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Gerald
Massey.
A carte-de-visite
by
Henry Y. Porter & S. B. Heald, Boston, USA. |
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Gold, art thou not a blessèd thing, a
charm above
all other,
To shut up hearts to Nature's cry, when brother
pleads with brother?
Hast thou a music sweeter than the voice of
loving-kindness?
No! curse thee, thou'rt a mist 'twixt God and men
in outer blindness.
'Father, come back!' my Children cry; their
voices, once so sweet,
Now pierce and quiver in my heart! I cannot,
dare not meet
The looks that make the brain go mad, for dear
ones asking bread—
God of the Wretched, hear my prayer: I would
that I were dead!
From... A Cry of the
Unemployed |
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――――♦――――
SHELLEY AND HIS POETRY
attributable to Gerald Massey.
'He was treated as a Reprobate,
cast forth as a Criminal! The cause was, he believed his Opinions
true, and, he loved Truth, with a Martyr's love; this Sacrifice, was
demanded of a Youth 17 years of Age! and he shrank not from it, but pafs'd
the ordeal nobly....'
This article, taken from an 1848 issue of a
circulating manuscript newspaper, The Attempt, is Massey's earliest known writing in prose. |
――――♦――――
Extracts
from the Uxbridge Pioneer
No. 1, February 1849,
both written and attributable to Gerald Massey.
'The
Spirit of Freedom, and Working Man's Vindicator. Conducted by
WORKING MEN. This monthly Penny periodical—formerly
a weekly—printed
at Uxbridge,—is
already widely known among working men. Its editor is Gerald Massey,
a young man of very high poetic talent, and a frequent contributor to
Cooper's Journal. John Rymill of Northampton, another earnest
hearted working-man, is one of its essayists; and the band of
fervent-minded young men, who are thus putting forth their burning
thoughts to the masses, cannot fail to be felt, and to produce stirring
effects in the Future. Periodicals like these are among the most notable
'Signs of the Times.' There is, surely, hope for England, while her
toiling children are breathing out these unmistakeable syllables of their
aspirations. By every association of workingmen for mutual instruction
this periodical ought to be purchased.' [From Cooper's Journal,
March 2nd, 1850.] |
――――♦――――
THE
RED REPUBLICAN
&
THE FRIEND OF THE
PEOPLE
EQUALITY, LIBERTY, FRATERNITY
EDITED BY G. JULIAN HARNEY.
1850. |
――――♦――――
COOPER'S
JOURNAL:
OR, UNFETTERED THINKER AND PLAIN SPEAKER FOR
TRUTH, FREEDOM, AND PROGRESS.
(February 23, 1850)
SIGNS
OF PROGRESS
Effusive rhetoric from
the twenty two-year old Massey on 'machinery and capital'
crushing the masses, some half a century before the birth of the British
Labour Party. |
――――♦――――
THE CHRISTIAN SOCIALIST.
3 May, 1851.
THE
BROTHERHOOD OF LABOUR
'Thou shouldst be doing
something, for the world, the good and glorious world! For thee she
clothes herself like a bride, in the garniture of spring's loveliness! and
for thee the flowers start up at our feet, smiling into our eyes as
meaningly as though they knew we ought to have happy hearts and cheerful
countenances!'
Young Massey
in lyrical mode, encouraging those who, in truth, were probably far beyond
encouragement. |
――――♦――――
THE CHRISTIAN SOCIALIST.
August - September 1851.
TENNYSON AND HIS
POETRY
Massey's belief expressed in this, among his earliest
literary essays, is that....'The
Muse of Tennyson is truly a 'dainty Ariel.' She does not startle, or
astound, but like the invisible spirit, waylays, bewilders, and enchants
you. The subtle spirit of her magic melody, and the power of her
exceeding beauty, have permeated you through and through, ere you are
aware, and, scarcely knowing why, you come most naturally to the
conclusion that Tennyson is the greatest, the sweetest, and the perfectest
of our living singers.'
