I HOPE that the Vicar will pardon the haste With which an occasion once more is embrac'd Of getting some knowledge, in points that I seek, From one so well vers'd both in Hebrew and Greek, In a question of fact, where a friendly pursuit Has @3the truth@1 for its object, and not @3the dispute:@1 Which, tho' haste should encroach upon metrical leisure, Will be sure, if it rise, to be kept within measure. It would save much voluminous labour sometimes, If disputes were tied down to dispassionate rhymes, As well as to reason.But, not to digress, Having weigh'd his responses both larger and less, I resume the same subject, same freedom of pen, To intreat for some small satisfaction again In relation to points, which, appearing absurd, Have extorted poetical favour the third. Three things are laid down in prose favour the last, And regard to his thoughts would have none of them past; To his first it was paid, to his future shall be; But let "Veritas magis amica" be free. First @3manage the comma,@1 says he, @3how you will,@1 SPEAK, @3or@1 HEAR, @3the same sense will result from it still:@1 Yes, the sense of the context, λαλουντων αυτων, "While they speak in @3their tongue,@1 we all hear in @3our own." The Hebrew word@1 for TONGUE, says he next, @3Whene'er it is us'd by itself in a text, Never signifies fire, never signifies flame,@1 And, believing it true, I say also the same. But in joint, @3tongue of fire,@1 or a @3blaze,@1 Foreign languages claim no symbolical phrase; Tho' @3tongue@1 may occasion mistake to befal, It has here no relation to language at all. @3Short issue,@1 he thinks, @3the dispute will admit,@1 And desires me @3to answer this query, to wit, Were the tongues, the new tongues, which a promise was made That Disciples should speak, as St. Mark hath display'd, New languages, such as have never been got By learning beforehand to speak them, or not?@1 To which for the present, till somebody shew That it must have this meaning, my answer is, "no." Now this, if he can, I could wish he would do, And prove the constructionNEW LANGUAGEStrue, In the sense that he means:for, when all understood One person who spake, it was really as good As if numbers had spoken, or promised grace Were interpreted languages here in this place. The effect was the same, and may answer the pith Of all that his second has favour'd me with. Still difficult, then, if we carefully sift, Is the vulgar account of the Pentecost gift, Which the learned advance, and establish thereon What the Vicar has built his ideas upon, With additions thereto, which, as far as I see, Not one of the learned has added, but he; For example,if some,very few, I presume, Have describ'd the Disciples as quitting the room. But let them be many, what reason, what trace Do we find of their leaving the sanctify'd place? Of a wind from above did they fear at the shake? And the house, thro' a doubt of its falling, forsake? Or did they go forth to the gathering quire, Lest the many bright flames should have set it on fire? If a thought could have enter'd of going away, What circumstance was not strong motive to stay? Then again@3that the foreigners, all of them, knew The language then us'd at Jerusalem too@1 For the miracle's sake one would here have demurr'd; Which is render'd so needless, improper, absurd, That Jerusalem mockers would really have had A pretence to alledge that the pious were mad; For of speaking strange tongues what accountable aim, Or of hearing fifteen, when they all knew the same? Add to this@3the Disciples, the Hundred and Twenty, Spake amongst one another strange tongues in like plenty, One by one,@1 says the Vicar, who very well saw What confusion would rise without some such a law As the text has no hint of, which says "they began "To speak by the Spirit," not @3man after man:@1 Could time have suffic'd for so doing, yet why Speak the tongues of such men, as were none of them by? The Vicar saw too that this could not attract Any multitude thither, supposing it fact; And so he conceiv'd that @3a rumour was spread By the men of the house,@1 of whom nothing is said. Now, when men of his learning are forc'd to find out Such unchronicled salvos to dissipate doubt, One is apt to infer a well grounded suspense, And the more to look out for more natural sense. I wish my old friend would consider the case, And how ill it consists with effusion of grace To speak Parthian and Median, and so of the rest, To none but themselves being present address'd: Unless he can grant, on revolving the point, That indeed there is something not rightly in joint, Or solve one's objections, or shew one the way How to clear up the matter.What can a man say? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SELF-DEPENDENCE by MATTHEW ARNOLD A BALLAD OF SARSFIELD; OR, THE BURSTING OF THE GUNS by AUBREY THOMAS DE VERE TO SIR HENRY WOTTON (1) by JOHN DONNE THE WIDOW'S MITE by FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON THE NINE LITTLE GOBLINS by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY VALENTINES TO MY MOTHER: 1882 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI |