登陆注册
20296700000049

第49章 ON THE ATHENIAN ORATORS(6)

They both advanced to perfection by contemporaneous steps, and from similar causes.The early speakers, like the early warriors of Greece, were merely a militia.It was found that in both employments practice and discipline gave superiority.(It has often occurred to me, that to the circumstances mentioned in the text is to be referred one of the most remarkable events in Grecian history; I mean the silent but rapid downfall of the Lacedaemonian power.Soon after the termination of the Peloponnesian war, the strength of Lacedaemon began to decline.

Its military discipline, its social institutions, were the same.

Agesilaus, during whose reign the change took place, was the ablest of its kings.Yet the Spartan armies were frequently defeated in pitched battles,--an occurrence considered impossible in the earlier ages of Greece.They are allowed to have fought most bravely; yet they were no longer attended by the success to which they had formerly been accustomed.No solution of these circumstances is offered, as far as I know, by any ancient author.The real cause, I conceive, was this.The Lacedaemonians, alone among the Greeks, formed a permanent standing army.While the citizens of other commonwealths were engaged in agriculture and trade, they had no employment whatever but the study of military discipline.Hence, during the Persian and Peloponnesian wars, they had that advantage over their neighbours which regular troops always possess over militia.

This advantage they lost, when other states began, at a later period, to employ mercenary forces, who were probably as superior to them in the art of war as they had hitherto been to their antagonists.) Each pursuit therefore became first an art, and then a trade.In proportion as the professors of each became more expert in their particular craft, they became less respectable in their general character.Their skill had been obtained at too great expense to be employed only from disinterested views.Thus, the soldiers forgot that they were citizens, and the orators that they were statesmen.I know not to what Demosthenes and his famous contemporaries can be so justly compared as to those mercenary troops who, in their time, overran Greece; or those who, from similar causes, were some centuries ago the scourge of the Italian republics,--perfectly acquainted with every part of their profession, irresistible in the field, powerful to defend or to destroy, but defending without love, and destroying without hatred.We may despise the characters of these political Condottieri; but is impossible to examine the system of their tactics without being amazed at its perfection.

I had intended to proceed to this examination, and to consider separately the remains of Lysias, of Aeschines, of Demosthenes, and of Isocrates, who, though strictly speaking he was rather a pamphleteer than an orator, deserves, on many accounts, a place in such a disquisition.The length of my prolegomena and digressions compels me to postpone this part of the subject to another occasion.A Magazine is certainly a delightful invention for a very idle or a very busy man.He is not compelled to complete his plan or to adhere to his subject.He may ramble as far as he is inclined, and stop as soon as he is tired.No one takes the trouble to recollect his contradictory opinions or his unredeemed pledges.He may be as superficial, as inconsistent, and as careless as he chooses.Magazines resemble those little angels, who, according to the pretty Rabbinical tradition, are generated every morning by the brook which rolls over the flowers of Paradise,--whose life is a song,--who warble till sunset, and then sink back without regret into nothingness.Such spirits have nothing to do with the detecting spear of Ithuriel or the victorious sword of Michael.It is enough for them to please and be forgotten....

第一章A PROPHETIC ACCOUNT OF A GRAND NATIONAL EPIC POEM, TO BE ENTITLED"THE WELLINGTONIAD," AND TO BE PUBLISHED A.D.2824.

(November 1824.)

How I became a prophet it is not very important to the reader to know.Nevertheless I feel all the anxiety which, under similar circumstances, troubled the sensitive mind of Sidrophel; and, like him, am eager to vindicate myself from the suspicion of having practised forbidden arts, or held intercourse with beings of another world.I solemnly declare, therefore, that I never saw a ghost, like Lord Lyttleton; consulted a gipsy, like Josephine; or heard my name pronounced by an absent person, like Dr Johnson.Though it is now almost as usual for gentlemen to appear at the moment of their death to their friends as to call on them during their life, none of my acquaintance have been so polite as to pay me that customary attention.I have derived my knowledge neither from the dead nor from the living; neither from the lines of a hand, nor from the grounds of a tea-cup; neither from the stars of the firmament, nor from the fiends of the abyss.I have never, like the Wesley family, heard "that mighty leading angel," who "drew after him the third part of heaven's sons," scratching in my cupboard.I have never been enticed to sign any of those delusive bonds which have been the ruin of so many poor creatures; and, having always been an indifferent horse man, I have been careful not to venture myself on a broomstick.

My insight into futurity, like that of George Fox the quaker, and that of our great and philosophic poet, Lord Byron, is derived from simple presentiment.This is a far less artificial process than those which are employed by some others.Yet my predictions will, I believe, be found more correct than theirs, or, at all events, as Sir Benjamin Back bite says in the play, "more circumstantial."I prophesy then, that, in the year 2824, according to our present reckoning, a grand national Epic Poem, worthy to be compared with the Iliad, the Aeneid, or the Jerusalem, will be published in London.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 兵发死亡谷

    兵发死亡谷

    围绕建军80周年,人民武警出版社认真组织《中国武警特别行动系列 丛书》和《忠诚卫士风采》等国家重点图书的落实工作。其中,《中国武 警特别行动系列丛书》一共出版六本,分别是《中国武警特别行动》、《 世界反恐大扫描》、《大搜捕》、《兵发死亡谷》、《铁血英雄》、《千 里护卫毛泽东——武警警卫工作秘闻》。这套丛书通过选择一个个特别的 角度,向我们介绍了武警。
  • 道尊

