1041 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
1041 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
16 page printout, page 177 to 192
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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CHAPTER 14.
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WAS HE 'A MERE ICONOCLAST'?
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(concluded)
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Did He Endeavor To Destroy the Hope of Immortality?
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In dealing with the specific charges of iconoclasm that have
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been so insistently pressed by the theological indicters of
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Ingersoll, there yet remain to be considered his views of at least
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one other subject, -- the immortality of the soul. Holding as they
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do so prominent and so essential a place in his life-work, --
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running like threads of gold through the very warp and woof of his
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philosophy, -- their presentation is not merely desirable: it
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constitutes a task which no conscientious reviewer could avoid.
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It is asserted by Ingersoll's critics, that his monistic and
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agnostic teachings, in general, and his rejection of supernatural
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purpose and design and the bodily resurrection and ascension of
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Christ, in particular, utterly destroy the hope of immortality,
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leaving mankind without the shadow of a consolation that the
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unspeakable wrongs of this life will be righted in another.
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Now, clearly to understand Ingersoll's views concerning the
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immortality of the soul, that is, concerning the mind after the
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death of the body, it is first absolutely necessary to understand
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his views concerning the mind before the death of the body. What
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were they?
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Reiterating so much only of his philosophy as is essential to
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a comprehensive presentation of the views in question, and avoiding
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the "double words" of the metaphysician and the psychologist, I may
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state that Ingersoll believed in what is called the natural; that
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the universe is the uncreated and indestructible, the infinite and
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eternal, all. Without pretending either to define or to distinguish
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them, he believed that this all consists of what are called
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substance and force. He did not believe that there is any power,
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force, or essence behind the universe, because, even to think of
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such power, force, or essence, he would have been necessitated to
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think of some form or phase of substance or force, that is, of some
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part or phase of the universe. In other words, he would have been
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necessitated to think of something as existing behind itself. This
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being impossible, the supernatural was excluded from his belief.
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Incapable of conceiving of anything but the natural, he believed
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that every phenomenon is a natural phenomenon. Though the original
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development of organic life from inorganic substance and force was
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to him an insoluble problem, he believed that, from the monera or
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some even more simple protoplasmic mass, through countless ages,
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had evolved by a series of purely natural, interrelated chemical,
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physical, and psychological processes. He held that by no
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conceivable possibility could the human organism have become
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different from what it is. Confident that there was no more
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trustworthy informant concerning that organism, he accepted the
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conclusions of the representative biological and anthropological
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scientists of his day. He believed, for example, that, without what
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are termed the voluntary muscles, it would be absolutely impossible
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for an individual voluntarily to exert force; that, were it not for
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Bank of Wisdom
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177
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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the heart and the rest of the circulatory mechanism, it would be
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impossible either to supply with food the several tissues of the
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body or to remove from them the various deleterious products of
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waste; that, in the absence of certain nerve-tissues, there would
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be no sensation. He was satisfied as to the inevitable and
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invariable functional integrity of these structures. He believed,
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that, between the highly specialized and widely differentiated
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tissues or organs just mentioned, there is no vicarious action;
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that voluntary motion is invariably effected through the muscles;
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circulation, through the heart; sensation, through the nerves. He
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was convinced that the quality and the degree of functional
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activity in the organs concerned depend absolutely and inevitably
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upon their own physiological condition, plus the conditions of
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their environment. In short, he believed that the organs of motion,
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circulation, and sensation naturally developed, under natural
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conditions, and are natural organs, acting in a natural way.
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Did he believe to the contrary concerning any other organ --
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concerning the brain? In my judgment, there is no better way of
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initiating a reply to this question than by asking another -- than
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by asking simply this: Could he?
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To him, the brain was either natural or supernatural: it could
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not be both. It was either a purely natural organ, manifesting the
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purely natural phenomena called mind, or it was a purely
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supernatural organ, manifesting the purely supernatural phenomena
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called mind. Which of these would he declare it to be? Holding, as
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already indicated, that every other organ is purely natural, could
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he declare that the brain, chemically the most complex, and
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anatomically and physiologically the most wonderful, of all, is
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purely supernatural, manifesting purely supernatural phenomena?
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He knew that the source and origin of thought had been removed
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by modern science from the maze of metaphysics to the domain of the
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physical, the natural. He knew, that, superseding the theories of
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such dualistic thinkers as Plato and Descartes, according to the
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last of whom the ego sat an inexorable autocrat on its throne in
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the pineal gland, we have a physicochemical mechanism within whose
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wondrous substance is an epitome of all the past and a hint of all
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the future -- an organ constantly reacting to external stimuli,
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like all other organs, and subject to the same immutable forces or
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conditions -- an organ whose function is the production and
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manifestation of thought. And he knew, that, were there no such
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organ, there would be no thought, -- just as he knew, that, were
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there no muscles, heart, nor nerves, there would be no motion,
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circulation, nor sensation. He knew, that, if this were not the
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case, -- if that marvelous organ called the brain were merely a
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sort of play-ground for some "absolute" immaterial essence, --
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mental vigor would not increase directly (pari passu) with
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physiological vigor, as revealed by the scalpel and the microscope,
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nor wane like a fading flower with the progress of disease. He saw,
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that, if the brain be not the real and only source of mental
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phenomena, there is no reason why, when a part or all of its
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essential cells and fibers are destroyed by accident, experiment,
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disease, or age, the individual concerned should not continue to
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think with as much facility as he did before, -- to think with some
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other organ, -- with the spleen, for example.
