登陆注册
4811400000116

第116章

Unfortunately, in the eighteenth century, reason was classic; not only the aptitude but the documents which enable it to comprehend tradition were absent. In the first place, there was no knowledge of history; learning was, due to its dullness and tediousness, refused;learned compilations, vast collections of extracts and the slow work of criticism were held in disdain. Voltaire made fun of the Benedictines. Montesquieu, to ensure the acceptance of his "Esprit des lois," indulged in wit about laws. Reynal, to give an impetus to his history of commerce in the Indies, welded to it the declamation of Diderot. The Abbé Barthélemy covered over the realities of Greek manners and customs with his literary varnish. Science was expected to be either epigrammatic or oratorical; crude or technical details would have been objectionable to a public composed of people of the good society; correctness of style therefore drove out or falsified those small significant facts which give a peculiar sense and their original relief to ancient personalities. -- Even if writers had dared to note them, their sense and bearing would not have been understood. The sympathetic imagination did not exist[9]; people were incapable of going out of themselves, of betaking themselves to distant points of view, of conjecturing the peculiar and violent states of the human brain, the decisive and fruitful moment during which it gives birth to a vigorous creation, a religion destined to rule, a state that is sure to endure. The imagination of Man is limited to personal experiences, and where in their experience, could individuals in this society have found the material which would have allowed them to imagine the convulsions of a delivery? How could minds, as polished and as amiable as these, fully adopt the sentiments of an apostle, of a monk, of a barbarian or feudal founder; see these in the milieu which explains and justifies them; picture to themselves the surrounding crowd, at first souls in despair and haunted by mystic dreams, and next the rude and violent intellects given up to instinct and imagery, thinking with half-visions, their resolve consisting of irresistible impulses? Aspeculative reasoning of this stamp could not imagine figures like these. To bring them within its rectilinear limits they require to be reduced and made over; the Macbeth of Shakespeare becomes that of Ducis, and the Mahomet of the Koran that of Voltaire. Consequently, as they failed to see souls, they misconceived institutions. The suspicion that truth could have been conveyed only through the medium of legends, that justice could have been established only by force, that religion was obliged to assume the sacerdotal form, that the State necessarily took a military form, and that the Gothic edifice possessed, as well as other structures, its own architecture, proportions, balance of parts, solidity, and even beauty, never entered their heads. -- Furthermore, unable to comprehend the past, they could not comprehend the present. They knew nothing about the mechanic, the provincial bourgeois, or even the lesser nobility; these were seen only far away in the distance, half-effaced, and wholly transformed through philosophic theories and sentimental haze. "Two or three thousand"[10] polished and cultivated individuals formed the circle of ladies and gentlemen, the so-called honest folks, and they never went outside of their own circle. If they fleeting had a glimpse of the people from their chateaux and on their journeys, it was in passing, the same as of their post-horses, or of the cattle on their farms, showing compassion undoubtedly, but never divining their anxious thoughts and their obscure instincts. The structure of the still primitive mind of the people was never imagined, the paucity and tenacity of their ideas, the narrowness of their mechanical, routine existence, devoted to manual labor, absorbed with the anxieties for daily bread, confined to the bounds of a visible horizon; their attachment to the local saint, to rites, to the priest, their deep-seated rancor, their inveterate distrust, their credulity growing out of the imagination, their inability to comprehend abstract rights, the law and public affairs, the hidden operation by which their brains would transform political novelties into nursery fables or into ghost stories, their contagious infatuations like those of sheep, their blind fury like that of bulls, and all those traits of character the Revolution was about to bring to light. Twenty millions of men and more had scarcely passed out of the mental condition of the middle ages; hence, in its grand lines, the social edifice in which they could dwell had necessarily to be mediaeval. It had to be cleaned up, windows put in and walls pulled down, but without disturbing the foundations, or the main building and its general arrangement;otherwise after demolishing it and living encamped for ten years in the open air like savages, its inmates would have been obliged to rebuild it on the same plan. In uneducated minds, those having not yet attained to reflection, faith attaches itself only to the corporeal symbol, obedience being brought about only through physical restraint;religion is upheld by the priest and the State by the policeman. --One writer only, Montesquieu, the best instructed, the most sagacious, and the best balanced of all the spirits of the age, made these truths apparent, because he was at once an erudite, an observer, a historian and a jurisconsult. He spoke, however, as an oracle, in maxims and riddles; and every time he touched matters belonging to his country and epoch he hopped about as if upon red hot coals. That is why he remained respected but isolated, his fame exercising no influence. The classic reason refused[11] to go so far as to make a careful study of both the ancient and the contemporary human being. It found it easier and more convenient to follow its original bent, to shut its eyes on man as he is, to fall back on its stores of current notions, to derive from these an idea of man in general, and build in empty space. --Through this natural and complete state of blindness it no longer heeds the old and living roots of contemporary institutions; no longer seeing them makes it deny their existence. Custom now appears as pure prejudice; the titles of tradition are lost, and royalty seems based on robbery. So from now on Reason is armed and at war with its predecessor to wrench away its control over the minds and to replace a rule of lies with a rule of truth.

