登陆注册
5217300000010

第10章 Chapter I(10)

Mill had already received the appointment which decided the future course of his life.He was appointed to a clerkship in the India House,21st May 1823,having just finished his seventeenth year.He received successive promotions,till in 1856he became chief of the office with a salary of ?000a year.Mill gives his own view of the advantages of the position,Which to a man of his extraordinary power of work were unmistakable.He was placed beyond all anxiety as to bread-winning.He was not bound to make a living by his pen,and could devote himself to writing of permanent value.He was at the same time brought into close relation with the conduct of actual affairs;forced to recognise the necessity of compromise,and to study the art of instilling his thoughts into minds not specially prepared for their reception.Mill's books show how well he acquired this art.

Whatever their other merits or defects,they reconcile conditions too often conflicting;they are the product of mature reflection,and yet presented so as to be intelligible without special initiation.He is unsurpassable as an interpreter between the abstract philosopher and the man of common-sense.The duties were not such as to absorb his powers.Though his holidays were limited to a month,he could enjoy Sunday rambles in the country and pedestrian tours at home and abroad;and though conscientiously discharging his official duties,he managed to turn out as much other work as might have occupied the whole time of average men.The Utilitarians were beginning to make themselves felt in the press.Mill's first printed writings were some letters in the Traveller in 1822,defending Ricardo and James Mill against some criticism by Torrens.He then contributed three letters to the Morning Chronicle,denouncing the prosecution of Carlisle,which then excited the rightful wrath of the Utilitarians.Two letters in continuation were too outspoken to be published.(16)Mill contributed to the Westminster Review from its start in the spring of 1824,helping his father's assault upon the Edinburgh.He was,he says,the most frequent writer of all,and between the second and eighteenth number contributed thirteen reviews.They show that he was reading widely.An article upon Scott's Napoleon in 1828shows that he had fully made up his deficiencies as to the history of the French revolution.He had not,however,as yet attained his full powers of expression;and neither the style nor the arrangement of the matter has the merits of his later work.(17)The most remarkable by far is the review of Whately's Logic in January 1828.It shows some touches of youthful arrogance,though exceedingly complimentary to the author reviewed.But the knowledge displayed and the vigour of the expression are surprising in a youth of twenty-one;and it proves that Mill was already reflecting to some purpose upon the questions treated in his Logic.

While thus serving an apprenticeship to journalism,Mill was going through a remarkable mental training.About the beginning of 1825he undertook to edit Bentham's Rationale of Evidence.He says that this work 'occupied nearly all his leisure for about a year.'That such a task should have been accomplished by a youth of twenty in a year would seem marvellous even if he had been exclusively devoted to it.He had to condense large masses of Bentham's crabbed manuscript into a continuous treatise;to 'unroll'his author's involved and parenthetic sentences;to read the standard English textbooks upon evidence;to reply to reviewers of previous works of Bentham,and to add comments especially upon some logical points.Finally,he had to see,five large volumes through the press.'(18)That this was admirable practice,and that Mill's style became afterwards,markedly superior,to what it had been before,may be well believed.It is impossible,however,not to connect the fact that Mill had gone through this labour in 1825with the singular mental convulsion which followed in 1826.

He was,he says,in a,dull state of nerves,in the autumn of that year.It occurred to him to ask whether he would be happy supposing that all his objects in life could be realised.'An irrepressible consciousness distinctly answered "No."'The cloud would not pass away.He could think of no physician of the mind who could 'raze out the rooted trouble of the brain.'His father had no experience of such feeling,nor could he give the elder man the pain of thinking that all the educational plans had failed.The father's philosophy,indeed,both explained,and showed the hopelessness of,the evil.Feelings depend upon association.Analysis tends to destroy the associations,and therefore to 'wear away the feelings.'Happiness has for its main source the pleasure of sympathy with others.But the knowledge that the feeling would give happiness could not suffice to restore the feeling itself.It seemed to be impossible to set to work again and create new associations.Mill dragged on mechanically through the winter of 1826-27,and the gloom only gathered.He made up his mind that he could not bear life for more than a year.The first ray of hope came from a passage in which Marmontel describes his father's death and his resolution to make up the loss to his family.Gradually he recovered,though he suffered several relapses.He learned,he says,two lessons:first,that though happiness must be the end,it must not be the immediate or conscious end,of life.Ask whether you are happy and you will cease to be happy.Fix upon some end external to happiness,and happiness will be 'inhaled with the air you breathe.'And in the second place,he learned to make the 'cultivation of the feelings one of the cardinal points in his ethical and philosophical creed.'He could not,however,for some time apply his new doctrine to practice.He mentions as a quaint illustration of this period one ingenious mode of self-torment.