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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Of course, Ingersoll was well aware that so-called scientists
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had produced many volumes to show, that, although a certain more or
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less definite connection between the mind and the brain must be
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admitted, there is no absolutely necessary and inevitable relation
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between the physicochemical constitution of that organ and either
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the quality or the quantity of the phenomena it manifests. He was
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perfectly familiar with such arguments, all of which amount to no
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more than this, namely, that the relation between brain and mind
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is, at best, only a parallel relation, that is, the relation
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between the natural and the supernatural! So the assertions of the
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dualist made upon him no impression, save that they were, for the
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most part, untrue: --
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"Thought is a form of force. We walk with the same force with
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which we think. Man is an organism, that changes several forms of
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force into thought-force. Man is a machine into which we put what
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we call food, and produce what we call thought. Think of that
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wonderful chemistry by which bread was changed into the divine
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tragedy of Hamlet!"
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It must not be inferred, however, that Ingersoll regarded mind
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and consciousness as solved problems; -- that he was chargeable
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with the crudity usually attributed to materialistic psychology.
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For he was not a pure materialist. Nor was he a pure "energist":
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rather was he what I venture to term an agnostic monist. He said:
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"I believe there is such a thing as matter. I believe there is
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a something called force. The difference between force and matter
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I do not know. So there is a something called consciousness.
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Whether we call consciousness an entity or not makes no difference
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as to what it really is. There is something that hears, sees and
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feels, a something that takes cognizance of what happens in what we
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call the outward world. No matter whether we call this something
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matter or spirit, it is something that we do not know, to say least
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of it, all about. We cannot understand what matter is. It defies
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us, and defies definitions. So, with what we call spirit, we are in
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utter ignorance of what it is. We have some little conception of
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what we mean by it, and of what others mean, but as to what it
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really is no one knows. It makes no difference whether we call
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ourselves Materialists or Spiritualists, we believe in all there
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is, no matter what you call it. If we call it all matter, then we
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believe that matter can think and hope and dream. If we call it all
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spirit, then we believe that spirit has force, that it offers a
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resistance; in other words, that it is in one of its aspects, what
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we call matter. I cannot believe that everything can be accounted
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for by motion or by what we call force, because there is something
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that recognizes force. There is something that compares, that
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thinks, that remembers; there is something that suffers and enjoys;
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there is something that each one calls himself or herself, that is
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inexplicable to himself or herself, and it makes no difference
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whether we call this something mind or soul, effect or entity, it
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still eludes us, and all the world we have coined for the purpose
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of expressing our knowledge of this something, after all, expresses
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only our desire to know, and our efforts to ascertain."
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Believing, then, that mind, in some unknown way, is, like
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physiological motion, circulation, and sensation, a function or
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manifestation of the organ with which it is related, could
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Bank of Wisdom
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179
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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Ingersoll logically accept the popular view, that it shares at
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death a different fate than they? Since to reply in the negative
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would be entirely gratuitous, let us pass, at once, to the
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paramount question, Did he deny that it shares a different fate?
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And let us have the answer in the Great Agnostic's own words: --
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"I have said a thousand times, and say again, that we do not
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know, we cannot say, whether death is a wall or a door -- the
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beginning, or the end, of a day -- the spreading of pinions to
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soar, or the folding forever of wings -- the rise or set of a sin,
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or an endless life, that brings rapture and love to every one."
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In a letter to Mr. David S. Geer, president of the Oakland
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Literary Club, Chicago, the same conviction is reiterated, and its
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foundation concisely stated. Mr. Geer had addressed to Dr. E. B.
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Foote, Sr., of New York, a birthday greeting that contained, among
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other things, a positive assurance of immortality: --
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"117 East Twenty-first Street,
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"Gramercy Park, April 24, '99
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"My Dear Mr. Geer:
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"What you said to Dr. Foote is beautiful and for all I know it
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may be all true. Still, I have no evidence that human beings are
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immortal. Neither have I any evidence that 'there is any wise and
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beneficent power back of all creation.' In fact, I have no evidence
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of creation. I believe that all matter and all force have existed
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from, and will exist, to eternity. There is to me no evidence of
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the existence of any power superior to Nature. In my opinion the
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supernatural does not exist. Still, we can wish in spite of, or
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against, evidence, and we can hope without it.
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"Yours always,
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"R.G. Ingersoll."
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And elsewhere: --
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"* * * it is no more wonderful that we should live again than
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that we do live. Sometimes I have thought it not quite so wonderful
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for the reason that we have a start. But upon that subject I have
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not the slightest information. Whether man lives again or not I
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cannot pretend to say. * * *
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"My opinion of immortality is this:
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"First. -- I live, and that of itself is infinitely wonderful.
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Second. -- There was a time when I was not, and after I was not, I
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was. Third. -- Now that I am, I may be again; and it is no more
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wonderful that I may be again, if I have been, than that I am,
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having once been nothing."
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"It is natural to shun death, natural to desire eternal life.
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With all my heart I hope for everlasting life and joy * * * ."