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――――♦――――
THE CHRISTIAN SOCIALIST.
September - November 1851.
TENNYSON'S PRINCESS
'After reading the 'Princess'
again and again, one is surprised at what they missed on reading it the
first time.....Read it again, it was your carelessness and opaqueness, not
the poet's want of light and lustre. It was your blindness, and
deafness, not his lack of divine wisdom, and melody.'
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――――♦――――
THE FRIEND OF THE PEOPLE.
Final editions, published during 1852.
EARLY, SHORT LITERARY ESSAYS, BOOK REVIEWS AND ARTICLES ON
MILTON, WORDSWORTH,
TENNYSON, POE AND OTHERS.
'Properly
speaking, there is no life of Milton at all worthy of the name; there
have been many inadequate attempts, principally by his enemies, who have
each flung a stone upon the place where he lies, until it has become a
cairn, and that which was intended to obliterate, has become his monument......We cannot be Milton, my brothers, but we may
strive to imitate his devotedness, his earnestness, manliness, purity,
and patriotism; and there is none so mean and humble but may do something
to hasten on the time of which we dream, that shall crown long years of
blood, and tears, and misery, and degradation, when the poor man's heart
shall leap for gladness, and the desert of his life shall blossom as the
rose.' |
――――♦――――
NORTHERN TRIBUNE
[Vol. I, No. 12, 1854]
MAZZINI AND ITALY
'Mazzini
is one of the few unsuccessful great men that are not used up and killed
out by defeat. It is difficult for the world to see the hero in the
unsuccessful man.
But Mazzini has stamped his impression upon it as indelibly as
the image of a king upon the coinage from his mint....'
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――――♦――――
HOGG'S INSTRUCTOR
[Vol. IV. 1855]
THOMAS
HOOD, POET AND PUNSTER
'In the sunshine of spirit which he calls forth, he
sets his tears
as very jewels of wit.' |
――――♦――――
HOGG'S INSTRUCTOR
[Vol. V. 1855]
THE
POETRY OF ALFRED TENNYSON
'.....it is the voice of Tennyson we hear soaring
triumphantly above the long agony of doubt, soothing as
that of a sister leading the bewildered mind out
of the burning trance of delirium.'
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――――♦――――
NORTH BRITISH REVIEW
[Vol. 28, February 1858]
POETRY—THE
SPASMODISTS
'It appears to us that Robert Browning is, in a sense,
one of the greatest spasmodists, so far as a wilful delight in remote
and involved thinking, abrupt and jerking mental movements, and 'pernickitieness'
of expression, working, in the higher regions of genius, can constitute
a spasmodist.'
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――――♦――――
NORTH BRITISH REVIEW
[Vol. 33, Nov 1860]
AMERICAN
HUMOUR
'One man will be struck with the difference between things as they are, and as they ought to be, or might be. It fills his spirit with sadness. Another cannot help laughing at many of their incongruities. But the man who can laugh as well as weep is most a man. The greatest humorists have often been also the most serious seers, and men of most earnest heart. Hence their humour passes into pathos at their will.'
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NORTH BRITISH REVIEW
[Vol. 34, May 1861]
THE
POEMS AND PLAYS OF
ROBERT
BROWNING
'No other living poet has sounded such depths of human feeling, or can smite the soul with such a rush of kindling energy. Great and lofty and deep as Tennyson is, he has no such range.'........'It seems to us that Mr Browning has narrowly missed being the greatest poet living. But he has missed it, and Tennyson is crowned instead. Mr Browning has the wider range,
and grasps more, but he brings less home to us.'
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NORTH BRITISH REVIEW
[Vol. 35, November 1861]
POETS
AND POETRY OF YOUNG IRELAND
'One would think that there
was also a defect in the Irish mind which incapacitates it for taking a
real possession of the present, and working out of the present a better
future.......It turns to some far past, and its poets sing of the bygone
days, as though they belonged to a race which has a splendid past, but a
hopeless future. Their true possessions appear to remain in a
far-off land that lies near the dawn, and is only visible in all its
glory when looked at across a sea of tears.'
