THE CHAUTAUQUAN A Monthly Magazine devoted to the Promotion of True Culture Organ of the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. VOLUME II. From October, 1881, to July, 1882. THEODORE L. FLOOD, D. D., Editor. PRINTED ON THE CHAUTAUQUA PRESS, COPYRIGHTED BY THEODORE L. FLOOD, IN THE OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS, WASHINGTON, D. C., 1882. INDEX TO VOLUME II. AFRICA. By Rev. J. O. Means, D. D. 21. AH! SUNFLOWER. A Poem. By Wm. ALEXANDER HAMILTON. By Jas. Clark ARCHERY. By Goethe and Eckermann. ARCTIC EXPLORATIONS. 353. CHAUTAUQUA BOOK-A-MONTH READ- DIRGE, A. By Felicia Hemans. 278. 311. CHRISTIANITY IN ART. By Prof. W. T. HARRIS. 12, 135, 230, 264, 328, 395, 461, 527, 568. CHURCH LYCEUM. By Rev. D. H. Mul- ASPIRATION. By Edward Young. 296. CHRISTIAN JOURNALISM. By Rev. Sim- eon Gilbert. 274. CICERO. By John Lord, LL. D. 563. CITY LIFE IN THE UNITED STATES. By a non-resident American. 233. C. L. Š. C. ANNOUNCEMENT FOR '81 AND C. L. S. C. CLASS OF 1882 VIGIL, Rev. BIBLE HISTORY IN THE LIGHT OF MOD-C. L. S. C. NOTES AND LETTERS. By BLUEBELLS. Poem. Selected. 530. 164. BOOK OF GOVERNMENT. By Joseph Al- BOOK NOTICES. 65, 188, 501. CESAR AND COLUMBUS. By J. Bald- A. M. Martin, Esq. 48, 116, 174, 224, C. L. S. C. ROUND TABLE, Rev. J. H. Vincent, D. D., presiding. 42, 109, 180, 227, 433, 489, 550. Mrs. Emily J. Bugbee. 397. COMMENCEMENT DAY-C. L. S. C. 617. COMPENSATION. Poem. By "B." 232. CONVERSATIONS OF GOETHE AND ECK- DECEMBER AND JUNE. Poem. By "B." 229. EDITOR'S NOTE BOOK. 60, 125, 185, 244, EDITOR'S OUTLOOK: The Second Vol- ume of THE CHAUTAUQUAN; Bishop E. O. Haven; The Chautauqua As- sembly for 1881; President Garfield; The C. L. S. C. Course of Study for 1881-1882; The Chautauqua School The New Version and the Christian Ministry; In Memoriam; American Reformers Abroad; Dr. J. G. Hol- Judge Tourgee's Story; The Spoils System; Method of Study; The Irish Question; Physical Culture. 182. The C. L. S. C. in Canada; Dr. pello; How to Awaken the Church- es; Novels and Novel-Reading; Our Industrial Education; Insanity as a The Chautauqua Assembly for 1882; Polar Explorations; The Outlook for The Recent Tribute to Garfield; The Persecution of the Jews; Recreation for the Laboring Classes. 435. The C. L. S. C. Class of 1882; The Anti-Polygamy Bill; Books for the Children; New Temperance Meth- TAUQUAN; The C. L. S. C. Diploma; Four Years in the C. L. S. C.; Charles R. Darwin; Ralph Waldo Emerson; Chautauqua for 1882; The Labor Troubles; Organic Union in Church- es; The Temperance Question. 611. EDITOR'S TABLE. Questions and An- swers. 61, 126, 186, 245, 308, 376, 438, ment by Dr. Vincent. 560. MEMORIAL DAYS. 177, 435, 492. MONTEREY C. L. S. C. ASSEMBLY. By MY RETURN TO ARCADY, AND HOW I MY LOST YOUTH. Poem. By Henry W. MYTHOLOGY IN HISTORY. By C. F. ERATURE. 468. By C. F. Richardson. ODE TO DUTY. Poem. By Wm. Words- OF THE INEQUALITY AMONGST US. By OF THE ART OF CONVERSATION. BY OIL EXCHANGE OF AMERICA. By Major ON A ROCK BOUND COAST. A Poem. OLD BATTLE FIELDS. Poem. By I. OLD FAMILIAR FACES, The. Poem. By Man's Antiquity and Language, and The History of Ancient Literature. Books First and Second of McKen- zie's "Nineteenth Century." 357. "The Art of Speech," Vol. II, Stud- ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE WORD PARENTAL RECOLLECTIONS. Poem. By PERSECUTION OF THE JEWS. By Canon PROPHECY FULFILLED. By Jennie L. PREPARATORY CLASS C. L. S. C. 55. READINGS ON MATHEMATICS. By Prof. RELIGIOUS ODDITIES IN INDIA. By Rev. W. F. Oldham. 164. SACREDNESS OF PROPERTY. By R. W. SACREDNESS OF THE SECULAR CALL- SANCTUM KING, The. Poem. By Will SEPOY REBELLION. By Rev. Wm. But- SHE WAS A PHANTOM. Poem. By Wm. SIMILE, A. Poem. By Matthew Prior. SOME WONDERS OF THE SEA. By Rev. Farnam Pratt. THE CHAUTAUQUAN. A MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE PROMOTION OF TRUE CULTURE. ORGAN OF THE CHAUTAUQUA LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC CIRCLE. VOL. II. OCTOBER, 1881. No. I. Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. glimmer into warmth; Athens ascending into daylight, President, J. H. Vincent, D. D., Plainfield, N. J. Counselors, Lyman Abbott, D. D.; J. M. Gibson, D. D.; Bishop H. W. Warren, D. D.; W. C. Wilkinson, D. D. REQUIRED READING. MOSAICS OF HISTORY. INTRODUCTION. First, wild and wildering as the strife Uncertain right and certain wrong In onward conflict driven, The threats and trampling of the strong The cavernous unsounded East Drowning the hymn of patriarch priest, -Lord Houghton. THE CHARMS OF HISTORY.