登陆注册
38538600000397

第397章

I do not say that no man should accuse another, who is not clean himself,--for then no one would ever accuse,--clean from the same sort of spot; but I mean that our judgment, falling upon another who is then in question, should not, at the same time, spare ourselves, but sentence us with an inward and severe authority. 'Tis an office of charity, that he who cannot reclaim himself from a vice, should, nevertheless, endeavour to remove it from another, in whom, peradventure, it may not have so deep and so malignant a root; neither do him who reproves me for my fault that he himself is guilty of the same. What of that? The reproof is, notwithstanding, true and of very good use. Had we a good nose, our own ordure would stink worse to us, forasmuch as it is our own: and Socrates is of opinion that whoever should find himself, his son, and a stranger guilty of any violence and wrong, ought to begin with himself, present himself first to the sentence of justice, and implore, to purge himself, the assistance of the hand of the executioner; in the next place, he should proceed to his son, and lastly, to the stranger. If this precept seem too severe, he ought at least to present himself the first, to the punishment of his own conscience.

The senses are our first and proper judges, which perceive not things but by external accidents; and 'tis no wonder, if in all the parts of the service of our society, there is so perpetual and universal a mixture of ceremonies and superficial appearances; insomuch that the best and most effectual part of our polities therein consist. 'Tis still man with whom we have to do, of whom the condition is wonderfully corporal. Let those who, of these late years, would erect for us such a contemplative and immaterial an exercise of religion, not wonder if there be some who think it had vanished and melted through their fingers had it not more upheld itself among us as a mark, title, and instrument of division and faction, than by itself. As in conference, the gravity, robe, and fortune of him who speaks, ofttimes gives reputation to vain arguments and idle words, it is not to be presumed but that a man, so attended and feared, has not in him more than ordinary sufficiency; and that he to whom the king has given so many offices and commissions and charges, he so supercilious and proud, has not a great deal more in him, than another who salutes him at so great a distance, and who has no employment at all. Not only the words, but the grimaces also of these people, are considered and put into the account; every one ****** it his business to give them some fine and solid interpretation. If they stoop to the common conference, and that you offer anything but approbation and reverence, they then knock you down with the authority of their experience: they have heard, they have seen, they have done so and so: you are crushed with examples. I should willingly tell them, that the fruit of a surgeon's experience, is not the history of his practice and his remembering that he has cured four people of the plague and three of the gout, unless he knows how thence to extract something whereon to form his judgment, and to make us sensible that he has thence become more skillful in his art. As in a concert of instruments, we do not hear a lute, a harpsichord, or a flute alone, but one entire harmony, the result of all together. If travel and offices have improved them, 'tis a product of their understanding to make it appear. 'Tis not enough to reckon experiences, they must weigh, sort and distil them, to extract the reasons and conclusions they carry along with them. There were never so many historians: it is, indeed, good and of use to read them, for they furnish us everywhere with excellent and laudable instructions from the magazine of their memory, which, doubtless, is of great concern to the help of life; but 'tis not that we seek for now: we examine whether these relaters and collectors of things are commendable themselves.

I hate all sorts of tyranny, both in word and deed. I am very ready to oppose myself against those vain circumstances that delude our judgments by the senses; and keeping my eye close upon those extraordinary greatnesses, I find that at best they are men, as others are:

"Rarus enim ferme sensus communis in illa Fortuna."

["For in those high fortunes, common sense is generally rare."--Juvenal, viii. 73.]