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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180
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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As indicated in the beginning of this chapter. it has often
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been asserted by his critics, that the destruction of the Bible and
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the Christian religion, through the universal acceptance of
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Ingersoll's teachings, would blot out of the human heart the hope
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of immorality. Passing over the fact that, as has just been shown,
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Ingersoll, far from denying the possibility of a future life,
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himself ardently hoped for it, it must be noted that the assertion
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in question (doubtless unwittingly, but nevertheless unavoidably)
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implies, that, had it not been for that book and that religion,
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there would now be no such hope. Ingersoll, as would be expected,
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clearly perceived this unfortunate corollary of his adversaries;
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and we accordingly find him dwelling with insistence upon the fact
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that the hope of immortality existed, not only thousands of years
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before Christ is supposed to have been born, but thousands of years
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before the time of Moses; that, for many thousands of years, the
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very cross itself has been a symbol of the life to come; that it
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has been found carved in stone above the graves of a people who
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lived and loved and hoped and dreamed beneath the same "sunny
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skies" long before either the Romans or the Etruscans -- carved in
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the walls of the ruined temples of Central America -- carved upon
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Babylonian cylinders. He further declares, with undoubted
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consternation to many, that, although the doctrine of a future life
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was taught in Egypt, India, and China thousands of years before
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either Christ or Moses is supposed to have been born, and is still
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taught there, it is not taught in the Old Testament. He insists
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that, as a matter of fact, while the Old Testament tells us how man
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lost immortality through Jehovah's preventing Adam from eating of
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the tree of life, there came from the top of Sinai no hope of a
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hereafter; that no one in the Old Testament "stands by the dead and
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says, 'We shall meet again.' "And, finally, he declares that,
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notwithstanding the "one little passage in Job which commentators
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have endeavored to twist into a hope of immortality," the Old
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Testament does not contain, "from the first mistake in Genesis to
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the last curse in Malachi," a burial service, nor even a single
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word about another world. Indeed, he goes even further when he
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asserts, that, "if we take the Old Testament for authority, man is
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not immortal."
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To present just here, in what might seem to be natural and
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logical sequence, Ingersoll's views as to whether the doctrine of
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immortality is taught in the New Testament, and if so, the kind of
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immortality there contemplated, would be premature, if not
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altogether irrelevant. The fact, as pointed out by him, that the
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hope of another life, although not recorded in the Old Testament,
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was held among many nations of antiquity, thousands of years before
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either Christ or Moses is supposed to have been born, and is now
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held in heathen and other non-Christian countries, is a sufficient
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refutation of the assertion, that, since in the absence of the
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Bible and of Christianity there would have been, and would be, no
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such hope, universal unbelief in them as divine institutions, in
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accordance with his teachings, would destroy it. And this
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refutation is at the same time a demonstration, -- a demonstration
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of the fact, that, contrary to the apparent understanding of his
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Christian critics, the hope of immortality is something with which
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neither the Bible nor Christianity necessarily has anything
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whatever to do. That hope is not dependent upon either. As a matter
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of fact, the relation is precisely the other way. Take from the New
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Bank of Wisdom
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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Testament and Christianity their teachings of immortality, and the
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Bible and Christianity would perish; but destroy every copy of the
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Bible, and erase from the tablet of memory the last trace of
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Christian thought, and the hope of immortality would still 'spring
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eternal in the human breast.' And what is true of the Bible and
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Christianity in this regard is true of every other so-called sacred
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book and supernatural religion.
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The weakness -- the falsity -- of the criticisms of
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Ingersoll's views of immortality lies in their failure to
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distinguish between terms. His critics confound hope with belief,
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and regard belief as equivalent to realization, or as a force
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capable of bringing about realization. It is therefore natural that
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they should place the utmost importance in belief, which, by a
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strangely erroneous consistency, they consider to be a mere puppet
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of caprice, -- a result of the so called will. They seem to think
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that even feigned belief is better than none; and so, ignoring the
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natural operations of the mind, they say to the rationalist: "The
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doctrines of Ingersoll may be good enough to live by, but they are
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poor doctrines to die by. Whatever your doubts, if you desire
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immortality you would better believe and be 'on the safe side.' "As
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though a chemist should say to a navigator who occupied an agnostic
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attitude toward the theories of chemistry: "If on your next voyage
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you wish the hydrogen and the oxygen which form the sea-water to
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remain united as such, not to spurn each other, and, returning to
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dissociate gases, allow your ship to fall to the ground, you would
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better believe in chemical affinity."
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To such reasoning, -- to the sophistical theological assertion
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that belief can change the fact, -- the Great Agnostic, never
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doubting the uniformity of nature, replied: --
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"If we are immortal it is a fact in nature, and we are not
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indebted to priests for it, nor to bibles for it, and it cannot be
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destroyed by unbelief."
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And again: --
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"Is man Immortal?
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"I do not know.
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"One thing I do know, and that is, that neither hope, nor
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fear, belief, nor denial, can change the fact. It is as it is, and
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it will be as it must be."
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A question of profound interest here presents itself. As
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indicated in the preceding pages, it was apparent to Ingersoll,
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although he was far from either affirming or denying, that mind,
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like every other organic function, ceases at the death of the organ
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in which it is manifest. He was not aware that any mind had
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survived the death of the brain. Of one fact he was aware, however
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-- that in the idea of immortality there is something fundamentally
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human -- that, in every age, it had been almost universal to
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mankind. How did he account for this? Did he conceive it to be a
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gift from the supernatural? I have shown that he held it to be
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impossible even to think of the supernatural. Did he believe that
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Bank of Wisdom
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INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
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the idea was an a priori one, as Kant believed some ideas to be? To
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hold that an idea is a priori is merely one way of saying that it
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is supernatural. Besides, Ingersoll specifically declared that all
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of man's ideas are a posteriori; that they were born of experience
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here in this world. How, then, did he account for the idea of
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another life?
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Like all other individuals of genius, Ingersoll possessed a
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profound knowledge of human nature. With him, despite his stern and
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sometimes implacable logic, two factors entered into all mental
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||
operations, -- heart and brain. He declared that whoever came to a
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conclusion without consulting his heart would make a mistake. And
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it was because he followed his own advice -- it was because "his
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brain took counsel of his heart" -- that his conclusions were
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almost never wrong. He knew that those who have suffered most have
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thought most; that those who have lain in the lowest dungeons of
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despair and gloom have soared to the loftiest, sunniest, most
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ecstatic heights. In endeavoring, therefore, to account for that
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loftiest of ideas, he consulted not only reason but feeling.
