The Great Agnostic
Page 1
The Great Agnostic
Robert Green Ingersoll, 1877
The
Great
Agnostic
Robert Ingersoll and
American Freethought
Susan Jacoby
Copyright © 2013 by Susan Jacoby.
All rights reserved.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Jacoby, Susan, 1945–
The great agnostic : Robert Ingersoll and American freethought / Susan Jacoby.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 978-0-300-13725-5 (clothbound : alk. paper)
1. Ingersoll, Robert Green, 1833–1899. 2. Freethinkers—United States—Biography. 3. Freethinkers—United States—History.
I. Title.
BL2790.I6J33 2013
211′.7092—dc23 2012027881
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
This paper meets the requirements of
ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper).
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
In memory of Aaron Asher
The most formidable weapon against errors of every kind is reason.
—THOMAS PAINE
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I
The Making of an Iconoclast
II
The Political Insider and the Religious Outsider
III
Champion of Science
IV
The Humanistic Freethinker
V
Church and State
VI
Reason and Passion
VII
Death and Afterlife
Afterword
A Letter to the “New” Atheists
Appendix A
Vivisection
Appendix B
Robert Ingersoll’s Eulogy for Walt Whitman,
March 30, 1892
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
I wish to thank my editor at Yale, Christopher Rogers, for taking on this project; James Johnson for designing the perfect, evocative cover; Joyce Ippolito for an outstanding job of copy editing, including her identification of several words I have been misspelling since childhood; and Laura Jones Dooley for her second look.
As always, I am grateful for the efforts of my longtime literary agents, Georges and Anne Borchardt.
Finally, I wish to thank Jay Barksdale and to say that this book was written in the Allen Room under the shadow of the lions at that great institution, the New York Public Library.
Introduction
How and why do some public figures who were famous in their own time become part of a nation’s historical memory, while others fade away or are confined to what is known on the Internet as “niche fame”? Robert Green Ingersoll (1833–1899), known in the last quarter of the nineteenth century as the “Great Agnostic,” once possessed real fame as one of the two most important champions of reason and secular government in American history—the other being Thomas Paine. Indeed, one of Ingersoll’s lasting accomplishments as the preeminent American orator of his era was the revival of Paine in the historical imagination of a nation that had been the beneficiary, throughout its revolutionary era, of some of the most memorable words ever written in the cause of liberty.
Ingersoll stepped onto the public stage as the leading figure in what historians of American secularism consider the golden age of freethought—an era when immigration, industrialization, and science, especially Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution by means of natural selection, were challenging both religious orthodoxy and the supposedly simpler values of the nation’s rural Anglo-Saxon past. That things were never really so simple was the message Ingersoll repeatedly conveyed as he spoke before more of his countrymen than elected public leaders, including presidents, in an era when lectures were both a form of mass entertainment and a vital source of information. Traveling across the continent at a time when most Americans did not, he spread his message not only to urban audiences but to those who had ridden miles on horseback to hear him speak in towns set down on the prairies of the Middle West and the cattle-grazing lands of the Southwest. Between 1875 and his death in 1899, Ingersoll spoke in every state except Mississippi, North Carolina, and Oklahoma. Known as “Robert Injuresoul” to his clerical enemies, he raised the issue of what role religion ought to play in the public life of the American nation for the first time since the writing of the Constitution, when the founders deliberately left out any acknowledgment of a deity as the source of governmental power. Ingersoll said of the founders:
They knew that to put God in the Constitution was to put man out. They knew that the recognition of a Deity would be seized upon by fanatics and zealots as a pretext for destroying the liberty of thought. They knew the terrible history of the church too well to place in her keeping, or in the keeping of her God, the sacred rights of man. They intended that all should have the right to worship, or not to worship; that our laws should make no distinction on account of creed. They intended to found and frame a government for man, and for man alone. They wished to preserve the individuality of all; to prevent the few from governing the many, and the many from persecuting and destroying the few.1
Of course, this view of the founders’ intentions is far from universally accepted in the United States today. It is unlikely that any American politician with national ambitions would dare describe the secular spirit and letter of the Constitution so forthrightly in the twenty-first century. They knew that to put God in the Constitution was to put man out. It is all too easy to envision this sentence in a thirty-second attack ad on a modern politician who openly advocates secular values, yet the undeniable absence of God from the Constitution poses a serious historical problem for pious “originalists” who, while insisting that the Constitution can mean only what its precise wording laid out in the eighteenth century, are equally insistent that the framers intended to establish a Christian government. I am certain that Ingersoll, given the faith of nineteenth-century freethinkers in the ultimate demise of rigid biblical religion, could never have imagined an America in which, more than a century after his death, a candidate for a major party’s presidential nomination would declare that the very idea of absolute separation of church and state was enough “to make you throw up.”* Ingersoll would have been even more astonished, given his generation’s faith in education and technology, at the same candidate’s dismissal of universal higher education as something that only a snob would support.