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NORTH BRITISH REVIEW
[VOL. 36, MAY 1862]
THE POEMS AND
OTHER WORKS OF
MRS BROWNING
'On, on she goes, with great bursts of feeling and
gushes of thought, that follow one
another with a spontaneity that is always surprising,
often startling, and sometimes savage.'.......'One thing we have to acknowledge, here as elsewhere,
is the courage with which
she never hesitates to lift up her voice for what she
considers the right.'
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QUARTERLY REVIEW
[Vol. 114, April 1863]
LIFE AND
WRITINGS OF THOMAS HOOD.
'It is a very
noticeable feature in Hood's character that, with even worse health than
Pope's, he was of a most sweet temper; and no amount of pain and
buffeting could turn him into one of the wasps of wit.'
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――――♦――――
NORTH BRITISH REVIEW
[Vol. 39, August 1863]
THOMAS DE QUINCEY—GRAVE
AND GAY.
'.....De Quincey knows the
lie that is trying to pass muster for truth. He has an eye almost
Shakspearian for detecting the true features of a man who may stand afar
off, half-hidden under the veil of distance. He has a sure grasp
of reality, and can estimate at their true value the glitter and graces,
the tinsel and powder, and fluttering affectations of the 'teacup
times.'''
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――――♦――――
QUARTERLY REVIEW
[Vol. 115, January 1864]
NEW ENGLANDERS
AND THE OLD HOME.
'Most
people have noticed how Nature, at certain whimsical moments, will mould
human faces, features, expressions, so queerly comical and quaintly
absurd that all the attempts of caricature fail to match them.
Leech, Doyle, and Cruikshank are outdone any day in the streets of
London.''
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QUARTERLY REVIEW
[Vol. 115, April 1864]
SHAKSPEARE
AND HIS SONNETS.
'It
is demonstrable that the poet did not contemplate being known to the world
as the writer of these Sonnets. The work was a cherished love-secret on
his part, all the dearer for the privacy. He thought of doing it, and he
believed it would live, and that his friend and all the love between them
should live on in it, but he himself was to steal off unidentified.' |
――――♦――――
THE QUARTERLY REVIEW
[VOLUME 118,
July 1865.]
BROWNING'S POEMS.
'Mr. Browning's powers ought to be
better understood than he is, and the discrepancy lessened betwixt what is
known of him by the few, and what is thought of him by the many. He has
qualities such as should be cherished by the age we live in, for it needs
them. His poetry ought to be taken as a tonic. He grinds no mere
hand-organ or music-box of pretty tunes; he does not try to attract the
multitude with the scarlet dazzle of poppies in his corn; he is not a poet
of similes, who continually makes comparisons which are the mere play of
fancy; he has nothing of the ordinary technique of poetry; he has felt
himself driven, somewhat consciously, to the opposite course of using, as
much as possible, the commonest forms of speech.' |
――――♦――――
QUARTERLY REVIEW
[Vol. 122, January 1867]
YANKEE
HUMOUR.
'Human nature in America is somewhat like the articles
in a great exhibition, where the largest and loudest things first catch
the eye and usurp the attention....'
'.....there
is among the Americans a stronger backing of sound sense, of
clear seeing, and of right feeling, than we could have gathered any idea
of from their political mouthpieces.' |
――――♦――――
FRASER'S MAGAZINE
(May
1867)
CHARLES
LAMB
'...a mob of happy faces crowding up at the pit
door of Drury Lane Theatre, just at the hour of six, gave him ten
thousand sincerer pleasures than he could have received from all the
flocks of silly sheep that ever whitened the plains of Arcadia...'
