Howitt's Journal
John Greenleaf Whittier
London: 9 October 1847
SINGULAR SECTS.
FATHER MILLER.
"Old Father Time is weak and gray,
Awaiting for the better day,
See how idiot-like he stands,
Fumbling his old palsied hands."
SHELLEY'S "Masque of Anarchy"
"Stage ready, gentlemen"—"Stage for camp ground, Derry Second-Advent
Camp-meeting!"
Accustomed, as I begin to feel, to the ordinary sights and sounds of
this busy city, I was, I confess, somewhat startled by this business-like
annunciation from the driver of a stage, who stood beside his horses,
swinging his whip with some degree of impatience: "Seventy-five cents to
the second advent camp-ground!"
The stage was soon filled; the driver cracked his whip, and went
rattling down the street.
The Second Advent!—the coming of our Lord in person upon this earth,
with signs and wonders and terrible judgments—the heavens rolling together
like a scroll, the elements melting with fervent heat! The mighty
consummation of all things at hand, with its destructions and its
triumphs, sad wailings of the lost, and rejoicing songs of the glorified!
From this overswarming hive of industry—from these crowded treadmills of
gain—here were men and women going out in solemn earnestness to prepare
for the dread moment, which they verily suppose is only a few months
distant, to lift up their warning voices in the midst of scoffers and
doubters, and to cry aloud to blind priests and careless churches, "BEHOLD,
THE BRIDEGROOM COMETH!"
It was one of the most lovely mornings of this loveliest season of
the year—a warm, soft atmosphere—clear sunshine falling on the city spires
and roofs—the hills of Darcut quiet and green in the distance, with
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their white farmhouses and scattered trees; around me the continual tread
of footsteps hurrying to the toils of the day—merchants spreading out
their wares for the eyes of purchasers—sounds of hammers, the sharp clink
of trowels, the murmur of the great manufactories subdued by distance! How
was it possible, in the midst of so much life, in that sunrise light, and
in view of all abounding beauty, that the idea of the death of nature—the
baptism of the world in fire—could take such a practical shape as this?
Yet here were sober, intelligent men, gentle and pious women, who, verily
believing the end to be at hand, had left their counting-rooms, and
workshops, and household cares, to publish the great tidings; and to
startle, if possible, a careless and unbelieving generation into
preparation for the day of the Lord, and for the blessed millennium—the
restored paradise—when, renovated and renewed by its fire-purgation, the
earth shall become, as of old, the garden of the Lord, and the saints
alone shall inherit it.
Very serious and impressive is the fact that this idea of a radical
change in our planet, is not only predicted in the Scriptures, but that
the earth herself, in her primitive rocks and varying formations, on which
are lithographed the history of successive convulsions, darkly prophesies
of others to come. The old poet-prophets, all the world over, have sung of
a renovated world. A vision of it haunted the contemplations of Plato. It
is seen in the half-inspired speculations of the old Indian mystics. The
Cumoean Sybil saw it in her trances. The apostles and martyrs of our faith
looked for it anxiously and hopefully. Gray anchorites in the deserts,
pilgrims to the holy places of Jewish and Christian tradition, prayed for
its coming. It inspired the gorgeous visions of the early fathers. In
every age since the Christian era, from the caves and forests and secluded
"upper chambers" of the times of the first missionaries of the Cross, from
the Gothic temples of the middle ages, from the bleak mountain gorges of
the Alps, where the hunted heretics put up this expostulation, "How long,
O Lord, how long!" down to the present time; and from this Derry
camp-ground, have been uttered the prophecy and the prayer for its
fulfillment.
How this great idea manifests itself in the lives of the enthusiasts
of the days of Cromwell! Think of Sir Henry Vane, cool, sagacious
statesman as he was, waiting with eagerness for the foreshadowings of the
millenium, and listening even in the very council-hall for the blast of
the last trumpet! Think of the Fifth-Monarchy men, weary with waiting for
the long-desired consummation, rushing out with drawn swords and loaded
matchlocks into the streets of London to establish at once the rule of
King Jesus! Think of the wild enthusiasts at Munster, verily imagining
that the millenium had commenced in their city! Still later, think of
Granville Sharp, diligently labouring in his vocation of philanthropy,
laying plans for the slow but beneficent amelioration of the condition of
his country and the world, and at the same time maintaining, with the zeal
of Father Miller himself, that the earth was just on the point of
combustion, and that the millenium would render all his benevolent schemes
of no consequence!
And, after all, is the idea itself a vain one? Shall to-morrow be the
same as to-day—shall the antagonism of good and evil continue as
heretofore forever? Is there no hope that this world-wide prophecy of the
human soul, uttered in all climes, in all times, shall yet be fulfilled?
Who shall say it may not be true? Nay, is not its truth proved by its
universality? The hope of all earnest souls must be realised. That
which, through a distorted and doubtful medium, shone even upon the
martyr-enthusiasts of the French Revolution—soft gleams of Heaven's light
rising over the hell of man's passions and crimes—the glorious idea of
Shelley, who, atheist as he was, through early prejudice and defective
education, saw the horizon of the world's future kindling with the light
of a better day,—that hope and that faith which constitute, as it were,
the world's life, without which it would be dark and dead, cannot be in
vain.
I do not, I confess, sympathize with my Second Advent friends in
their lamentable depreciation of mother earth, even in its present state.
