登陆注册
5362600000449

第449章

["If I may have what I now own, or even less, and may live for myself what of life remains, if the gods grant me remaining years."--Horace, Ep., i. 18, 107.] but the losses that befall me by the injury of others, whether by theft or violence, go almost as near my heart as they would to that of the most avaricious man. The offence troubles me, without comparison, more than the loss. A thousand several sorts of mischiefs fell upon me in the neck of one another; I could more cheerfully have borne them all at once.

I was already considering to whom, amongst my friends, I might commit a necessitous and discredited old age; and having turned my eyes quite round, I found myself bare. To let one's self fall plump down, and from so great a height, it ought to be in the arms of a solid, vigorous, and fortunate friendship: these are very rare, if there be any. At last, I saw that it was safest for me to trust to myself in my necessity; and if it should so fall out, that I should be but upon cold terms in Fortune's favour, I should so much the more pressingly recommend me to my own, and attach myself and look to myself all the more closely. Men on all occasions throw themselves upon foreign assistance to spare their own, which is alone certain and sufficient to him who knows how therewith to arm himself. Every one runs elsewhere, and to the future, forasmuch as no one is arrived at himself. And I was satisfied that they were profitable inconveniences; forasmuch as, first, ill scholars are to be admonished with the rod, when reason will not do, as a crooked piece of wood is by fire and straining reduced to straightness. I have a great while preached to myself to stick close to my own concerns, and separate myself from the affairs of others; yet I am still turning my eyes aside.

A bow, a favourable word, a kind look from a great person tempts me; of which God knows if there is scarcity in these days, and what they signify. I, moreover, without wrinkling my forehead, hearken to the persuasions offered me, to draw me into the marketplace, and so gently refuse, as if I were half willing to be overcome. Now for so indocile a spirit blows are required; this vessel which thus chops and cleaves, and is ready to fall one piece from another, must have the hoops forced down with good sound strokes of a mallet. Secondly, that this accident served me for exercise to prepare me for worse, if I, who both by the benefit of fortune, and by the condition of my manners, hoped to be among the last, should happen to be one of the first assailed by this storm; instructing myself betimes to constrain my life, and fit it for a new state. The true liberty is to be able to do what a man will with himself:

"Potentissimus est, qui se habet in potestate."

["He is most potent who is master of himself."--Seneca, Ep., 94.]

In an ordinary and quiet time, a man prepares himself for moderate and common accidents; but in the confusion wherein we have been for these thirty years, every Frenchman, whether personal or in general, sees himself every hour upon the point of the total ruin and overthrow of his fortune: by so much the more ought he to have his courage supplied with the strongest and most vigorous provisions. Let us thank fortune, that has not made us live in an effeminate, idle, and languishing age; some who could never have been so by other means will be made famous by their misfortunes. As I seldom read in histories the confusions of other states without regret that I was not present, the better to consider them, so does my curiosity make me in some sort please myself in seeing with my own eyes this notable spectacle of our public death, its form and symptoms; and since I cannot hinder it, I am content to have been destined to be present therein, and thereby to instruct myself. So do we eagerly covet to see, though but in shadow and the fables of theatres, the pomp of tragic representations of human fortune; 'tis not without compassion at what we hear, but we please ourselves in rousing our displeasure, by the rarity of these pitiable events. Nothing tickles that does not pinch. And good historians skip over, as stagnant water and dead sea, calm narrations, to return to seditions, to wars, to which they know that we invite them.

I question whether I can decently confess with how small a sacrifice of its repose and tranquillity I have passed over above the one half of my life amid the ruin of my country. I lend myself my patience somewhat too cheap, in accidents that do not privately assail me; and do not so much regard what they take from me, as what remains safe, both within and without. There is comfort in evading, one while this, another while that, of the evils that are levelled at ourselves too, at last, but at present hurt others only about us; as also, that in matters of public interest, the more universally my affection is dispersed, the weaker it is: to which may be added, that it is half true:

"Tantum ex publicis malis sentimus, quantum ad privatas res pertinet;"

["We are only so far sensible of public evils as they respect our private affairs."--Livy, xxx. 44.] and that the health from which we fell was so ill, that itself relieves the regret we should have for it. It was health, but only in comparison with the sickness that has succeeded it: we are not fallen from any great height; the corruption and brigandage which are in dignity and office seem to me the least supportable: we are less injuriously rifled in a wood than in a place of security. It was an universal juncture of particular members, each corrupted by emulation of the others, and most of them with old ulcers, that neither received nor required any cure.