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――――♦――――
HUMAN
NATURE
[Vol. 5, August 1871]
An ADDRESS
.....presented by the Spiritualists of England
to MRS. EMMA HARDINGE
BRITTEN at her Farewell Conversazione, held in St.
George's Hall, London, July 28, 1871.
'....you could not have
won more golden opinions, made more real friendships, left behind more
cherished recollections, or carried away with you more fervent blessings. Thanks, and Farewell.' |
――――♦――――
THE SPIRITUALIST NEWSPAPER
[June 1874]
ETERNAL PUNISHMENT AND ORTHODOX THEOLOGY
'What is there that men have not
found compatible with mere belief? Have they not cut each other's
throats, believing it to be for the glory of God? Have they not
burned bodies by the thousand, believing it to be the surest way of saving
souls from hell? Why, men have believed that by standing on one leg
for thirty years they would be permitted to hop into heaven at last.' |
――――♦――――
LUCIFER
[Vol. I, November 1887]
BLOOD-COVENANTING
'The truth is that no
bibliolator can be trusted to interpret the past of our race now being
unveiled by evolution. He is born and begotten with the blinkers on.
His mode of interpretation is to get behind us, to lay the hands upon our
eyes in front, and ask us to listen whilst he gives us his views of the
past!' |
――――♦――――
NILE GENESIS:
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE OPUS OF
GERALD MASSEY
by
CHARLES
S. FINCH
M.D.
'In contemporary times, Gerald Massey is primarily remembered for his
poetry, literary criticism, and socialist politics all in the pursuit of
which he applied his boundless energy. But it is in his forays into
human ‘typological’ beginnings, framed in the evolutionary perspective of
Darwin and Wallace, and probed through the antiquarian medium of
Egyptology and comparative mythology that Massey’s true genius is
revealed. To this effort – this opus – Massey dedicated the last 36
years of his life, resulting in three Herculean two-volume works which, as
they find a slowly expanding readership, are permanently changing our
perception of ancient history, human origins, and the primal place of
Africa – Massey’s 'Old Dark Land' – in the evolution of human
consciousness from its beginning.'
――――♦――――
THE EGYPTIAN
ORIGINS OF CHRISTIANITY
by
RICHARD
A. SATTLEBERG,
B.A., F.T.S.
'The average Christian has probably never suspected that the Gospels
he cherishes contain many points of similarity with ancient Egyptian
teachings. While it is true that the Gospels, and the Bible as a whole,
has been subjected to close scrutiny by scholars for some time now,
especially during the last hundred years, most of them have never even
suggested that the Gospels may very well have been based on the Ritual of
the 'Egyptian Book of the Dead'.' |
――――♦――――
Gerald
Massey's Lectures
[1887]
'In presenting my
readers with some of the data which show that much of the Christian
History was pre-extant as Egyptian Mythology, I have to ask you to bear
in mind that the facts, like other foundations, have been buried out of
sight for thousands of years in a hieroglyphical language, that was
never really read by Greek or Roman, and could not be read until the
lost clue was discovered by Champollion, almost the other day! In this
way the original sources of our Mytholatry and Christology remained as
hidden as those of the Nile, until the century in which we live. The
mystical matter enshrouded in this language was sacredly entrusted to
the keeping of the buried dead, who have faithfully preserved it as
their Book of Life, which was placed beneath their pillows, or clasped
to their bosoms, in their coffins and their tombs.'
