6 Quotes & Sayings By Jonathan Clements

Jonathan Clements is an English author and literary critic. He has written extensively on the works of Charles Dickens, as well as on such writers as William Shakespeare, Jane Austen and Emily Brontë, and has contributed to The Times Literary Supplement and The Economist magazine. His book "The Book of Jane Austen" was published by Macmillan in 1995. He is the author of "The Lost Art of Reading: A Guide to Good Books", a review of a literary culture which he believes has been gradually perishing since the late nineteenth century Read more

1
In the Modern Age, there are still those who refuse to contradict a single word of the Bible, even though the Bible contradicts itself. Jonathan Clements
2
Natural science in England, as Darwin already knew to his cost, was still the purview of Christian scholars. But here was a question that Darwin found compelling: if God had created all the creatures of the world, what possible reason could there be for the variations found in the Galápagos? Jonathan Clements
3
In 1867, George Campbell, Duke of Argyll, had published The Reign of Law, a book that Darwin found deeply annoying. A supporter of Richard Owen, Campbell argued that while evolution (or "Development") might be observable in the fossil record, it was merely evidence of God's purpose. God, for example, would cause horses and oxen to evolve in time to meet human needs. The brightly colored plumage of birds, Campbell went on, were simply God's decorations of nature for humanity's enjoyment. . Jonathan Clements
4
In what appears to have been an unplanned quip, Wilberforce asked Huxley if he thought he was descended from an ape on his father's or mother's side. Huxley retorted that he would rather have simian relatives than claim kinship with a man who used his charisma and authority to quash free debate. Jonathan Clements
5
Thomas Wollaston, in the Annals and Magazine of Natural History, complained that Darwin did no seem to know what a species actually was. The British Quarterly, deliberately sitting up trouble, speculated that a time might come when a monkey could propose marriage to a genteel British lady. Perhaps cruelest of all was a cartoon in Punch magazine, depicting a gorilla with a sign on its neck. Deliberately evoking the anti-slavery tract of Darwin's Wedgwood forbears, the sign read:" Am I a Man and a Brother?. Jonathan Clements