同类推荐
  • Told After Supper

    Told After Supper

    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。
  • 佛说离垢施女经

    佛说离垢施女经

    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。
  • 春秋左传

    春秋左传

    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。
  • 玉清内书

    玉清内书

    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。
  • 太上老君说消灾经

    太上老君说消灾经

    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
  • 珒然如梦

    珒然如梦

    许蔓珒和杜聿然的爱情,如梦一般美好,却也像梦一样短暂,好梦易醒。梦醒了,缘尽了,人也散了。让人遗憾的,从来就不是不爱,而是爱过又错过。我不愿再和你错过,就像我不愿在每一个梦醒时分,只能靠着那一点仅有的记忆来想你。我想我会一直爱你,就像我反复做的那个梦,梦里木槿花开,你伏在我的背上,摇晃着双腿轻轻唱着歌……
  • 九死一生

    九死一生

    这位老人,这位老兵,叫徐钦林,是1949年10月参加过金门战役的老战士。现住在故乡山东省广饶县大码头镇央上村。金门战役是解放战争中,我军唯一打败了的一场战役。我军出动9086人(内有船工、民夫350人),其中牺牲5000多人,被俘3000多人。国民党军阵亡(一说伤亡)9000多人。徐钦林是这场战斗之后唯一逃回大陆的战士。他的右小腿受伤后,靠身上穿的国民党军装才幸免被俘被杀害,并“混入”了国军。1950年2月,他随国民党部队去了舟山群岛。5月份在敌军撤退时,他乘机跑到了山里,后找到了攻岛的我军部队,才返回了大陆,返回了部队。先介绍一下金门战役。
  • 一路悲伤一路歌

    一路悲伤一路歌

    一个爱与拯救的故事。<br/><br/>只要一天,只要他们晚相遇一天,他的生命就如天空中滑过的弧线缓缓消逝。<br/>烟花生命短暂却有着绚烂的美丽,而他的生命,只有遗憾。<br/>她,十八年的生命中只有快乐,茁壮的生活着,直到遇到他,才体会了生命的晦涩、难过、悲伤、心痛……<br/>终于,她成长了,她成熟了,她蜕变成了真正的女人。<br/><br/>两个完全不同的生命交叉,两个不同的生命发生了翻天覆地的变化。&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
  • 汤姆叔叔的小屋(领跑者·小学生新课标经典文库)

    汤姆叔叔的小屋(领跑者·小学生新课标经典文库)

    专为小学生打造,符合小学生的阅读习惯和思维方式,扫清字词障碍,有效提高阅读水平和作文水平。在快乐的阅读中健康成长。
  • 末世科考团

    末世科考团

    各位书移友们驾老驴新书,点击作家页里有连结。 天谴般的灾难降临之后,林轻扬在联邦最高科学殿堂所开发出来的人工智能帮助下,在这个地狱般的末日世界里过著有滋有味的生活。举起追查真相和拯救世界的大义旗帜在环游世界,一路上不但有水有电可以看影片、喝咖啡、洗热水澡,顿顿都能吃到大餐。原本身无分文、一无所有的林轻扬在生产能力为零的世界里要粮有粮、要枪有枪、要车有车,还有一帮生死与共的兄弟!P.S:&quot;本书为无系统、无异能、无玄幻、无武功的四无科幻末世文&quot;
  • 不属于我的日子

    不属于我的日子

    大学时代的残酷青春故事。中国版《丑女贝蒂》。那片阳光还在,失去与回归后,是自我发现的成长。华亭路买衣服,考G考托出国热,唐颖的作品总能带人穿越回那些年我们爱过的上海。想要出国的人,安于现状的人,这世界上惟有爱情是无法追求的。女大学生与外国留学生的性情经历,渡边淳一一般的爱与失去。也许青春的秘密与真相就是找到真正的自己。
  • 我到远古来修仙

    我到远古来修仙

    请问一下,在座的各位有没有体会过什么叫做被雷一劈回到解放前的感觉?而且...还是被劈到了远古!看着一只只剑齿虎从她身边走过,她表示她一堂堂的现代修仙界天才,还能怕了不成?佛挡杀佛,神挡杀神!不管是豺狼虎豹还是阴谋诡计,在她面前都是纸老虎!!(本文纯属虚构背景,非真实远古时期现状)
  • 念你情深意长

    念你情深意长

    这世上终归有一人,能够给你一份孤勇,让你为之勇敢。久等,又有何妨?结局已如他所愿,过程再艰难,他都心甘情愿。求婚时,他说:“我从不敢奢望你会回报以爱情。可我说服不了自己放弃。我这辈子做过最骄傲最得意的事,就是和真心死磕到底,最终赢得了你。但这还不够。我要的是:我们相濡以沫、相伴终身。我怀着这样的想法向你求婚,希望花甲之年我们依然在一起。”一段差点被时光掩埋的心事,一场你敢嫁我就敢娶的甜蜜恋情。我遇上你,并不在最好的年纪,却因为你,又一次相信爱情。时光不老,你我情深意长。
  • 天文探谜

    天文探谜

    把兴趣引进课本,使爱好代替讲台,将学生的被动接受知识变为主动学习吸收,激发学生的阅读热情与探索精神,奠定良好的知识基础与创新素质,这就是本套全书的宗旨。
  • 写下待回忆

    写下待回忆

    一些杂七杂八的胡言乱语,也许是真实,也许是幻想。群:吃睡团团一号:706779116