76 INTRODUCTION. 



I almost entirely to the novel field of social and economic 

 problems. But against this there was a young growth 

 of ideas springing up in the poetic literature of the 

 nation. It is the freshness of individual thought as 

 clothed in the poetic language of Shelley and Words- 

 worth, maturing and deepening in the works of Tennyson 

 and Browning, which strikes us as the most original phase 

 of English thought in this century, whether we compare 

 it with Continental thought of the same period, or with 

 English thought of the previous age. 



26. And lastly, we might be tempted to make the great 



Goethe's 



'Faust 're- work of the grcatcst mind of the early part of our period, 



presenta- '-' ' ^ - 



thougiit'of Groethe's ' Faust,' the centre and beginning of our survey, 

 the century, g^^gj^^g j^; out as a Comprehensive embodiment, as the 

 classical expression of nineteenth - century doubts and 

 aspirations, leading us if we try to understand it 

 now into the bewildering labyrinth of philosophy, now 

 into the cheerful expanse of natural science, and again 

 into the hidden depths of individual life, of religious 

 faith with its mysteries of sin and redemption. 



But from whatsoever point we may start on our journey, 



""^ from whatsoever easily reached eminence we may cast a 



first eager glance across the wide country which we wish 



to explore, there is one feature which impresses itself 



27. alike upon our minds from the very beginning. It is not 



A period ^ J o o 



posebut'of ^ country of repose and restfulness, of healthy industry 



ferment. ^^^^ quict work, of gradual development, of ripening 



crops, of sowing or ingathering ; it does not present the 



aspect of a happy division of labour, of successful co- 



I operation, of peaceful regulation of employment. It looks 



more like a land which has lately been disturbed by 