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Finding that the brain could give no satisfactory explanation, he
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looked in the heart; and he found that human affection, the
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foundation of nearly everything else of value, is no less the
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foundation here. He said: --
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"The idea of immortality, that like a sea ebbed and flowed in
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the human heart, with its countless waves of hope and fear beating
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against the shores and rocks of time and fate, was not born of any
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book, nor of any creed, nor of any religion. It was born of human
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affection, and it will continue to ebb and flow beneath the mists
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and clouds of doubt and darkness as long as love kisses the lips of
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death. It is the rainbow -- Hope, shinning upon the tears of
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grief."
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Were it possible to doubt that this exquisite paragraph
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contains the very kernel of the Great Agnostic's convictions on the
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subject concerned; were it possible to doubt that it came
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||
ingenuously, spontaneously, from his heart and brain together, --
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not from his brain alone, as an artful attack upon theology, -- our
|
||
questioning would be instantly silenced by the last clause of the
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||
following passage, which was delivered many years later at the bier
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of a brother (as indicated in Chapter 5), and which, I may remark
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||
in passing, has been frequently misrepresented and misunderstood.
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||
I have italicized the particular clause: --
|
||
|
||
"Life is a narrow vale between the cold and barren peaks of
|
||
two eternities. We strive in vain to look beyond the heights. We
|
||
cry aloud, and the only answer is the echo of our wailing cry. From
|
||
the voiceless lips of the unreplying dead there comes no word; but
|
||
in the night of death hope sees a star and listening love can hear
|
||
the rustle of a wing."
|
||
|
||
Thus did Ingersoll find in human love, wrung by vain and
|
||
impotent anguish, the secret of man's dearest wish. Thus did he, in
|
||
a moment of grief, with a phrase as subtly delicate as the first
|
||
tints of a summer dawn, -- as gentle as hope itself, --
|
||
unconsciously silence the loud pretensions of theology. As Newton,
|
||
savant of the physical realm, divined in the falling apple the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
183
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
secret of the universe, so Ingersoll, savant of the mental realm,
|
||
saw in the falling tear the radiant image of that hope of hopes.
|
||
"Love," said he, taking even a deeper view, "Love is a flower that
|
||
grows on the edge of the grave." Well might he have added, "and the
|
||
hope of immortality is its fragrance."
|
||
|
||
But there is another side to this hope; and it was on that
|
||
side that Ingersoll uttered the most Ingersollian of his anti-
|
||
theological views. What is the side to which I refer?
|
||
|
||
Without entering into credal differences, it may be stated, as
|
||
a general truth, that, according to the teachings of Christianity,
|
||
those who believe and practice certain things will, either at death
|
||
or subsequently, be awarded everlasting joy, and that those who do
|
||
not so believe and practice will, at the same time, be consigned to
|
||
everlasting misery.
|
||
|
||
A logical analysis of this doctrine, especially if we accept
|
||
the other alleged fundamental truths of Christianity, reveals the
|
||
following absolutely unavoidable implications: (1) That an
|
||
omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient being created, -- called into
|
||
consciousness from the unconscious elements, -- billions of human
|
||
beings, knowing that they were destined to everlasting misery; (2)
|
||
that individuals will be held everlastingly responsible for their
|
||
beliefs; (3) that finite acts will be awarded infinite punishment;
|
||
(4) that the time will come when an infinitely wise, just, and
|
||
merciful God will cease to be even just, -- will refuse to allow
|
||
his children to repent and be righteous; and (5) that human beings
|
||
will be infinitely happy in heaven, knowing that those who loved
|
||
them, and whom they loved, on earth are in everlasting misery.
|
||
|
||
It was against this phase of Christian immortality, and
|
||
against this phase alone, that Ingersoll, with every fiber of his
|
||
being, with every unit of his moral and intellectual force, waged
|
||
war. This doctrine of everlasting punishment for the many and
|
||
everlasting bliss for the few was the real center round which his
|
||
lifelong battle raged. It made him an implacable enemy of the
|
||
Christian religion. It was the one dogma that stirred the utmost
|
||
depths of his being. Its bottomless pit became a receptacle for the
|
||
gall and wormwood of his indignation. But for this dogma, many
|
||
hundreds of pages of Ingersoll's discussions and controversies
|
||
would never have been produced; a large part of the lectures which
|
||
were delivered to hundreds of thousands, and which were read by
|
||
hundreds of thousands more, would never have left his lips; and
|
||
Voltaire would have remained the most aggressive and formidable
|
||
enemy of Christianity whom the world had ever known.
|
||
|
||
If we reflect that hatred of the idea of everlasting pain is
|
||
necessarily born of human sympathy and the sense of justice, and
|
||
that these exist from birth, if at all, as a part of the
|
||
individual's temperament (as does poetic feeling, for example, in
|
||
the temperament of the poet) we may not be surprised to learn that
|
||
Ingersoll's opposition to that idea began during boyhood; but we
|
||
shall be at least interested in learning under precisely what
|
||
circumstances it did begin -- doubly interested, I trust, because
|
||
we shall, at the same time, be afforded a glimpse of the evolution
|
||
of a great mind: --
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
184
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
"I heard hundreds of * * * evangelical sermons -- heard
|
||
hundreds of the most fearful and vivid descriptions of the tortures
|
||
inflicted in hell, of the horrible state of the lost. I supposed
|
||
that what I heard was true, and yet I did not believe it. I said:
|
||
'It is,' and then I thought: 'It cannot be.'
