[743:]
How rapidly we pass through life on earth! The first quarter of life slips away
before we know how to use it; the last quarter slips away after we have ceased
to enjoy it. At first we do not know how to live; soon we are not able to live.
In the interval between these two useless extremes three-quarters of the time
left to us is consumed by sleep, work, pain, constraints, and every kind of
suffering. Life is short, less because of the little time it lasts than because
we have hardly any time to savor what little of it there is. In vain is the
moment of death set apart from that of birth; life is always too short when this
space is badly filled.
[744:]
We are born, so to speak, twice: once to exist, the other to live; one time for
our species and another for our sex. Those who regard woman as an imperfect man
are wrong without doubt, but the analogy based on externals supports them. Up to
the age of puberty children of both sexes have nothing to distinguish them in
appearance. They both have the same face, the same figure, the same complexion,
the same voice -- everything is equal. Girls are children and boys are children;
the same name suffices for beings so similar. Males whose later sexual
development has been impeded preserve this resemblance all their lives; they are
always big children; and women who never lose this resemblance seem in many ways
never to be anything else.
[745:]
But man in general is not meant to remain always in childhood. He will leave it
at the time prescribed by nature; and this moment of crisis, although very
short, has long-term influences.
[746:]
Like the rumbling of the sea that precedes a storm from afar, so the murmur of
rising passions announces this tumultuous revolution. A bubbling undercurrent
warns of the the approaching danger. Changes of temper, frequent outbreaks of
anger, a continual agitation of the mind, make the child almost ungovernable. He
becomes deaf to the voice that used to make him manageable; he is a lion in a
fever. He disregards his guide; he wants no longer to be controlled.
[747:]
Along with the moral symptoms of a changing temper come perceptible changes in
appearance. His face develops and takes on the stamp of his character; the soft
and sparse down at the base of his cheeks becomes darker and takes on
consistency. His voice changes, or rather he loses it altogether; he is neither
a child nor a man and cannot take the tone of either. His eyes, those organs of
the soul which have said nothing until now, find their own language and
expression. A growing fire animates them. Their livelier glances still have a
sacred innocence, but they no long keep their earlier dumbness; he already feels
that they can say too much. He begins to know how to lower them and blush. He is
becoming sensitive before knowing that he feels; he is restless without reason.
All this may come slowly and still give you time; but if his vivacity makes him
too impatient, if outbursts change into fury, if he becomes angry then gentle
from one moment to the next, if he weeps without cause, if in the presence of
objects which are beginning to be a source of danger his pulse quickens and his
eyes light up, if he trembles when a woman's hand touches his, if he is troubled
or timid in her presence, 0 Ulysses, wise Ulysses! take care! The goatskin sacks
you sealed with so much care are open; the winds are unloosed; do not leave the
helm for a minute or all is lost.
[748:]
This is the second birth I spoke of. It is now that man is truly born to life
and that nothing human is foreign to him. Until now our efforts have been
child's play; it is only now that they take on a true importance. This period
when ordinary educations end is just the time when ours ought to begin. But to
explain this new plan properly, let us review from a distance the state of
things that relate to it.
[749:]
Our passions are the principle means of our self-preservation; it is therefore
an enterprise as vain as it is ridiculous to wish to destroy them. That would be
to control nature, to wish to reform the work of God. If God told man to
annihilate the passions he gives him, God would both will and not will; he would
contradict himself. He has never given such an insane command; nothing like it
is written on the human heart, and what God wants a man to do, he does not have
it said by another man, he says it to him himself. He writes it in the botton of
his heart.
[750:]
Now I consider anyone who would prevent the birth of the passions almost as
foolish as he who would like to annihilate them; and those who believe that this
has been my project up until now have strongly misunderstood me.
[751:]
But would we be reasoning correctly, if from the fact that passions are natural
to man, we went on to conclude that all of the passions we feel in ourselves and
that we see in others are natural? Their source is natural, it is true; but they
have been swollen by a thousand other streams; they are a great river that is
constantly growing and in which one can scarcely find a few drops of the
original stream. Our natural passions are very limited; they are the instruments
of our liberty, they tend to preserve us. All those which subjugate and destroy
us come to us from elsewhere. Nature does not give them to us; we appropriate
them at her expense.
[752:]
The source of our passions, the origin and principle of all the others, the only
one that is born with man and never leaves him as long as he lives, is amour de
soi -- a passion that is primitive, innate, anterior to any other, and of which
all the others are in a sense only modifications. In this sense, if you like,
they are all natural. But most of these modifications have external causes
without which they would never occur, and these same modifications, far from
being advantageous to us, are harmful. They change the original purpose and work
against their principle, Then it is that man finds himself outside nature and
puts himself in contradiction with himself.
[753:]
Amour de soi-même is always good and always in accordance with order. Each of us
being charged especially with our own preservation, the first and the most
important of our cares is and ought to be to ceaselessly watch over it; and how
can we continually watch over it, if we do not take the greatest interest in it?
[754:]
We must therefore love ourselves in order to preserve ourselves, and it follows
directly from this same sentiment that we love that which preserves us. Every
child clings to its nurse;
Romulus must have clung to the she-wolf who suckled him. At
first this attachment is purely mechanical. That which favors the well-being of
an individual attracts him, that which harms him repells him; this is nothing
but blind instinct. What transforms this instinct into feeling -- the the
attachment into love, the aversion into hatred -- is the manifested intention to
help us or to harm us. We do not become passionately attached to insensitive
objects that only follow the direction given them. But those from which we
expect either good or evil from their internal disposition, from their will,
those we see acting freely for or against us, inspire us with feelings similar
to those they show towards us. Something does us good, we seek it out; but we
love the person who does us good. Something harms us, and we shrink from it; but
we hate the person who tries to hurt us.
[755:]
The child's first sentiment is to love himself, and the second, which derives
from the first, is to love those around him. For in his present state of
weakness he is aware of people only through the help and attention he receives
from them. At first his affection for his nurse and his governess is mere habit.
He seeks them because he needs them and because it feels good to have them; it
is more like consciousness than benevolence. He needs a long time to understand
that not only are they are useful to him but that they want to be useful to him.
It is then that he begins to love them.
[756:]
So a child is naturally disposed to kindly feeling because he sees that every
one about him is inclined to help him, and he gets from this observation the
habit of a sentiment favorable to his species. But as he expands his relations,
his needs, his active or passive dependencies, the feeling of his relations to
others awakens and produces a feeling of duties and preferences. Then the child
becomes imperious, jealous, deceitful, and vindictive. When he is coerced to
obey, if he does not see the usefulness of what he is told to do, he attributes
it to caprice, to an intention of tormenting him, and he rebels. When, on the
other hand, people obey him, then as soon as anything opposes him he regards it
as rebellion, as an intention to resist him; he beats the chair or table for
disobeying him. Amour de soi, which concerns only ourselves, is content when our
true needs are satisfied; but amour-propre, which makes comparisons, is never
satisfied and never can be. For this sentiment, which prefers ourselves to
others, requires also that others prefer us to themselves, which is impossible.
This is how the gentle and affectionate passions are born from amour de soi, and
how the hateful and irrascible passions are born from amour propre. Thus what
makes man essentially good is to have few needs and to compare himself little
with others; what makes him essentially evil is to have many needs and to depend
much on opinion. By this principle it is easy to see how one can direct to good
or evil all the passions of children and of men. It is true that being unable to
live always alone they will with difficulty always be good. This problem will by
necessity even increase with their relations; and it is in this above all else
that the dangers of society make art and care more indispensable in order to
prevent in the human heart the depravity that is born with these new needs.
[757:]
The proper study for man is that of his relations. As long as he only knows
himself through his physical being, he should study himself in relation with
things. This is the occupation of his childhood. When he begins to feel his
moral being, he should study himself in relation with men. This is the
occupation of his entire life, to be begun at the point where we have now
arrived.
[758:]
As soon as a man needs a companion he is no longer an isolated being; his heart
is no longer alone. All his relations with his species, all the affections of
his heart, come into being along with this. His first passion soon arouses the
rest.
[759:]
The direction of the instinct is uncertain. One sex is attracted by the other;
that is movement of nature. Choice, preferences, personal attachments, are the
work of enlightenment, prejudice, and habit. Time and knowledge are necessary to
make us capable of love; we do not love until after having judged or prefer
until after having compared. These judgments happen without anyone being aware
of them, but they are for that not less real. True love, whatever one may say
about it, will always be honored by man. For although its transports lead us
astray, although it does not exclude from the heart certain detestable qualities
and even can give rise to them, yet it always presupposes certain estimable
characteristics without which we would be incapable of feeling that love. This
choice that people put in opposition to reason really springs from reason. We
say love is blind because its eyes are better than ours, and it sees relations
that we cannot perceive. For a person who had no idea of merit or of beauty all
women would be equally good, and the first comer would always be the most
lovable. Far from coming from nature, love is the rule and the curb of nature's
leanings. It is love that makes one sex indifferent to the other, the loved one
alone excepted.
[760:]
We wish to obtain the same preference that we grant; so love must be reciprocal.
To be loved one must be lovable; to be preferred one must be more lovable than
another -- more lovable than all the others, at least in the eyes of the
beloved. Hence the first regards towards one's peers; hence the first
comparisons with them; hence emulation, rivalry, and jealousy. A heart full of
an overflowing sentiment loves to expand; from the need for a mistress there
soon springs the need for a friend. He who feels how sweet it is to be loved
desires to be loved by everyone; and there could be no preferences if there were
not many disappointments. With love and friendship are born dissension, enmity,
hatred. From the heart of so many passions I see opinion raising its unshakable
throne, and foolish mortals, enslaved by its empire, base their very existence
merely on what other people think.
[761:]
Extend these ideas and you will see where we get the form of amour-propre that
we imagine is natural, and how amour de soi, ceasing to be an absolute
sentiment, becomes pride in great minds, vanity in small ones, and in both
ceaselesly feeds itself at the expense of one's neighbor. Passions of this kind
have no seed in a child's heart and cannot spring up in it by themselves; it is
we who carry them there, and they would never take root except through our own
fault. But it is not so with the heart of a young man. Whatever we do such
passions will appear in spite of us. It is therefore time to change our method.
[762:]
Let us begin with some important reflections on the critical stage under
discussion. The passage from childhood to puberty is not so clearly determined
by nature that it doesn't vary in individuals according temperament and in
peoples according to climate. Everybody knows the differences which have been
observed in this regard between hot and cold countries, and every one sees that
ardent temperaments mature earlier than others. But we may be mistaken as to the
causes, and we may often attribute to physical causes what is really due to
moral: this is one of the commonest errors in the philosophy of our times. The
teachings of nature come late and slow, those of men are almost always
premature. In the first case, the senses awaken the imagination, in the second
the imagination awakens the senses; it gives them a precocious activity which
cannot fail to enervate, to weaken first the individual and, in the long run,
the species. A more general and more sure observation than the one about the
effect of the climates is that puberty and sexual power is always more
precocious among educated and civilized peoples than among the ignorant and
barbarous ones. Children have a singular capacity to discern immoral habits
beneath the tricks of decency with which they are concealed. The purified speech
dictated to them, the lessons in good behavior they are given, the veil of
mystery people affect to hang before their eyes, are so many pricks to their
curiosity. From the way you go about it, it is clear that they are meant to
learn what you profess to conceal; and of all you teach them this is most
quickly assimilated.
[763:]
Consult experience and you will understand to what point this insane method
accelerates the work of nature and ruins the temperament. This is one of the
principle causes of the degeneration of the race in our cities. The young
people, prematurely exhausted, remain small, feeble, misshapen; they grow old
instead of growing up -- like the vine that is forced to bear fruit in spring
fades and dies before autumn.
[764:]
One must have lived among rude and simple people to know to what age a happy
ignorance may prolong the innocence of children. It is a sight both touching and
amusing to see both sexes, left to the protection of their own hearts,
continuing the sports of childhood into the flower of youth and beauty and
showing by their very familiarity the purity of their pleasures. When finally
those lovable young people marry, they are mutually exchanging the first fruits
of their person and thereby become all the more dear to each other. Multitudes
of healthy robust children are the pledges of a union which nothing can alter
and the products of the wisdom of their early years.
[765:]
If the age at which a man becomes conscious of his sex differs as much by the
effects of education as by the action of nature, it follows that one may
accelerate or delay this age according to the way in which one raises one's
children; and if the body gains or loses consistency in proportion as one delays
or accelerates this progress, it also follows that the more we try to delay it
the stronger and more vigorous will the young man be. I am still speaking of
purely physical effects; we will soon see that we are not limited to them.
[766:]
From these reflections I derive a solution to the question, so often discussed,
of whether it is better to enlighten children early on as to the objects of
their curiosity or to put them off with modest lies. I think that one need do
neither. In the first place, this curiosity will not come to them unless one
provides the occasion for it; we must therefore make sure not to provide the
occasion for it. In the second place, questions one is not forced to answer do
not require us to deceive those who ask them. It is better to impose silence
than to answer by lying. He will not be greatly surprised by this law if you
have already accustomed him to it in matters of no importance. Finally, if you
decide to answer his questions, do it with the greatest simplicity -- without
mystery, without embarrassment, without smiles. It is much less dangerous to
satisfy a child's curiosity than to excite it.
[767:]
Your answers should always be grave, brief, decided, and without seeming to
hesitate. I need not add that they should be true. We cannot teach children the
danger of telling lies to men without realizing, on the man's part, the greater
danger of telling lies to children. A single lie on the part of the teacher will
forever ruin the fruit of his education.
[768:]
Complete ignorance with regard to certain matters is perhaps the best thing for
children; but let them learn very early those things that are impossible to hide
from them forever. Either their curiosity must never be aroused in any way, or
it must be satisfied before the age when it becomes a source of danger. Your
conduct towards your pupil in this respect depends greatly on his particular
situation, the society which surrounds him, the circumstances you predict he may
find himself in, etc. It is important here that nothing be left to chance; and
if you are not sure of keeping him in ignorance about the difference between the
sexes until he is sixteen, take care that he learns it before he is ten.
[769:] I
do not like people to affect a purified language in speaking with children, nor
to make long detours in order to avoid giving things their true name. They are
always found out if they do. Good manners in these things have much simplicity;
but an imagination soiled by vice makes the ear over-sensitive and compels us to
be constantly refining our expressions. Gross terms are without consequence; it
is lascivious ideas which must be avoided.
[770:]
Although modesty is natural to man, children do not have it naturally. Modesty
only begins with the knowledge of evil; and how should children who do not and
should not have this knowledge have the sentiment which results from it? To give
them lessons in modesty and good conduct is to teach them that there are things
shameful and bad, and to give them a secret desire to know what these things
are. Sooner or later they will find out, and the first spark which touches the
imagination will certainly hasten the kindling of the senses. Anyone who blushes
is already guilty; true innocence is ashamed of nothing.
[771:]
Children do not have the same desires as men; but subjected like them to the
same improprieties which offend the senses, they may with regard to this one
subjection receive the same lessons in decency. Follow the spirit of nature,
which has located in the same place the organs of secret pleasures and those of
disgusting needs. Nature teaches us the same precautions at different ages,
sometimes by means of one idea and sometimes by another -- to the man through
modesty, to the child through cleanliness.
[772:] I
can only find one good way of preserving the child's innocence; that is have all
those who surround him respect and love it. Without this all our efforts to keep
him in ignorance fail sooner or later. A smile, a wink, a careless gesture tell
him all we sought to hide; it is enough to let him know that there is something
we want to hide from him. The delicate phrases and expressions used by polite
people among each other assume a knowledge which children ought not to possess
and are inappropriate for them. But when we truly honor the child's simplicity
we easily find in talking to him the simple phrases which are suitable. There is
a certain naiveté of language that is suitable and pleasing to innocence; this
is the right tone to adopt in order to distract the child from a dangerous
curiosity. By speaking simply to him about everything you do not let him suspect
there is anything left unsaid. By connecting coarse words with the unpleasant
ideas which belong to them, you quench the first spark of imagination. You do
not forbid the child to say these words or to form these ideas; but without him
thinking about it you make recalling them repugnant to him. And how much
confusion is spared to those who speaking from the heart always say the right
thing, and say it as they themselves have felt it!
[773:]
"How are babies made?" -- an embarrassing question that occurs very naturally to
children, and one which foolishly or wisely answered sometimes can determine
their habits and their health for life. The quickest way for a mother to avoid
it without deceiving her son is to impose silence on him. This would be fine if
he has always been accustomed to it in matters of no importance and if he does
not suspect some mystery from this new tone. But rarely does the mother stop
there. "It is the married people's secret," she will say, "little boys should
not be so curious." This is good for getting the mother out of an embarrassing
situation, but she must know that the little boy, piqued by her scornful manner,
will not have a moment's rest until he has found out the married people's
secret, and he will not take long to learn it.
[774:]
Permit me to recount a very different answer which I heard given to the same
question, one which struck me all the more coming as it did from a woman as
modest in speech as in her manners, but who, when the need arose, was able to
throw aside the false fear of blame and the vain jests of the foolish for the
welfare of her child and for the cause of virtue. Not long before the child had
passed a small stone in his urine which had torn the urethra, but the trouble
was over and forgotten. "Mamma," said the eager child, "how are children made?"
"My child," replied his mother without hesitation, "women piss them out with
pains that sometimes cost them their life." Let fools laugh and silly people be
scandalized; but let the wise inquire if it is possible to find a more judicious
answer and one which would better serve its purpose.
[775:]
In the first place the thought of a natural and known need turns the child's
thoughts away from the idea of a mysterious process. The accompanying ideas of
pain and death cover it with a veil of sadness which deadens the imagination and
suppresses curiosity; everything leads the mind to the results, not the causes,
of child-birth. The infirmities of human nature, disgusting objects, images of
suffering -- these are the elucidations that the response would lead to if the
repugnance inspired by the answer allowed the child to inquire further. How
could any agitation of the desires have the chance to develop in conversations
directed in this way? And yet you see the truth has not been altered and that
there is no need to deceive one's pupil in order to instruct him.
[776:]
Your children read; in the course of their reading they get knowledge they would
never have if they had not read. If they study, their imagination is fired up
and sharpened in the silence of the library. If they move in the world of
society, they hear a strange jargon, they see examples of things that shock
them. They have been so well persuaded that they are men, that in everything men
do in their presence they immediately try to find how that will suit themselves;
the actions of others must indeed serve as a model when the opinions of others
are their law. Servants who are made to depend on them, and consequently are
anxious to please them, court them at the expense of their morals. Giggling
governesses make propositions to the four-year-old child which the most
shameless woman would not dare to make when he is fifteen. They soon forget what
they said, but the child has not forgotten what he heard. Loose conversation
prepares the way for licentious conduct; the child is debauched by the cunning
lacquey, and the secret of the one guarantees the secret of the other.
[777:]
The child brought up in accordance with his age is alone. He knows no attachment
but that of habit. He loves his sister like his watch and his friend like his
dog. He is unconscious of his sex and his species; men and women are alike
unknown; he does not connect either what they say or what they do with himself;
he neither sees nor hears, or he pays no attention to them. Their speeches do
not interest him any more than their exmples; all that is not made for him. This
is no artificial error induced by our method, it is the ignorance of nature. The
time will come when even nature will take care to enlighten her pupil, and only
then does she make him capable of profiting without danger from the lessons that
she gives him. This is our principle. The details of its rules are not my
subject, and the means I propose with regard to other matters will still serve
to illustrate this one.
[778:]
Do you wish to establish order and rule among the rising passions? Then prolong
the period of their development, so that they may have time to find their proper
place as they arise. Then it is not man who orders them but nature herself; your
task is merely to leave it in her hands. If your pupil were alone, you would
have nothing to do; but everything that surrounds him enflames his imagination.
A flood of prejudices sweeps him along. In order to hold him back one must push
him in the opposite direction. Feeling must enchain the imagination and reason
must silence the opinion of men. The source of all the passions is sensibility;
the imagination determines their course Every being that is aware of his
relations must be affected when these relations change and when he imagines or
believes he imagines others better adapted to his nature. It is the errors of
the imagination which transform into vices the passions of all finite beings,
even of angels, if indeed they have passions; for it would be necessary to know
the nature of every creature to realize what relations are best adapted to
oneself.
[779:]
This is the sum of human wisdom with regard to the use of the passions: 1: to
feel the true relations of man both in the species and the individual; 2: to
order all the affections in accordance with these relations.