同类推荐
  • 会稽记

    会稽记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Eugenie Grandet

    Eugenie Grandet

    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。
  • 赤松子中诫经

    赤松子中诫经

    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。
  • 太上老君说常清静经注

    太上老君说常清静经注

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说四不可得经

    佛说四不可得经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 朱元璋发迹史

    朱元璋发迹史

    中国历史不乏奇迹,朱元璋更是奇迹中的奇迹,从社会最底层的乞丐和尚,爬上天朝上国的皇帝宝座。中间的秘辛固然数不胜数,但这种成功足以激励后人。朱元璋的一生,可以说是拼搏的一生,也可以说是杀戮的一生。在他成功的路上,智慧伴随着血腥,谋略混杂着阴暗,理性之中夹杂着疯狂……如何解读朱元璋这个人,是现代人乐此不疲的话题。朱元璋身上有许多值得学习的地方,也有很多让人唾弃的地方。翻开姚尧编写的这本《朱元璋发迹史》,它将带你认识这位草根皇帝,并揭秘其发迹之路。
  • 古董女佣吻上少东家

    古董女佣吻上少东家

    本书原名:《千年奇缘》他,身家上亿,英俊轩昂,曾深受情伤,见到女人就如同见了河水猛兽急于防犯。但是,自从这个女人从天而降,他像失了魂丢了魄发神经将她收留,连连误会,甚至最后他被迫很小人的用计谋将她绑在身边。他,黑帮老大,一代袅雄,对她一见钟情,誓死守在她的身边,哪怕没有回报。他,落拓不羁,俊逸非凡,IQ200,电脑界、服装设计界的天才,遇见她,他同样难过美人关,被她迷得神魂颠倒。她,为了报仇,岂料被穿越到21世纪陌生地方,有天上飞的大鸟,有在地上奔驰的怪异马车,一切翻天覆地变了样!面对三名出色男人的追求,她迷茫无措!亲们,《古董女佣》有做MTV,地址:http://m.wkkk.net/m.wkkk.net?act=view&account=huangyuping7788&album_id=295194进去欣赏帅哥美女吧!包准大饱眼福!隆重推荐自已另一部新作《刀疤丑后》轻松文《总裁的VIP情人》现代文
  • 最强大脑训练课:越玩越好玩的365个猜谜游戏

    最强大脑训练课:越玩越好玩的365个猜谜游戏

    谜语在我国源远流长、历史悠久,自古以来就是一种广为流传的民间文学形式。本书共包含十个章节,让每天处于忙碌生活的人们能够在猜谜的游戏中获得快乐,既能陶冶情操,又能学到知识,促进智力的增长。
  • 极品女参谋

    极品女参谋

    十年前,她身陷囹圄,被迫为奴。十年后,她踏入返乡之路,却被最爱的人送入宁国皇宫。彼时,宁国江山岌岌可危。睿智的帝王受人控制,年幼的太子一夜间痴傻。佞臣当道,她无奈接受皇命,问鼎天下。身居高位,仿佛如坐云端,性命堪忧。幸而他始终不离不弃,舍身为她守护宁国江山。然而一朝落崖,十数年遍寻不见他。再次相见,却是卿已老,君将故。两人之间只剩下黄泉碧落的承诺,以及青葱岁月里的一场梦。情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 带着无敌系统闯异界

    带着无敌系统闯异界

    天才?鬼才?大陆第一奇才?在无敌系统面前,一切天才都是渣渣!
  • 汉祚天下

    汉祚天下

    时空逆转,万物归于洪荒。将星入世,五千年历史聚合,战国群雄、三国豪杰、隋唐英杰、日本战国……时空错乱的大千世界,不为人知的阴谋迷局,凶险与精彩并存,谁能铸鼎天下?
  • 尚论篇

    尚论篇

    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。
  • 被弃小宫女:天价皇妃

    被弃小宫女:天价皇妃

    “你只能是本王的!”他看着身下哭的梨花带雨,不断颤抖的黎昕,发狠道,“他已经用一百两把你卖给本王了。”她默默的承受着他给的痛,想起那个忘恩负义的男人,嘴边咧开一个苦涩的笑意,既然他以贱价一百两把自己卖了,那么自己就要做最最高贵的女人。他日登帝,她是他捧在手心的天价皇妃,他再想要挽回,而她莞尔一笑,“本宫无价。”
  • 不必拼狠劲,姐有洞察力:职场女性最讨巧的升职术

    不必拼狠劲,姐有洞察力:职场女性最讨巧的升职术

    13年前,它只是一个概念,我开始了观察成功的女性,发现了一个共同的特质——职场女性奋斗靠巧劲。要知道,光凭直觉敏锐还不行,只有上升到洞察力,往往最先洞察人心和先机,因而他们年纪轻轻就取得了非凡的业绩。
  • 完美复命,执行不打折扣

    完美复命,执行不打折扣

    企业员工人手一本的培训工具书,全面提升企业战斗力的执行手册。完美复命,培养有命必复的复命精神;不折不扣,锻造非凡卓越的执行能力。