I find it extremely difficult to comprehend how it is that this goodly,
green, sunlit home of ours is resting under a curse. It really does not
seem to me to be altogether like the roll which the angel bore in the
prophet's vision, "written within and without with mourning, lamentation,
and woe!" September sunsets—changing forests—moonrise and cloud—sun and
rain,—I, for one, am contented with them; they fill my heart with a sense
of beauty. I see in them the perfect work of Infinite Love as well as
wisdom. It may be that our Advent friends, however, coincide with the
opinions of an old writer on the prophecies, who considered the hills and
valleys of the earth's surface and its changes of seasons as so many
visible manifestations of God's curse; and that in the millenium, as in
the days of Adam's innocence, all these picturesque inequalities would be
levelled nicely away, and the flat surface laid handsomely down to grass!
As might be expected, the effect of this belief in the speedy
destruction of the world and the personal coming of the Messiah, acting
upon a class of uncultivated, and in some cases gross minds, is not always
in keeping with the enlightened Christian's ideal of "the better day." One
is shocked in reading some of the "Hymns" of these believers. Sensual
images—semi-Mahommedan descriptions of the condition of the
"saints"—exultation over the destruction of the "sinners"—mingle with the
beautiful and soothing promises of the prophets. There are indeed
occasionally to be found among the believers men of refined and exalted
spiritualism, who in their lives and conversation remind one of Tennyson's
Christian Knight-errant in his yearning towards the "hope set before him."
"To me is given
Such hope I may not fear;
I long to breathe the airs of heaven,
Which sometimes meet me here.
I muse on joys which cannot fade,
Pure spaces filled with living beams;
While lilies of eternal peace
With odours haunt my dreams."
One of the most ludicrous examples of the sensual phase of Millerism—the
incongruous blending of the sublime with the ridiculous—was mentioned to
me not long since. A fashionable young woman, in the western part of this
state, became an enthusiastic believer in the doctrine. On the day which
had been designated as the closing one of Time, she packed all her fine
dresses and soiled valuables in the large trunk, with long straps attached
to it; and seating herself upon it, buckled the straps over her shoulders,
patiently awaiting the crisis,—shrewdly calculating, that as she must
herself go upwards, her goods and chattels would of necessity follow.
Three or four years ago, on my way eastward, I spent an hour or two
and a camp-ground of the Second Advent, in East Kingston. The spot was
well chosen. A tall growth of pine and hemlock threw its melancholy over
the multitude, who were arranged upon rough seats of boards and logs.
Several hundred—perhaps a thousand—people were present, and more were
rapidly coming. Drawn about in a circle, forming a background of snowy
whiteness to the dark masses of men and foliage, were the white tents, and
at the back of them the provision stalls and cook-shops. When I
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reached the ground, a hymn the words of which I could not distinguish, was
pealing through the dim aisles of the forest. I could readily perceive
that it had its effect upon the multitude before me, kindling to higher
intensity their already excited enthusiasm. The preachers were placed in a
rude pulpit of rough boards, carpeted only by the dead forest leaves and
flowers, and tasseled, not with silk and velvet, but with the green boughs
of the hemlocks around it. One of them followed the music in an earnest
exhortation on the duty of preparing for the great event. Occasionally he
was really eloquent; and his description of the last day had all the
terrible distinctness of Anelli's painting of the "End of the World."
Suspended from the front of the rude pulpit, were two broad sheets of
canvass, upon one of which was the figure of a man; the head of gold, the
breast and arms of silver, the belly of brass, the legs of iron, and feet
of clay,—the dream of Nebuchadnezzar. On the other were depicted the
wonders of the Apocalyptic vision;—the beasts—the dragons—the scarlet
woman seen by the seer of Patmos—oriental types, figures, and mystic
symbols, translated into staring Yankee realities, and exhibited like the
beasts of a travelling menagerie. One horrible image, with its hideous
heads and scaly caudal extremity, reminded me of the tremendous line of
Milton, who in speaking of the same evil Dragon describes him as—
"Swinging in scaly horrors of his folded tail."
To an imaginative mind the scene was full of novel interest: the
white circle of tents—the dim wood arches—the upturned earnest faces—the
loud voices of the speakers, burdened with the awful symbolic language of
the Bible—the smoke from the fires rising like incense—carried me back to
those days of primitive worship which tradition faintly whispers of when
on hill-tops and in the shade of old woods religion had her first altars,
with every man for her priest, and the whole universe for her temple.
Beautifully and truthfully has Dr. Channing spoken of this doctrine
of the Second Advent in his memorable discourse in Berkshire, a little
before his death:—
"There are some among us at the present moment who are waiting for
the speedy coming of Christ. They expect, before another year closes, to
see him in the clouds, to hear his voice, to stand before his
judgment-seat. These illusions spring from misinterpretations of Scripture
language. Christ, in the New Testament, is said to come, whenever his
religion breaks out in new glory, or gains new triumphs. He came in the
Holy Spirit in the Day of Pentecost. He came in the destruction of
Jerusalem, which, by subverting the old ritual law, and breaking the power
of the worst enemies of His religion, insured to it new victories. He came
in the Reformation of the Church. He came on this day four years ago,
when, through his religion, eight hundred thousand men were raised from
the lowest degradation to the rights and dignity and fellowship of men.
Christ's outward appearance is of little moment compared with the brighter
manifestations of his Spirit. The Christian, whose inward eyes and ears
are touched by God, discerns the coming of Christ, hears the sound of his
chariot wheels and the voice of his trumpet, when no other perceives them.
He discerns the Saviour's advent in the dawning of higher truth on the
world, in new aspirations of the Church after perfection, in the
prostration of prejudice and error, in brighter expressions of Christian
love, in more enlightened and intense consecration of the Christian to the
cause of humanity, freedom, and religion. Christ comes in the conversion,
the regeneration, the emancipation of the world."
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