登陆注册
4705400000132

第132章

This description is surely by no means applicable to a statesman who had, through the whole course of his life, carefully avoided exposing himself in seasons of trouble; who had repeatedly refused, in most critical conjunctures, to be Secretary of State; and, who now, in the midst of revolutions, plots, foreign and domestic wars, was quietly writing nonsense about the visits of Lycurgus to the Brahmins and the tunes which Arion played to the Dolphin.

We must not omit to mention that, while the controversy about Phalaris was raging, Swift, in order to show his zeal and attachment, wrote the Battle of the Books, the earliest piece in which his peculiar talents are discernible. We may observe that the bitter dislike of Bentley, bequeathed by Temple to Swift, seems to have been communicated by Swift to Pope, to Arbuthnot, and to others, who continued to tease the great critic long after he had shaken hands very cordially both with Boyle and with Atterbury.

Sir William Temple died at Moor Park in January 1699. He appears to have suffered no intellectual decay. His heart was buried under a sundial which still stands in his favourite garden. His body was laid in Westminster Abbey by the side of his wife; and a place hard by was set apart for Lady Giffard, who long survived him. Swift was his literary executor, superintended the publication of his Letters and Memoirs, and, in the performance of this office, had some acrimonious contests with the family.

Of Temple's character little more remains to be said. Burnet accuses him of holding irreligious opinions, and corrupting everybody who came near him. But the vague assertion of so rash and partial a writer as Burnet, about a man with whom, as far as we know, he never exchanged a word, is of little weight. It is, indeed, by no means improbable that Temple may have been a freethinker. The Osbornes thought him so when he was a very young man. And it is certain that a large proportion of the gentlemen of rank and fashion who made their entrance into society while the Puritan party was at the height of power, and while the memory of the reign of that party was still recent, conceived a strong disgust for all religion. The imputation was common between Temple and all the most distinguished courtiers of the age. Rochester, and Buckingham were open scoffers, and Mulgrave very little better. Shaftesbury, though more guarded, was supposed to agree with them in opinion. All the three noblemen who were Temple's colleagues during the short time of his sitting in the Cabinet were of very indifferent repute as to orthodoxy.

Halifax, indeed, was generally considered as an atheist; but he solemnly denied the charge; and, indeed, the truth seems to be that he was more religiously disposed than most of the statesmen of that age, though two impulses which were unusually strong in him, a passion for ludicrous images, and a passion for subtle speculations, sometimes prompted him to talk on serious subjects in a manner which gave grave and just offence. It is not unlikely that Temple, who seldom went below the surface of any question, may have been infected with the prevailing scepticism. All that we can say on the subject is, that there is no trace of impiety in his works, and that the case with which he carried his election for an university, where the majority of the voters were clergymen, though it proves nothing as to his opinions, must, we think, be considered as proving that he was not, as Burnet seems to insinuate, in the habit of talking atheism to all who came near him.

Temple, however, will scarcely carry with him any great accession of authority to the side either of religion or of infidelity. He was no profound thinker. He was merely a man of lively parts and quick observation, a man of the world among men of letters, a man of letters among men of the world. Mere scholars were dazzled by the Ambassador and Cabinet counsellor; mere politicians by the Essayist and Historian. But neither as a writer nor as a statesman can we allot to him any very high place. As a man, he seems to us to have been excessively selfish, but very sober, wary, and far-sighted in his selfishness; to have known better than most people what he really wanted in life; and to have pursued what he wanted with much more than ordinary steadiness and sagacity, never suffering himself to be drawn aside either by bad or by good feelings. It was his constitution to dread failure more than he desired success, to prefer security, comfort, repose, leisure, to the turmoil and anxiety which are inseparable from greatness; and this natural languor of mind, when contrasted with the malignant energy of the keen and restless spirits among whom his lot was cast, sometimes appears to resemble the moderation of virtue. But we must own that he seems to us to sink into littleness and meanness when we compare him, we do not say with any high ideal standard of morality, but with many of those frail men who, aiming at noble ends, but often drawn from the right path by strong passions and strong temptations, have left to posterity a doubtful and checkered fame.