|
||
|
||
"Those sermons made but faint impressions on my mind. I was
|
||
not convinced. * * *
|
||
|
||
"But I heard one sermon that touched my heart, that left its
|
||
mark, like a scar, on my brain. [Ingersoll was then about ten years
|
||
old.]
|
||
|
||
"One Sunday I went with my brother to hear a Free Will Baptist
|
||
preacher. He was a large man, dressed like a farmer, but he was an
|
||
orator. He could paint a picture with words.
|
||
|
||
'He took for his text the parable of 'the rich man and
|
||
Lazarus.' He described daves, the rich man -- his manner of life,
|
||
the excesses in which he indulged, his extravagance, his riotous
|
||
nights, his purple and fins linen, his feasts, his wines and his
|
||
beautiful women.
|
||
|
||
"Then he described Lazarus, his poverty, his rags and
|
||
wretchedness, his poor body eaten by disease, the crusts and crumbs
|
||
he devoured, the dogs that pitied him. He pictured his lonely life,
|
||
his friendless death.
|
||
|
||
"Then changing his tone of pity to one of triumph -- leaping
|
||
from tears to the heights of exultation -- from defeat to victory
|
||
-- he described the glorious company of angels, who with white and
|
||
outspread wings carried the soul of the despised pauper to Paradise
|
||
-- to the bosom of Abraham.
|
||
|
||
"Then, changing his voice to one of scorn and loathing, he
|
||
told of the rich man's death. He was in his palace, on his costly
|
||
couch, the air heavy with perfume, the room filled with servants
|
||
and physicians. His gold was worthless then. He could not buy
|
||
another breath. He died, and in hell he lifted up his eyes, being
|
||
in torment.
|
||
|
||
"Then, assuming a dramatic attitude, putting his right hand to
|
||
his ear, he whispered, 'Hark! I hear the rich man's voice. What
|
||
does he say? Hark! '"Father Abraham! Father Abraham! Father
|
||
Abraham! I pray thee send lazarus that he may dip the tip of his
|
||
finger in water and cool my parched tongue, for I am tormented in
|
||
this flame."
|
||
|
||
"'Oh, my hearers, he has been making that request for more
|
||
than eighteen hundred years. And millions of ages hence that wail
|
||
will cross the gulf that lies between the saved and lost and still
|
||
will be heard the cry: "Father Abraham! Father Abraham! I pray thee
|
||
send Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and
|
||
cool my parched tongue, for I am tormented in this flame."'
|
||
|
||
"For the first time I understood the dogma of eternal pain --
|
||
appreciated 'the glad tidings of great joy.' For the first time my
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
185
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
imagination grasped the height and depth of the Christian horror.
|
||
Then I said: 'It is a lie, and I hate your religion. If it is true,
|
||
I hate your God.'
|
||
|
||
"From that day I have had no fear, no doubt. For me, on that
|
||
day, the flames of hell were quenched. From that day I have
|
||
passionately hated every orthodox creed. That Sermon did some
|
||
good."
|
||
|
||
Fortunate hour, indeed, when infinite injustice sows the seeds
|
||
from which it is to reap annihilation! Wondrous circumstance, when
|
||
blind ignorance and heartlessness so touch the brain and heart of
|
||
a child as to bring forth a flood of light and tears to dissipate
|
||
the gloom and quench the fires of hell!
|
||
|
||
Not to the day of his death did the impression which Robert
|
||
Ingersoll received on that Sunday ever leave him. Instead, it grew
|
||
deeper. It was a poisoned wound which, never healing, became more
|
||
and more sensitive to the environment of its possessor. As proof of
|
||
this, we find, that, while in his earliest lectures he freely
|
||
expressed his hatred of the dogma of everlasting punishment, it was
|
||
not until the high noon of his anti-theological career that he
|
||
publicly vowed never to deliver a lecture without attacking it, and
|
||
that it was not until the very ending of that career that he
|
||
declared that as long as he had life, as long as he drew breath, he
|
||
should hate with every drop of his blood, and would deny with all
|
||
his strength, that "infinite lie." Pursuant to this determination,
|
||
it is in his latest discourses that he dwells most insistently upon
|
||
the dogma of eternal pain, obviously not because earlier in his
|
||
career he had neglected to bestow upon it what the orthodox
|
||
regarded as adequate attention, nor yet because he entertained the
|
||
least fear of its gaining ground, but because it was his profound
|
||
conviction, that, just as long as a thing so terrible found
|
||
lodgment in a human brain, it was his duty to oppose it to the
|
||
utmost extent of his power.
|
||
|
||
Those who cherish as sacred the memory of his friendship, --
|
||
who have basked in the illimitable sunshine of his nature, and felt
|
||
the genial warmth of his heart, -- and even those who only know him
|
||
through the cold medium of lead and ink, will be reluctant to
|
||
believe that Robert Ingersoll was capable of hate. And, indeed, if
|
||
we apply the latter word solely to the individual, we shall be
|
||
obliged to yield to their reluctance. That he was capable of hating
|
||
institutions and ideas, however, no one, we think, will deny; and
|
||
if there was any idea that he did hate, -- if, in the boundless
|
||
realm of thought, there was any idea that had dropped the plummet
|
||
into the depths of his detestation, -- it was the idea of
|
||
everlasting punishment.
|
||
|
||
He declared it to be the one idea the infamy of which no mind
|
||
could conceive, no language express. refusing even to allow that it
|
||
was an original conception of the human brain, he declared that it
|
||
was born of infuriated revenge in the lowest of the animal world.