-History presents the pleasantest features of poetry and fiction; the majesty of the epic; the moving accidents of the drama; the surprises and moral of the romance. Wallace is a ruder Hector; Robinson Crusoe is not stranger than Croesus; the knights of Ashby never burnish the page of Scott with richer lights of lance and armor, than the Carthaginians, winding down the Alps, cast upon Livy. Froissart's hero has all the minute painting of Richardson's. The poetic element is the life-blood of the narrative. The gazette glows into the drama; the pen-and-ink scrawl into the portrait.* THREE PHASES OF HISTORY.-History may be considered in three lights-a pleasurable, an educational, and a moral: (1) As it entertains the fancy; (2) opens new sources of instruction; (3) and cherishes, or enlarges the feelings of virtue. In the first light, its poetical relationship is clearly marked. Imagination creates no grander episodes than the rise and fall of empires. To watch the first smiles and motions of national life in its cradle; to trace its growth, the maturity, and the decline of kingdoms; to observe one side of the world brightening in the sun of civilization, while the other is vapory and cold; to see, in the course of years, the flourishing region become dim, and the dark country *Willmott's "Pleasures of Literature," and Egypt sinking into shadow; learning setting over Greece to rise upon Italy; and dying at Rome to be rekindled at Bagdad: these are visions to dazzle the eyes, and people the fancy of a poet.* History is to be regarded in an educational light, as it opens new sources of information. A scholar may be six thousand years old, and have learned brick-making under Pharaoh. Never lived such a citizen of the world; he was Assyrian at Babylon, Lacedæmonian at Sparta, Roman at Rome, Egyptian at Alexandria. He has been by turns a traveller, a merchant, a man of letters, and a commanderin-chief; presented at every court, he knew Daniel, and sauntered through the picture-gallery of Richelieu. Dryden called history a perspective glass, carrying the mind to a vast distance, and taking in the remotest objects of antiquity. How many battles by sea and land the student has witnessed! He clambered with the Greeks along the rocky shore of Pylus; he heard the roar of falling houses when the Turks stormed Rhodes; three times he was beaten back with Condé by that terrible Spanish infantry, which tossed off the French fire like foam from a cliff; he recognized Dante in the struggle of Campaldino; stood by the side of Cervantes when an arquebus carried away his left hand; and stooped with a misty lantern over the bleeding body of Moore. A cultivated reader of history is domesticated in all families; he dines with Pericles, and sups with Titian. The Athenian fish-bell often invites him to the market to cheapen a noisy poulterer, or exchange compliments with a bakeress of inordinate fluency. A monk illuminating a missal, and Caxton pulling his first proof, are among the pleasant entries of his diary. He still stops his ears to the bellowing of Cleon; and remembers, as of yesterday, the rhetorical frown of the old tapestry, and the scarlet drapery of Pitt. To study history is to study literature. The biography of a nation embraces all its works. No trifle is to be neglected. A mouldering medal is a letter of twenty centuries. Antiquities, which have been beautifully called history defaced, compose its fullest commentary. In these wrecks of many storms, which time washes to the shore, the scholar looks patiently for treasure. The painting round a vase, the scribble on a wall, the wrath of a demagogue, the drollery of a farce, the point of an epigram-each possesses its own interest and value. A fossil court of law is dug out of an orator; and the Pompeii of Greece is discovered in the comedies of Aristophanes.* The third aspect of history is the moral, as it cherishes the feelings of virtue, and enlarges their action. Southey felt confident that Clarendon, put into his youthful hands, would have preserved him from the political follies which he lived to regret and outgrow. Guicciardini, also, has *Willmott's "Pleasures of Literature," |