[780:]
But can man master the ordering of his affections according to such and such
relations? No doubt he can master the direction of his imagination on this or
that object, or to form this or that habit. Moreover, it is less a question here
what a man can do for himself than it is with what we can do for our pupil
through our choice of the circumstances in which he shall be placed. To show the
means by which he may be kept in the path of nature is to say enough about
enough how one might stray from that path.
[781:]
So long as his consciousness is confined to himself there is no morality in his
actions. It is only when it begins to extend beyond himself that he forms first
the sentiments and then the ideas of good and bad, which make him truly a man
and an integral part of his species. To begin with we must therefore confine our
observations to this point.
[782:]
These observations are difficult to make, for we must reject the examples before
our eyes, and seek out those in which the successive developments follow the
order of nature.
[783:] A
sophisticated, polished, and civilized child, who is only awaiting the power to
put into practice the precocious instruction he has received, is never mistaken
with regard to the moment when this power is acquired. Far from awaiting it, he
accelerates it. He stirs his blood to a premature ferment; he knows what should
be the object of his desires long before those desires are experienced. It is
not nature which stimulates him; it is he who forces nature. She has nothing to
teach him by making him a man; he was a man in thought long before he was a man
in reality.
[784:]
The true course of nature is slower and more gradual. Little by little the blood
grows warmer, the faculties expand, the character is formed. The wise workman
who directs the process is careful to perfect all these instruments before
putting them to work. The first desires are preceded by a long period of unrest,
they are deceived by a prolonged ignorance, they know not what they want. The
blood ferments and becomes agitated; a superabundance of life seeks to extend
itself outwards. The eye grows animated and surveys others; we begin to be
interested in those around us; we begin to feel that we are not meant to live
alone. Thus the heart opens itself to human affections and becomes capable of
attachment.
[785:]
The first sentiment that the well-raised young man is susceptible to is not love
but friendship. The first action of his rising imagination is to teach him that
he has fellow human beings and that the species affects him before the sex. Here
is another advantage of prolonged innocence: you may take advantage of his
dawning sensibility to sow the first seeds of humanity in the heart of the young
adolescent. This advantage is all the the more precious because this is the only
time in his life when such efforts may be truly successful.
[786:] I
have always observed that young men corrupted early on and given over to women
and debauchery are inhuman and cruel. Their passionate temperament makes them
impatient, vindictive, and angry. Their imagination fixes on one object only,
and refuses all the rest; they know neither pity nor mercy; they would have
sacrificed father, mother, the whole world, to the least of their pleasures. A
young man, on the other hand, who is brought up in happy simplicity is drawn by
the first stirrings of nature to the tender and affectionate passions. His
compassionate heart is touched by the sufferings of his fellow-creatures; he
trembles with delight when he meets his friend. His arms know how to embrace
tenderly, his eyes know how to shed tears of tenderness. He is sensitive to the
shame of displeasing and to the the remorse of having offended. If the eager
warmth of his blood makes him quick, hasty, and passionate, a moment later you
see all his natural kindness of heart in the eagerness of his repentance; he
weeps, he groans over the wound he has given, he wants to atone for the blood he
has shed with his own. Faced with the sentiment of his wrong-doing, his anger
dies away, his pride is humbled. Is he himself offended? In the height of his
fury an excuse, a word, disarms him: he forgives the wrongs of others as
wholeheartedly as he repairs his own. Adolescence is not the age of vengeance or
of hate; it is the age of pity, forgiveness, and generosity. Yes, I maintain,
and I am not afraid of the testimony of experience, that a youth of good birth,
one who has preserved his innocence up to the age of twenty, is at this age the
most generous, the best, the most loving and most lovable of men. You never
heard such a thing; I can well believe it. Philosophers such as you, brought up
among the corruption of the schools, are unaware of it.
[787:]
It is man's weakness that makes him sociable. It is our common sufferings draw
our hearts to humanity; we would owe nothing to mankind if we were not men.
Every attachment is a sign of insufficiency. If each of us had no need of
others, we should hardly think of associating with them. Thus from our very
weakness is born our frail happiness. A truly happy being is a solitary being.
God alone enjoys an absolute happiness; but which of us has any idea of it? If
any imperfect being could be sufficient to itself, what according to us would he
be able to enjoy? He would be alone, he would be miserable. I do not conceive
how one who has no need of anything could love anything; I do not conceive how
he who loves nothing could be happy.
[788:]
It follows from this that we are drawn towards our fellow beings less by the
sentiment of their pleasures than by that of their pains; for there we see much
better the the identification of our nature and the guarantees of their
affection for us. If our common needs unite us by interest, our common miseries
unite us by affection. The sight of a happy man inspires in others less love
than envy; one is ready to accuse him of usurping a right that he does not have,
of creating for himself an exclusive happiness; and amour-propre suffers more by
making us feel that this man has no need of us. But who does not feel sorry for
the unhappy man who is seen suffering? Who would not wish to deliver him from
his pains if it cost only a wish to do so? Imagination puts us into the place of
the miserable man sooner than into the place of of the happy man; we sense that
former condition touches us more nearly than the latter. Pity is sweet because
by putting ourselves in the place of one who suffers we nevertheless feel the
pleasure of not suffering like him. Envy is bitter in that the sight of a happy
man, far from putting the envious in his place, inspires him with regret that he
is not there. The one seems to exempt us from the pains he suffers, the other
seems to deprive us of the good things he enjoys.
[789:]
Do you wish to stimulate and nourish these first stirrings of awakening
sensibility in the heart of a young man -- to turn his disposition towards
beneficence and goodness? Then avoid planting the seeds of pride, vanity, and
envy through the misleading picture of the happiness of men; do not show him to
begin with the pomp of courts, the pride of palaces, the delights of spectacles;
do not take him into society and into brilliant assemblies. Do not show him the
externals of high society until after having put him in a condition to
appreciate it on its own terms. To show him the world before he is knows men is
not to form him but to corrupt him; not to instruct him but to deceive him.
[790:]
By nature men are neither kings, nobles, courtiers, nor millionaires. All men
are born naked and poor, all are subject to the miseries of life, its sorrows,
its ills, its needs, its suffering of every kind; finally all are condemned to
die. This is what man really is; this is what no mortal can escape. Begin then
by studying that which is the most inseparable from human nature, that which
best constitutes humanity
[791:]
At sixteen the adolescent knows what it is to suffer, for he himself has
suffered; but he hardly knows that others suffer too; to see it without feeling
it is not to know it, and as I have said a hundred times the child who does not
imagine what others feel knows no ills but his own. But when the first
development of the senses lights the fire of imagination in him, he begins to
feel himself in his fellows, to be touched by their cries and to suffer from
their pains. It is then that the sorrowful picture of suffering humanity should
bring to his heart the first feeling of tenderness he has ever experienced.
[792:]
If this moment is not easy to notice in your children, whose fault is that? You
taught them early on to play at feeling, you taught them its language so soon
that speaking continually with the same tone they turn your lessons against you
and give you no chance of discovering when they cease to lie and when they begin
to feel what they say. But look at my Emile. At the age I have led him up to, he
has neither felt nor lied. Before knowing what it is to love he has never said,
"I love you very much." He has never been perscribed what expression to assume
when he enters the room of his father, his mother, or his sick tutor; he has not
been shown the art of affecting a sadness he does not feel. He has never
pretended to weep for the death of any one, for he does not know what it is to
die. There is the same insensibility in his heart as in his manners.
Indifferent, like every child, to everything outside of himself, he takes no
interest in any one; the only thing that distinguishes him is that he will not
pretend to take such an interest and that he is not false like they are.
[793:]
Having thought little about sensitive beings Emile will know late what suffering
and dying are. Groans and cries will begin to stir his insides; the sight of
blood flowing will make him turn away his eyes; the convulsions of a dying
animal will cause him I know not what anguish, before he knows the source of
these impulses. If he were still stupid and barbarous he would not have these
sentiments; if he were more instructed he would recognize their source. He has
compared ideas too frequently already to feel nothing but not enough to conceive
of what he feels.
[794:]
Thus pity is born, the first relative sentiment that touches the human heart
according to the order of nature. To become sensitive and compassionate, the
child must know that there are beings similar to him who suffer what he has
suffered, who feel the pains he has felt; and others which he can form some idea
of as being capable of feeling these things also. In effect, how can we let
ourselves be stirred by pity unless we go beyond ourselves and identify
ourselves with the suffering animal? By leaving, so to spunk, our own nature and
taking his? We only suffer so far as we judge that he suffers; the suffering is
not in us, it is in him that we suffer. So no one becomes sensitive till his
imagination is aroused and begins to carry him outside himself.
[795:]
To stimulate and nourish this growing sensibility, to guide it or to follow its
natural bent, what should we do if not present to the young man objects on which
the expansive force of his heart may take effect -- objects which dilate it,
which extend it to other beings, which make him find himself outside of himself
-- and carefully remove everything that narrows, concentrates, and strengthens
the power of the human self? That is to say, in other words, to arouse in him
goodness, humanity, compassion, beneficence -- all the engaging and gentle
passions which are naturally pleasing to man -- and to prevent the the growth of
envy, covetousness, hatred -- all the repulsive and cruel passions which make
our sensibility not merely nul but a negative quantity and are the torment of
those who experience them.
[796:] I
think I can sum up all the preceding reflections in two or three definite,
straightforward, and easy to understand maxims.
First
Maxim
It is
not in human heart to put ourselves in the place of those who are happier than
ourselves, but only in the place of those who are the most to be pitied.
[797:]
If you find exceptions to this rule, they are more apparent than real. Thus we
do not put ourselves in the place of the rich or great when we become fond of
them; even when our affection is real, we only appropriate to ourselves a part
of their welfare. Sometimes we love the rich man in the midst of misfortunes;
but so long as he prospers he has no real friend except the man who is not
deceived by appearances and who pities rather than envies him in spite of his
prosperity.
[798:]
We are touched by the happiness of certain conditions of life -- for instance,
pastoral or country life. The charm of seeing these good people happy is not
poisoned by envy; we are genuinely interested in them. Why is this? Because we
feel we are able to descend into this state of peace and innocence and enjoy the
same happiness; it is an alternative which only gives us pleasant thoughts so
long as the wish is as good as the deed. There is always pleasure in seeing
one's own resources, in contemplating one's own wealth, even when we do not mean
to spend it.
[799:]
From this it follows that that to incline a young man to humanity, instead of
making him admire the brilliant fate of others you must show him the sad sides
of things and make him fear them. Thus it becomes clear that he must mark out a
route to happiness that does not follow the traces of anyone else.
Second Maxim
We never
pity another's woes unless we know we may suffer in like manner ourselves.
" Non
ignara mali, miseris succurrere disco." -- Virgil.
[800:] I
know nothing so beautiful, so profound, so touching, so true as these lines.
[801:]
Why have kings no pity for their subjects? Because they never expect to be men.
Why are the rich so hard on the poor? Because they have no fear of becoming
poor. Why do the nobles look down upon the people? Because a nobleman will never
be a commoner. Why are the Turks generally kinder and more hospitable than
ourselves? Because under their wholly arbitrary system of government, the rank
and wealth of individuals are always precarious and vacillating, so that they do
not regard poverty and degradation as conditions foreign to them; to-morrow, any
one may himself be in the same position as the one he assists is in today. This
reflection, which occurs again and again in eastern romances, lends them a
certain tenderness which is not to be found in our pretentious and harsh
morality.
[802:]
So do not accustom your pupil to look down from the height of his glory upon the
sufferings of the unfortunate, the labors of the wretched; and do not hope to
teach him to pity them as long as he considers them to be foreign to him. Make
him clearly understand that the fate of these unhappy persons may one day be his
own, that all their ills are just below him, that a thousand unforeseen and
inevitable events could make him fall to their level in a moment. Teach him to
put no trust in birth, health, or riches; show him all the vicissitudes of
fortune; find him examples all too frequent of poeple who from a condition much
higher than his own have fallen below the condition of these unhappy creatures
-- whether by their own fault or not is not our question now. Does he indeed
know the meaning of the word fault? Never interfere with the order of knowledge
and only enlighten him through the means within his reach. He needs to be no
great scholar to perceive that all the prudence of mankind cannot make certain
whether he will be alive or dead in an hour's time, whether before nightfall he
will not be grinding his teeth in the pangs of nephritis, whether a month from
now he will be rich or poor, whether in a year's time he may not be rowing an
Algerian galley under the lash of the slave-driver. Above all do not teach him
this coldly, like a catechism; let him see and feel human calamities. Shake up
and startle his imagination with the perils that continually surrounded every
man; let him see the abysses all about him, and when he hears you speak of them,
let him cling more closely to you for fear lest he should fall. "You will make
him timid and cowardly," you say. We will soon see; as for the present let us
begin by making him human; above all that is what is important to us.
Third
Maxim
The pity
that we have for the pain of others is not measured by the quantity of this pain
but by the sentiment we have for those who suffer it.
[803:]
We only pity a miserable person in so far as we think they feel the need of
pity. The physical sentiment of our pains is more limited than one would
suppose; it is memory that prolongs the pain, imagination which projects it into
the future, that make us really to be pitied. This is, I think, one of the
causes that makes us more callous to the pains of animals than to those of men,
although a common sensibility ought to make us identify ourselves equally with
them. We hardly pity the cart-horse in his shed, for we do not suppose that
while he is eating his hay he is thinking of the blows he has received and the
labors that await him. Neither do we pity the sheep grazing in the field, though
we know it is about to be slaughtered, for we believe it knows nothing of its
fate. Accordingly we also become hardened to the fate of men, and the rich
console themselves for the harm they do to the poor by supposing them to be too
stupid to feel anything. In general I judge of the value any one puts on the
happiness of his fellow-beings by what he seems to think of them. It is natural
to cheapen the happiness of the people one scorns. So do not be surprised that
politicians speak of the people with so much scorn and that philosophes affect
to make man so wicked.
[804:]
It is the people who compose the human race; those who are not of the people are
so few in number that they are not worth counting. Man is the same in every
condition of life. If that be so, the most numerous condition merits the most
respect. For the thinking person, all civil distinctions disappear; he sees the
same passions, the same sentiments, in both the vagrant and the celebrity. There
is merely a slight difference in speech and more or less artificiality of tone;
and if there is any essential difference that distinguishes them, it is to the
detriment of the moset dissembling. The people show themselves as they are, and
they are not attractive; but the fashionable world is compelled to adopt a
disguise. We would be horrified if we saw it as it really is.
[805:]
There is, so our sages tell us, the same amount of happiness and sorrow in every
condition. This saying is as destructive as it is untenable; for if everyone
were equally happy why would I need to trouble myself for anyone? Let every one
stay where he is; let the slave be ill-treated, the sick man suffer, and the
wretched perish; they have nothing to gain by any change in their condition.
People enumerate the sorrows of the rich, and show the inanity of their vain
pleasures. What gross sophistry! The rich man's sufferings do not come from his
condition, but from himself who alone abuses it. Even if he is more unhappy than
the poor man, he is not to be pitied, for his ills are of his own making, and it
depends only on him to make himself happy. But the sufferings of the poor man
come from external things, from the hardness of the fate that weighs upon him.
There are no good habits that can relieve him of the physical ills of fatigue,
exhaustion, and hunger. Neither a good mind nor wisdom can serve in any way to
free him from the pains of his condition. What did Epictetus gain by predicting
that his master would break his leg? Did he not do it anyway? Beyond the pain
itself he had the pain of foresight. If the people were as sensible as we assume
them to be stupid, what could they be other than what they are, what could they
do other than what they do do? Study the people in this condition; you will see
that, with a different way of speaking, they have as much intelligence and more
common-sense than you. Have respect then for your species; remember that it
consists essentially of the whole of the people, collectively; that if all the
kings and all the philosophes were removed they would scarcely be missed, and
things would go on none the worse. In a word, teach your pupil to love all men,
even those who scorn them; act in such way that he does not put himself in any
class, but finds himself in all. Speak to him of the human race with tenderness,
and even with pity, but never with scorn. Man, do not dishonor man.
[806:]
It is by these ways and others like them-- very different from the beaten paths
-- that we must enter the heart of the young adolescent in order to stimulate in
him the first impulses of nature, to develop it and extend it to his fellow
beings. To this I add that it is important to involve as little self-interest as
possible in these impulses; above all, no vanity, no emulation, no boasting --
none of those sentiments which force us to compare ourselves with others. For
such comparisons are never made without arousing some impression of hatred
against those who dispute our preference, were it only in our own estimation.
Then we would become either blind or angry, a bad man or a fool. Let us try to
avoid this alternative. Sooner or later these dangerous passions will appear, I
am told, in spite of us. I do not deny it. Each thing has its time and its
place. I am only saying that we should not help to arouse these passions.
[807:]
This is the spirit of the method to be laid down. Here examples and
illustrations are useless, for here we find the beginning of the nearly infinite
differences of character, and every example I gave would possibly apply to only
one case in a hundred thousand. This is the age also that the clever teacher
begins his real business as an observer and as a philosopher who knows the art
of probing the heart while working to reform it. Since it does not occur to the
young man to disguise himself, and since he has not even learned its meaning,
you can see by his manner, in his eyes, in his gestures, the impression he has
received from any object presented to him. You read in his face every impulse of
his heart. By watching his expression you learn to foresee his impulses and
eventually to control them.
[808:]
It has been commonly observed that blood, wounds, cries and groans, the
preparations for painful operations, and everything which directs the senses
towards things connected with suffering, are usually the first to make an
impression on all men. The idea of destruction, being more complex, does not
strike one the same. The image of death affects us later and more feebly, for no
one has had for himself the experience of dying; you must have seen corpses to
feel the agonies of the dying. But when once this idea is well formed in our
mind, there is no spectacle more horrible to our eyes, whether because of the
idea of complete destruction which it arouses through our senses, or because
knowing that this moment is inevitable for all men we feel ourselves more
intensely affected by a situation from which we know there is no escape.
[809:]
These various impressions differ in manner and in degree according to the
particular character of each individual and his former habits, but they are
universal and no one is completely free from them. There are other later and
less general impressions which are suited to more sensitive souls. These are
those that we receive from moral pains, inward suffering, the afflictions of the
mind, depression, and sadness. There are men who can be touched by nothing but
groans and tears; the suppressed sobs of a heart laboring under sorrow would
never draw a even a sigh from them; the sight of a down-cast visage, a pale and
gloomy countenance, eyes which can weep no longer, would never make them weep
themselves. The pains of the soul are nothing to them: they are analysed, but
their own mind feels nothing. From such persons expect only inflexible severity,
harshness, cruelty. They may be upright and just, but never merciful, generous,
or pitying. I say they could be just, if a man can indeed be just without being
merciful.
[810:]
But do not be in a hurry to judge young people by this standard, above all those
who, having been educated the way they should be, have no idea of the moral
sufferings they have never had to experience. For once again they can only pity
the ills they know, and this apparent insensibility, which only comes from
ignorance, is soon transformed into pity when they begin to feel that there are
in human life a thousand ills of which they know nothing As for Emile, if he had
simplicity and good sense in childhood, I am sure that he will have soul and
sensitivity in his youth. For the truth of the sentiments depends to a great
extent on the accuracy of the ideas.
[811:]
But why bring him to this? More than one reader will reproach me no doubt for
forgetting my first resolutions and the lasting happiness I promised my pupil.
The sorrowful, the dying, such sights of pain and misery -- what happiness, what
delight is this for a young heart on the threshold of life? His gloomy tutor,
who proposed to give him such a kindly education, only give him life so that he
may suffer? This is what they will say, but what difference does it make to me?
I promised to make him happy, not to make him seem happy. Is it my fault if,
always deceived by appearances, you take them for the reality?
[812:]
Let us take two young men at the end of their primary education and entering the
world by opposite doors. One climbs right away up to Mount Olympus and makes his
way into the smartest society. He is presented at court, introduced to nobles,
rich men, pretty women. I assume that he is entertained everywhere, and I will
not examine the effect of this reception on his reason; I assume it can resist
it. Pleasures fly before him, every day new objects amuse him; he flings himself
into everything with an eagerness which carries you away. You find him
attentive, eager, and curious; his first wonder makes a great impression on you;
you think him happy; but look at the state of his heart; you think he is
rejoicing, I think he suffers.