To the question that retains its politically divisive power today—whether the United States was founded as a Christian nation—Ingersoll answered an emphatic no. The marvel of the framers, he argued, was that they established “the first secular government that was ever founded in this world” at a time when every government in Europe was still based on union between church and state.2 “Recollect that,” Ingersoll admonished his audience in a centennial oration, delivered on July 4, 1876, in his home town of Peoria, Illinois. “The first secu
lar government; the first government that said every church has exactly the same rights and no more; every religion has the same rights, and no more. In other words, our fathers were the first men who had the sense, had the genius, to know that no church should be allowed to have a sword.”3 A government that had “retired the gods from politics,” Ingersoll declared with decidedly premature optimism on America’s hundredth birthday, was an indispensable condition of progress.4 To nineteenth-century freethinkers, as to their eighteenth-century predecessors, intellectual and material progress went hand-in-hand with abandonment of superstition, and strong ties between government and religion amounted to state-endorsed superstition. Born decades before cities were illuminated by electricity, before the role of bacteria in the transmission of disease was understood, before Darwin’s revolutionary insight that humans were descended from lower animals was fully accepted even within the scientific community, Ingersoll was the most outspoken and influential voice in a movement that was to forge a secular intellectual bridge into the twentieth century for many of his countrymen.
From a twenty-first-century perspective, it is clear that the golden age of freethought, which stretched roughly from 1875 until the beginning of the First World War, divided Americans in much the same fashion, and over many of the same issues, as the culture wars of the past three decades. Even though the religious, ethnic, and economic composition of the late nineteenth-century population differed vastly from that of Americans in the last thirty years of the twentieth century, both eras were characterized by one challenge after another to what were once considered settled cultural truths. The argument over the proper role of religion in civil government was (and is) only a subsidiary of the larger question of whether the claims of supposedly revealed religion deserve any particular respect or deference in a pluralistic society. The other cultural issues that divided Americans in Ingersoll’s time are equally familiar and include evolution, race, immigration, women’s rights, sexual behavior, freedom of artistic expression, and vast disparities in wealth. In the nineteenth century, however, the issues were newer, as was the science bolstering the secular side of the arguments, and the forces of religious orthodoxy were stronger. The overarching question in Ingersoll’s time was whether any of these issues could or should be resolved by appeals to divine authority. To this Ingersoll also said no, spreading the gospel (though he would never have called it that) of reason, science, and humanism to audiences across the country. It is not an overstatement to say that Ingersoll devoted his life to freethought, the lovely term that first appeared in England in the late seventeenth century and was meant to convey devotion to a way of looking at the world based on observation rather than on ancient “sacred” writings by men who believed that the sun revolved around the earth.
Ingersoll’s influence derived in part from his fulfillment of an American archetype—the self-made, self-educated man who, by his own diligence and pursuit of knowledge, rises to fame and fortune—that was already disappearing in post–Civil War America. The son of an unsuccessful Presbyterian minister who never managed to remain attached to one congregation for very long, Ingersoll grew up poor. Like his hero Abraham Lincoln, he had little formal education. Also like Lincoln, he was admitted to the bar not after studying at one of the nation’s few law schools but by learning his trade—and the history and philosophy of law—in an older attorney’s office on the frontier. By the time of Ingersoll’s death just a year before the turn of the twentieth century, his kind of self-made American achiever—whether in law, scholarship, government, the arts, or business—was already on the way to extinction. Ingersoll spoke out of a simpler past, in which self-education was the only route to learning for those not born to money, on behalf of an American future in which education would be available to all.
