登陆注册
20012600000023

第23章 ROCHEFOUCAULD(1)

To the Lady Violet Lebas.

Dear Lady Violet,--I am not sure that I agree with you in your admiration of Rochefoucauld--of the Reflexions,ou Sentences et Maximes Morales,I mean.At least,I hardly agree when I have read many of them at a stretch.It is not fair to read them in that way,of course,for there are more than five hundred pensees,and so much esprit becomes fatiguing.I doubt if people study them much.Five or six of them have become known even to writers in the newspapers,and we all copy them from each other.

Rochefoucauld says that a man may be too dull to be duped by a very clever person.He himself was so clever that he was often duped,first by the general honest dulness of mankind,and then by his own acuteness.He thought he saw more than he did see,and he said even more than he thought he saw.If the true motive of all our actions is self-love,or vanity,no man is a better proof of the truth than the great maxim-maker.His self-love took the shape of a brilliancy that is sometimes false.He is tricked out in paste for diamonds,now and then,like a vain,provincial beauty at a ball."A clever man would frequently be much at a loss,"he says,"in stupid company."One has seen this embarrassment of a wit in a company of dullards.It is Rochefoucauld's own position in this world of men and women.We are all,in the mass,dullards compared with his cleverness,and so he fails to understand us,is much at a loss among us."People only praise others in hopes of being praised in turn,"he says.Mankind is not such a company of "log-rollers"as he avers.

There is more truth in a line of Tennyson's about "The praise of those we love,Dearer to true young hearts than their own praise."I venture to think we need not be young to prefer to hear the praise of others rather than our own.It is not embarrassing in the first place,as all praise of ourselves must be.I doubt if any man or woman can flatter so discreetly as not to make us uncomfortable.

Besides,if our own performances be lauded,we are uneasy as to whether the honour is deserved.An artist has usually his own doubts about his own doings,or rather he has his own certainties.

About our friends'work we need have no such misgivings.And our self-love is more delicately caressed by the success of our friends than by our own.It is still self-love,but it is filtered,so to speak,through our affection for another.

What are human motives,according to Rochefoucauld?Temperament,vanity,fear,indolence,self-love,and a grain of natural perversity,which somehow delights in evil for itself.He neglects that other element,a grain of natural worth,which somehow delights in good for itself.This taste,I think,is quite as innate,and as active in us,as that other taste for evil which causes there to be something not wholly displeasing in the misfortunes of our friends.

There is a story which always appears to me a touching proof of this grain of goodness,as involuntary,as fatal as its opposite.I do not remember in what book of travels I found this trait of native excellence.The black fellows of Australia are very fond of sugar,and no wonder,if it be true that it has on them an intoxicating effect.Well,a certain black fellow had a small parcel of brown sugar which was pilfered from his lair in the camp.He detected the thief,who was condemned to be punished according to tribal law;that is to say,the injured man was allowed to have a whack at his enemy's head with a waddy,a short club of heavy hard wood.The whack was duly given,and then the black who had suffered the loss threw down his club,burst into tears,embraced the thief and displayed every sign of a lively regret for his revenge.

That seems to me an example of the human touch that Rochefoucauld never allows for,the natural goodness,pity,kindness,which can assert itself in contempt of the love of self,and the love of revenge.This is that true clemency which is a real virtue,and not "the child of Vanity,Fear,Indolence,or of all three together."Nor is it so true that "we have all fortitude enough to endure the misfortunes of others."Everybody has witnessed another's grief that came as near him as his own.

How much more true,and how greatly poetical is that famous maxim:

"Death and the Sun are two things not to be looked on with a steady eye."This version is from the earliest English translation of 1698.The Maximes were first published in Paris in 1665.{8}"Our tardy apish nation"took thirty-three years in finding them out and appropriating them.This,too,is good:"If we were faultless,we would observe with less pleasure the faults of others."Indeed,to observe these with pleasure is not the least of our faults.Again,"We are never so happy,nor so wretched,as we suppose."It is our vanity,perhaps,that makes us think ourselves miserrimi.

Do you remember--no,you don't--that meeting in "Candide"of the unfortunate Cunegonde and the still more unfortunate old lady who was the daughter of a Pope?"You lament your fate,"said the old lady;"alas,you have known no such sorrows as mine!""What!my good woman!"says Cunegonde."Unless you have been maltreated by two Bulgarians,received two stabs from a knife,had two of your castles burned over your head,seen two fathers and two mothers murdered before your eyes,and two of your lovers flogged at two autos-da-fe,I don't fancy that you can have the advantage of me.