[813:]
What does he see when first he opens his eyes? Multitudes of so-called pleasures
which he did not know before and most of which, beingwithin his reach for only a
moment only seem to come to him in order to make him regret being deprived of
them. Is he walking through a palace? You see by his uneasy curiosity that he is
asking why his father's house is not like it. Every question shows you that he
is constantly comparing himself with the master of this house. And all the
mortification arising from this comparison sharpens his vanity by revolting it.
If he meets a young man better dressed than himself, I find him secretly
complaining of his parents' stinginess. If he is better dressed than another, he
suffers because the latter is his superior in birth or in intellect, and all his
gold lace is put to shame by a plain cloth coat. If he shines unrivalled in some
assembly, stands on tiptoe so that they may see him better, who is there who
does not secretly desire to humble the pride and vanity of the young fop?
Everybody soon unites as if in concert: the disquieting glances of a solemn man,
the biting phrases of some satirical person, do not fail to reach him, and even
if it were only one man who despised him, the scorn of that one would poison in
a moment the applause of the rest.
[814:]
Let us grant him everything. Let us not grudge him charm and worth; let him be
well-built, full of wit, and attractive. He will be sought after by women; but
by pursuing him before he is in love with them, they will inspire rage rather
than love. He will have successes, but neither rapture nor passion to enjoy
them. Since his desires are always anticipated they never have time to grow; in
the midst of pleasures he only feels the tedium of restraint. Even before he
knows it he is disgusted and satiated with the sex formed to be his own delight
; if he continues to seek it is only through vanity, and even should he really
become attached, he will not be the only young, brilliant, attractive young man,
nor will he always find his mistresses to be prodigies of fidelity.
[815:] I
say nothing of the vexations, deceptions, crimes, and remorse of all kinds that
are inseparable from such a life. Experience of the world makes one feel
disgusted with it, as everyone knows. And I am speaking only of the drawbacks
belonging to youthful illusions.
[816:]
What a contrast for the one who, sheltered up until now in the bosom of his
family and friends and seeing himself the sole object of their care, suddenly
enters an order of things where he counts for so little and finds himself
drowning in an unknown sphere, he who has been so long the center of his own!
What insults, what humiliation, must he endure, before he loses among strangers
the ideas of his own importance -- ideas that were formed and nourished among
his own people! As a child everything gave way to him, everyone flocked to him;
as a young man he must give place to every one, or if he preserves his former
airs even a little, what harsh lessons will bring him to himself! The habit of
obtaining the objects of his desires easily leads him to desire many things and
makes him feel continual privations. Everything that flatters him tempts him;
everything that others have he wants to have. He covets everything, he envies
every one, he wants to dominate everywhere. He is devoured by vanity. The heat
of unbridled desires inflames his young heart, including jealousy and hatred.
All these violent passions burst out at once. He carries their agitations with
him into the busy world, they return with him at night, he comes home
dissatisfied with himself and others, he falls asleep full of a thousand vain
projects, troubled by a thousand fantasies. And even in his dreams his pride
pictures those fleeting goods which torment his desire and which he will never
in his life possess. There is your pupil; now let us see mine.
[817:]
If the first sight that strikes him is something sorrowful, his first return to
himself is a feeling of pleasure. When he sees how many evils he has escaped he
thinks he is happier than he thought he was. He shares the suffering of his
fellow beings, but this sharing is voluntary and sweet. He enjoys at once the
pity he feels for their ills and the joy of being exempt from them. He feels in
himself that state of vigor which projects us beyond ourselves, and makes us
transfer to others the superfluous activity of our well-being. To pity the ills
of others we must indeed know them, but we need not feel them. When we have
suffered or are in fear of suffering, we pity those who suffer; but when we
suffer ourselves, we pity none but ourselves. But if all of us, being subject
ourselves to the ills of life, only accord to others the sensibility we do not
actually require for ourselves, it follows that pity must be a very pleasant
feeling, since it disposes one to favor us; and, on the contrary, a hard-hearted
man is always unhappy, since the state of his heart leaves him no superfluous
sensibility that he can accord to the sufferings of others.
[818:]
We judge happiness too much by appearances. We assume it to be where it is least
likely to be; we seek for it where it cannot possibly be. Cheerfulness is a very
uncertain sign of its presence. A cheerful man is often an unhappy person who is
trying to deceive others and distract himself. Those men who are so jovial, so
open, so agreeable at their club, are almost all depressed and grumbling at
home, and their servants have to pay for the entertainment they provide for the
company. True contentment is neither cheerful nor frivolous. Jealous of so sweet
a sentiment, while tasting it we savor it; we fear it will evaporate. A really
happy man says little and laughs little; he hugs his happiness, so to speak, to
his heart. Noisy games, wild joy, conceal aversion and boredom. But melancholy
is the companion of sensuality: tenderness and tears accompany our sweetest
joys, and excessive joy itself brings forth tears rather than laughter.
[819:]
If at first the number and variety of our amusements seem to contribute to our
happiness, if at first the uniformity of a balanced life seems tedious, when we
look at it more closely we find on the contrary that the sweetest habit of the
soul consists in a moderate enjoyment, one that leaves little scope for desire
and aversion. The restlessness of desire causes curiosity and fickleness; the
emptiness of noisy pleasures causes boredom. We are never bored with our
situation when we have no knowledge of a more pleasurable one. Of all the men in
the world savages are the least curious and the least bored. Everything is
indifferent to them. They get their pleasures not from things but from each
other; they spend their life doing nothing and are never bored.
[820:]
The man of the world lives entirely inside a mask. Almost never being in himself
he is always a stranger and ill at ease when he is forced to come back to
himself. What he is is nothing; what he seems is everything for him.
[821:]
In the face of the young man I have just spoken of I cannot help picturing
something impertinent, slick, and affected that is repulsive to people in
general; and in the face of my own pupil a simple and interesting expression
which indicates contentment, a true serenity of soul which inspires estime and
confidence and seems only to await an outreach of friendship to extend his own
confidence in return. It is thought that physiognomy is only the simple
development of certain features already marked out by nature. For my part I
think that over and above this development a man's facial features are
unconsciously formed by the frequent and habitual influence of certain
affections of the soul. These affections appear on the face, there is nothing
more certain; and when they become habitual, they must surely leave lasting
impressions. This is why I think the expression shows the character, and that we
can sometimes judge one another without seeking mysterious explanations in
knowledge we do not possess.
[822:] A
child has only two distinct feelings, joy and sorrow; he laughs or he cries;
there is nothing in between, and he is constantly passing from one extreme to
the other. On account of these perpetual changes there is no lasting impression
on the face, and no expression. But when the child is older and more sensitive
he is more intensely or more constantly affected, and these deeper impressions
leave traces more difficult to erase; and the habitual state of the feelings has
an effect on the features which time makes ineffaceable. Still it is not rare to
see men whose expression changes at different ages. I have met with several, and
I have always found that those whom I could observe and follow had also changed
their habitual passions. This one observation thoroughly confirmed would seem to
me decisive, and it is not out of place in a treatise on education, where it is
a matter of importance that we should learn to judge the feelings of the soul by
external signs.
[823:] I
do not know whether my young man will be any the less lovable for not having
learnt to copy conventional manners and to feign sentiments which are not his
own; that does not concern me at present. I only know he will be more loving;
and I find it difficult to believe that one who cares for nobody but himself can
so far disguise his true feelings as to please others as readily as the one who
finds in his affection for others a new feeling of happiness for himself. But
with regard to this feeling of happiness, I think I have said enough already for
the guidance of any sensible reader, and to show that I have not contradicted
myself.
[824:] I
return to my system, and I say: when the critical age approaches, present to
young people spectacles which restrain rather than excite them. Put off their
dawning imagination with objects which, far from inflaming their senses, repress
their activity. Keep them away from great cities, where the flaunting attire and
immodesty of the women hasten and anticipate the lessons of nature, where
everything presents to their view pleasures which they should know nothing of
until they can choose them for themselves. Bring them back to their early home,
where rural simplicity allows the passions of their age to develop less rapidly.
Or if their taste for the arts keeps them in the city, guard them by means of
this very taste from a dangerous idleness. Choose carefully their company, their
occupations, and their pleasures; show them only touching but modest pictures
that move them without seducing them, that nourish their sensibility without
stimulating their senses. Remember also, that the danger of excess is not
confined to any one place, and that immoderate passions always do unavoidable
harm. You need not make your pupil a sick-nurse or a brother of charity, or
afflict his sight with continual objects of pain and suffering or take him from
one hospital to another, from the gallows to the prison. He must be softened,
not hardened, by the sight of human misery. Endlessly confronted by the same
sights over and over again, we no longer feel their impressions; habit accustoms
us to everything. What one has seen too much of one no longer imagines; and it
is only through the imagination that we can feel the sorrows of others. It is by
seeing so much death and suffering that priests and doctors become pitiless. Let
your pupil therefore know something of the fate of man and the miseries of his
fellow-beings, but let him not see them too often. A single thing, carefully
selected and shown on the right day, will give him a month of tender feelings
and reflection. It is not so much what he has seen as his reaction to what he
has seen that will determine the judgment he makes of it; and the lasting
impression that he could get from an object comes less even from the object
itself than from the point of view with which he is drawn to recall it. Thus by
a careful use of examples, lessons, and images, you may dull the prick of the
senses and delay nature even while following her own directions.
[825:]
As he acquires enlightenment, choose the ideas that relate to it. As his desires
take fire, select scenes able to quench them. An old veteran, distinguished by
his manners as well as for his courage, once told me that in early youth his
father, a sensible but extremely pious man, seeing that his son's growing
sensibility was attracting him to women, tried in every way to restrain him. But
at last when in spite of all his care his son was about to escape from his
control, the father decided to take him to a hospital for syphilis victims, and,
without any warning, made him go into a ward where a number of wretched
creatures were expiating with a terrible treatment the disorder which had
brought them into this plight. His senses revolted by such a hideous sight, the
young man almost became sick. " Miserable lech," said his father vehemently, "go
follow your vile tastes; you will soon be only too glad to be admitted to this
ward, and as a victim to the most shameful sufferings, you will compel your
father to thank God when you are dead."
[826:]
These few words, together with the moving picture that had struck the young man,
made an impression on him that could never be erased. Compelled by his
profession to pass his youth in army barracks, he preferred to face all the
jests of his comrades rather than to share their debauchery. " I have been a
man," he said to me, "I have had my weaknesses, but even to the present day the
sight of a prostitute inspires me with horror." Teacher, few discourses; but
learn to choose the places, times and people; then give all your lessons by
examples, and be sure of their effect.
[827:]
The way childhood is spent is no great matter. The evil which may slip in is not
irremediable, and the good which may be done might come later. But it is not so
in in the first age in which man really begins to live. This age never lasts
long enough for what there is to be done, and its importance demands unceasing
attention; this is why I insist on the art of prolonging it. One of the best
rules of good farming is to hold things back as much as possible. Make your
progress slow and sure; prevent the adolescent from becoming a man until the
moment when nothing remains for him to do to become one. While the body is
growing the spirits destined to give vigor to the blood and strength to the
muscles are in process of formation and elaboration. If you make them take
another course and permit the strength which should have gone to the perfecting
of one person to go to the making of another, both of them will remain in a
state of weakness, and the work of nature will be imperfect. The workings of the
mind, in their turn, are affected by this alteration, and the soul, as sickly as
the body, functions languidly and feebly. Length and strength of limbs are not
the same thing as courage or genius, and I grant that strength of mind does not
always accompany strength of body, when the means of connection between the two
are poorly ordered. But however well ordered they may be, they will always work
feebly if for motive power they depend upon an exhausted, impoverished supply of
blood, deprived of the substance which gives strength and elasticity to all the
springs of the machinery. There is generally more vigor of soul to be found
among men whose early years have been preserved from premature corruption than
among those whose disorderly life has begun at the earliest opportunity; and
this is no doubt one of the reasons why nations who have pure morals are
generally superior in sense and courage to those who do not. The latter shine
only through I know not what small and unimportant qualities, which they call
wit, sagacity, cunning. But those great and noble features of wisdom and reason
that distinguish and honor men by fine actions, by virtues, by really useful
efforts, are scarcely to be found except among the nations whose morals are
pure.
[828:]
Teachers complain that the energy of this age makes their pupils unruly. I see
that it is so, but are not they themselves at fault? When once they have let
this energy flow through the channel of the senses, do they not realize that
they cannot change its course? Will the long cold sermons of the pedant erase
from the mind of his pupil the image of the pleasures he has known? Will they
banish from his heart the desires that torment him? Will they chill the heat of
a passion whose use he now knows? Will not the pupil be angered by the obstacles
which stand in the way of the only kind of happiness of which he has any idea?
And in the harsh law imposed upon him before he can understand it, will he see
anything but the caprice and hatred of a man who is trying to torment him? Is it
strange that he rebels and hates you in turn?
[829:] I
know very well that if one is easy-going one may be tolerated, and one may
maintain an apparent authority. But I fail to see the use of an authority over
the pupil which is only maintained by fomenting the vices it ought to repress;
it is like attempting to soothe a high-spirited horse by making it leap over a
precipice.
[830:]
Far from being an obstacle to education, this fire of adolescence is the means
of its consummation and achievement. It is what gives you a hold on the young
man's heart when he is no longer weaker than you. His first affections are the
reins with which you direct his movements, He was free, and now I see him in
your power. So long as he loved nothing, he only depended on himself and his own
needs; as soon as he loves, he is dependent on his affections. Thus are formed
the first ties that unite him to his species. When you direct his growing
sensibility in this way, do not expect that it will at first include all men,
and that the word "humankind" will have any meaning for him. No, this
sensibility will at first be limited to those like himself, and these will not
be people unknown to him but those with whom he has connections, those whom
habit has made dear to him or necessary to him, those whom he sees having
evidently the same manner of thinking and feeling as he does, those whom he sees
exposed to the pains he has suffered and sensible to the pleasures he has
enjoyed -- in a word, those in whom the identity of a more fully manifested
nature gives a greater disposition to love themselves. It will only be after
having cultivated his natural bent in a thousand ways, after many reflections on
his own sentiments and on those he has observed in others that he will be able
to arrive at generalizing his individual notions under the abstract idea of
humanity and join to his own particular affections those that can identify him
with his species.
[831:]
When he becomes capable of affection, he becomes aware of the affection, and he
is on the lookout for the signs of that affection. Do you not see what a new
hold you are going to acquire over him? What chains have you bound about his
heart before he even sees them! What will he feel, when turning his eyes upon
himself he sees what you have done for him; when he can compare himself with
other young people of his age, and other tutors with you? I say, "When he sees
it," but be careful not to tell him of it; if you tell him he will not see it.
If you claim his obedience in return for the care you have given him, he will
think that you have preempted him. He will see that while you profess to have
cared for him without reward, you meant to saddle him with a debt and to bind
him to a bargain which he never made. In vain you will add that what you demand
is for his own good; still you are demand it, and you are demanding it by virtue
of what you have done without his consent. When a man down on his luck accepts
money from a stranger, and finds he has enlisted in the army without knowing it,
you protest against the injustice. Is it not still more unjust to demand from
your pupil the price of care which he has not even accepted of others?
[832:]
Ingratitude would he rarer if kindness were less often the investment of a
usurer. We love those who have done us a kindness; it is such a natural
sentiment! Ingratitude is not to be found in the heart of man, but self-interest
is there. There are fewer ungrateful beneficiaries than self-interested
benefactors. If you sell me your gifts, I will haggle over the price; but if you
pretend to give, in order to sell later on at your own price, you are guilty of
fraud. It is the free gift which is beyond price. The heart is a law to itself;
in wishing to bind it you lose it. By holding on to it one lets it free.
[833:]
When the fisherman baits his line, the fish come round him without suspicion;
but when they are caught on the hook concealed in the bait, they feel the line
tighten and try to escape. Is the fisherman a benefactor? Is the fish
ungrateful? Do we ever see a man forgotten by his benefactor forgetting him? On
the contrary, he speaks about him with pleasure, he thinks of him only with
tenderness. If he gets a chance of showing him by some unexpected service that
he remembers what he did for him, how delighted he is to satisfy his gratitude!
With what sweet joy he makes himself known to him! How delighted he is to say,
"It is my turn now." This is truly the voice of nature; never did a true favor
cause ingratitude.
[834:]
If therefore recognition is a natural feeling, and you do not destroy its
effects by your own fault, you may be sure that your pupil, as he begins to
understand the value of your efforts, will be grateful for them provided you
have not put a price upon them, and that they will give you an authority over
his heart which nothing can overthrow. But before being assured of this
advantage, be careful not to lose it by valuing yourself too much in front of
him. Boast of your services and they will become intolerable; forget them and
they will not be forgotten. Until the time comes to treat him as a man let it
not be a question of what he owes you but what he owes to himself. To make him
docile, let him have his liberty; hide yourself so that he may seek you; raise
his soul to the noble sentiment of gratitude by on]y speaking of his own
interest. I would not have him told that what was done was for his good before
he was able to understand. In such a speech he would only see that your
dependence on him and he would merely take you as his valet. But now that he is
beginning to feel what it is to love, he also knows what a sweet tie may unite a
man to what he loves; and in the zeal which keeps you constantly occupied with
him, he now sees not the bonds of a slave but the affection of a friend. Indeed
there is nothing which carries so much weight with the human heart as the voice
of friendship recognized as such, for we know that it never speaks but for our
good. We may think our friend is mistaken, but never that he wants to deceive
us. Sometimes we may resist his advice, but we never scorn it.
[835:]
We finally enter the moral order; we have just taken the second step towards
manhood. If this were the place for it, I would try to show how from the first
movements of the heart arise the first voices of conscience, and how from the
sentiments of love and hatred spring the first notions of good and evil. I would
show that justice and goodness are not merely abstract words, not pure moral
beings formed by the understanding, but true affections of the heart enlightened
by reason, and are only the natural outcome of our primitive affections; that by
reason alone, independent of conscience, we cannot establish any natural law;
and that all of natural right is merely a dream if it is not founded on a
natural need of the human heart. But at this point I believe there is no need to
make treatises on metaphysics and morals, nor courses of study of any kind. It
is enough to indicate the order and progress of our sentiments and of our
knowledge in relation to our constitution. Others will perhaps work out what I
have only indicated here.
[836:]
Having until now only regarded himself, the first regard that my Emile will cast
on his fellow beings will cause him to compare himself with them; and the first
sentiment that this comparison will stimulate in him is the desire to be first.
Here is the point when amour de soi changes into amour-propre, and when all the
passions that derive from it begin to be born. But to determine whether the
passions which dominate his character will be humane and gentle or cruel and
malicious, whether they shall be the passions of benevolence and compassion or
those of envy and covetousness, we must know what he believes his place among
men to be, and what sort of obstacles he expects to have to overcome in order to
arrive at the place he would like to occupy.
[837:]
To guide him in this inquiry, after we have shown him men by means of the
accidents common to the species, it is necessary now to show him them by means
of their differences. Now comes the assessment of natural and civil inequality
and a picture of the whole social order.
[838:]
One must study society by men and men by society. Those who desire to treat
politics and morals separately will never understand anything of either of them.
By focusing first on one's earliest relations, we see how men should be
influenced by them and what passions should spring from them. We see that it is
in proportion to the development of these passions that a man's relations with
others expand or contract. It is less the strength of arms as moderation of
spirit that makes men free and independent. Whoever desires few things is
dependent on few men; but confusing always our vain desires with our physical
needs, those who have made these needs the basis of human society are
continually mistaking effects for causes, and they have only become lost in
their own reasoning.
[839:]
There is in the state of nature a real and indestructible de facto equality
because it is impossible in this state that any single difference between man
and man would be great enough to make one person dependent on another. There is
in the civil state a vain and imaginary de jure equality because the means aimed
at maintaining it themselves serve to destroy it -- and because in order to
oppress the weak the public force, together with the force of the strongest,
breaks the kind of equilibrium that nature put between them. From this first
contradiction flow all the others noticed in the civil order between appearance
and reality. Always the many will be sacrificed to the few, the public interest
to the particular interest. Always those specious words of justice and
subordination will serve as instruments of violence and the weapons of inequity.