同类推荐
  • 比丘尼传

    比丘尼传

    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。
  • 佛说称赞如来功德神咒经

    佛说称赞如来功德神咒经

    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。
  • 言兵事疏

    言兵事疏

    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。
  • 决罪福经

    决罪福经

    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。
  • 秋水轩尺牍

    秋水轩尺牍

    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
  • 豪门总裁藏1

    豪门总裁藏1

    A市风雨交加的夜晚。“老公我肚子疼快点叫医生,应该是快要生了。”欧阳宏烨正打电话……
  • 久爱成婚:亿万总裁惹不起

    久爱成婚:亿万总裁惹不起

    一夜之间,她失去云家所有宠爱,父亲将她送给老男人,她逃离却难逃失身。三年后,她华丽转变,与帝都最有权势的男人签订合约,他邪魅地在她耳边开口:“想要我替你报仇,取悦我,直到我满意为止。”她妩媚一笑,“三少,你确定你能hold住?”结婚当天,她抛弃他,和别的男人离开,当她回归之时,他已有未婚妻,他不顾未婚妻的脸面,对她高调宣爱,她沉着脸怒声大喊:“苏凌墨,你给我滚!”他面不改色迈步向她走来,一把搂住她暧昧的说:“咱们一起滚…床!单!”
  • 恍若梦中一相逢

    恍若梦中一相逢

    《恍若梦中一相逢》在一场文化与历史的盛宴里洗涤心灵,倾注热情,修磨心性,超越美学。在新颖的唐诗与散文完美的交融里,让读者品尝文字的韵味,体悟人生的真理,探索自然的永恒。
  • 追风逐云

    追风逐云

    杀戮江湖。风云教为一统江湖与武林各派势成水火。因南方盟主天苍云破坏风云教欲将各派一网成擒的计谋,月圣使水若风受到代教主刑罚,更因而欲杀天苍云而后快。于是设计、使毒使他功力全失,眼看天苍云就要葬身万丈深渊,却因一时大意,被他那条该死的乌金索一起卷下死谷。谷下,遍地天颜花,不仅解了天苍云的毒,还将他变成了魔鬼……解毒后的错落,让天苍云对水若风起了异样的怜惜之心,大错既已造成,以他的为人、甚至是心中那点慕爱之意,不管双方背景上如何对立,他也要誓死维护水若风周全。两人渐长的情感是否能捱得过正道与魔教双方的迫害?对立的立场是否终能化解?
  • 会办事才能办成事:瞬间把事办成的81个心理策略

    会办事才能办成事:瞬间把事办成的81个心理策略

    本书借鉴和汲取了诸多办事智慧的精华,从魅力征服、礼仪为先、因人而异、善借外力、洞悉人心、巧言胜师、示人以弱、把握分寸、以进为退、方圆有度、处变不惊、转换思路等12个方面对如何办事进行了全方位、深层次的透析,并通过一些生动而有趣的案例介绍了那些会办事的聪明人是通过什么样的方法和智慧最终达成了目的的。通过《会办事才能办成事:瞬间把事办成的81个心理策略》,读者可以针对不同场合、不同对象,把握办事的分寸、火候、分量、次序,有效利用各种资源达到成功办事的目的,轻轻松松把事情办好。
  • 妙手医妃

    妙手医妃

    穿越成为个废材庶女不可悲,成为弃妇才可悲。偏偏这王爷太作,行!本姑娘不仅医毒拿手,更是治作小能手!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 和我同名的人

    和我同名的人

    我叫张伟。我不知道全国有多少人叫这个名字。上小学时我曾经萌发过把这个大众化的名字改了的念头,回家还没等把这个意思和父亲表达清楚,就遭到了脾气暴躁的父亲的一顿臭骂:小兔崽子,刚上了两天半学胎毛还没褪净,就想出幺蛾子!这个名字是你爷爷给你起的,不能改!我父亲是个孝子,他认为私自把长辈赋予的名字改了,就是大不敬,就是大逆不道。于是我只能将这个我爷爷赋予我的名字继续延续下去。不过,随着年龄的增长,我逐渐意识到,其实名字说白了只是个区别于旁人的符号,对一个人的发展可能起到推进作用,但是作用不是很大,后天自身的努力才是最关键的。
  • 吴三桂演义

    吴三桂演义

    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。
  • 超级忍者系统

    超级忍者系统

    一觉醒来,东方云阳来到了一个类似火影忍者的异世界,脑袋里还莫名出现了一个超级忍者系统,作为木岩村三大创始家族之一东方家宗家独苗的他又将开启一条怎样的忍者之路呢?叮咚:“恭喜主人获得血继限界?写轮眼,可进化。”叮咚:“恭喜主人获得忍具?鲛肌,此忍具可吸收他人查克拉化为己用。”叮咚:“恭喜主人获得通灵术?尾兽,此术可召唤各类尾兽。”……PS:非火影原著背景,而是一个类似的忍者世界,不过火影中的人物会以特殊方式的客串登场。
  • 系统之贵妻临门

    系统之贵妻临门

    贺青浣的爹天下第一好看!贺青浣的弟弟天下第二美!贺青浣的老公是天下第三美男子!至于贺青浣,她有败家系统就好啦。买买买,花花花,这就是贺青浣穿越到周朝后的日常生活。嗯,除此外,当然也有膜拜一下美男老爹,调教一下美男弟弟,调戏一下美男老公啦!系统在手,天下我有!贺青浣表示,这样的人生,很幸福,很满足。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】