同类推荐
  • 马培之医案

    马培之医案

    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。
  • 七国春秋平话

    七国春秋平话

    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。
  • 西湖水利考

    西湖水利考

    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。
  • 明伦汇编官常典翰林院部

    明伦汇编官常典翰林院部

    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。
  • 续一切经音义

    续一切经音义

    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
  • 寻天之念

    寻天之念

    命途多舛,寻天茫茫......最后,不过也是带着这世间给你的一切,再次被这个世间给打败而已.....大家可以移步我的新书《亦佛亦是魔》
  • 煎饼妹的开挂人生

    煎饼妹的开挂人生

    同父异母的弟弟结婚要她出首付,婚礼却不让她参加?感恩了十多年的后妈把她当成提款机?他们既要她的钱,还嫌弃她!?陆蓁蓁突然发现,努力了这么多年,她还是没有得到别人的认可!重回到十八岁,陆蓁蓁决定先学会爱自己。阻止真正的亲人意外去世,捡回被丢弃的大学录取通知书,她还要把煎饼快餐店开遍全国!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 穿越之绝世妖孽

    穿越之绝世妖孽

    在现实世界中如妖孽的他,穿越到动漫世界会怎么样呢【目前是兄弟战争+樱兰高校+夏目友人帐+网球+名侦探柯南,大概就是这些了】新人执笔
  • 夜城旧梦

    夜城旧梦

    她冷漠无情,杀人无数,却在遇见他之后,频频失态,她想,她的报应来了。他装傻充愣了二十年,却在遇见她后放弃所有计划,他想,他要找的人,找到了。
  • 雨露未停风不作

    雨露未停风不作

    那有什么前途光明,只是有人在你不知道的地方默默护行。
  • 遇见你真欢喜

    遇见你真欢喜

    萧筱重生,为了跟萧翊宸冷漠冰山男离婚,她花光了她生平所有的时间在离婚这件事上。离婚不成,她便重伤自己。一日家人来找老公来哭诉……婆婆说:这媳妇要不得,大手大脚早晚把家产败光。公公说:这媳妇太闹腾,三天两头进警局,赶紧离。兄弟们说:你这媳妇太强悍,镇不住,赶紧离。嫂子们说:你媳妇娘家天天来打秋风,什么时候到个头。萧筱开心坏了,连连点头说:“说的好,离婚,离婚。老公说:“离不了……因为我爱她。”“……”
  • 佛说施一切无畏陀罗尼经

    佛说施一切无畏陀罗尼经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Storyteller

    Storyteller

    A visitor from Peru, happening upon an exhibition of photographs from the Amazon jungle in an obscure Florentine picture gallery, finds his attention drawn to a picture of a tribal storyteller seated among a circle of Michiguenga Indians. There is something odd about the storyteller. He is too light-skinned to be an Indian. As the visitor stares at the photograph, it dawns on him that he knows this man. The storyteller is his long-lost friend, Saul Zuratas, his classmate from university who was thought to have disappeared in Israel. The Storyteller is a brilliant and compelling study of the world of the primitive and its place in our own modern lives.
  • 超甜小萌妃

    超甜小萌妃

    普通却并不平凡的她,穿越到了一个修仙世界,以废材三小姐的身份重生。因为,末日是她招来!然而,重生之后,天生残脉,受尽欺凌,更是被迫嫁给一个又丑又傻的王爷。孰不可忍,婶不可忍!一名神秘男子的出现,改变了她的命运,将她的潜能激发,让她从一个平凡的女孩,成为了无上至尊的存在!“你们不是想要我的命吗?”她冷昵天下强者,傲然地说道:“当我成就无上至尊,你们将匍匐在我的石榴裙下,感受着死亡的恐惧!一切欺我辱我讽我之人,都将为此付出惨痛的代价!“
  • 六宫独宠

    六宫独宠

    易相思本就是亲爹不爱,后妈残爱的可怜娃娃,没想拼命的凭着自己打工赚来的钱读完了大学,却又被阎王勾错了魂。现代回不去了,阎王就直接把她送到古代了。可不是说好的官宦千金,咋一醒来就变嫔妃了。相思那个悔,那个恨呀!见那皇帝容貌俊美,待她还不错,她也就认了吧!可,这皇帝也是一个被后妈欺负的孩子,相思这同情心就泛滥了,打算帮他勇斗后妈。可还没开始,怎么他身边的大太监晏安就来威胁她,不许靠近他,居然还强吻她。直接让她呕吐了三天三夜。