Hence it follows that the upper classes which claim to be useful to the rest are
really only useful to themselves at the expense of others. From this we should
judge how much consideration is due to them according to justice and according
to reason. It remains to be seen whether the rank that these people have given
themselves is favorable to those who hold it or not for us to know what opinion
each one of us should bring with regard to his own fate. This is the study with
which we are now concerned; but to do it well we must begin by knowing the human
heart.
[840:]
If it were only a question of showing young people man with his mask on there
would be no need of showing, since he would always be before their eyes. But
because the mask is not the man, and because they must not he seduced by surface
qualities, when you depict men for your pupil, depict them as they are -- not
that he may hate them, but that he may pity them and have no wish to he like
them. This is, in my opinion, the most reasonable sentiment a man can hold with
regard to his species.
[841:]
With this object in view we must take the opposite route from that followed up
until now and instruct the youth through the experience of others rather than
through his own. If men deceive him he will hate them; but if, while respected
by him, he sees them deceiving each other, he will pity them. "The spectacle of
the world," said Pythagoras, "is like the Olympic games. Some treat it as a
boutique and think only of their profits; others pay with their body and seek
out glory; others are happy to be watching the games, and this last category is
not the worst."
[842:] I
would have you so choose the company of a youth that he should think well of
those who live with him, and I would have you so teach him to know the world
that he should think ill of all that takes place in it. Let him know that man is
naturally good; let him feel it, let him judge his neighbor by himself. But let
him see how society corrupts and perverts men; let him find in their prejudices
the source of all their vices; let him be moved to respect the individual, but
to despise the multitude; let him see that all men wear nearly the same mask,
but let him also know that there are faces more beautiful than the mask that
conceals them.
[843:]
This method, it must be admitted, has its inconveniences and is not easy to put
into practice. For if he becomes observant too soon, if you accustom him to
spying too closely on the actions of others, you will make him spiteful and
satirical, assertive and quick to judge others. He will take an odious pleasure
in seeking out all kinds of sinister interpretations and will fail to see the
good even in that which is really good. He will at the very least get used to
the spectacle of vice and to seeing bad people without horror, just as we get
used to seeing the poor without pity. Soon general perversity will serve less as
a lesson than as an example. He will say to himself that if man is thus, he
himself does not want to be otherwise.
[844:]
So if you wish to teach him by principles and make him know together with the
nature of the human heart how external causes turn our inclinations into vices,
by trying to lead him immediately from sense objects to intellectual objects you
will be using a metaphysics that he is not in a position to understand. You will
be falling back into the problem, so carefully avoided until now, of giving him
lessons that ressemble lessons, of substituting in his mind the experience and
the authority of the master for his own experience and the development of his
own reason.
[845:]
To remove these two obstacles at once and to bring the human heart within his
reach without risk of spoiling his own, I would show him men from afar, in other
times or in other places, so that he may see the scene without ever being able
to act in it. This is the moment for history. With its help he will read the
hearts of men without any lessons in philosophy; with its help he will view them
as a mere spectator without self-interest and without passion, as their judge
not as their accomplice or their accuser.
[846:]
To know men you must see them act. In society we hear them talk; they show their
discourse and hide their deeds. But in history these actions are unveiled, and
they are judged by the facts. Their sayings even help us to understand them. For
by comparing what they say and what they do, we see both what they are and what
they would like to appear to be. The more they disguise themselves the better
one knows them.
[847:]
Unluckily this study has its dangers, its inconveniences of more than one kind.
It is difficult to adopt a point of view that will enable one to judge one's
fellow-beings with equity. One of the great vices of history is that it depicts
many more men by their bad sides than by their good sides. Since it is only
interesting because of revolutions and catastrophes, so long as a nation grows
and prospers quietly in the tranquillity of a peaceful government, history says
nothing. It only begins to take note when, no longer able to be self-sufficient,
nations interfere with the affairs of their neighbors or allow their neighbors
to interfere with them. History only makes them famous when they are on in
decline. All our histories begin where they ought to end. We have very exact
histories of nations that destroy themselves; what we lack is the history of
those nations which are multiplying. They are so happy and so wise that history
has nothing to tell us of them; and we see indeed in our own times that the
governments that conduct themselves the best are least talked of. We thus only
know what is bad; the good is scarcely mentioned. Only the wicked become famous,
the good are forgotten or turned to ridicule; and thus history, like philosophy,
is forever slandering mankind.
[848:]
Moreover, it is inevitable that the facts described in history do not give an
exact picture of the same facts such as they happened. They are transformed in
the head of the historian; they are molded by his interests and colored by his
prejudices. Who is it who can can place the reader exactly in a position to see
the event as it really happened? Ignorance or partiality disguise everything.
Without even altering an historical incident, by expanding or contracting the
circumstances that relate to it, how many different faces one can give it! Put a
single object in diverse points of view and it will hardly appear the same; and
yet nothing will have changed but the eye of the spectator. Do you indeed do
honour to truth when what you tell me is a genuine fact, but you make it appear
something quite different? How many times has one tree more or less, a rock to
the right or to the left, a cloud of dust raised by the wind, decided the
outcome of a battle without any one knowing it? Does that prevent the historian
from telling you the cause of defeat or victory with as much assurance as if he
had been there? But of what importance are facts in themselves when the reason
for them remains unknown to me, and what lessons can I draw from an event whose
true cause is unknown to me? The historian gives me one, but he invents it; and
criticism itself, of which we hear so much, is only the art of conjecture, the
art of choosing from among several lies the one that best ressembles the truth.
[849:]
Have you ever read Cleopatra or Cassandra or any books of the kind? The author
selects a well-known event, then by adapting it to his own views, adorning it
with details of his own invention, with people who never existed, and with with
imaginary portraits, he piles fiction on fiction to make the reading fun. I see
little difference between such romances and your histories unless it is that the
novelist draws more on his own imagination while the historian slavishly makes
use of that of others. To this I would add, if I may, that the novelist has some
moral purpose good or bad, about which the historian scarcely concerns himself.
[850:]
You will tell me that accuracy in history is of less interest than a true
picture of men and manners. Provided the human heart is truly portrayed, it
matters little that events should be accurately recorded. For after all, you
say, what does it matter to us what happened two thousand years ago? You are
right if the portraits are indeed truly rendered according to nature. But if
most of them only have their model in the historian's imagination, are you not
falling into the very problem you wanted to avoid, and surrendering to the
authority of the historian what you would not yield to the authority of the
teacher? If my pupil is merely to see fantasy pictures, I would rather draw them
myself. They will, at least, be better suited to him.
[851:]
The worst historians for a youth are those who make judgments. Let us have facts
and let him judge for himself. This is how he will learn to know men. If the
judgement of the author ceaselessly guides him, he will only be made to see with
the eye of another, and when he lacks this eye he will no longer see anything.
[852:] I
leave modern history on one side, not only because it has no character and all
our men ressemble each other, but because our historians, wholly taken up with
their own brilliance, think of nothing but highly colored portraits, which often
represent nothing. The old historians generally give fewer portraits and bring
more intelligence and common-sense to their judgments. But even among them there
is a large choice to make, and you must not begin with the wisest but with the
simplest. I would not put Polybius or Sallust into the hands of a youth. Tacitus
is the author of old men, young men cannot understand him. You must learn to see
in human actions the most primitive traits of the human heart before wanting to
sound its depths. You must be able to read facts clearly before you begin to
study maxims. Philosophy in the form of maxims is only fit for the experienced.
Youth should never generalize anything; all its instruction should be in
particular rules.
[853:]
Thucydides is in my view the true model of historians. He reports facts without
judging them; but he omits no circumstance that would enable us to judge for
ourselves. He puts everything that he relates before his reader. Far from
inserting himself between the facts and the readers, he conceals himself; we
seem not to read but to see. Unfortunately he speaks always of war, and in his
stories we only see the least instructive thing in the world, that is to say
battles. The Retreat of the Ten Thousand and the Commentaries of Caesar have
almost the same virtues and defects. The kindly Herodotus, without portraits,
without maxims, yet flowing, simple, full of details calculated to delight and
interest in the highest degree, would perhaps be the best historian if these
very details did not often degenerate into childish simplicities, better adapted
to spoil the taste of youth than to form it. We need discretion before we can
read him. I say nothing of Livy; his turn will come, but he is a politician, a
rhetorician, he is everything that is unsuitable for this age.
[854:]
History in general is lacking in that it only registers striking and clearly
marked facts that may be fixed by names, places, and dates. But the slow
evolution of these facts, which cannot be definitely noted in this way, still
remains unknown. We often find in some battle lost or won the reason for a
revolution that was inevitable before this battle took place. War only makes
manifest events already determined by moral causes that historians rarely know
how to see.
[855:]
The philosophic spirit has turned the thoughts of many of the writers of our
times in this direction; but I doubt whether truth has profited from their
labors. The rage for systems having takin hold of them all, no one seeks to see
things as they are but only as they agree with his system.
[856:]
Add to all these considerations the fact that history shows us many more actions
than men because it only seizes men at certain chosen times in full dress; it
only portrays public man who arranges himself in order to be seen. History does
not follow him to his home, to his study, among his family and his friends; it
only shows depicts him when he represents something; it is his clothes rather
than himself that it describes.
[857:] I
would prefer to begin the study of the human heart with reading the lives of
individuals. For then even when the man tries to hide himself the historian
follows him everywhere; he never leaves him a moment's relief nor any corner
where he can escape the piercing eye of the spectator. And it is when he thinks
he is concealing himself best that the writer makes him best known. "Those who
write lives," says Montaigne, "in so far as they delight more in ideas than in
events, more in that which comes from within than in that which comes from
without, these are the writers I prefer; that is why Plutarch is the man for
me."
[858:]
It is true that the genius of men in groups or nations is very different from
the character of the individual man, and that we have a very imperfect knowledge
of the human heart if we do not also examine it in crowds. But it is none the
less true that one must begin studying man in order to judge men, and that he
who knew perfectly the inclinations of each individual could foresee all their
combined effects in the body of the people.
[859:]
We must go back again to the ancients for the reasons already stated, and also
because all the details common and familiar, but true and characteristic, being
banished by the modern style, men are dressed up by our modern authors as much
in their private life as in the public world. Decency, no less strict in writing
than in life, no longer permits us to say anything in public that we are not
permitted to do in public; and since we can only show the man as representating
something, we can know them no better from our books than we can from our
theaters. The lives of kings may be written a hundred times in vain; we shall
never have another Suetonius.
[860:]
The excellence of Plutarch consists in those very details that we are no longer
permitted to describe. With inimitable grace he paints the great man in little
things; and he is so fortunate in the choice of his traits that a word, a smile,
a gesture, will often suffice to characterize his hero. With a jest Hannibal
cheers his frightened soldiers and leads them laughing to the battle which
conquers Italy; Agesilaus riding on a stick makes me love the conqueror of the
great king; Caesar passing through a poor village and chatting with his friends
unconsciously betrays the traitor who professed that he only wished to be
Pompey's equal. Alexander swallows his medecine without a word -- it is the
finest moment in his life; Aristides writes his own name on the shell and so
justifies his title; Philopoemen, his mantle laid aside, chops firewood in the
kitchen of his host. This is the true art of portraiture. Physiognomy does not
show itself in large traits, nor character in grand actions; it is the small
things that reveal what is natural. Public events are either too common or too
artificial, and yet it is almost exclusively on them that today's authors, out
of pride, are focused.
[861:]
M. de Turenne was undoubtedly one of the greatest men of the last century. They
have had the courage to make his life interesting by the little details which
make us know and love him; but how many details have they felt obliged to omit
that might have made us know and love him even more? I will only quote one which
I have on good authority, one which Plutarch would never have omitted, but one
which Ramsai would not have taken care to write if he had known it.
[862:]
On a hot summer's day Viscount Turenne was standing near the window of his
antichamber in a little white vest and nightcap. One of his men came up and,
misled by the dress, took him for one of the kitchen boys whom he knew. He crept
up behind him and not at all lightly gave him a great smack on the behind. The
man he struck turned around immediately. The valet saw it was his master and
trembled at the sight of his face. He fell on his knees in desperation. "Sir, I
thought it was George." "Well, even if it was George," exclaimed Turenne rubbing
the injured part, "you need not have struck so hard." You do not dare to say
this, you miserable writers! Remain for ever without humanity and without
feeling; steel your hard hearts in your vile propriety, make yourselves
contemptible through your high-mindedness. But as for you, dear youth, when you
read this anecdote, when you are touched by all the kindliness displayed even on
the impulse of the moment, read also the meanness of this great man when it was
a question of his name and birth. Remember it was this very Turenne who always
professed to yield precedence to his nephew so that all men might see that this
child was the head of a royal house. Look on this picture and on that one; love
nature, despise popular prejudice, and know the man as he was.
[863:]
There are few people able to realize what an effect such reading, carefully
directed, will have upon the unspoiled mind of a youth. Weighed down by books
from our earliest childhood, accustomed to read without thinking, what we read
strikes us even less because we already carry in ourselves the passions and
prejudices with which history and the lives of men are filled. All that they do
strikes us as only natural, for we ourselves are unnatural and we judge others
by ourselves. But let us represent a young man raised according to my maxims.
Imagine my Emile, who has been carefully guarded for eighteen years with the
sole object of preserving a right judgment and a healthy heart; imagine him when
the curtain goes up casting his eyes for the first time upon the world's stage;
or rather picture him behind the scenes watching the actors don their costumes
and counting the cords and pulleys whose gross prestige deceives the eyes of the
spectators. His first surprise will soon give way to feelings of shame and scorn
for his species; he will be indignant at the sight of the whole human race
duping itself and stooping to this childish play. He will grieve to see his
brothers tearing each other apart for a mere dream and transforming themselves
into ferocious beasts because they could not be content to be men.
[864:]
Given the natural disposition of the pupil, as little as the teacher may bring
of prudence and of choice in his readings, as little as he puts the pupil on the
path towards the reflections that he ought to draw from them, this exercise will
be for him a course in practical philosophy, surely better and more clearly
understood than all the vain speculations with which we muddle the minds of our
young people in our schools. After hearing about the romantic plans of Pyrrhus,
Cineas asks him what real good the conquest of the world would gain him that he
couldn not enjoy in the present without such great sufferings. This only arouses
in us a passing interest as a smart saying. But Emile will think it a very wise
thought, one which had already occurred to himself, and one which he will never
forget because there is no hostile prejudice in his mind to prevent it sinking
in. When he reads more of the life of this madman, he will find that all his
great plans resulted in his death at the hands of a woman, and instead of
admiring this pretended heroism, what will he see in the exploits of this great
captain and the schemes of this great statesman but so many steps towards that
unlucky tile which was to bring life and schemes alike to a shameful death?
[865:]
All conquerors have not been killed; all usurpers have not failed in their
plans. To minds imbued with vulgar prejudices many of them will seem happy. But
he who looks below the surface and reckons men's happiness by the condition of
their hearts will perceive their wretchedness even in the midst of their
successes. He will see them panting after advancement and never attaining their
prize; he will find them like those inexperienced travelers among the Alps, who
think that every height they see is the last, who reach its summit only to find
to their disappointment there are loftier peaks beyond.
[866:]
Augustus, when he had subdued his fellow-citizens and destroyed his rivals,
reigned for forty years over the greatest empire that ever existed. But all this
vast power could not hinder him from beating his head against the walls and
filling his palace with his groans as he cried to Varus to restore his
slaughtered legions. If he had conquered all his foes what good would his empty
triumphs have done him, when troubles of every kind beset his path, when his
life was threatened by his dearest friends, and when he had to mourn the
disgrace or death of all near and dear to him? The wretched man desired to rule
the world and failed to rule his own household. What was the result of this
neglect? He beheld his nephew, his adopted child, his son-in-law, perish in the
flower of youth and his grandson reduced to eat the stuffing of his mattress to
prolong his wretched existence for a few hours. His daughter and his
grand-daughter, after they had covered him with infamy, both died -- one of
hunger and want on a desert island, the other in prison by the hand of a common
archer. He himself, the last survivor of his unhappy house, found himself
compelled by his own wife to acknowledge a monster as his heir. Such was the
fate of the master of the world, so famous for his glory and his good fortune. I
cannot believe that any one of those who admire his glory and fortune would
accept them at the same price.
[867:] I
have taken ambition as my example, but the play of every human passion offers
similar lessons to any one who will study history to make himself wise and good
at the expense of those who are now dead. The time is drawing near when the
teaching of the life of Antony will appeal more forcibly to the youth than the
life of Augustus. Emile will scarcely know where he is among the many strange
sights in his new studies; but he will know beforehand how to avoid the illusion
of passions before they arise, and seeing how in all ages they have blinded
men's eyes, he will be forewarned of the way in which they may one day blind his
own should he abandon himself to them. These lessons, I know, are difficult to
adapt to him; perhaps when needed they may be too late and insufficient. But
remember they are not the lessons I wished to draw from this study. By beginning
it I had another aim; and surely, if this purpose is unfulfilled, the teacher is
to blame.
[868:]
Remember that as soon as amour-propre has developed the relative self is
ceaselessly put into play, and the young man never observes others without
coming back to himself and comparing himself with them. It is therefore a
question of knowing what ranking he will give himself among his peers after
having examined them. I see from the manner in which young men are taught to
study history that they are transformed, so to speak, into the people they see,
that you strive to make them become a Cicero, a Trajan, or an Alexander of them
in order to dishearten them when they return to themselves, to make each of them
regret that he is merely himself. There are certain advantages in this plan
which I do not deny; but, so far as Emile is concerned, if it happens at any
time when he is making these comparisons that he wishes to be any one but
himself--were it Socrates or Cato -- all is lost. He who begins to regard
himself as a stranger will soon forget himself altogether.
[869:]
It is not philosophers who know most about men. They only view them through the
prejudices of philosophy, and I know no one so prejudiced as philosophers. A
savage would judge us more sanely than a philosopher. The philosopher is aware
of his own vices, he is indignant at ours, and he says to himself, "We are all
evil." The savage looks at us without being moved and says, "You are mad." He is
right, for no one does evil for evil's sake. My pupil is that savage, with this
difference: Emile has thought more, he has compared ideas, seen our errors from
up close, he is more on his guard against himself, and only judges of what he
knows.
[870:]
It is our own passions that set us against the passions of others; it is our
self-interest that makes us hate the wicked. If they did us no harm we would
feel more pity for them than hate. The harm that they do to us makes us forget
what they do to themselves. We would readily forgive their vices if we could
perceive how their own heart punishes those vices. We feel the offence, but we
do not see the punishment; the advantages are plain, the penalty is hidden. He
who thinks he is enjoying the fruits of his vices is no less tormented by them
than if they had not been successful; the object is different, the anxiety is
the same. In vain he displays his good fortune and hides his heart. In spite of
them his conduct betrays him. But to see this, our own heart must not ressemble
his.
[871:]
The passions that we share seduce us, those that challenge our self-interest
revolt us, and with a lack of logic due to these very passions we blame in
others what we would like to imitate. Aversion and illusion are inevitable when
we are forced to endure at another's hands what we ourselves would do in his
place.
[872:]
What then is necessary in order to observe men well? A great interest in knowing
them, a great impartiality of judging them, a heart sensitive enough to conceive
of every human passion and calm enough not to experience them. If there is any
time in our life a favorable moment for this study, it is this one that I have
chosen for Emile. Before now men would have been strangers to him; later on he
would have been like them. Opinion, the effects of which he already perceives,
has not yet acquired an empire over him; the passions, whose consequences he
realizes, have not yet agitated his heart. He is a man. He takes an interest in
his brothers; he is equitable and he judges his peers. Now it is certain that if
he judges them rightly he will not want to be in the position of any one of
them. For the goal of all the torments they give themselves being based on
prejudices that he does not share, such a goal seems to him a mere dream. For
him, everything he wants is within his reach. How should he be dependent on any
one when he is self-sufficent and free of prejudice? He has strong arms, good
health, moderation, few needs, and the means to satisfy those needs. Brought up
in the most absolute liberty, the greatest wrong he can conceive of is
servitude. He pities those miserable kings who are the slaves of all who obey
them; he pities those false prophets fettered by their empty fame; he pities
those rich fools, martyrs to their own pomp; he pities those ostentatious
voluptuaries, who spend their entire life in boredom so that they may appear to
have its pleasures. He would pity the enemy who harmed him, for in his
wrongdoing he would see his misery. He would say to himself, ""By giving himself
the need to hurt me, this man has made his fate dependent on mine."