Besides,I was born a baroness of seventy-two quarterings,and Ihave been a cook."But the daughter of a Pope had,indeed,been still more unlucky,as she proved,than Cunegonde;and the old lady was not a little proud of it.

同类推荐
  • 金钟传正明集

    金钟传正明集

    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。
  • 三宝太监西洋记

    三宝太监西洋记

    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。
  • 技击余闻

    技击余闻

    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。
  • 浪淘沙二首

    浪淘沙二首

    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。
  • 续修台湾县志

    续修台湾县志

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 中国市场经济发展研究

    中国市场经济发展研究

    本书内容包括:中国社会主义市场经济改革进程特征及价值判断标准、中国社会主义市场化进程中经济增长的周期和总量调控、中国社会主义市场化进程中结构变化和增长的效率。
  • 诛天道卷

    诛天道卷

    八荒乱起,六合唯一。在这个神秘的世界,他如何立足。以‘我之剑,斩天斩地,唯我最强’的信念。用‘不屈的灵魂,诠译人生真谛’的勇气。纵横异界、、、、、、、
  • 魂禁:白发小新娘

    魂禁:白发小新娘

    她从未做过一件真正的恶事,却被视为“白发妖女”不容于世。一朝迫为帝君妻,从此日夜更难宁:他们是夫妻,却更象是仇敌!小语:从前世走到了今生,有些话,似仍开不了口,开不了口的,我多么想对你说:可以吗?活在我的视线内,陪着我,永不分离——
  • 龙语者世纪

    龙语者世纪

    龙语者世界,在这个宏大的世界里,没有什么华丽的魔法、斗技,所有的人修炼都只为一个目的——成为龙语者!龙族,在这世界上有成千上百万个种类,它们被龙语者们契约、炼化,人们靠着这些各式各样的龙族来获取力量,吸收龙之力!每一种龙代表着一种龙之技。龙之力的阶级划分:龙语者、御龙者、龙影士、龙灵侍、龙魂侍、龙王使、龙皇使、龙尊师、龙圣师、龙神主。
  • 无赖神医

    无赖神医

    中医是迷信?那就让我来让他崛起!医道难大成?那我便成就无上金身!金钱、权势、美女,我全部掌控。长生、飞仙、无敌,亦唾手可得。医馆小子徐凡,意外被飞来茶壶砸中了脑袋,从此开启了无上医道之路……
  • 春朝愈秋暮

    春朝愈秋暮

    刚入高中,校草兼学生会会长的学长居然是自己的青梅竹马,明明是自己向校草闵时智表白,自己居然不知道到底是怎么回事,虽然两人还真的莫名其妙在一起了,但最后还是以分手告终,在大学再次遇到闵时智,却和另一个人牵扯不清......到底谁才能让她找回真正自己......
  • 明日传奇

    明日传奇

    一张诡异出现的纸片,如下金蛋的鹅,每天都会给寒玉提供一笔钱,让他逐渐衣食无忧,愈发强大。但是,它也如催命恶鬼,不停的让寒玉完成一些稀奇古怪的‘任务’。------“我的经验条在哪?不如也让我瞧瞧吧!你当是在玩《地球OL》吗!”‘你完全可以当作是地球OL(笑脸)。’
  • 送您一首赞美歌

    送您一首赞美歌

    品德即道德品质,是道德在个体身上的体现,是指个人按社会规范行动时所表现出来的稳定特性,是人们依据一定的社会道德准则和规范行动时,对社会、对他人、对周围事物所表现出来的稳定的心理特征或倾向。
  • 行笔随文散集

    行笔随文散集

    收录一些我写的散文~诗歌~之类的记录一下生活中的文章
  • 我是一个网游汪

    我是一个网游汪

    软蛋苏晓乐,在学校天天被人欺负,有一天他在想为什么自己会被欺负,就学着谢文东去反抗,可是谁会知道装X不成反被杀,一不小心居然重生到洪荒大陆,开启一段不一样的修仙故事!等一等,错了错了,不是这样的故事节奏。其实这就是一篇网游。