Despite a schedule so demanding that he occasionally lost his voice in an era when speakers were unaided by sound amplification devices, Ingersoll transmitted energy and enthusiasm to his audiences as he walked around the stage, usually speaking from memory. Described by one twentieth-century biographer as the Babe Ruth of the podium, Ingersoll weighed more than two hundred pounds—a disproportionate share of them concentrated in his abdomen—by his forties. His portliness impelled the Oakland Evening Tribune to note that in another century, the amount of fat in the Great Agnostic’s body would have produced a “spectacular auto da fé.”5 He told his audiences, “We are not endeavoring to chain the future, but to free the present. We are not forging fetters for our children, but we are breaking those our fathers made for us. We are the advocates of inquiry, of investigation, and thought. This of itself, is an admission that we are not perfectly satisfied with our conclusions. Philosophy has not the egotism of faith.”6 Asked if he enjoyed lecturing by a newspaper reporter in Kansas City, the ebullient Ingersoll replied, “Of course I enjoy lecturing. It is a great pleasure to drive the fiend of fear out of the hearts of men, women, and children. It is a positive joy to put out the fires of hell.”7
The continuing lack of public consensus on the proper balance between religion and secularism in American life could easily be used to support the argument that Ingersoll’s current obscurity is richly deserved. He did not, as the explosiveness of religious issues in American politics has made clear since the 1980s, put to rest the issue of whether the United States was founded as a Christian nation. Nor did he manage to lay an unshakable foundation for a future in which Americans would emphatically reject the injection of religious dogma into public schools, in which teaching the biblical story of creation in a high school biology class would be as unthinkable as telling schoolchildren that thunder and lightning were produced by Thor’s hammer. Yet the persistent tension and inflamed emotion surrounding these issues—a phenomenon that exists nowhere else in the developed world—ought to enhance rather than diminish the Great Agnostic’s stature. Intellectual history is a relay race, not a hundred-yard dash. Ingersoll was one of those indispensible people who keep an alternative version of history alive. Such men and women are vital to the real story and identity of a nation, because in their absence, public consensus about the past would be totally controlled by those who wish to re-create the country’s mythic origins in their own image—including founder-worshippers who see the passionate risk-taking revolutionary leaders and anti-intellectual ideologues who think that too much education is a dangerous thing.
To understand Ingersoll’s importance, one need only look at a partial list of distinguished Americans of his own generation who were influenced by his arguments and, even more important, younger admirers who lived on into the twentieth century to make critical contributions to American politics, science, business, and law and to become leaders on behalf of civil liberties and international human rights. This list of nineteenth-and twentieth-century luminaries—poets, artists, inventors, social reformers, even a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame—includes Clara Barton, Clarence Darrow, Luther Burbank, Eugene V. Debs, Frederick Douglass, W. C. Fields, H. L. Mencken, Robert M. LaFollette, Andrew Carnegie, Margaret Sanger, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, Thomas Edison, and my favorite Ingersoll fan of all, “Wahoo” Sam Crawford, baseball’s outstanding power hitter throughout the first two decades of the twentieth century.* Ingersoll’s appeal as a freethinker cut across political and class boundaries. A Republican who upheld the gold standard and traveled in social circles that included business titans like Carnegie, Ingersoll’s closest friends and fervent admirers also included champions of labor such as Debs, who would garner more than a million votes as the Socialist candidate for president in 1920, and LaFollette of Wisconsin, the leader of American Progressivism until his death in 1925. “Ingersoll had a tremendous influence on me,” LaFollette recalled in later years. “He liberated my mind. Freedom was what he preached; he wanted the shackles off everywhere. He wanted me to think boldly about all things. … He was a rare, bold, heroic figure.”8
The nation’s most famous agnostic and freethinker, also a successful
trial lawyer, gave up a promising career in politics to pursue his campaign against religious orthodoxy and for the separation of church and state. Then as now, a man who openly rejected belief in a deity and in all religion could never hope to go far in American politics. As part of his mission, Ingersoll elucidated Darwin’s theory of evolution for millions of Americans who might otherwise have heard about the great scientific insight of their age only through the attacks of biblical literalists. Unlike orator-celebrities today, Ingersoll did not preach only to the converted (or, in his case, to the unconverted). The diverse array of men and women who jammed lecture halls to hear Ingersoll could scarcely have presented a shaper contrast to today’s segmented American audience, whose members generally tune in to pundits and log on to blogs that merely reflect and reinforce preexisting views.
Ingersoll would have been contemptuous of the idea that anonymous “free speech,” as practiced by bloggers with nothing at stake in the real world, had anything of value to contribute to public discourse. To influence the public in the late nineteenth century, one was required to speak and appear as oneself. And as contemporary newspaper accounts make clear, Ingersoll was a master at reaching people who did not necessarily agree with him or who might have been downright hostile. When he appeared for the first time in medium-sized cities where orthodox religious influence was strong, Ingersoll’s reputation as a heretic often held down the size of the audience. That was never true the second time the Great Agnostic spoke. Once the local newspapers reported on the entertainment value of Ingersoll’s talks, tickets became a prize for scalpers. In Iowa, the Mason City Republican reported that a majority of those attending an 1885 Ingersoll lecture were orthodox religious believers who nevertheless appreciated Ingersoll’s wit at the expense of their own faith. “Foreordination laughs jostled freewill smiles,” the reporter recalled, “Baptist cachinations floated out to join apostolic roars, and there was a grand unison of orthodox cheers for the most unorthodox jokes.”9