[873:]
One step more and we reach our goal. Amour-propre is a useful tool though a
dangerous one. It often wounds the hand that uses it, and it rarely does good
without doing evil. When Emile considers his place among men, when he finds
himself so fortunately situated, he will he tempted to give credit to his own
reason for the work of yours, and to attribute to his own merits the effects of
his happiness. He will say to himself, "I am wise and other men are fools." By
pitying them he will despise them, by congratulating himself he will estime
himself all the more, and by feeling himself happier than they, he will believe
himself more worthy of being so. This is the fault we have most to fear, for it
is the most difficult to eradicate. If he remained in this state of mind, he
would have profited little by all our care; and if I had to choose, I hardly
know whether I would not rather choose the illusions of prejudice than those of
pride.
[874:]
Great men are under no illusion with respect to their superiority. They see it
and know it, but they are none the less modest. The more they have, the better
they know what they lack. They are less vain about their superiority over us
than ashamed by the consciousness of their weakness; and among the good things
they really possess they are too wise to pride themselves on a gift which is
none of their getting. The good man may be proud of his virtue for it is his
own, but what cause for pride has the man of intellect? What has Racine done
that he is not Pradon, and Boileau that he is not Cotin?
[875:]
Here it is something very different. Let us remain in the common order. I
assumed that my pupil had neither transcendent genius nor a limited
understanding. I chose him of an ordinary mind to show what education could do
for man. Exceptions defy all rules. If, therefore, as a result of my care, Emile
prefers his way of living, seeing, and feeling to that of others, he is right;
but if he thinks because of this that he is nobler and better born than they, he
is wrong; he is deceiving himself. He must he undeceived, or rather let us
prevent the mistake, lest it be too late to correct it
[876:]
Provided a man is not mad, he can be cured of any folly but vanity. There is no
cure for this but experience, if indeed there is any cure for it at all. When it
first appears we can at least prevent its further growth. But do not therefore
waste your breath on empty arguments to prove to the adolescent that he is like
other men and subject to the same weaknesses. Make him feel it or he will never
know it. This is another instance of an exception to my own rules. I must
voluntarily expose my pupil to every accident which may convince him that he is
no wiser than we. The adventure with the magician will he repeated again and
again in different ways. I shall let flatterers take advantage of him; if some
daredevils draw him into a perilous adventure, I will let him run the risk; if
he falls into the hands of gamblers at a card-table, I will abandon him to them
to make as their dupe. I will let them flatter him, pluck him, and rob him; and
when having sucked him dry they turn and mock him, I will even thank them to his
face for the lessons they have been good enough to give him. The only snares
from which I will guard him with my utmost care are the wiles of courtesans. The
only precaution I shall take will be to share all the dangers I let him run, and
all the insults I let him receive. I will bear everything in silence, without a
murmur or reproach, without a word to him, and be sure that if this wise conduct
is faithful]y adhered to, what he sees me endure on his account will make more
impression on his heart than what he suffers himself.
[877:]
Here I cannot prevent myself from mentioning the false dignity of tutors who, in
order to play at being wise, discourage their pupils by affecting to treat them
as children and by emphasizing the difference between themselves and their
scholars in everything they do. Far from damping their youthful spirits in this
fashion, you should spare no effort to elevate their soul. Make them your equals
so that they may become so, and if they cannot rise to your level, come down to
theirs without shame or scruple. Remember that your honour is no longer in
yourself but in your pupil. Share his faults in order to correct them, bear his
shame in order to erase it. Imitate that brave Roman who seeing his army flee
and being unable to rally them, placed himself at their head, exclaiming, " They
do not flee, they follow their captain!" Did this dishonor him? Not so. By
sacrificing his glory he increased it. The power of duty, the beauty of virtue,
compel our respect in spite of all our foolish prejudices. If I received a blow
while fulfilling my duties to Emile, far from avenging it I would boast of it;
and I doubt whether there is in the world a man so vile as to not respect me
more for it.
[878:]
It is not that the pupil should suppose his master to have as limited an
understanding as his own or to be as liable to be seduced. This idea is all very
well for a child who can neither see nor compare things, who thinks everything
is within his reach, and only puts his confidence only in those who know how to
come down to his level. But a young man of Emile's age and as sensible as he is
is no longer so stupid as to make this mistake, and it would not be desirable
that he should. The confidence he ought to have in his tutor is of another kind.
It should rest on the authority of reason and on superior understanding, on the
advantages that the young man is capable of appreciating while he perceives how
useful they are to himself. Long experience has convinced him that he is loved
by, that this tutor is a wise and good man who desires his happiness and knows
how to procure it. He ought to know that it is to his own advantage to listen to
his advice. But if the master lets himself be taken in like the disciple, he
will lose his right to expect deference from him and to give him instruction.
Still less should the pupil suppose that his master is purposely letting him
fall into traps or preparing pitfalls for his inexperience. How can we avoid
these two difficulties? Choose the best and most natural means; be simple and
true like him; warn him of the perils to which he is exposed, show them to him
clearly and sensibly but without exaggeration, without ill humor, without
pedantic display, and above all without giving your opinions in the form of
orders until they have become such and until this imperious tone is absolutely
necessary. And if he is still obstinate after this, as he often will be? Then
say nothing more to him, leave him in liberty, follow him, imitate him,
cheerfully and frankly. Let yourself go, have as much fun as him if this is
possible. If the consequences become too serious, you are always there to
prevent them. And yet when this young man has witnessed your foresight and your
kindliness, will he not be at once struck by the one and touched by the other?
All his faults are but so many bands with which he himself provides you to
restrain him when needed. Now what makes for the greatest art of the teacher
consists in controlling circumstances and directing his exhortations so that he
may know beforehand when the young man will give in and when he will refuse to
do so, in order to surround him with the lessons of experience, and yet never
expose him to to grade dangers.
[879:]
Warn him of his faults before he commits them; do not blame him when once they
are committed; you would only stir his self-love to mutiny. We learn nothing
from a lesson we detest. I know nothing more foolish than the phrase, "I told
you so." The best way to make him remember what you told him is to seem to have
forgotten it. Go further than this, and when you find him ashamed of having
refused to believe you, gently smooth away the humiliation with kind words. He
will surely feel affection when he sees how you forget yourself for his sake and
that in stead of putting him down you console him. But if to his chagrin you add
your reproaches, he will hate you, and will make it a rule never to listen to
you, as if to prove that he does not agree with you as to the value of your
opinion.
[880:]
The turn you give to your consolation may itself be a lesson to him, all the
more useful because he does not suspect it. When you tell him, for example, that
a thousand other people have made the same mistakes, this is not what he was
expecting. You are correcting him by only seeming to pity him. For when one
thinks oneself better than other people it is a very mortifying excuse to
console oneself by their example. It means that we must realize that the most we
can say is that they are no better than we.
[881:]
The time of faults is the time for fables. When we blame the guilty under the
cover of a story we instruct without offending him; and he then understands that
the story is not untrue by means of the truth he finds in its application to
himself. The child who has never been deceived by flattery understands nothing
of the fable I recently examined; but the rash youth who has just become the
dupe of a flatterer perceives only too readily that the crow was a fool. Thus he
acquires a maxim from the fact, and the experience he would soon have forgotten
is engraved on his mind by means of the fable. There is no knowledge of morals
which cannot be acquired through our own experience or that of others. When
there is danger, instead of letting him try the experiment himself, we have
recourse to history. When the risk is comparatively slight, it is just as well
that the young man should be exposed to it. Then by means of the apologue one
can transpose into maxims the special cases with which the young man is now
acquainted.
[882:] I
do not mean, however, that these maxims should be explained, nor even
formulated. Nothing is so foolish and unwise as the moral at the end of most of
the fables -- as if the moral was not, or ought not to be so clear in the fable
itself that the reader cannot fail to perceive it. Why then add the moral at the
end, and so deprive him of the pleasure of discovering it for himself. The art
of teaching consists in making the pupil enjoy learning. But in order to enjoy
it, his mind must not remain so passive to everything you tell him that he has
nothing for him to do in order to understand you. The teacher's amour-propre
must always leave some space for the pupil's; he must be able to say, I
understand, I see it, I am getting at it, I am instructing myself. One of the
things which makes the Patontaloon in the Italian comedies so wearisome is the
pains taken by him to explain to the audience the platitudes they understand
only too well already. It is necessary to make oneself understood, but it is not
always necessary to say everything. He who says all says little, for at the end
no one will be listening to him. What is the sense of the four lines at the end
of La Fontaine's fable of the frog who puffed herself up. Is he afraid we should
not understand it? Does this great painter need to write the names beneath the
things he has painted? His morals, far from generalizing, restrict the lesson to
some extent to the examples given, and prevent our applying them to others.
Before I put the fables of this inimitable author into the hands of a youth, I
should like to cut out all the conclusions with which he strives to explain what
he has just said so clearly and pleasantly. If your pupil does not under-stand
the fable without the explanation, he will not understand it with it.
[883:]
Moreover, the fables would require to be arranged in a more didactic order, one
more in agreement with the feelings and knowledge of the young adolescent. Can
you imagine anything so foolish as to follow the mere numerical order of the
book without regard to our requirements or our opportunities? First the
grasshopper, then the crow, then the frog, then the two mules, etc. I am sick of
these two mules; I remember seeing a child who was being trained to be a
financier (and whom they were dazzling with the role he was going to play) read
this fable, learn it, say it, repeat it again and again without finding in it
the slightest objection to the profession to which he was destined. Not only
have I never found children make any real use of the fables they learn, but I
have never found anybody who took the trouble to see that they made such a use
of them. The pretext for this form of study is moral instruction; but the real
aim of mother and child is nothing but to get all the company together to watch
the child while he recites his fables. When he is too old to recite them and old
enough to make use of them, they are altogether forgotten. Only men, I repeat,
can learn from fables, and Emile is now old enough to begin.
[884:] I
show you from afar -- for I do not want to tell you everything -- the paths
which diverge from the right way so that you may learn how to avoid them. I
believe that in following the road I have marked out your pupil will buy his
knowledge of mankind and his knowledge of himself in the best possible market.
You will bring him to the point of contemplating the tricks of fortune without
envying the fate of her favorites and to be content with himself without
thinking himself better than others. You have begun by making him an actor that
he may learn to be a spectator. This task must be completed; for from the
theatre's pit one sees objects the way they seem, but from the stage one sees
them as they are. To embrace the whole you need perspective; you must come up
close to see the details. But how can a young man take part in the business of
life? What right has he to be initiated into its dark secrets? His interests are
confined within the limits of his own pleasures, he has no power over others, it
is as if he had no power at all. Man is the cheapest commodity on the market,
and among all our important rights of property, the rights of the individual are
always considered last of all.
[885:]
When I see that in the years of their greatest activity young people are limited
to purely speculative studies, while later on and without the slightest
experience they are suddenly thrown into the world and into business, it strikes
me as contrary both to reason and to nature, and I am no longer surprised that
so few men know how to conduct themselves. By what strange turn of mind are we
taught so many useless things, whereas the art of action counts for nothing!
People profess to form us for society, and we are taught as if each of us were
to spend his life thinking alone in a cell or discussing airy subjects with
disinterested people. You think you are teaching your children how to live by
teaching them certain bodily contortions and certain word-formulas that signify
nothing. I, too, have taught Emile how to live, for I have taught him to live
with himself and, more than that, to earn his own bread. But this is not enough.
To live in the world one must know how to get along with other people, one must
know the tools that can be used to influence them, one must calculate the action
and re-action of self-interest in civil society and estimate the results so
accurately that one is rarely mistaken in his undertakings, or at least will
have tried in the best possible way. The law does not allow young people to
manage their own affairs nor to dispose of their own property; but what would be
the use of these precautions if they never gained any experience until they were
of age? They would have gained nothing by the delay, and would be as naïve at
twenty-five as at fifteen. No doubt one must prevent a young man blinded by
ignorance or misled by passion from hurting himself. But at any age it is
permitted to be benevolent; at any age under the guidance of a wise man one can
protect the unfortunate who need some support.
[886:]
Mothers and nurses have affection for children because of the care they give
them. The exercise of social virtues carries the love of humanity to the bottom
of the heart. It is in doing good that we become good; I know of no practice
more sure. Keep your pupil busy with the good deeds that are within his reach.
Let the cause of the poor always be his; let him help them not merely with his
money but with his care; let him serve them, protect them, sacrifice his life
and his time to them. Let him be their agent -- he will never in his life have a
more noble employment. See how many of the oppressed, who never get a hearing,
will obtain justice when he -- with an intrepid firmness that only the practice
of virtue inspires -- demands it for them; when he forces open the doors of the
rich and noble; when he goes, if necessary, to the feet of the king himself to
make heard the voices of the poor -- whose misery closes all access for them and
who are so afraid of being punished for their misfortunes that they do not dare
to complain.
[887:]
But are we making Emile into a knight in shining armor, a do-gooder, a defender
of noblesse oblige? Will he thrust himself into public life, play the wise man
and defender of the laws before the nobles, the magistrates, the king? Will he
present petitions before the judges and plead in the law courts? That I cannot
say. The nature of things is not changed by terms of mockery and scorn. He will
do all that he knows to be useful and good. He will do nothing more, and he
knows that nothing is useful and good for him which is unbefitting his age. He
knows that his first duty is to himself; that young men should distrust
themselves, be circumspect in their conduct, respectful before those older than
themselves, reticent and discrete in talking without good reason, modest Emile
therefore loves peace.
[888:]The image of happiness pleases him, and when he can contribute to
producing it this is one more way to share it. I refuse to assume that when he
sees suffering he will feel the kind of sterile and cruel pity that is content
to deplore only the ills it can heal. His active benevolence teaches him much
that he would have learned much more slowly, or would never have learned at all,
if his heart had been harder. If he sees discord arising among his friends he
seeks to reconcile them. If he sees grieving he inquires as to the cause of the
sufferings. If he meets two men who hate each other, he wants to know the reason
for their enmity. If he finds oppressed people groaning from their mistreatment
by the rich and powerful, he tries to find a way to counteract this oppression,
and in the interest he takes with regard to all such miserable people, the means
of removing their sufferings are never indifferent to him. What must we do to
make use of these impulses in a manner suitable to his age? Regulate his efforts
and his knowledge, and use his zeal to increase them.
[889:] I
am never weary of repeating: Put all the lessons of young people in actions
rather than in speeches. Let them learn nothing from books that experience can
teach them. How absurd to attempt to give them practice in speaking when they
have nothing to say, to expect to make them experience at their school desks the
energy of the language of passion and all the force of the arts of persuasion
when they have nothing and nobody to persuade! All the rules of rhetoric are a
mere waste of words to those who do not know how to use them for their own
purposes. What difference does it make to a schoolboy to know how Hannibal
encouraged his soldiers to cross the Alps? If instead of these grand harangues
you showed him how to make his prefect to give him a holiday, you may be sure he
would pay more attention to your rules.
[890:]
If I wanted to teach rhetoric to a youth whose passions were already developed,
I would present him continually with things that would gratify these passions,
and I would explore with him what language he should use with people so as to
get them to regard his desires favorably. But Emile is not in a condition so
favorable to the art of oratory. Limited almost solely to physical necessities,
he has less need of others than they of him; and having nothing to ask of others
for himself, what he wants to persuade them to do does not affect him
sufficiently to motivate him very much. It follows from this that in general he
will need a simple and unfigurative language. He usually speaks to the point and
only to make himself understood. He is not sententious, for he has not learned
to generalize his ideas. He uses little imagersy because he is rarely
impassioned.
[891:]
Yet this is not because he is completely phlegmatc and cold. Neither his age,
nor his character, nor his tastes permit of this. In the fire of adolescence the
life-giving spirits retained in the blood and distilled again and again inspire
his young heart with a warmth which glows in his eye -- a warmth that one feels
in his words and sees in his actions. His language has taken on accent and
sometimes vehemence. The noble sentiment that inspires it gives it force and
elevation. Fillrd with tender love for humanity his words convey the movements
of his heart. His open generosity has more of a certain enchanting quality than
than does the artificial eloquence of others; or rather he alone has the only
true eloquence, for he has only to show what he feels in order to communicate to
those who hear him.
[892:]
The more I think of it the more convinced I am that by thus putting our
benevolence into action and drawing from our success or lack of success some
conclusions as to their cause, we shall find that there is little useful
knowledge that cannot be cultivated in the mind of a young man; and that
together with all the true learning that one may acquire in the colleges he will
acquire a science of still more importance -- which is the application of what
he has learned to the purposes of life. Taking such an interest in his
fellow-beings, it is impossible that he should not learn early on how to weigh
and appreciate their actions, their tastes, their pleasures, and to give in
general a more accurate evaluation of what can raise or lessen the happiness of
man than those who care for nobody and never do anything for any one. Those who
are always occupied solely with their own concerns are too self-indulgent to
judge wisely of things. Relating everything to themselves alone and basing their
ideas of good and bad solely on their own experience, their minds are filled
with a thousand absurd prejudices, and anything which affects their own
advantage even slightly seems an upheaval of the universe.
[893:]
Let us extend amour-propre to other beings and it is transformed into virtue,
and there is no heart of man in which this virtue does not have its root. The
less the object of our care is directly dependent on ourselves, the less we have
to fear from the illusion of individual self-interest. The more we can
generalize this interst, the more equitable it becomes, and love for the human
race is nothing other in us than love of justice. Do we want Emile to be a lover
of truth, do we want him to know the truth? In all his dealings keep him far
from himself. The more care he devotes to the happiness of others the more that
care will be enlightened and wise, and the fewer mistakes he will make between
good and evil. But never allow him any blind preference founded merely on
personal predilection or unfair prejudice. Why should he harm one person to
serve another? It matters little to him who has the greater share of happiness,
providing he promotes the happiness of all. Apart from self-interest this care
for the general well-being is the first concern of the wise man, for each of us
is part of the human species and not part of any individual.
[894:]
To prevent pity from degenerating into weakness we must generalize it and extend
it to all humankind. Then we will yield to it only when it is in accordance with
justice, since justice is of all the virtues that which contributes most to the
common good. Reason and love for ourselves compel us to have more pity for our
own species thanfor the next one, and to pity the wicked is to be very cruel to
other men.
[895:]
Moreover, one must remember that all these means that I use to launch my pupil
beyond himself have also a direct relation to himself. For they not only cause
him inward delight; by making him benevolent towards others I am also working to
instruct him.
[896:]
First I showed the means and now I will show the effect. What grand vistas I see
being arranged little by little in his heart! What sublime sentiments crowd out
the seeds of lesser passions in his heart! What clearness of judgment, what
accuracy in reasoning, do I see developing in him from the inclinations we have
cultivated, from the experience which concentrates the desires of a great soul
within the narrow limits of possibility, so that a man superior to others who
cannot raise them up to his level can at least lower himself to theirs! The true
principles of justice, true types of beauty, all moral relations between man and
man, all ideas of order, are engraved on his understanding. He sees the right
place for each thing and the causes which remove it from that place. He sees
what may do good, and what hinders it. Without having felt the passions of
mankind, he knows their illusions and their effects.
[897:] I
proceed attracted by the force of things but without imposing myself on the
judgments of my readers. Long ago they have made up their minds that I am
wandering in the land of fantasies, while for my part I think they remain in the
country of prejudice. When I wander so far from popular beliefs I do not cease
to bear them in mind; I examine them, I consider them, not that I may follow
them or shun them, but that I may weigh them in the balance of reason. Whenever
reason compels me to abandon these popular beliefs, I know by experience that my
readers will not imitate me; I know that they will persist in refusing to go
beyond what they can see, and that they will take the youth I am describing for
an imaginary and fantastical being, merely because he is unlike the youths with
whom they compare him -- without remembering that he must be different since he
has been raised differently, influenced by sentiments contrary to theirs,
instructed in a wholly different manner from them. So it would be much more
surprising if he were like your pupils than if he were the way I have supposed.
He is not a man's man but nature's man. Assuredly he must seem very strange in
their eyes.