Peradventure, we esteem and look upon them for less than they are, by reason they undertake more, and more expose themselves; they do not answer to the charge they have undertaken. There must be more vigour and strength in the bearer than in the burden; he who has not lifted as much as he can, leaves you to guess that he has still a strength beyond that, and that he has not been tried to the utmost of what he is able to do; he who sinks under his load, makes a discovery of his best, and the weakness of his shoulders. This is the reason that we see so many silly souls amongst the learned, and more than those of the better sort: they would have made good husbandmen, good merchants, and good artisans: their natural vigour was cut out to that proportion. Knowledge is a thing of great weight, they faint under it: their understanding has neither vigour nor dexterity enough to set forth and distribute, to employ or make use of this rich and powerful matter; it has no prevailing virtue but in a strong nature; and such natures are very rare--and the weak ones, says Socrates, corrupt the dignity of philosophy in the handling, it appears useless and vicious, when lodged in an ill-contrived mind. They spoil and make fools of themselves:

"Humani qualis simulator simius oris, Quern puer arridens pretioso stamine serum Velavit, nudasque nates ac terga reliquit, Ludibrium mensis."

["Just like an ape, simulator of the human face, whom a wanton boy has dizened up in rich silks above, but left the lower parts bare, for a laughing-stock for the tables."--Claudian, in Eutrop., i 303.]

同类推荐
  • Round the Moon

    Round the Moon

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道德真经注

    道德真经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Conflict

    The Conflict

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 阿弥陀经异本

    阿弥陀经异本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上老君内观经

    太上老君内观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 人间至味是识得

    人间至味是识得

    “顾子恒,你知不知道你跟我离婚,要分我一半的家产。顾氏集团都会受到影响。”“我知道,所以呢?”男人冷笑着,一字一句的说道:“你是我花再多钱,也要扔掉的垃圾。”
  • 风之绝唱

    风之绝唱

    世界树是这个世界的最明显的标志,目前人类已经接触到了许多物种,但这只是这个世界的百分之一的区域。当一天一位神降临在这个世界上,迎接这个世界的,将是什么样的风浪?
  • 外挂狂妃不好惹

    外挂狂妃不好惹

    都说她冷血无情,嗜血如魔,可又有谁能理解她?又有谁知道她背后心酸的故事?经历了一次背叛,不再相信真情。且看她如何归来,华丽逆袭。不定时更新哦!
  • 探险之旅之死亡的怀表

    探险之旅之死亡的怀表

    白羽在学校的废弃仓库里,捡到了一个刻有乌鸦的,破旧的黑色怀表。当怀表的指针开始转动,四人的命运也渐渐脱离轨道,是生是死,无法预测!死神……降临了!本人是很喜欢看雷叔的书的,今天就试着模仿一下,绝无它意。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 机械娱乐

    机械娱乐

    混娱乐圈的不少。穿越混娱乐圈的更多。变成机器人混娱乐圈的见过没?不管你见没见过。反正我是没见过!
  • 修真之无尽祭坛

    修真之无尽祭坛

    修真;以假成真,扭转乾坤。神仙自有神仙传,哪有凡人修成仙。且看一位孤儿的修真传奇、
  • 黑暗居士

    黑暗居士

    无尽的人生,无尽的追求,事业,美人,永生,你即将看到的是一部宏伟的成功与永生之路
  • 十道轮回

    十道轮回

    三年前,叶尘与一名不世天才一战,重伤落败,昏睡了三年之久。然而一朝清醒,他却无比震惊,因为在昏睡的三年中,他神游太虚,重回太古,在太古时代称帝了一万年!重回今世,他发现自己的身体在三年前被打成了不治之伤,几乎无救,沦为了废人。但是同时,他又发现自己的神魂强大得异常,远胜常人数百年苦修。“为什么到了今世,太古的一切都没有留下,甚至那些曾经无敌六道十万年的无上大帝,也连个名字都不被世人所知,难道太古的种种都被埋藏了吗?武帝、魔尊、道祖,你们也都被葬在了那一世?”带着留在太古的诸多遗憾,叶尘回到了这一世,从头开始。
  • 近墨者非黑

    近墨者非黑

    梦中醒来,没有梦中的那般性格,不是没有感情,只是未到,当她,遇上他,又会怎样呢?她也很好奇呢!