登陆注册
5291300000052

第52章 CHAPTER IX. (4)

But while Mme. de Lambert had a calm and equable temperament, and loved to surround herself with an atmosphere of repose, she was not without a fine quality of sentiment. "I exhort you much more to cultivate your heart," she writes to her son, "than to perfect your mind; the true greatness of the man is in the heart." "She was not only eager to serve her friends without waiting for their prayers or the humiliating exposure of their needs," said Fontenelle, "but a good action to be done in favor of indifferent people always tempted her warmly . . .. The ill success of some acts of generosity did not correct the habit; she was always equally ready to do a kindness." She has written very delicately and beautifully of friendships between men and women; and she had her own intimacies that verged upon tenderness, but were free from any shadow of reproach. Long after her death, d'Alembert, in his academic eulogy upon de Sacy, refers touchingly to the devoted friendship that linked this elegant savant with Mme. de Lambert. "It is believed," says President Henault, "that she was married to the Marquis de Sainte-Aulaire. He was a man of esprit, who only bethought himself, after more than sixty years, of his talent for poetry; and Mme. de Lambert, whose house was filled with Academicians, gained him entrance into the Academy, not without strong opposition on the part of Boileau and some others." Whether the report of this alliance was true or not, the families were closely united, as the daughter of Mme. de Lambert was married to a son of Sainte-Aulaire; it is certain that the enduring affection of this ancient friend lighted the closing years of her life.

Though tinged with the new philosophy, Mme. de Lambert regarded religion as a part of a respectable, well-ordered life.

"Devotion is a becoming sentiment in women, and befitting in both sexes," she writes. But she clearly looked upon it as an external form, rather than an internal flame. When about to die, at the age of eighty-six, she declined the services of a friendly confessor, and sent for an abbe who had a great reputation for esprit. Perhaps she thought he would give her a more brilliant introduction into the next world; this points to one of her weaknesses, which was a love of consideration that carried her sometimes to the verge of affectation. It savors a little of the hypercritical spirit that is very well illustrated by an anecdote of the witty Duchesse de Luxenbourg. One morning she took up a prayer book that was lying upon the table and began to criticize severely the bad taste of the prayers. A friend ventured to remark that if they were said reverently and piously, God surely would pay no attention to their good or bad form. "Indeed," exclaimed the fastidious Marechale, whose religion was evidently a becoming phase of estheticism, "do not believe that."

The thoughts of Mme. de Lambert, so elevated in tone, so fine in moral quality, so rich in worldly wisdom, and often so felicitous in expression, tempt one to multiply quotations, especially as they show us an intimate side of her life, of which otherwise we know very little. Her personality is veiled. Her human experiences, her loves, her antipathies, her mistakes, and her errors are a sealed book to us, excepting as they may be dimly revealed in the complexion of her mind. Of her influence we need no better evidence than the fact that her salon was called the antechamber to the Academie Francaise.

The precise effect of this influence of women over the most powerful critical body ot eh century, or of any century, perhaps, we can hardly measure. In the fact that the Academy became for a time philosophical rather than critical, and dealt with theories rather than with pure literature, we trace the finger of the more radical thinkers who made themselves so strongly felt in the salons. Sainte=Beuve tells us that Fontenelle, with other friends of Mme. de Lambert, first gave it this tendency; but his mission was apparently an unconscious one, and strikingly illustrates the accidental character of the sources of the intellectual currents which sometimes change the face of the world. "If I had a handful of truths, I should take good care not to open it," said this sybarite, who would do nothing that was likely to cause him trouble. But the truths escaped in spite of him, and these first words of the new philosophy were perhaps the more dangerous because veiled and insidious. "You have written the 'Histoire des Oracles,'" said a philosopher to him, after he had been appointed the royal censor, "and you refuse me your approbation." "Monsieur," replied Fontenelle, "if I had been censor when I wrote the 'Histoire des Oracles,' I should have carefully avoided giving it my approbation." But if the philosophers finally determined the drift of this learned body, it was undoubtedly the tact and diplomacy of women which constituted the most potent factor in the elections which placed them there. The mantle of authority, so gracefully worn by Mme. de Lambert, fell upon her successors, Mme. Geoffrin and Mlle. de Lespinasse, losing none of its prestige. As a rule, the best men in France were sooner or later enrolled among the Academicians.

If a few missed the honor through failure to enlist the favor of women, as has been said, and a few better courtiers of less merit attained it, the modern press has not proved a more judicious tribunal.