[898:]
When I began this work I took for granted only what could be observed as readily
by others as by myself. For our starting-point, the birth of man, is the same
for all. But while I am seeking to cultivate nature and you are seeking to
deprave it, the further we go the further apart we find ourselves. At six years
old my pupil was not so very unlike yours, whom you had not yet had time to
disfigure. Now there is nothing in common between them; and when they reach the
age of manhood, which is now approaching, they will show themselves utterly
different from each other, unless all my pains have been thrown away. There may
not be so very great a difference in the amount of knowledge they possess, but
there is all the difference in the world in the kind of knowledge. You are
amazed to find that the one has noble sentiments of which the others have not
the smallest germ, but remember that the latter are already philosophers and
theologians while Emile does not even know what is meant by a philosopher and
has scarcely heard the name of God.
[899:]
But if you come and tell me, "There are no such young men; young people are not
made that way; they have this passion or that, they do this or that," it is as
if you denied that a pear tree could ever be a tall tree because the pear trees
in our gardens are all dwarfs.
[900:] I
beg these critics who are so ready with their blame to consider that I am as
well acquainted as they are with everything they say, that I have probably given
more thought to it, and that, as I have no private end to serve in getting them
to agree with me, I have a right to demand that they should at least take time
to find out where I am mistaken. Let them thoroughly examine the constitution of
man, let them follow the earliest growth of the heart in any given
circumstances, so as to see what a difference education may make in the
individual; then let them compare my method of education with the results I
ascribe to it; and let them tell me where my reasoning is unsound, and I shall
have no answer to give them.
[901:]
It is this that makes me speak so strongly, and as I think with good excuse. I
have not pledged myself to any system, I depend as little as possible on
arguments, and I trust to what I myself have observed. I do not base my ideas on
what I have imagined, but on what I have seen. It is true that I have not
confined my observations within the walls of any one town, nor to a single class
of people. But having compared men of every class and every nation which I have
been able to observe in the course of a life spent in this pursuit, I have
discarded as artificial what belonged to one nation and not to another, to one
rank and not to another; and I have regarded as proper to mankind what was
common to all, at any age, in any station, and in any nation whatsoever.
[902:]
Now if in accordance with this method you follow from infancy the course of a
youth who has not been shaped to any special mold, one who depends as little as
possible on authority and the opinions of others, which will he most resemble,
my pupil or yours? This is, it seems to me, the question you must answer if you
would know if I am mistaken.
[903:]
It is not easy for a man to begin to think; but when once he has begun he never
stops. Once a thinker, always a thinker, and the understanding once practiced in
reflection will never rest. You may therefore think that I do too much or too
little; that the human mind is not by nature so quick to unfold; and that after
having given it opportunities it has not got, I keep it too long confined within
a circle of ideas which it ought to have out-grown.
[904:]
But remember, in the first place, that when I want to train a natural man, I do
not want to make him a savage and to send him back to the woods; rather, that
while in the whirl of social life it is enough that he should not let himself be
carried away by the passions and opinions of men. Let him see with his eyes and
feel with his heart, let him be governed by no authority but that of his own
reason. Under these conditions it is plain that a multitude things that strike
him, the oft-recurring sentiments which affect him, the different ways of
satisfying his real needs, must give him many ideas he would not otherwise have
acquired or would only have acquired much later. The natural progress of the
mind is quickened but not reversed. The same man who would remain stupid in the
forests would become wise and reasonable in towns, even if he were merely a
spectator. Nothing is better fitted to make us wise than the sight of follies we
do not share, and even if we share them, we still learn, provided we are not the
dupe of our follies and provided we do not bring to them the same mistakes as
those who commit them.
[905:]
Consider also that while our faculties are limited to the things that can be
seen, we offer scarcely any hold to the abstractions of philosophy or to purely
intellectual ideas. To attain to these we require either to free ourselves from
the body to which we are so strongly bound, or to proceed from object to object
in a gradual and slow process, or else to leap across the intervening space with
a gigantic bound of which no child is capable, one for which grown men even
require steps made especially for them; but I find it very difficult to see how
you propose to construct such steps.
[906:]
The incomprehensible being that embraces all, that gives its motion to the world
and shapes the system of all creatures, is not visible to our eyes or palpable
to our hands; it escapes all of our senses. The work is seen, but the workman is
hidden . It is even no small matter to know that it exists, and when we have got
so far, and when we ask. What is it? Where is it? our mind is overwhelmed and
goes astray, and we no longer know what to think.
[907:]
Locke would have us begin with the study of spirits and go on to that of bodies.
This is the method of superstition, prejudice, and error; it is not the method
of nature, nor even that of well-ordered reason; it is to learn to see by
shutting our eyes. We must have studied bodies long enough before we can form
any true idea of spirits, or even suspect that there are such beings. The
contrary method serves only to establish materialism.
[908:]
Since our senses are the first instruments to our learning, corporeal and
sensible bodies are the only bodies we directly apprehend. The word "spirit" has
no meaning for any one who has not philosophized. To the unlearned and to the
child a spirit is merely a body. Do they not imagine spirits that groan, speak,
fight, and make noises? Now one must admit that spirits with arms and voices are
very like bodies. This is why every nation on the face of the earth, not even
excepting the Jews, have made corporeal gods for themselves. We, ourselves, with
our words, Spirit, Trinity, Persons, are for the most part quite
anthropomorphic. I admit that we are taught that God is everywhere; but we also
believe that there is air everywhere, at least in our atmosphere; and the word
Spirit meant originally nothing more than breath and wind. Once you teach people
to say what they do not understand, it is easy enough to get them to say
anything you like.
[909:]
The sentiment of our action upon other bodies must have first induced us to
suppose that their action upon us was effected in like manner. Thus man began by
thinking that all things whose action affected him were alive. Feeling himself
less strong than most of these beings, he therefore supposed that they were
limitless and he made them his gods as soon as he had supplied them with bodies.
In the earliest times men were in terror of everything and everything in nature
seemed alive. The idea of matter was developed as slowly as that of spirit, for
the former is itself an abstraction. They thus filled the universe with gods
that could be sensed. The stars, the winds and the mountains, rivers, trees, and
towns, their very dwellings, each had its soul, its god, its life. The teraphim
of Laban, the manitous of the indians, the fetishes of the Negroes, every work
of nature and of man were the first gods of mortals; polytheism was their first
religion and idolatry their earliest form of worship. The idea of one God was
beyond their grasp, until by generalizing their ideas more and more they were in
a position to get to the idea of a first cause and gave meaning to the word
"substance," which is at bottom the greatest of abstractions. So every child who
believes in God is of necessity an idolater or at least he regards the Deity as
a man, and when once the imagination has perceived God, it is very seldom that
the understanding conceives him. Locke's order leads us into this same mistake.
[910:]
Having arrived, I know not how, at the abstract idea of substance, it is clear
that to allow of a single substance it must be assumed that this substance is
endowed with incompatible and mutually exclusive properties such as thought and
size -- one of which is by its nature divisible and the other wholly incapable
of division. Moreover it is assumed that thought or, if you prefer it,
sentiment, is a primitive quality inseparable from the substance to which it
belongs, that its relation to the substance is like the relation between
substance and size. Hence it is inferred that beings who lose one of these
attributes lose the substance to which it belongs, consequently that death is,
therefore, but a separation of substances, and that those beings in whom the two
attributes are found are composed of the two substances to which those two
qualities belong.
[911:]
But consider what a distance still remains between the idea of two substances
and that of the divine nature, between the incomprehensible idea of the
influence of our soul upon our body and the idea of the influence of God upon
every living creature. The ideas of creation. destruction, ubiquity, eternity,
almighty power, those of the divine attributes--these are all ideas so confused
and obscure that few men succeed in grasping them. Yet there is nothing obscure
about them to the common people, because they do not understand them in the
least. How then should they present themselves in full force, that is to say in
all their obscurity, to the young mind which is still occupied with the first
working of the senses and can conceive only of that which he can touch? In vain
do the abysses of the infinite open around us; a child does not know the enough
to be awed by them; his weak eyes cannot gauge their depths. To children
everything is infinite. They cannot put limits on anything; not that their
measure is so large, but because their understanding is so small. I have even
noticed that they place the infinite rather below than above the dimensions
known to them. They judge a distance to be immense rather by their feet than by
their eyes; infinity is bounded for them. not so much by what they can see, but
how far they can go. If you talk to them of the power of God, they will think he
is nearly as strong as their father. As their own knowledge is in everything the
measure of what is possible, they always picture what is described to them as
rather smaller than what they know. Such are the natural judgments of an
ignorant and feeble mind.
Ajax was afraid to measure his strength against Achilles
and challenged Jupiter to combat, for he knew Achilles and did not know Jupiter.
A Swiss peasant thought himself the richest man alive; when they tried to
explain to him what a king was, he asked with pride, "Has the king got a hundred
cows on the high pastures?"
[912:] I
foressee that many of my readers will be surprised to find me following my pupil
through his early years without speaking to him of religion. At fifteen he will
not even know that he has a soul, and perhaps even at eighteen he may not be
ready to learn about it. For if he learns about it too soon, there is the risk
of his never really knowing it.
[913:]
If I had to depict the most regrettable stupidity, I would show a pedant
teaching children the catechism; if I wanted to drive a child crazy I would
require him to explain what he learned in his catechism. You will object that
since most of the Christian dogmas are mysteries, to wait until the human mind
is capable of conceiving of them is to wait not merely until the child is a man,
but until the man is dead. To that I reply, first that there are mysteries not
only impossible for man to conceive of but to believe in; and I do not see what
we gain by teaching them to children, unless you want to teach them how to lie
at an early age. Moreover, I assert that to admit that there are mysteries, you
must at least realize that they are incomprehensible, and children are not even
capable of this conception! At an age when everything is mysterious, there are
no mysteries properly so-called.
[914:]
"We must believe in God if we would be saved." This doctrine wrongly understood
is the root of sanguinary intolerance and the cause of all the futile teaching
which strikes a deadly blow at human reason by accustoming it to rely on mere
words. No doubt there is not a moment to lose in order to merit eternal
salvation; but if the repetition of certain words suffices to obtain it, I do
not see what prevents us from peopling heaven with starlings and magpies as well
as with children.
[915:]
The obligation to believe presupposes its possibility. The philosopher who does
not believe is wrong, for he misuses the reason he has cultivated, and he is
able to understand the truths he rejects. But the child who professes the
Christian faith -- what does he believe? Just what he understands; and he
understands so little of what he is made to say that if you tell him to say just
the opposite he will agree to it just as willingly. The faith of children and
the faith of many men is a matter of geography. Will they be rewarded for having
been born in Rome rather than in Mecca? One of them is told that Mohammed is the
prophet of God and so he says, "Mohammed is the prophet of God." The other is
told that Mohammed is a fake and he says, "Mohammed is a fake." Each of them
would have affirmed just the opposite had he found himself in a different place.
Starting with such similar dispositions, should one be sent to paradise and the
other to hell? When a child says he believes in God, it is not God he believes
in, but Peter or James, who told him that there is something called God, and he
believes it after the fashion of Euripides --
"O
Jupiter, of whom I know nothing but thy name."
[916:]
We maintain that no child who dies before the age of reason will be deprived of
everlasting happiness. The Catholics believe the same of all children who have
been baptized, even though they have never heard of God. There are, therefore,
circumstances in which one can be saved without belief in God, and these
circumstances occur in the case of children or madmen when the human mind is
incapable of the operations necessary to recognize the divinity. The only
difference I see between you and me is that you profess that children of seven
years old have this capacity and I do not think them ready for it even at
fifteen. Whether I am right or wrong depends not on an article of the faith but
on a simple observation in natural history.
[917:]
From the same principle it is plain that any man having reached old age without
faith in God will not, therefore, be deprived of God's presence in another life
if his blindness was not voluntary; and I maintain that it is not always
voluntary. You admit that it is so in the case of lunatics deprived by disease
of their spiritual faculties but not of their manhood and therefore still
entitled to the goodness of their Creator. Why then should we not also admit it
for those who have been sequestered from all society since childhood and have
led an absolutely primitive life without the knowledge that comes from
intercourse with other men? For it is clearly impossible that such a savage
could ever raise his thoughts to the knowledge of the true God. Reason tells us
that man should only be punished for his willful faults and that invincible
ignorance can never be imputed to him as a crime. Hence it follows that in the
sight of eternal justice every man who would believe if he had the necessary
knowledge is counted a believer, and that there will be no unbelievers to be
punished except those who have closed their hearts against the truth.
[918:]
Let us beware of proclaiming the truth to those who are not in a condition to
hear it, for to do so is to try to substitute error for truth. It would be
better to have no idea at all of the divinity than to have ideas that are mean,
grotesque, harmful, and unworthy. It is less of an evil to fail to perceive the
divine than to insult it. The worthy Plutarch says, "I would rather men said,
'There is no such person as Plutarch,' than that they should say, 'Plutarch is
unjust, envious, jealous, and such a tyrant that he demands more than can be
performed.'"
[919:]
The chief harm which results from the deformed ideas of the divinity that are
traced on the minds of children is that they stay there all their life, and as
men they conceive no more of God than they did as children. In Switzerland I
once saw a good and pious mother who was so convinced of the truth of this maxim
that she did not want to teach her son religion during his first years for fear
lest he should be satisfied with this crude teaching and neglect a better
teaching when he reached the age of reason. This child never heard God spoken of
except with devotion and reverence , and as soon as he attempted to say the word
he was silenced, as if the subject were too sublime and great for him. This
reserve aroused his curiosity and his amour-propre; he looked forward to the
time when he would know this mystery so carefully hidden from him. The less they
spoke of God to him, the less he was himself permitted to speak of God, the more
he thought about Him. This child saw God everywhere. What I should most fear
from this indiscrete affectation of mystery is that by over-stimulating the
youth's imagination you may turn his head and thus finally make a fanatic rather
than a believer.
[920:]
But we need fear nothing of the sort for Emile, who always declines to pay
attention to what is beyond his reach and listens with profound indifference to
things he does not understand. There are so many things of which he is
accustomed to say, "That is no concern of mine," that one more will make little
difference to him; and when he does begin to worry about these great questions,
it is because the natural growth of his knowledge is turning his thoughts that
way.
[921:]
We have seen the road by which the cultivated human mind approaches these
mysteries, and I am ready to admit that it would not attain to them naturally
even in the midst of society until a much later age. But since there are in this
same society inevitable causes which hasten the development of the passions, if
we did not also hasten the development of the knowledge which controls these
passions we should indeed depart from the order of nature and the equilibrium
would be broken. When one can no longer succeed in moderating a too rapid
development on one side, one must guide wih the same rapidity the development of
others which correspond to it, so that the order of nature may not be inverted,
and so that things that should progress together and not become separated, and
so that the man who is whole at every moment of his life will never find himself
at one stage in one of his faculties and at another stage in another faculty.
[922:]
What a difficulty do I see before me! A difficulty all the greater because it
depends less on things than on the cowardice of those who do not dare to resolve
it. Let us begin at least by daring to state the problem. A child should always
be brought up in his father's religion; he is always shown that this religion,
whatever it may be, is the only true religion, that the others are nothing but
extravagance and absurdity. The force of the argument depends entirely on the
country in which it is put forward. Let a Turk, who thinks Christianity so
absurd at Constantinople, come see what they think of Mohammedanism in Paris. It
is above all in matters of religion that opinion triumphs. But we who profess to
shake off its yoke entirely, we who do not with to yield anything to authority,
we who do not want to teach Emile anything which he could not learn for himself
in any country -- in what religion will we raise him? To what sect shall this
man of nature be joined? The answer is quite simple, it seems to me. We will
join him neither to this one nor that one but we will put him into a condition
to choose for himself the one to which the best use of his reason leads him.
Incedo
per ignes
Suppositos cineri doloso. -- Horace, lib. ii. ode .
[923:]
No matter. Zeal and good faith have thus far taken the place of prudence. I hope
that these guardians will not fail me now. Reader, do not fear lest I that I
will take precautions unworthy of a lover of truth. I shall never forget my
motto, but it is only too permissable to distrust my own judgment. Instead of
telling you now what I think myself, I will tell you what a man who is more
worthy than me thinks. I guarantee the truth of the facts that are about to be
reported to you. They actually happened to the author of the paper I am about to
transcribe. It is for you to see whether one can draw from them any useful
reflections on the subject at hand. I do not offer my own or another's sentiment
as your rule; I merely present them for your examination.
[924:]
"Thirty years ago there was a young man in an Italian town; he was an exile from
his native land and found himself reduced to the depths of poverty. He had been
born a Calvinist, but the consequences of his own folly had made him a fugitive
in a strange land; he had no money and he changed his religion for a morsel of
bread. There was a hostel for proselytes in that town to which he gained
admission. The study of controversy inspired doubts he had never felt before,
and he made acquaintance with evil hitherto unsuspected by him; he heard strange
doctrines and he met with morals still stranger to him; he beheld this evil
conduct and nearly fell a victim to it. He longed to escape, but he was locked
up; he complained, but his complaints were unheeded; at the mercy of his
tyrants, he found himself treated as a criminal because he would not share their
crimes. The anger kindled in a young and untried heart by the first experience
of violence and injustice may be realized by those who have themselves
experienced it. Tears of anger flowed from his eyes, he was wild with rage; he
prayed to heaven and to man, and his prayers were unheard; he spoke to every one
and no one listened to him. He saw no one but the vilest servants under the
control of the wretch who insulted him, or accomplices in the same crime who
laughed at his resistance and encouraged him to follow their example. He would
have been ruined had not a worthy priest visited the hostel on some matter of
business. He found an opportunity of consulting him secretly. The priest was
poor and in need of help himself, but the victim had more need of his
assistance, and he did not hesitate to help him to escape at the risk of making
a dangerous enemy.
[925:]
Having escaped from vice to return to poverty, the young man struggled vainly
against fate: for a moment he thought he had gained the victory. At the first
gleam of good fortune his woes and his protector were alike forgotten. He was
soon punished for this ingratitude; all his hopes vanished; youth indeed was on
his side, but his romantic ideas spoiled everything. He had neither talent nor
skill to make his way easily, he could neither be common-place nor wicked, he
expected so much that he got nothing. When he had sunk to his former poverty,
when he was without food or shelter and ready to die of hunger, he remembered
his benefactor.
[926:]
He went back to him, found him, and was kindly welcomed; the sight of him
reminded the priest of a good deed he had done; such a memory always rejoices
the heart. This man was by nature humane and pitiful; he felt the sufferings of
others through his own, and his heart had not been hardened by prosperity; in a
word, the lessons of wisdom and an enlightened virtue had reinforced his natural
kindness of heart. He welcomed the young man, found him a lodging, and
recommended him; he shared with him his living which was barely enough for two.
He did more, he instructed him, consoled him, and taught him the difficult art
of bearing adversity in patience. You prejudiced people, would you have expected
to find all this in a priest and in Italy?
[927:]
This worthy priest was a poor Savoyard clergyman who had offended his bishop by
some youthful fault; he had crossed the
Alps
to find a position which he could not obtain in his own country. He lacked
neither wit nor learning, and with his interesting countenance he had met with
patrons who found him a place in the household of one of the ministers, as tutor
to his son. He preferred poverty to dependence, and he did not know how to get
on with the great. He did not stay long with this minister, and when he departed
he took with him his good opinion; and as he lived a good life and gained the
hearts of everybody, he was glad to be forgiven by his bishop and to obtain from
him a small parish among the mountains, where he might pass the rest of his
life. This was the limit of his ambition.
[928:]
He was attracted by the young fugitive and he questioned him closely. He saw
that ill-fortune had already seared his heart, that scorn and disgrace had
overthrown his courage, and that his pride, transformed into bitterness and
spite, led him to see nothing in the harshness and injustice of men but their
evil disposition and the vanity of all virtue. He had seen that religion was but
a mask for selfishness, and its holy services but a screen for hypocrisy; he had
found in the subtleties of empty disputatious heaven and hell awarded as prizes
for mere words; he had seen the sublime and primitive idea of Divinity
disfigured by the vain fancies of men; and when, as he thought, faith in God
required him to renounce the reason God himself had given him, he held in equal
scorn our foolish imaginings and the object with which they are concerned. With
no knowledge of things as they are, without any idea of their origins, he was
immersed in his stubborn ignorance and utterly despised those who thought they
knew more than himself.
[929:]
The neglect of all religion soon leads to the neglect of a man's duties. The
heart of this young libertine was already far on this road. Yet his was not a
bad nature, though incredulity and misery were gradually stifling his natural
disposition and dragging him down to ruin; they were leading him into the
conduct of a rascal and the morals of an atheist.
