain's social
system." But this kernel of thought seems almost hidden in the vast amount
of desultory matter that accompanies it.
ERRATUM.
We wish to inform our readers that in ihc June number of The Open
Court, the first article, which treated of "The Moral Code of Yukichi Fuku-
zawa" and included a complete English version of this interesting document of
"the Gladstone of Japan," was erroneously ascribed to Joseph Sale. The
author is Mr. Joseph Lale of Boston. Mass., and we regret the mischance by
which the error was made.
Plant Breeding
Comments on the experiments of
BURBANK & NILSSON. By
Hugo DeVries, Professor of Botany in the University of Amsterdam.
Pages, XIII + 351. 114 Illustrations. Printed on fine enamel paper. Cloth,
gilt top, $1.50 net; $1.70 postpaid. (7s. 6d. net.)
Under the influence of the work of Nilsson, Burbank, and others, the principle of
selection has, of late, changed its meaning in practice in the same sense in which it is
changing its significance in science by the adoption of the theory of an origin of species
by means of sudden mutations. The method of slow improvement of agricultural varie-
ties by repeated selection is losing its reliability and is being supplanted by the discovery
of the high practical value of the elementary species, which may be isolated by a single
choice. The appreciation of this principle will, no doubt, soon change the whole aspect
of agricultural plant breeding.
Hybridization is the scientific and arbitrary combination of definite characters. It
does not produce new unit-characters; it is only the combination of such that are new.
From this point of view the results of Burbank and others wholly agree with the theory
of mutation, which is founded on the principle of the unit-characters.
This far-reaching agreement between science and practice is to become a basis for
the further development of practical breeding as well as of the doctrine of evolution.
To give proof of this assertion is the main aim of these Essays.
The results of Nilsson have been published only in the Swedish language; those of
Burbank have not been described by himself. Prof. DeVries's arguments for the theory
of mutation have been embodied in a German book, "Die Mutationstheorie" (2 vols.
Leipsic, Vat & Co.), and in lectures given at the University of California in the summer
of 1904, published under the title of "Species and Varieties; their Origin by Mutation."
A short review of them will be found in the first chapter of these Essays.
Some of them have been made use of in the delivering of lectures at the Universities
of California and of Chicago during the summer of 1906 and of addresses before various
audiences during my visit to the United States on that occasion. In one of them (II. D.),
the main contents have been incorporated of a paper read before the American Philo-
sophical Society at their meeting in honor of the bicentennary of the birth of their
founder, Benjamin Franklin, April, 1906.
THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING CO.. 1522 Wabash Ave.. Chicago
Second Edition, thoroughly Corrected
and Revised, with Portrait,
Species and Varieties:
Their Origin by Mutation
Bi/ Hugo de Vries
Professor of Botany in the University of Amsterdam.
Edited by Daniel Trembly Mac Dougal, Director,
Department of Botanical Research, Carnegie Institution of Washington
xxiii + S30 pages
HE belief has prevailed for more than half
a century that species are changed into new
types very slowly and that thousands of
years were necessary for the development
^ ^^^:=^ of a new type of animal or plant. After
twenty years of arduous investigation Professor de Vries
has announced that he has found that new species originat-
ed suddenly by jumps, or by "mutations," and in conjunc-
tion with this discovery he offers an explanation of the
qualities of living organisms on the basis of the concep-
tion of unit-characters. Important modifications are also
proposed as to the conceptions of species and varieties as
well as of variability, inheritance, atavism, selection and
descent in general.
The announcement of the results in question has excited
more interest among naturalists than any publication
since the appearance of Darwin's Origin of Species, and
marks the beginning of a new epoch in the history of
evolution. Professor de Vries was invited to deliver a series
of lectures upon the subject at the University of California
during the summer of 1904, and these lectures are offered
to a jniblic now thoroughly interested in modern ideas of
evolution.
The contents of the book include a readable and orderly
recital of the facts and details which furnish the basis for
the mutation-theory of the origin of species. All of the
more important phases of heredity and descent come in
for a clarifying treatment that renders the volume
extremely readable to the amateur as well as to the trained
biologist. The more reliable historical data are cited and
the results obtained by Professor de Vries in the Botanical
Garden at Amsterdam during twenty years of observations
are described.
Not the least important service rendered by Professor
de Vries in the preparation of these lectures consists in the
indication of definite specific problems that need investi-
gation, many of which may be profitably taken up by any-
one in a small garden. He has rescued the subject of
evolution from the thrall of polemics and brought it once
more within reach of the great mass of naturalists, any one
of whom may reasonably hope to contribute something
to its advancement by orderly observations.
The text of the lectures has been revised and rendered
into a form suitable for permanent record by Dr. D. T.
MacDougal who has been engaged in researches upon the
subject for several years, and who has furnished substan-
tial proof of the mutation theory of the origin of species by
his experimental investigations carried on in the New
York Botanical Gardens.
Price, postpaid $5.00 ( 21s.) net. xxiii + 830 pages, 8 vo., cloth, gilt top
The Open Court Publishing Company
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NOTEWORTHY SERIES OF ARTICLES IN LATE
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IV. Supplementary. January, 1903.
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examples. April, 1903.
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VII. Concerning Certain Other Versions, more or less in the
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VIII. A Few Final Tests. April, 1905.
IX. Concerning Idiom. July, 1907.
The Diseases of the Bible
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Biblical Epidemics of Bubonic Plague. April, 1 904.
Deaths of Antiochus IV., Herod the Great, and Herod
Agrippa I. July, 1 904.
The Malady of Saul, King of Israel. October, 1 904.
Did Jesus Die of a Broken Heart ? January and April, 1 905.
The Abasement of Nebuchadnezzar. October, 1 905.
The Powers of Darkness. April and July, 1 906.
The Patience of Job. April, 1 907.
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The Old and the New Magic ^^^"^"'^whh an
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Aristotle on His Prede>
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Zarathuslitra, Pliilo, tlie Achaemenids and Israel.
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The Story of Samson *"^ "^ ^'=« " *^! ^}^-
•' lous Development of Mankind.
By Paul Cams. 80 illustrations. Pp. 183. Comprehensive index.
Boards, ^1.00 net. (4s. 6d. net.)
Dr. Cams contends that Samson's prototype is to be found in those traditions of all prim-
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cal account of Samson's deeds, like the twelve labors of Heracles, is the echo of an ancient
solar epic which glorifies the deeds of Shamash in his migration through the twelve signs of
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which is discussed at some length the relaticm between myth and history.
Cllill^^^ T'flOllCfflf "^^ Exposition of the Main Character-
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