|
||
It was a certificate that our remote progenitors were the vilest of
|
||
beasts. Only from the leering eyes of enraged hyenas and jackals --
|
||
from the glittering eyes and throbbing fangs of arboreal serpents
|
||
awaiting in pendent coils their unsuspecting prey -- could such a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
186
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
thought have sprung; and only through the slanting foreheads and
|
||
the cacophonous jargon of unclean baboons could it have reached the
|
||
age of man. The doctrine of everlasting punishment had blighted the
|
||
flower of pity in countless hearts, and put out the light of reason
|
||
in countless brains. It had mocked at hope, and, in the place of
|
||
honest doubt, it had thrust upon mankind the loaded dice of
|
||
predestination and free will. It had made of the grave a
|
||
bottomless, shoreless sea of flame, and for cradles it had put
|
||
rockers on coffins. It had shrieked in the ears of maternity: "Your
|
||
child will be the fuel of eternal fire!" Over the sweet countenance
|
||
of Mercy, it had spread the scowl of Typhon, and in her hand it had
|
||
placed the cross-hilted sword of persecution. It had invented the
|
||
auto de fe, the thumbscrew, and the rack. It had built dungeons,
|
||
forged chains, driven all the stakes -- cut, carried, and lighted
|
||
the fagots. It had robbed the peasant, robed the hypocrite, crowned
|
||
and sceptered the tyrant, and stained the fair face of Europe with
|
||
ashes, blood, and tears. It had driven Justice from her throne of
|
||
"eternal calm," and put behind the universe an infinite fiend.
|
||
|
||
The doctrine that an omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient being
|
||
called into consciousness from the unconscious elements billions of
|
||
human beings, knowing that they were destined to everlasting
|
||
misery, was to Ingersoll the infamy of infamies, the one
|
||
"unpardonable sin" against mankind. To the assertion that God has
|
||
the right to damn us, because he made us, Ingersoll replied: "That
|
||
is just the reason that he has not a right to damn us." Above,
|
||
below, nor beyond this reply, reason and justice cannot go. It
|
||
would not do to say that God made man "a free moral agent," -- gave
|
||
him a "free will." An all-knowing God gave man a free will, not
|
||
knowing how he would use it!
|
||
|
||
That phase of the doctrine which asserts that individuals will
|
||
be held responsible for their beliefs -- that one will be
|
||
everlastingly punished for failing to believe a thing to be true,
|
||
when his reason, having heard the testimony both for and against,
|
||
tells him it is false, and that another will be rewarded with
|
||
everlasting bliss for believing the same thing to be true, when his
|
||
reason, having likewise heard the testimony both for and against,
|
||
tells him it is true -- received, as we should expect, the full
|
||
measure of Ingersoll' denunciation: --
|
||
|
||
"This frightful declaration, 'He that believeth and is
|
||
baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be
|
||
damned,' has filled the world with agony and crime."
|
||
|
||
That he regarded it as scarcely more pernicious than absurd
|
||
and unpsychological, however, is evident from the following: --
|
||
|
||
"The truth is, that no one can justly be held responsible for
|
||
his thoughts. The brain thinks without asking our consent. We
|
||
believe, or we disbelieve, without an effort of the will. Belief is
|
||
a result. It is the effect of evidence upon the mind. The scales
|
||
turn in spite of him who watches. There is no opportunity of being
|
||
honest or dishonest in the formation of an opinion. The conclusion
|
||
is entirely independent of desire. We must believe, or we must
|
||
doubt, in spite of what we wish."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
187
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
Still more objectionable was that feature of the "plan of
|
||
salvation" which arbitrarily attaches infinite consequences to
|
||
finite acts. Of course, no thinker of Ingersoll's subtlety and
|
||
profundity could fail to recognize, that, in the ethical realm, as
|
||
in the physical, all acts are related, if only remotely and
|
||
vaguely. Nevertheless, the idea that any act of this brief life --
|
||
this glint and shadow on the dial of eternity -- could merit
|
||
everlasting misery was to him "a proposition so monstrous" that he
|
||
was "astonished that it ever found lodgment in the brain of man."
|
||
|
||
Equally "monstrous" was that feature of the "plan" which
|
||
implies that the fate of the soul is everlastingly fixed at death.
|
||
If, during this life, there is more rejoicing in heaven over one
|
||
soul that repents, than over ninety and nine not gone astray, why,
|
||
reasoned Ingersoll, should the chance of repentance be denied in
|
||
the next? Why should infinite goodness there stand between the
|
||
repentant soul and righteousness? How could infinite mercy have an
|
||
end? Why should the love that counts every falling sparrow and
|
||
numbers every hair turn to hate on the verge of the grave? Why
|
||
should the smile of infinite beneficence wrinkle to a frown on the
|
||
somber face of Death? --
|
||
|
||
"Strange! that a world cursed by God, filled with temptation
|
||
and thick with fiends, should be the only place where hope exists,
|
||
the only place where man can repent, the only place where reform is
|
||
possible! Strange! that heaven, filled with angels and presided
|
||
over by God, is the only place where reformation is utterly
|
||
impossible! Yet these are the teachings of all the believers in the
|
||
eternity of punishment."
|
||
|
||
And again: --
|
||
|
||
"All I insist is, if there is another life, the bassist soul
|
||
that finds its way to that dark or radiant shore will have the
|
||
everlasting chance of doing right. Nothing but the most cruel
|
||
ignorance, the most heartless superstition, the most ignorant
|
||
theology, ever imagined that the few days of human life spent here,
|
||
surrounded by mists and clouds of darkness, blown over life's sea
|
||
by storms and tempests of passion, fixed for all eternity the
|
||
condition of the human race. If this doctrine be true, this life is
|
||
but a net, in which Jehovah catches souls for hell."
