4 EXPANSION OF ENGLAND. [lect.
Those vague flourishes usually consisted in some
reference to what was called the advance of civilisation.
No definition of civilisation was given; it was spoken
of in metaphorical language as a light, a day gradually
advancing through its twilight and its dawn towards its
noon ; it was contrasted with a remote ill-defined period,
called the Dark Ages. Whether it would always go on
brightening, or whether, like the physical day, it would
pass again into afternoon and evening, or whether it would
come to an end by a sudden eclipse, as the light of
civilisation in the ancient world might appear to have
done, all this was left in the obscurity convenient to a
theory which was not serious, and which only existed for
the purpose of rhetorical ornament.
It is a very fair sample of bad philosophising, this
theory of civilisation. You have to explain a large mass
of phenomena, about which you do not even know that
they are of the same kind—but they happen to come into
view at the same time— ; what do you do but fling over
the whole mass a word, which holds them together like
a net ? You carefully avoid defining this word, but in
speaking of it you use metaphors which imply that it
denotes a living force of unknown, unlimited properties,
so that a mere reference to it is enough to explain the
most wonderful, the most dissimilar effects. It was used
to explain a number of phenomena which had no further
apparent connexion with each other than that they happened
often to appear together in history ; sometimes the soften
ing of manners, sometimes mechanical inventions, some
times religious toleration, sometimes the appearance of
great poets and artists, sometimes scientific discoveries,
sometimes constitutional liberty. It was assumed, though
it was never proved, that all these things belonged together