[930:]
The almost inevitable evil was not actually consummated. The young man was not
ignorant, his education had not been neglected. He was at that happy age when
the pulse beats strongly and the heart is warm but is not yet enslaved by the
madness of the senses. His heart had not lost its elasticity. A native modesty,
a timid disposition restrained him, and prolonged for him that period during
which you watch your pupil so carefully. The hateful example of brutal
depravity, of vice without any charm, had not merely failed to quicken his
imagination, it had deadened it. For a long time disgust rather than virtue
preserved his innocence, which would only succumb to more seductive charms.
[931:]
The priest saw the danger and the way of escape. He was not discouraged by
difficulties, he took a pleasure in his task; he determined to complete it and
to restore to virtue the victim he had snatched from vice. He set about it
cautiously; the beauty of the motive gave him courage and inspired him with
means worthy of his zeal. Whatever might be the result, his pains would not be
wasted. We are always successful when our sole aim is to do good.
[932:]
He began to win the confidence of the proselyte by not asking any price for his
kindness, by not intruding himself upon him, by not preaching at him, by always
coming down to his level, and treating him as an equal. It was, so I think, a
touching sight to see a serious person becoming the comrade of a young scamp,
and virtue putting up with the speech of license in order to triumph over it
more completely. When the young fool came to him with his silly confidences and
opened his heart to him, the priest listened and set him at his ease; without
giving his approval to what was bad, he took an interest in everything; no
tactless reproof checked his chatter or closed his heart; the pleasure which he
thought was given by his conversation increased his pleasure in telling
everything; thus he made his general confession without knowing he was
confessing anything.
[933:]
After he had made a thorough study of his feelings and disposition, the priest
saw plainly that, although he was not ignorant for his age, he had forgotten
everything that he most needed to know, and that the disgrace which fortune had
brought upon him had stifled in him all real sense of good and evil. There is a
stage of degradation which robs the soul of its life; and the inner voice cannot
be heard by one whose whole mind is bent on getting food. To protect the unlucky
youth from the moral death which threatened him, he began to revive his
amour-propre and his good opinion of himself. He showed him a happier future in
the right use of his talents; he revived the generous warmth of his heart by
stories of the noble deeds of others; by rousing his admiration for the doers of
these deeds he revived his desire to do like deeds himself. To draw him
gradually from his idle and wandering life, he made him copy out extracts from
well-chosen books; he pretended to want these extracts, and so nourished in him
the noble feeling of gratitude. He taught him indirectly through these books,
and thus he made him sufficiently regain his good opinion of himself so that he
would no longer think himself good for nothing, and would not make himself
despicable in his own eyes.
[934:] A
trifling incident will show how this kindly man tried, unknown to him, to raise
the heart of his disciple out of its degradation, without seeming to think of
teaching. The priest was so well known for his uprightness and his discretion,
that many people preferred to entrust their alms to him, rather than to the
wealthy clergy of the town. One day someone had given him some money to
distribute among the poor, and the young man was mean enough to ask for some of
it on the score of poverty. "No," said he, "we are brothers, you belong to me
and I must not touch the money entrusted to me." Then he gave him the sum he had
asked for out of his own pocket. Lessons of this sort seldom fail to make an
impression on the heart of young people who are not wholly corrupt.
[935:] I
am weary of speaking in the third person, and the precaution is unnecessary; for
you are well aware, my dear friend, that I myself was this unhappy fugitive; I
think I am so far removed from the disorders of my youth that I may venture to
confess them, and the hand which rescued me well deserves that I should at least
do honor to its goodness at the cost of some slight shams.
[936:]
What struck me most was to see in the private life of my worthy master, virtue
without hypocrisy, humanity without weakness, speech always plain and
straightforward, and conduct in accordance with this speech. I never saw him
trouble himself whether those whom he assisted went to vespers or confession,
whether they fasted at the appointed seasons and went without meat; nor did he
impose upon them any other like conditions, without which you might die of
hunger before you could hope for any help from the devout.
[937:]
Far from displaying before him the zeal of a new convert, I was encouraged by
these observations and I made no secret of my way of thinking, nor did he seem
to be shocked by it. Sometimes I would say to myself, he overlooks my
indifference to the religion I have adopted because he sees I am equally
indifferent to the religion in which I was brought up; he knows that my scorn
for religion is not confined to one sect. But what could I think when I
sometimes heard him give his approval to doctrines contrary to those of the
Roman Catholic Church, and apparently having but a poor opinion of its
ceremonies. I should have thought him a Protestant in disguise if I had not
beheld him so faithful to those very customs which he seemed to value so
lightly; but I knew he fulfilled his priestly duties as carefully in private as
in public, and I knew not what to think of these apparent contradictions. Except
for the fault which had formerly brought about his disgrace, a fault which he
had only partially overcome, his life was exemplary, his conduct beyond
reproach, his conversation honest and discreet. While I lived on very friendly
terms with him, I learnt day by day to respect him more; and when he had
completely won my heart by such great kindness, I awaited with eager curiosity
the time when I should learn what was the principle on which the uniformity of
this strange life was based.
[938:]
This opportunity was a long time coming. Before taking his disciple into his
confidence, he tried to get the seeds of reason and kindness which he had sown
in my heart to germinate. The most difficult fault to overcome in me was a
certain haughty misanthropy, a certain bitterness against the rich and
successful, as if their wealth and happiness had been gained at my own expense,
and as if their supposed happiness had been unjustly taken from my own. The
foolish vanity of youth, which kicks against the pricks of humiliation, made me
only too much inclined to this angry temper; and the self-respect, which my
mentor strove to revive, led to pride, which made men still more vile in my
eyes, and only added scorn to my hatred.
[939:]
Without directly attacking this pride, he prevented it from developing into
hardness of heart; and without depriving me of my self-esteem, he made me less
scornful of my neighbors. By continually drawing my attention from the empty
show, and directing it to the genuine sufferings concealed by it, he taught me
to deplore the faults of my fellows and feel for their sufferings, to pity
rather than envy them. Touched with compassion towards human weaknesses through
the profound conviction of his own failings, he viewed all men as the victims of
their own vices and those of others; he beheld the poor groaning under the
tyranny of the rich, and the rich under the tyranny of their own prejudices.
"Believe me," said he, "our illusions, far from concealing our woes, only
increase them by giving value to what is in itself valueless, in making us aware
of all sorts of fancied privations which we should not other-wise feel. Peace of
heart consists in despising everything that might disturb that peace; the man
who clings most closely to life is the man who can least enjoy it; and the man
who most eagerly desires happiness is always most miserable."
[940:]
"What gloomy ideas!" I exclaimed bitterly. "If we must deny ourselves
everything, we might as well never have been born; and if we must despise even
happiness itself who can be happy?" "I am," replied the priest one day, in a
tone which made a great impression on me. "You happy ! So little favored by
fortune, so poor, an exile and persecuted, you are happy! How have you contrived
to be happy?" "My child," he answered, "I will gladly tell you"
[941:]
Thereupon he explained that, having heard my confessions, he would confess to
me. "I will open my whole heart to yours," he said, embracing me. "You will see
me, if not as I am, at least as I seem to myself. When you have heard my whole
profession of faith, when you really know the condition of my heart, you will
know why I think myself happy, and if you think as I do, you will know how to be
happy too. But these explanations are not the affair of a moment, it will take
time to show you all my ideas about the lot of man and the true value of life;
let us choose a fitting time and a place where we may continue this conversation
without interruption."
[942:] I
showed him how eager I was to hear him. The meeting was fixed for the very next
morning. It was summer time; we rose at daybreak. He took me out of the town on
to a high hill above the river Po, whose course we beheld as it flowed between
its fertile banks; in the distance the landscape was crowned by the vast chain
of the Alps; the beams of the rising sun already touched the plains and cast
across the fields long shadows of trees, hillocks, and houses, and enriched with
a thousand gleams of light the fairest picture which the human eye can see. You
would have thought that nature was displaying all her splendor before our eyes
to furnish a text for our conversation. After contemplating this scene for a
space in silence, the man of peace spoke to me.
PROFESSION OF FAITH OF A SAVOYARD VICAR
[943:]
My child, do not look to me for learned speeches or profound arguments. I am no
great philosopher, nor do I desire to be one. I have, however, a certain amount
of common-sense and a constant devotion to truth. I have no wish to argue with
you nor even to convince you; it is enough for me to show you, in all simplicity
of heart, what I really think. Consult your own heart while I speak; that is all
I ask. If I am mistaken, I am honestly mistaken, and therefore my error will not
be counted to me as a crime; if you, too, are honestly mistaken, there is no
great harm done. If I am right, we are both endowed with reason, we have both
the same motive for listening to the voice of reason. Why should not you think
as I do?
[944:]
By birth I was a peasant and poor; to till the ground was my portion; but my
parents thought it a finer thing that I should learn to get my living as a
priest and they found means to send me to college. I am quite sure that neither
my parents nor I had any idea of seeking after what was good, useful, or true;
we only sought what was wanted to get me ordained. I learned what was taught me,
said what I was told to say, I promised all that was required, and I became a
priest. But I soon discovered that when I promised not to be a man, I had
promised more than I could perform.
[945:]
Conscience, they tell us, is the creature of prejudice, but I know from
experience that conscience persists in following the order of nature in spite of
all the laws of man. In vain is this or that forbidden; remorse makes her voice
heard but feebly when what we do is permitted by well-ordered nature, and still
more when we are doing her bidding. My good youth, nature has not yet appealed
to your senses; may you long remain in this happy state when her voice is the
voice of innocence. Remember that to anticipate her teaching is to offend more
deeply against her than to resist her teaching; you must first learn to resist,
that you may know when to yield without wrong-doing.
[946:]
From my youth up I had reverenced the married state as the first and most sacred
institution of nature. Having renounced the right to marry, I was resolved not
to profane the sanctity of marriage; for in spite of my education and reading I
had always led a simple and regular life, and my mind had preserved the
innocence of its natural instincts; these instincts had not been obscured by
worldly wisdom, while my poverty kept me remote from the temptations dictated by
the sophistry of vice.
[947:]
This very resolution proved my ruin. My respect for marriage led to the
discovery of my misconduct. The scandal must be expiated; I was arrested,
suspended, and dismissed; I was the victim of my scruples rather than of my
incontinence, and I had reason to believe, from the reproaches which accompanied
my disgrace, that one can often escape punishment by being guilty of a worse
fault.
[948:] A
thoughtful mind soon learns from such experiences. I found my former ideas of
justice, honesty, and every duty of man overturned by these painful events, and
day by day I was losing my hold on one or another of the opinions I had
accepted. What was left was not enough to form a body of ideas which could stand
alone, and I felt that the evidence on which my principles rested was being
weakened; at last I knew not what to think, and I came to the same conclusion as
yourself, but with this difference: My lack of faith was the slow growth of
manhood, attained with great difficulty, and all the harder to uproot.
[949:] I
was in that state of doubt and uncertainty which Descartes considers essential
to the search for truth. It is a state which cannot continue, it is disquieting
and painful; only vicious tendencies and an idle heart can keep us in that
state. My heart was not so corrupt as to delight in it, and there is nothing
which so maintains the habit of thinking as being better pleased with oneself
than with one's lot.
[950:] I
pondered, therefore, on the sad fate of mortals, adrift upon this sea of human
opinions, without compass or rudder, and abandoned to their stormy passions with
no guide but an inexperienced pilot who does not know whence he comes or whither
he is going. I said to myself, "I love truth, I seek her, and cannot find her.
Show me truth and I will hold her fast; why does she hide her face from the
eager heart that would fain worship her?"
[951:]
Although I have often experienced worse sufferings, I have never led a life so
uniformly distressing as this period of unrest and anxiety, when I wandered
incessantly from one doubt to another, gaining nothing from my prolonged
meditations but uncertainty, darkness, and contradiction with regard to the
source of my being and the rule of my duties.
[952:] I
cannot understand how any one can be a skeptic sincerely and on principle.
Either such philosophers do not exist or they are the most miserable of men.
Doubt with regard to what we ought to know is a condition too violent for the
human mind; it cannot long be endured; in spite of itself the mind decides one
way or another, and it prefers to be deceived rather than to believe nothing.
[953:]
My perplexity was increased by the fact that I had been brought up m a church
which decides everything and permits no doubts, so that having rejected one
article of faith I was forced to reject the rest; since I could not accept
absurd decisions, I was deprived of those which were not absurd. When I was told
to believe everything, I could believe nothing, and I knew not where to stop.
[954:] I
consulted the philosophers, I searched their books and examined their various
theories; I found them all alike proud, assertive, dogmatic, professing, even in
their so-called skepticism, to know everything, proving nothing, scoffing at
each other. This last trait, which was common to all of them, struck me as the
only point in which they were right. Braggarts in attack, they are weaklings in
defense. Weigh their arguments, they are all destructive; count their voices,
every one speaks for himself; they are only agreed in arguing with each other. I
could find no way out of my uncertainty by listening to them.
[955:] I
suppose this prodigious diversity of opinion is caused, in the first place, by
the weakness of the human intellect; and, in the second, by pride. We have no
means of measuring this vast machine, we are unable to calculate its workings;
we know neither its guiding principles nor its final purpose; we do not know
ourselves, we know neither our nature nor the spirit that moves us; we scarcely
know whether man is one or many; we are surrounded by impenetrable mysteries.
These mysteries are beyond the region of sense, we think we can penetrate them
by the light of reason, but we fall back on our imagination. Through this
imagined world each forces a way for himself which he holds to be right; none
can tell whether his path will lead him to the goal. Yet we long to know and
understand it all. The one thing we do not know is the limit of the knowable. We
prefer to trust to chance and to believe what is not true, rather than to own
that not one of us can see what really is. A fragment of some vast whole whose
bounds are beyond our gaze, a fragment abandoned by its Creator to our foolish
quarrels, we are vain enough to want to determine the nature of that whole and
our own relations with regard to it.
[956:]
If the philosophers were in a position to declare the truth, which of them would
care to do so? Every one of them knows that his own system rests on no surer
foundations than the rest, but he maintains it because it is his own. There is
not one of them who, if he chanced to discover the difference between truth and
falsehood, would not prefer his own lie to the truth which another had
discovered. Where is the philosopher who would not deceive the whole world for
his own glory? If he can rise above the crowd, if he can excel his rivals, what
more does he want? Among believers he is an atheist; among atheists he would be
a believer.
[957:]
The first thing I learned from these considerations was to restrict my inquiries
to what directly concerned myself, to rest in profound ignorance of everything
else, and not even to trouble myself to doubt anything beyond what I required to
know.
[958:] I
also realized that the philosophers, far from ridding me of my vain doubts, only
multiplied the doubts that tormented me and failed to remove any one of them. So
I chose another guide and said, "Let me follow the inner light; it will not lead
me so far astray as others have done, or if it does it will be my own fault, and
I shall not go so far wrong if I follow my own illusions as if I trusted to
their deceits."
[959:] I
then went over in my mind the various opinions which I had held in the course of
my life, and I saw that although no one of them was plain enough to gain
immediate belief, some were more probable than others, and my inward consent was
given or withheld in proportion to this improbability. Having discovered this, I
made an unprejudiced comparison of all these different ideas, and I perceived
that the first and most general of them was also the simplest and the most
reasonable, and that it would have been accepted by every one if only it had
been last instead of first. Imagine all your philosophers, ancient and modern,
having exhausted their strange Systems of force, chance, fate, necessity, atoms,
a living world, animated matter, and every variety of materialism. Then comes
the illustrious Clarke who gives light to the world and proclaims the Being of
beings and the Giver of things. What universal admiration, what unanimous
applause would have greeted this new system -- a system so great, so
illuminating, and so simple. Other systems are full of absurdities; this system
seems to me to contain fewer things which are beyond the understanding of the
human mind. I said to myself, "Every system has its insoluble problems, for the
finite mind of man is too small to deal with them; these difficulties are
therefore no final arguments, against any system. But what a difference there is
between the direct evidence on which these systems are based! Should we not
prefer that theory which alone explains all the facts, when it is no more
difficult than the rest?
[960:]
Bearing thus within my heart the love of truth as my only philosophy, and as my
only method a clear and simple rule which dispensed with the need for vain and
subtle arguments, I returned with the help of this rule to the examination of
such knowledge as concerned myself; I was resolved to admit as self-evident all
that I could not honestly refuse to believe, and to admit as true all that
seemed to follow directly from this; all the rest I determined to leave
undecided, neither accepting nor rejecting it, nor yet troubling myself to clear
up difficulties which did not lead to any practical ends.
[961:]
But who am I? What right have I to decide? What is it that determines my
judgments? If they are inevitable, if they are the results of the impressions I
receive, I am wasting my strength in such inquiries; they would be made or not
without any interference of mine. I must therefore first turn my eyes upon
myself to acquaint myself with the instrument I desire to use, and to discover
how far it is reliable.
[962:] I
exist, and I have senses through which I receive impressions. This is the first
truth that strikes me and I am forced to accept it. Have 'I any independent
knowledge of my existence, or am I only aware of it through my sensations? This
is my first difficulty, and so far I cannot solve it. For I continually
experience sensations, either directly or indirectly through memory, so how can
I know if the feeling of self is something beyond these sensations or if it can
exist independently of them?
[963:]
My sensations take place in myself, for they make me aware of my own existence;
but their cause is outside me, for they affect me whether I have any reason for
them or not, and they are produced or destroyed independently of me. So I
clearly perceive that my sensation, which is within me, and its cause or its
object, which is outside me, are different things.
[964:]
Thus, not only do I exist, but other entities exist also, that is to say, the
objects of my sensations; and even if these objects are merely ideas, still
these ideas are not me.
[965:]
But everything outside myself; everything which acts upon my senses, I call
matter, and all the particles of matter which I suppose to be united into
separate entities I call bodies. Thus all the disputes of the idealists and the
realists have no meaning for me; their distinctions between the appearance and
the reality of bodies are wholly fanciful.
[966:] I
am now as convinced of the existence of the universe as of my own. I next
consider the objects of my sensations, and I find that I have the power of
comparing them, so I perceive that I am endowed with an active force of which I
was not previously aware.
[967:]
To perceive is to feel; to compare is to judge; to judge and to feel are not the
same. Through sensation objects present themselves to me separately and singly
as they are in nature; by comparing them I rearrange them, I shift them so to
speak, I place one upon another to decide whether they are alike or different,
or more generally to find out their relations. To my mind, the distinctive
faculty of an active or intelligent being is the power of understanding this
word "is." I seek in vain in the merely sensitive entity that intelligent force
which compares and judges; I can find no trace of it in its nature. This passive
entity will be aware of each object separately, it will even be aware of the
whole formed by the two together, but having no power to place them side by side
it can never compare them, it can never form a judgment with regard to them.
[968:]
To see two things at once is not to see their relations nor to judge of their
differences; to perceive several objects, one beyond the other, is not to relate
them. I may have at the same moment an idea of a big stick and a little stick
without comparing them, without judging that one is less than the other, just as
I can see my whole hand without counting my fingers. These comparative ideas,
greater, smaller, together with number ideas of one, two, etc., are certainly
not sensations, although my mind only produces them when my sensations occur.
[969:]
We are told that a sensitive being distinguishes sensations from each other by
the inherent differences in the sensations; this requires explanation. When the
sensations are different, the sensitive being distinguishes them by their
differences; when they are alike, he distinguishes them because he is aware of
them one beyond the other. Otherwise, how could he distinguish between two equal
objects simultaneously experienced? He would necessarily confound the two
objects and take them for one object, especially under a system which professed
that the representative sensations of space have no extension.
[970:]
When we become aware of the two sensations to be compared, their impression is
made, each object is perceived, both are perceived, but for all that their
relation is not perceived. If the judgment of this relation were merely a
sensation, and came to me solely from the object itself, my judgments would
never be mistaken, for it is never untrue that I feel what I feel.
[971:]
Why then am I mistaken as to the relation between these two sticks, especially
when they are not parallel? Why, for example, do I say the small stick is a
third of the large, when it is only a quarter? Why is the picture, which is the
sensation, unlike its model which is the object? It is because I am active when
I judge, because the operation of comparison is at fault; because my
under-standing, which judges of relations, mingles its errors with the truth of
sensations, which only reveal to me things.