|
||
|
||
And even ignoring all of the points which we have shown to
|
||
have met with the Great Agnostic's opposition, there is one which
|
||
would alone have made him an aggressive opponent of the Christian
|
||
plan of salvation. It is the one which implies that human beings,
|
||
-- beings of perfect goodness, -- will be perfectly happy in
|
||
heaven, knowing that those who loved them, and whom they loved, on
|
||
earth are in everlasting misery. For if, to him, there was anything
|
||
intrinsic, -- anything that should endure and bind after all else
|
||
had evanesced, -- it was the golden chord of human affection.
|
||
"Heaven," he said, "is where those are we love, and those who love
|
||
us. And I wish to go to no world unless I can be accompanied by
|
||
those who love me here." He declared, that, although, according to
|
||
one of the alleged fundamental truths of Christianity, eternal
|
||
happiness was rendered possible by infinite love, there would,
|
||
under the Christian doctrine of immortality, be no love in heaven.
|
||
For, did not that doctrine compel the father to say: "I can be
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
188
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
happy with my daughter in hell"? Did it not compel the son to say;"
|
||
I can be happy in heaven when my mother, -- the woman who would
|
||
have died for me, -- is in everlasting pain"? Did it not compel the
|
||
believing mother to say: "I can be supremely happy knowing that my
|
||
generous and brave but unbelieving boy is in hell"? To those who
|
||
would evade this extremity by assuming that the elect would be
|
||
oblivious of the fate of the lost, he replied: "Another life is
|
||
nought, unless we know and love again the ones who love us here."
|
||
|
||
Thus did the Great Agnostic again take counsel of his heart. As
|
||
he had already found in human affection the secret, the origin, of
|
||
the hope of hopes, so now did he find the magic essence that keeps
|
||
it bright and pure. Thus did he find that the fairest flower is
|
||
soil and light and dew unto itself, and that by its own fragrance
|
||
it stills the very thorns that threaten its existence, -- the vines
|
||
that venomous clamber to destroy. --
|
||
|
||
"And suppose after all that death does not end all. Next to
|
||
eternal joy, next to being forever with those we love and those who
|
||
have loved us, next to that, is to be wrapped in the dreamless
|
||
sleep. Upon the eternal peace. Next to eternal life is eternal
|
||
sleep. Upon the shadowy shore of death the sea of trouble casts no
|
||
wave. Eyes that have been curtained by the everlasting dark, will
|
||
never know again the burning touch of tears. Lips touched by
|
||
eternal silence will never speak again the broken words of grief.
|
||
Hearts of dust do not break. The dead do not weep. Within the tomb
|
||
no veiled and weeping sorrow sits, and in the rayless gloom is
|
||
crouched no shuddering fear.
|
||
|
||
"I had rather think of those I have loved, and lost, as having
|
||
returned to earth, as having become a part of the elemental wealth
|
||
of the world -- I would rather think of them as unconscious dust,
|
||
I would rather dream of them as gurgling in the streams, floating
|
||
in the clouds, bursting in the foam of light upon the shores of
|
||
worlds, I would rather think of them as the lost visions of a
|
||
forgotten night, than to have even the faintest fear that their
|
||
naked souls have been clutched by an orthodox god. I will leave my
|
||
dead where nature leaves them. Whatever flower of hope springs up
|
||
in my heart I will cherish, I will give it breath of sighs and rain
|
||
of tears. But I can not believe that there is any being in this
|
||
universe who has created a human soul for eternal pain. I would
|
||
rather that every god would destroy himself; I would rather that we
|
||
all should go to eternal chaos, to black and starless night, than
|
||
that just one soul should suffer eternal agony.
|
||
|
||
"I have made up my mind that if there is a god, he will be
|
||
merciful to the merciful.
|
||
|
||
"Upon that rock I stand. --
|
||
|
||
"That he will not torture the forgiving. --
|
||
|
||
"Upon that rock I stand. --
|
||
|
||
"That every man should be true to himself, and that there is
|
||
no world, no star, in which honesty is a crime.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
189
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
"Upon that rock I stand.
|
||
|
||
"The honest man, the good woman, the happy child, have nothing
|
||
to fear, either in this world or in the world to come.
|
||
|
||
"Upon that rock I stand."
|
||
|
||
That this was, indeed, the "rock" upon which he stood, and
|
||
that it and such other of his conclusions as have been presented in
|
||
this chapter were founded in the depths of moral and intellectual
|
||
conviction, are made doubly evident by the private letter which I
|
||
introduce with the following explanation.
|
||
|
||
In the summer of 1885, a lady of San Francisco lost, by sudden
|
||
and unexpected death, her only child, a son. Her grief, in itself
|
||
overwhelming, was greatly intensified by the terrors of the
|
||
Calvinistic creed in which she had been reared, and according to
|
||
which she well knew that there was, for her unconverted son, no
|
||
hope. Such was her anguish that her reason, if not her life, was
|
||
almost despaired of. Among those who vainly tried to console her
|
||
was Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper, a lady very prominent in Bible-class and
|
||
other church work. One would naturally suppose that Mrs. Cooper,
|
||
under the circumstances, would have appealed to some member of the
|
||
clergy; but instead, she turned straightway to Ingersoll, begging
|
||
that he endeavor, by written word, to relieve the bereaved mother
|
||
of her terrible apprehension. His letter was given to a reporter
|
||
for publication, on condition that the name of the recipient be
|
||
withheld: --
|
||
|
||
"My Dear Madam:
|
||
|
||
"Mrs. Cooper has told me the sad story of your almost infinite
|
||
sorrow. I am not foolish enough to suppose that I can say or do
|
||
anything to lessen your great grief, your anguish for his loss; but
|
||
may be I can say something to drive from your poor heart the fiend
|
||
of fear -- fear for him.