同类推荐
  • The Autobiography of Ben Franklin

    The Autobiography of Ben Franklin

    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。
  • 词旨

    词旨

    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。
  • 佛说贫穷老公经之二

    佛说贫穷老公经之二

    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。
  • Novel Notes

    Novel Notes

    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。
  • 大明度经

    大明度经

    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
  • 美食高手(现代生活实用丛书)

    美食高手(现代生活实用丛书)

    中国的饮食文化源远流长,有着丰富的文化内涵形成了众多的菜系。目前有四大菜系、八大菜系、十大菜系之说。它们因地理气候、习俗、特产的不同形成了不同的地方风味。中国饮食文化有着丰富的饮食观念、民俗风情、物产原料烹调技术、饮食器具、礼仪、食疗养生多重内容。我国的饮食调制方法各式各样,烹、炒、煎、炸、煮、炖、涮等。花样繁多,色香味俱全。《美食高手》一书方便易懂,更提取了各菜系中的精华,渴望成为城乡居民,尤其是家庭主妇的良师益友。
  • 命定

    命定

    《命定》描写的是藏族军人参加远征军,与汉族人民一起抗击日本侵略者的故事。在充满浓郁的康巴风情和藏传佛教习俗的背景之下,两个康巴汉子在命运的驱使下一步步走向了抗战前线。这两个令人赞叹的康巴汉子,用自己朴实平凡的行为,告知了世人关于信仰、生命、爱情、友情、亲情的真谛所在。
  • 给我眼睛开个挂

    给我眼睛开个挂

    才艺双绝的超级学霸路晓晓穿越了,然而令他懵逼的是,自己居然穿越到了一个普通人的身上?What?什么都没有?自己既不是废物主角,也不是圣子大反派,这怎么玩儿?难道自己就这么默默无为就算啦?fuck!你特么至少给我一个金手指啊,路晓晓说道,然而~并没有什么卵用……且看路晓晓怎么凭借头脑在异世界生活,自己不是主角?没关系,谁是主角我就阴谁,就让我看看,主角到底能有多大的气运?!反派?呵呵,算不上吧,我黑白通吃……活成我自己就行了,为什么非要去搞什么死套路剧情?没必要……
  • 三世独妃

    三世独妃

    她,林卓儿,足智多谋,却挡不住爱狱,国破家亡之日以身殉国。醒来,她是凤家的绝世天才,却是一身修为尽毁的废物!她扬眉浅笑,废材,那是暂时的,耻辱,那也是暂时的!那些曾经践踏她,侮辱她的人,她要一个个将他们踩在脚下,让他们回答,谁,才是废物!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 无血战争

    无血战争

    “阿麦,附近发现了还在运作的友方机器吗?”莎拉·班尼特低声问道。她强咽了一口唾沫,试图按捺住心中越来越剧烈的恐慌,仿佛那恐慌随时都会蹦出嗓子眼儿。我不是士兵,只是个给计算机编程的女人!我不知道我在干什么,肯定是哪儿出错了!自主军用智能机器人阿麦,语调平静、不带感情色彩地在她的耳朵里说:“往北约一公里有个修理厂,看上去完好,但极有可能已被敌人动过。靠近需谨慎。”
  • 画春风

    画春风

    李惜以为,重生一世,必能避开不幸,过上幸福的生活。事实给了她一个大巴掌:面对强大的敌人,所有谋划都是空,重生的李惜再次成了孤家寡人。有人告诉她:“大道三千,殊途同归。”大道的尽头是什么,李惜不知道,也不想知道。她只知道“灵石是万能的,没有灵石更是万万不能的。”她不是奔波在赚灵石的路上,就是正在赚灵石......另有最新完结文《鉴宝娘子》。等更期间可移步!
  • 万世缘之混沌尊帝

    万世缘之混沌尊帝

    缘分有三生三世,一世便是一百年,那么有没有能够延续一百万年的缘分呢?苍生选择听风,还是听风选择苍生?一切都不过一个缘字...
  • 华严经海印道场九会请佛仪

    华严经海印道场九会请佛仪

    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。
  • 千古风流话周瑜

    千古风流话周瑜

    周瑜,字公瑾,东汉末年名将,有姿貌、精音律,少与孙策交好,后孙策遇刺身亡,孙权继任。周瑜将兵赴丧,以中护军的身份与长史张昭共掌众事,建安十三年(208年),周瑜率东吴军与刘备军联合,在赤壁击败曹操,自此三分天下。究竟孰是孰非,君子小人,就从这里开始!
  • 爱之枷锁

    爱之枷锁

    “富二代”、“官二代”!我们大家现在关心的社会群体。 一所集聚着“富二代”、“官二代”的贵族学校里,他们过着如公主般和王子般的生活。以一个叫柯贝为首的“富二代”,她家“富可敌国”,她有着自己的专职保姆;她高傲、冷漠、刁钻,是一个让人不可接近的女孩。但是,她的眼里为何充满了孤独?她有什么心结?她又是怎样和另外几个同样是“富二代”和“官二代”的孩子成为了好朋友?他们也有着和我们普通孩子一样的热情和善良,他们也有着自己爱恨分明的个性,他们一起生活、学习,他们共同进步!他们又是怎样帮助柯贝打开心结?他们的身上,又承受着怎样的枷锁呢?······ 这是一部取之于现实题材的小说,文章中诙谐幽默的对话场景也许会给你带来一定的快乐和轻松!也许会让你领会到一些什么······请大家多多支持(多点击、多推荐、多收藏)!