2 EXPANSION OF ENGLAND. [lect.
absolutely at least if not always relatively. It is far greater
now than it was in the eighteenth century; it was far
greater in the eighteenth century than in the seventeenth,
far greater in the seventeenth than in the sixteenth.
The prodigious greatness to which it has attained makes
the question of its future infinitely important and at the
same time most anxious, because it is evident that the
great colonial extension of our state exposes it to new
dangers, from which in its ancient insular insignificance
it was free.
The interest of English history ought therefore to
deepen steadily to the close, and, since the future grows out
of the past, the history of the past of England ought to
give rise to a prophecy concerning her future. Yet our
popular historians scarcely seem to think so. Does not
Aristotle say that a drama ends, but an epic poem only
leaves off? English history, as it is popularly related,
not only has no distinct end, but leaves off in such a
gradual manner, growing feebler and feebler, duller and
duller, towards the close, that one might suppose that
England, instead of steadily gaining in strength, had been
for a century or two dying of mere old age. Can this be
right ? Ought the stream to be allowed thus to lose itself
and evaporate in the midst of a sandy desert ? The ques
tion brings to mind those lines of Wordsworth :
It is not to be thought of that the flood
Of British freedom, which to the open sea
Of the world’s praise, from dark antiquity
Hath flowed 'with pomp of waters unwithstood’,
Boused though it be full often to a mood
Which spurns the check of salutary bands,
That this most famous stream in bogs and sands
Should perish, and to evil and to good