|
||
|
||
"If there is a God, let us believe that he is good; and if he
|
||
is good, the good have nothing to fear. I have been told that your
|
||
son was kind and generous; that he was filled with charity and
|
||
sympathy. Now, we know that in this world like begets like,
|
||
kindness produces kindness, and all good bears the fruit of joy.
|
||
Belief is nothing -- deeds are everything; and if your son was kind
|
||
he will naturally find kindness wherever he may be. You would not
|
||
inflict endless pain upon your worst enemy. Is God worse than you?
|
||
You could not bear to see a viper suffer forever. Is it possible
|
||
that God will doom a kind and generous boy to everlasting pain?
|
||
Nothing can be more monstrously absurd and cruel.
|
||
|
||
"The truth is, that no human being knows anything of what is
|
||
beyond the grave. If nothing is known, then it is not honest for
|
||
anyone to pretend that he does know. If nothing is known, then we
|
||
can hope only for the good. If there be a God your boy is no more
|
||
in his power now than he was before his death -- no more than you
|
||
are at the present moment. Why should we fear God more after death
|
||
than before? Does the feeling of God toward his children change the
|
||
moment they die? While we are alive they say God loves us; when
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
190
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
will he cease to love us? True love never changes. I beg of you to
|
||
throw away all fear. Take counsel of your own heart. If God exists,
|
||
your heart is the best revelation of him, and your heart could
|
||
never send your boy to endless pain. After all, no one knows. The
|
||
ministers know nothing. And all the churches in the world know no
|
||
more on this subject than the ants on the ant-hills. Creeds are
|
||
good for nothing except to break the hearts of the loving.
|
||
|
||
"Let us have courage. Under the seven-hued arch of hope let
|
||
the dead sleep. I do not pretend to know, but I do know that others
|
||
do not know. Listen to your heart, believe what it says, and wait
|
||
with patience and without fear for what the future has for all. If
|
||
we can get no comfort from what people know, let us avoid being
|
||
driven to despair by what they do not know.
|
||
|
||
"I wish I could say something that would put a star in your
|
||
night of grief -- a little flower in your lonely path -- and if an
|
||
unbeliever has such a wish, surely an infinitely good being never
|
||
made a soul to be the food of pain through countless years.
|
||
|
||
"Sincerely yours,
|
||
|
||
"R.G. Ingersoll."
|
||
|
||
The reply: --
|
||
|
||
"Dear Colonel Ingersoll:
|
||
|
||
"I found your letter inclosed with one from ______ [Mrs.
|
||
Cooper] at my door on the way to this hotel to see a friend. I
|
||
broke the seal here, and through blinding tears -- letting it fall
|
||
from my hands between each sentence to sob my heart out -- read it.
|
||
The first peace I have known, real peace, since the terrible blow,
|
||
has come to me now. While I will not doubt the existence of God, I
|
||
feel that I can rest my grief-stricken heart on his goodness and
|
||
mercy; and you have helped me do this. Why, you have helped me to
|
||
believe in an all-merciful and loving Creator, who has gathered (I
|
||
will try to believe) my poor little boy -- my kind, large-hearted
|
||
child -- into his tender and sheltering arms. There is genuine ring
|
||
in your words that lifts me up.
|
||
|
||
"Your belief, so clear and logical, so filled with common-
|
||
sense, corresponding, so far back as I can remember, with my own
|
||
matter-of-fact ideas; and I was the child of good and praying
|
||
parents; and my great wondering eyes, questioning silently when
|
||
they talked to me, -- my strange ways, while I tried to be good, --
|
||
caused them often great anxiety and many a pang -- God forgive me!
|
||
|
||
"I am writing, while people are talking about me, just a line
|
||
to thank you from the bottom of my heart for the comfort you have
|
||
given me to-day. You great good man; I see the traces of your tears
|
||
all over your letter, and I could clasp your hand and bless you for
|
||
this comfort you have given my poor heart."
|
||
|
||
And so, at last, we find that Ingersoll did not seek to
|
||
destroy the hope of another life, but that he merely sought "to
|
||
prevent theologians from destroying this"; that he did not seek to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
191
|
||
|
||
INGERSOLL, A BIOGRAPHICAL APPRECIATION
|
||
|
||
disparage the idea of a heaven in which rewards should be based
|
||
upon the principles of eternal justice, but that he did seek "to
|
||
put out the ignorant and revengeful fires of hell." We find that he
|
||
did not affirm, that he did not deny, but that, because he lived,
|
||
the great bow of hope, springing from the depths of human
|
||
affection, arches with brighter radiance the darkness of honest
|
||
doubt.
|
||
|
||
[NOTE: The Mrs. Cooper mentioned in the text and letters was
|
||
president of the Golden Gate Kindergarten Association and Free
|
||
Normal Training School. She was a second or third cousin of
|
||
Ingersoll. Eleven years after the occurrence of the incident above
|
||
related, -- that is, after eleven more years of experience in the
|
||
church, -- she wrote to Ingersoll, in part as follows: "Were I to
|
||
pass away before you, dear cousin Robert, I would rather have you
|
||
say a few words over my sleeping dust than any one in the world. I
|
||
believe in you. I believe less and less in theologians. Experience
|
||
has forced this upon me. There are some true, good men in the
|
||
ministry. There are many false-hearted men, who do not
|
||
deserve to be respected. Of this I am sure."]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom Inc. is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
192
|
||
|