Note: the following lectures were
published privately and sold separately by the author. Paragraph numbers do not appear in
the original editions, but are
here inserted
to assist with referencing. |
――――♦――――
THE MEDIUM AND DAYBREAK
[April 15, 1887]
Simon of Samaria
'Simon of Samaria is a
Gnostic friend of mine, in whom I feel a particular interest, as one of
those who have suffered (if mind can consciously persist) for eighteen
centuries from the falsehoods and forgeries that helped to establish the
demoralizing delusion of Historic Christianity. If I were a believer in
the re-incarnation of individual personality, I might fancy that I am one
of those same victims come back again consciously to aid in avenging the
great wrongs we have sorely suffered for so long, like men made dumb
through being buried alive.' |
――――♦――――
THE MEDIUM AND DAYBREAK
[July 22, 1887]
Mr. Gerald Massey's reply to
Dr. A. R. Wallace
'It would be a serious error for
any man of science even to use the language of ignorance concerning
miracles, which the vulgar sense imply a supernatural interference with
natural law. But Mr. Wallace does more than that, in vouching for
the biblical miracles being actual facts.' |
――――♦――――
LUCIFER
[October, 1887]
Are
the Teachings Ascribed to Jesus Contradictory?
'. . . if the Christian scheme of damnation be
true, as assigned to the teaching of Jesus, no humane person should want
to know that there is any hereafter.'
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――――♦――――
THE AGNOSTIC ANNUAL
[1888]
The Name and
Nature of The Christ.
'Having stated in my
lecture on 'The
Historical Jesus and the Mythical Christ' that the Egyptian
hieroglyphics were never read by the Greeks or Romans, I have been
challenged to show how the Mythos, which was shrouded in a dead language,
could, in its astronomical and mystical phases, have been reproduced in
Greece and Rome if, as I have asserted, the Greeks and Romans did not read
the hieroglyphics.......' |
――――♦――――
The Secret Drama of Shakspeare's Sonnets
(1888 edition.)
'It must be borne in mind that we are endeavouring to
decipher a secret history of an unexampled kind. We can get little
help except from the written words themselves. We must rely
implicitly on that inner light of the Sonnets, left like a lamp in a tomb
of old, which will lead us with the greater certainty to the precise spot
where we shall touch the secret spring and make clear the mystery.
We must ponder any the least minutiæ of thought, feeling, or expression,
and not pass over one mote of meaning because we do not easily see its
significance. Some little thing that we cannot make fit with the old
reading may be the key to the right interpretation.'
Shakespeare
in Domestic Life
Ostensibly a review of 'Shakespeare’s
Sonnets, never before Interpreted; His Private Friends Identified:
together with a Recovered Likeness of Himself' (1866). While the
reviewer has comparatively little to say about Massey's first published volume
of
conjectures on the circumstances surrounding
the Sonnets, the article provides an interesting Victorian view
of Shakespeare's life and times.
A Short Critique of Gerald Massey’s work on
Shakespeare's Sonnets
by Ernie Wingeatt
(December, 2008).
'. . . . what Massey’s research
lacks is complete intellectual honesty and rigour. This is emphasised
when considering what Akrigg has to say at the end of his study of
Shakespeare and Southampton where he touches precisely on the problems
that a modern academic faces in achieving a truly objective account of
what took place historically. He notes the need for caution by
observing: “all those warning uses of ‘probably’, ‘apparently’, ‘might’
and ‘may’ which scholarly conscience requires” are what he as a scholar
for a moment suspends in order to summarize the probable in terms of the
relationship between the two men.
What should matter about Massey and his ideas on Shakespeare is that
they be studied more for the worth of the understanding it gives to us
of the age in which he [Massey] lived, its view of the world and how he
[Massey] fits into that age, rather than for the work alone. There
is a rich seam of material here for the student of Victorian mores, the
growth of English Literature as a subject for academic study and the
working man’s part in those things. . . .' |
――――♦――――
NATIONAL REVIEW
(October, 1888)
Myth
and Totemism
as
Primitive Modes of Representation.
together
with
An
Introduction
by
Rey Bowen
reproduced
with the author's kind permission.
Note:
paragraph numbers did not appear in Massey's original essay.
They are
here inserted
to assist with referencing.
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――――♦――――
My
Lyrical Life: Explanatory
Poems Old and New
BY
GERALD MASSEY
London: 1889
'....I saw
myself described the other day as being the most
unpublished of Living Authors.
There were
reasons for this. It happens that I have not hitherto had a Publisher...' |
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