TO LEWIS CAMPBELL, Esq.
Trin. Coll., 17th October 1855.
I expect to be grinding this term.
There are lectures
on hydrostatics
and optics, papers for questionists to be set and read over with
the men, which is procrastinatious. Besides this I may have to lecture
the working men, and what spare time I have I intend to use
on various subjects, which will keep me in work for some time to come,
so I do not require any pupils to keep my hand in this term. I
was
looking for Jowett's book in the library, but, as usual,
all
the new theology had been carried off in a lump by the M.A.'s, who get
in the first day. I wanted Ellicott, but he was out too, so
I took Carlyle on the French Revolution. I have been reading the
English
language, comprising Chaucer, Sir Tristram, Bacon F., Pope,
Berkeley, Goldsmith, Cowper, Burns' letters, Isaac Taylor's
Saturday
Night, Carlyle, Ruskin, Kingsley, Maurice, and combining the whole with
Trench on English Past and Present, and with all this I derive
pleasure
and information, but not a single glimmer of a theory about
Words.
And yet I have presently to state whether words mould thought or
thought
brews words. Is not one theory as good as another? Faith and a
dale
better too, if it was not for the sake of laying them together by the
ears,
which is a difficult task when you have to catch both
yourself.
I was staying at the Blackburns' when
I was at
Glasgow, but they were
away, and the Ramsays fed and tended me. I found your
photograph
there, together with a few other pleasant recollections. I have been
over
to H. M. Butler, who is come up again. We were talking about
Maurice,
etc. Maurice is a man I am loath to say nay to, or to
accuse
of wilful perversion of facts; but in some matters I think he is in
great
error, especially in his estimate of respectable ordinary
Christians,
as far as regards their creed. He cannot go too far in enforcing
practice
and work on people who were bound to it before, and
theoretically
confess it, but he is too hard upon the theories, and
totally
misrepresents them. I would rather be taken for a Yezide than for one
of
Maurice's popular religionists.