Page:The kernel and the husk (Abbott, 1886).djvu/326

310 XXVIII

——,

You tell me that you have been shewing my letters to some of your young friends, and that they have expressed various objections to non-miraculous Christianity. Some say that I am an "optimist;" others that it is a compromise between faith and reason, and that compromises are always to be rejected; one says that I am for introducing "a new religion;" others that a Gospel of illusion must, by its own shewing, be itself illusive; others, that "these new notions are so vague that they can never be put into a definite shape, and they are so mixed up with theories and fancies and suppositions of error in every period of the Church, that they can never commend themselves to the masses."

Do you know what "cant" means, and why it was so called? "Cant" is the sort of language used (not always deceitfully) when a man "chants," or utters in a kind of sing-song, words that he has not felt himself, or, if he has ever felt, has ceased to feel, through the too frequent use of them. Hence he cannot speak them, but "sing-songs" them, "chants" or "cants" them. Now I take leave to think that two or three of the objections above-mentioned come under this head of "cant." I mean that your young objectors, not knowing exactly at the moment what to say about opinions that are new and require some thought to understand or criticise, and being desirous of saying something at the moment, and something, if possible, that