    道尊

    孟木从乱星海内逃出一缕残魄,却发现已是三千年之后。当年的谄媚小弟云鹤子,如今已是万里道祖,道统万千。当年的未婚妻子詹琴仙子,如今已是瑶池太上,掌管三千女真。当年的愚笨表弟,如今已是太上剑尊,受万人跪拜。孟木站在中州望着众仙为自己前世所树立的万丈道像,一时间陷入了回忆。各位读者老爷,试看十章,不满意再看十章,看到满意为止咩。
  • 捡到一座小破塔

    捡到一座小破塔

    捡到了一座小破塔,暗藏玄机,塔内却有另一位面!王中王自从有了这小破塔,不一样的冒险开始了……
  • 冥界神迹

    冥界神迹

    一个帝国永存的传说,一段少年忘却的记忆,一群消失十年的亡灵,......再重头,三尺寒芒手中剑,一阵屠尽天下威!可敢否,以我之血洗涤这污浊世间?众神在九天俯瞰世间,亡灵在云端歌唱,有一道声音在永恒回荡:宁可永劫受沉沦,不从诸圣求解脱!少年从永夜之中走出,却发现历史早已为他留白,他一步一步沿着先圣千年之前就已为他写好的剧本走下去,想回头,已是百年身!这是个背叛与欺骗的故事,世间生灵,苍生万物,各自冷眼众生,各自为营。而我...正在冷漠的创造着这个世界。
  • 天都烟云

    天都烟云

    这是政协海原县委员会首次印刷出版的第一部海原县文史资料专辑。全书收录史料计54篇,按内容分为红军西征、抗战烽烟、解放海原、剿匪平叛、军民情深、史海钩沉、民国见闻、民族之风、人物春秋、教育历程、区域旧治、文化探秘共十二类。
  • 青梅绕竹马:独家密爱

    青梅绕竹马:独家密爱

    他们是同甘共苦的青梅竹马,曾经共度年少那段最青涩的时光。他们都以为,他们所憧憬的未来,是童话般的幸福美好。然而,命运多变,始料未及。她为了让他重获自由,不得已远去,在恶魔身边痛苦犹疑。他为了能早日找到幸福的方向,将自己推向噩梦的深渊。“小星星,你说过你会保护我,可这就是你给我的承诺?”“我所做的一切,不过都是希望我们能在一起。”
  • 第一倾城女王

    第一倾城女王

    “哥哥!"一道撕心裂肺的喊声划破天空,拥有紫发的少女跪在地上。从这一刻开始,她与他再无感情......重生!带着前世的记忆,带着前世的仇恨,带着前世的能力,她,如女王般重生了。‘顺吾者昌,逆吾者亡!’带着带着这一句话的信仰,见神弑神,见魔弑魔!直到遇见了他,一直的伪装,一直的防备,一直的强大全部放下了。因为当第一眼看到他时,她就爱上了他......
  • 天价星妻,霸道总裁请住手

    天价星妻,霸道总裁请住手

    两年前,她车祸昏迷,继母贪财让她嫁入A市豪门明家两年后,她苏醒得知失忆后,却发现自己曾是一线当红女星,铺天盖地满是她失踪的新闻。她问他,“明琛浩,我到底是如何嫁给你的?”满足我,我告诉你。”一场车祸,他抱着心爱女人的尸体,恶狠狠的看着她,“罗晗心,这就是你想要的结果?”那一刻,她泪腺崩塌,一颗再也伪装不下去的内心像是停止跳动了般,含泪离开……霍峻威,带我离开,我要宣布跟他离婚。”一段视频流出,他看着那场车祸,他见她“明先生,很高兴您成为我们电影的制片人。”“孩子谁的?”他冷冷打断她的话,紧盯着她抱着的男孩。“妈咪这个怪蜀黍是谁?好可怕。”他这么凶要不要告诉他,其实还有一个女儿?
  • 我是家政服务能手

    我是家政服务能手

    党中央提出建设社会主义新农村,是惠及亿万农民的大事、实事、好事。建设新农村,关键是培养新农民。农村要小康,科技做大梁;农民要致富,知识来开路。本书的出版发行让农民朋友买得起、看得懂、用得上,用书上的知识指导实践,用勤劳的双手发家致富,早日把家乡建成生产发展、生活宽裕、乡风文明、管理民主的社会主义新农村。本书主要介绍了家政服务人员所需具备的素质、家政服务人员的职业道德、家政服务人员面试过程中应注意的问题、家政服务人员择业的注意事项、如何做好家政服务、家政服务人员在工作中应注意的问题、常见家政技能须知、家政服务涉及的工作范围、如何照顾老年人等知识。
  • 美好的人生(智慧必读丛书)

    美好的人生(智慧必读丛书)

    本书从各个方面分析了为人处世的原则和技巧,为您的美好人生路导航指路。在讲述道理的同时作者引用了许多名人的生动故事,使文字显得更为活泼生动,具有较强的可读性。