[972:]
Add to this a consideration which will, I feel sure, appeal to you when you
'have thought about it: it is this -- If we were purely passive in the use of
our senses, there would be no communication between them; it would be impossible
to know that the body we are touching and the thing we are looking at is the
same. Either we should never perceive anything outside ourselves, or there would
be for us five substances perceptible by the senses, whose identity we should
have no means of perceiving.
[973:]
This power of my mind which brings my sensations together and compares them may
be called by any name; let it be called attention, meditation, reflection, or
what you will; it is still true that it is in me and not in things, that it is I
alone who produce it, though I only produce it when I receive an impression from
things. Though I am compelled to feel or not to feel, I am free to examine more
or less what I feel.
[974:] I
am not therefore simply a sensitive, passive being, but an active and
intelligent being, whatever philosophy says about it, I dare pretend to the
honor of thinking. I know only that truth is in things and not in my spirit
which judges them, and that the less I put of myself into the judgments that I
make, the more I am certain to approach the truth: thus my rule of giving myself
up to my sensations rather than to reasoning is confirmed by reason itself.
[975:]
Being now, so to speak, sure of myself, I begin to look at things outside
myself, and I behold myself with a sort of shudder flung at random into this
vast universe, plunged as it were into the vast number of entities, knowing
nothing of what they are in themselves or in relation to me. I study them, I
observe them; and the first object which suggests itself for comparison with
them is myself.
[976:]
All that I perceive through the senses is matter, and I deduce all the essential
properties of matter from the sensible qualities which make me perceive it,
qualities which are inseparable from it. I see it sometimes in motion, sometimes
at rest, hence I infer that neither motion nor rest is essential to it, but
motion, being an action, is the result of a cause of which rest is only the
absence. When, therefore, there is nothing acting upon matter it does not move,
and for the very reason that rest and motion are indifferent to it, its natural
state is a state of rest.
[977:] I
perceive two sorts of motions of bodies, acquired motion and spontaneous or
voluntary motion. In the first the cause is external to the body moved, in the
second it is within. I shall not conclude from that that the motion, say of a
watch, is spontaneous, for if no external cause operated upon the spring it
would run down and the watch would cease to go. For the same reason I should not
admit that the movements of fluids are spontaneous, neither should I attribute
spontaneous motion to fire which causes their fluidity.
[978:]
You ask me if the movements of animals are spontaneous; my answer is, "I cannot
tell," but analogy points that way. You ask me again, how do I know that there
are spontaneous movements? I tell you, "I know it because I feel them." I want
to move my arm and I move it without any other immediate cause of the movement
but my own will. In vain would any one try to argue me out of this feeling, it
is stronger than any proofs; you might as well try to convince me that I do not
exist.
[979:]
If there were no spontaneity in men's actions, nor in anything that happens on
this earth, it would be all the more difficult to imagine a first cause for all
motion. For my own part, I feel myself so thoroughly convinced that the natural
state of matter is a state of rest, and that it has no power of action in
itself, that when I see a body in motion I at once assume that it is either a
living body or that this motion has been imparted to it. My mind declines to
accept in any way the idea of inorganic matter moving of its own accord, or
giving rise to any action.
[980:]
Yet this visible universe consists of matter, matter diffused and dead, matter
which has none of the cohesion, the organization, the common feeling of the
parts of a living body, for it is certain that we who are parts have no
consciousness of the whole. This same universe is in motion, and in its
movements, ordered, uniform, and subject to fixed laws, it has none of that
freedom which appears in the spontaneous movements of men and animals. So the
world is not some huge animal which moves of its own accord; its movements are
therefore due to some external cause, a cause which I cannot perceive, but the
inner voice makes this cause so apparent to me that I cannot watch the course of
the sun without imagining a force which drives it, and when the earth revolves I
think I see the hand that sets it in motion.
[981:]
If I must accept general laws whose essential relation to matter is unperceived
by me, how much further have I got? These laws, not being real things, not being
substances, have therefore some other basis unknown to me. Experiment and
observation have acquainted us with the laws of motion; these laws determine the
results without showing their causes; they are quite inadequate to explain the
system of the world and the course of the universe. With the help of dice
Descartes made heaven and earth; but he could not set his dice in motion, nor
start the action of his centrifugal force without the help of rotation. Newton
discovered the law of gravitation; but gravitation alone would soon reduce the
universe to a motionless mass; he was compelled to add a projectile force to
account for the elliptical course of the celestial bodies; let
Newton show us the hand that launched the planets in the
tangent of their orbits.
[982:]
The first causes of motion are not to be found in matter; matter receives and
transmits motion, but does not produce it. The more I observe the action and
reaction of the forces of nature playing on one another, the more I see that we
must always go back from one effect to another, till we arrive at a first cause
in some will; for to assume an infinite succession of causes is to assume that
there is no first cause. In a word, no motion which is not caused by another
motion can take place, except by a spontaneous, voluntary action; inanimate
bodies have no action but motion, and there is no real action without will. This
is my first principle. I believe, therefore, that there is a will which sets the
universe in motion and gives life to nature. This is my first dogma, or the
first article of my creed.
[983:]
How does a will produce a physical and corporeal action? I cannot tell, but I
perceive that it does so in myself; I will to do something and I do it; I will
to move my body and it moves, but if an inanimate body, when at rest, should
begin to move itself, the thing is incomprehensible and without precedent. The
will is known to me in its action, not in Its nature. I know this will as a
cause of motion, but to conceive of matter as producing motion is clearly to
conceive of an effect without a cause, which is not to conceive at all.
[984:]
It is no more possible for me to conceive how my will moves my body than to
conceive how my sensations affect my mind. I do not even know why one of these
mysteries has seemed less inexplicable than the other. For my own part, whether
I am active or passive, the means of union of the two substances seem to me
absolutely incomprehensible. It is very strange that people make this very
incomprehensibility a step towards the compounding of the two substances, as if
operations so different in kind were more easily explained in one case than in
two.
[985:]
The doctrine I have just laid down is indeed obscure; but at least it suggests a
meaning and there is nothing in it repugnant to reason or experience; can we say
as much of materialism? Is it not plain that if motion is essential to matter it
would be inseparable from it, it would always be present in it in the same
degree, always present in every particle of matter, always the same in each
particle of matter, it would not be capable of transmission, it could neither
increase nor diminish, nor could we ever conceive of matter at rest When you
tell me that motion is not essential to matter but necessary to it, you try to
cheat me with words which would be easier to refute if there was a little more
sense in them. For either the motion of matter arises from the matter itself and
is therefore essential to it; or it arises from an external cause and is not
necessary to the matter, because the motive cause acts upon it; we have got back
to our original difficulty.
[986:]
The chief source of human error is to be found in general and abstract ideas;
the jargon of metaphysics has never led to the discovery of any single truth,
and it has filled philosophy with absurdities of which we are ashamed as soon as
we strip them of their long words. Tell me, my friend, when they talk to you of
a blind force diffused throughout nature, do they present any real idea to your
mind? They think they are saying something by these vague expressions--universal
force, essential motion--but they are saying nothing at all. The idea of motion
is nothing more than the idea of transference from place to place; there is no
motion without direction; for no individual can move all ways at once. In what
direction then does matter move of necessity? Has the whole body of matter a
uniform motion, or has each atom its own motion.1 According to the first idea
the whole universe must form a solid and indivisible mass; according to the
second it can only form a diffused and incoherent fluid, which would make the
union of any two atoms impossible. What direction shall be taken by this motion
common to all matter? Shall it be in a straight line, in a circle, or from above
downwards, to the right or to the left? If each molecule has its own direction,
what are the causes of all these directions and all these differences? If every
molecule or atom only revolved on its own axis, nothing would ever leave its
place and there would be no transmitted motion, and even then this circular
movement would require to follow some direction. To set matter in motion by an
abstraction is to utter words without meaning, and to attribute to matter a
given direction is to assume a determining cause. The more examples I take, the
more causes I have to explain, without ever finding a common agent which
controls them. Far from being able to picture to myself an entire absence of
order in the fortuitous concurrence of elements, I cannot even imagine such a
strife, and the chaos of the universe is less conceivable to me than its
harmony. I can understand that the mechanism of the universe may not be
intelligible to the human mind, but when a man sets to work to explain it, he
must say what men can understand.
[987:]
If matter in motion points me to a will, matter in motion according to fixed
laws points me to an intelligence; that is the second article of my creed. To
act, to compare, to choose, are the operations of an active, thinking being; so
this being exists. Where do you find him existing, you will say? Not merely in
the revolving heavens, nor in the sun which gives us light, not in myself alone,
but in the sheep that grazes, the bird that flies, the stone that falls, and the
leaf blown by the wind.
[988:] I
judge of the order of the world, although I know nothing of its purpose, for to
judge of this order it is enough for me to compare the parts one with another,
to study their co-operation, their relations, and to observe their united
action. I know not why the universe exists, but I see continually how it is
changed; I never fail to perceive the close connection by which the entities of
which it consists lend their aid one to another. I am like a man who sees the
works of a watch for the first time; be is never weary of admiring the
mechanism, though he does not know the use of the instrument and has never seen
its face. I do not know what this is for, says he, but I see that each part of
it is fitted to the rest, I admire the workman in the details of his work, and I
am quits certain that all these wheels only work together in this fashion for
some common end which I cannot perceive.
[989:]
Let us compare the special ends, the means, the ordered relations of every kind,
then let us listen to the inner voice of feeling; what healthy mind can reject
its evidence? Unless the eyes are blinded by prejudices, can they fail to see
that the visible order of the universe proclaims a supreme intelligence? What
sophisms must be brought together before we fail to understand the harmony of
existence and the wonderful co-operation of every part for the maintenance of
the rest? Say what you will of combinations and probabilities; what do you gain
by reducing me to silence If you cannot gain my consent And how can you rob me
of the spontaneous feeling which, in spite of myself, continually gives you the
lie? If organized bodies had come together fortuitously in all sorts of ways
before assuming settled forms, if stomachs are made without mouths, feet without
heads, hands without arms, imperfect organs of every kind which died because
they could not preserve their life, why do none of these imperfect attempts now
meet our eyes; why has nature at length prescribed laws to herself which she did
not at first recognize? I must not be surprised if that which is possible should
happen, and if the improbability of the event is compensated for by the number
of the attempts. I grant this; yet if any one told me that printed characters
scattered broadcast had produced the Æneid all complete, I would not condescend
to take a single step to verify this falsehood. You will tell me I am forgetting
the multitude of attempts. But how many such attempts must I assume to bring the
combination within the bounds of probability? For my own part the only possible
assumption is that the chances are infinity to one that the product is not the
work of chance. In addition to this, chance combinations yield nothing but
products of the same nature as the elements combined, so that life and
organization will not be produced by a flow of atoms, and a chemist when making
his compounds will never give them thought and feeling in his crucible.
[990:] I
was surprised and almost shocked when I read Neuwentit. How could this man
desire to make a book out of the wonders of nature, wonders which show the
wisdom of the author of nature? His book would have been as large as the world
itself before he had exhausted his subject, and as soon as we attempt to give
details, that greatest wonder of all, the concord and harmony of the whole,
escapes us. The mere generation of living organic bodies is the despair of the
human mind; the insurmountable barrier raised by nature between the various
species, so that they should not mix with one another, is the clearest proof of
her intention. She is not content to have established order, she has taken
adequate measures to prevent the disturbance of that order.
[991:]
There is not a being in the universe which may not be regarded as in some
respects the common center of all, around which they are grouped, so that they
are all reciprocally end and means in relation to each other, The mind is
confused and lost amid these innumerable relations, not one of which is itself
confused or lost in the crowd. What absurd assumptions are required to deduce
all this harmony from the blind mechanism of matter set in motion by chance! In
vain do those who deny the unity of intention manifested in the relations of all
the parts of this great whole, in vain do they conceal their nonsense under
abstractions, coordinations, general principles, symbolic expressions; whatever
they do I find it impossible to conceive of a system of entities so firmly
ordered unless I believe in an intelligence that orders them. It is not in my
power to believe that passive and dead matter can have brought forth living and
feeling beings, that blind chance has brought forth intelligent beings, that
that which does not think has brought forth thinking beings.
[992:] I
believe, therefore, that the world is governed by a wise and powerful will; I
see it or rather I feel it, and it is a great thing to know this. But has this
same world always existed, or has it been created? Is there one source of all
things? Are there two or many? What is their nature? I know not; and what
concern is it of mine? When these things become of importance to me I will try
to learn them; till then 1 abjure these idle speculations, which may trouble my
peace, but cannot affect my conduct nor be comprehended by my reason.
[993:]
Recollect that I am not preaching my own opinion bat explaining it. Whether
matter is eternal or created' whether its origin is passive or not, it is still
certain that the whole is one, and that it proclaims a single intelligence; for
I see nothing that is not part of the same ordered system, nothing which does
not co-operate to the same end, namely, the conservation of all within the
established order. This being who wills and can perform his will' this being
active through his own power, this being, whoever he may be, who moves the
universe and orders all things, is what I call God. To this name I add the ideas
of intelligence, power, will, which I have brought together, and that of
kindness which is their necessary consequence; but for all this I know no more
of the being to which I ascribe them. He hides himself alike from my senses and
my understanding; the more I think of him, the more perplexed I am; I know full
well that he exists, and that he exists of himself alone; I know that my
existence depends on his, and that everything I know depends upon him also. I
see God everywhere in his works; I feel him within myself; I behold him all
around me; but if I try to ponder him himself, if I try to find out where he is,
what he is, what is his substance, he escapes me and my troubled spirit finds
nothing.
[994:]
Convinced of my unfitness, I shall never argue about the nature of God unless I
am driven to it by the feeling of his relations with myself. Such reasonings are
always rash; a wise man should venture on them with trembling, he should be
certain that he can never sound their abysses; for the most insolent attitude
towards God is not to abstain from thinking of him, but to think evil of him.
[995:]
After the discovery of such of his attributes as enable me to conceive of his
existence, I return to myself, and I try to discover what is my place in the
order of things which he governs, and I can myself examine. At once, and beyond
possibility of doubt, I discover my species; for by my own will and the
instruments I can control to carry out my will, I have more power to act upon
all bodies about me, either to make use of or to avoid their action at my
pleasure, than any of them has power to act upon me against my will by mere
physical impulsion; and through my intelligence I am the only one who can
examine all the rest. What being here below, except man, can observe others,
measure, calculate, forecast their motions, their effects, and unite, so to
speak, the feeling of a common existence with that of his individual existence?
What is there so absurd in the thought that all things are made for me, when I
alone can relate all things to myself?
[996:]
It is true, therefore, that man is lord of the earth on which he dwells; for not
only does he tame all the beasts, not only does he control its elements through
his industry; but he alone knows how to control it; by contemplation he takes
possession of the stars which he cannot approach. Show me any other creature on
earth who can make a fire and who can behold with admiration the sun. What! can
I observe and know all creatures and their relations; can I feel what is meant
by order, beauty, and virtue; can I consider the universe and raise myself
towards the hand that guides it; can I love good and perform it; and should I
then liken myself to the beasts? Wretched soul, it is your gloomy philosophy
which makes you like the beasts; or rather in vain do you seek to degrade
your-self; your genius belies your principles, your kindly heart belies your
doctrines, and even the abuse of your powers proves their excellence in your own
despite.
[997:]
For myself, I am not pledged to the support of any system. 1 am a plain and
honest man, one who is not carried away by party spirit, one who has no ambition
to be head of a sect; I am content with the place where God has set me; I see
nothing, next to God himself, which is better than my species; and if I had to
choose my place in the order of creation, what more could I choose than to be a
man!
[998:] I
am not puffed up by this thought, I am deeply moved by it; for this state was no
choice of mine, it was not due to the deserts of a creature who as yet did not
exist. Can I behold myself thus distinguished without congratulating myself on
this post of honor, without blessing the hand which bestowed it? The first
return to self has given birth to a feeling of gratitude and thankfulness to the
author of my species, and this feeling calls forth my first homage to the
beneficent Godhead. I worship his Almighty power and my heart acknowledges his
mercies. Is it not a natural consequence of our amour de soi to honor our
protector and to love our benefactor'.
[999:]
But when, in my desire to discover my own place within my species, I consider
its different ranks and the men who fill them, where am I now? What a sight
meets my eyes! Where is now the order I perceived? Nature showed me a scene of
harmony and proportion; the human race shows me nothing but confusion and
disorder. The elements agree together; men are in a state of chaos. The beasts
are happy; their king alone is wretched. O Wisdom, where are thy laws? O
Providence, is this thy rule over the world? Merciful God, where is thy Power? I
behold the earth, and there is evil upon it.
[1000:]
Would you believe it, dear friend, from these gloomy thoughts and apparent
contradictions, there was shaped in my mind the sublime idea of the soul, which
all my seeking had hitherto failed to discover? While I meditated upon man's
nature, I seemed to discover two distinct principles in it; one of them raised
him to the study of the eternal truths, to the love of justice, and of true
morality, to the regions of the world of thought, which the wise delight to
contemplate; the other led him downwards to himself, made him the slave of his
senses, of the passions which are their instruments, and thus opposed everything
suggested to him by the former principle. When I felt myself carried away,
distracted by these conflicting motives, I said, No; man is not one; I will and
I will not; I feel myself at once a slave and a free man; I perceive what is
right, I love it, and I do what is wrong; I am active when I listen to the voice
of reason; I am passive when I am carried away by my passions; and when I yield,
my worst suffering is the knowledge that I might have resisted.
[1001:]
Young man, hear me with confidence. I will always be honest with yon. If
conscience is the creature of prejudice, I am certainly wrong, and there is no
such thing as a proof of morality; but if to put oneself first is an inclination
natural to man, and if the first sentiment of justice is moreover inborn in the
human heart, let those who say man is a simple creature remove these
contradictions and I will grant that there is but one substance.
[1002:]
You will note that by this term substance I understand generally the being
endowed with some primitive quality, apart from all special and secondary
modifications. If then all the primitive qualities which are known to us can be
united in one and the same being, we should only acknowledge one substance; but
if there are qualities which are mutually exclusive, there are as many different
substances as there are such exclusions. You will think this over; for my own
part, whatever Locke may say, it is enough for me to recognize matter as having
merely extension and divisibility to convince myself that it cannot think, and
if a philosopher tells me that trees feel and rocks think in vain will he
perplex me with his cunning arguments; I merely regard him as a dishonest
sophist, who prefers to say that stones have feeling rather than that men have
souls.
[1003:]
Suppose a deaf man denies the existence of sounds because he has never heard
them. I put before his eyes a stringed instrument and cause it to sound in
unison by means of another instrument concealed from him; the deaf man sees the
chord vibrate. I tell him, "The sound makes it do that." "Not at all," says he,
"the string itself is the cause of the vibration; to vibrate in that way is a
quality common to all bodies." "Then show me this vibration in other bodies," I
answer, "or at least show me its cause in this string." "I cannot," replies the
deaf man; "but because I do not understand how that string vibrates why should I
try to explain it by means of your sounds, of which I have not the least idea?
It is explaining one obscure fact by means of a cause still more obscure. Make
me perceive your sounds; or I say there are no such things."
[1004:]
The more I consider thought and the nature of the human mind, the more likeness
I find between the arguments of the materialists and those of 'the deaf man.
Indeed, they are deaf to the inner voice which cries aloud to them, in a tone
which can hardly be mistaken. A machine does not think, there is neither
movement nor form which can produce reflection; something within thee tries to
break the bands which confine it; space is not thy measure, the whole universe
does not suffice to contain thee; thy sentiments, thy desires, thy anxiety, thy
pride itself, have another origin than this small body in which thou art
imprisoned.
[1005:]
No material creature is in itself active, and I am active. In vain do you argue
this point with me; I feel it, and it is this feeling which speaks to me more
forcibly than the reason which disputes it. I have a body which is acted upon by
other bodies, and it acts in turn upon them; there is no doubt about this
reciprocal action; but my will is independent of my senses; I consent or I
resist; I yield or I win the victory, and I know very well in myself when I have
done what I wanted and when I have merely given way to my passions. I have
always the power to will, but not always the strength to do what I will. When I
yield to temptation I surrender myself to the action of external objects. When I
blame myself for this weakness, I listen to my own will alone; I am a slave in
my vices, a free man in my remorse; the feeling of freedom is never effaced in
me but when I myself do wrong, and when I at length prevent the voice of the
soul from protesting against the authority of the body.
[1006:]
I am only aware of will through the consciousness of my own will, and
intelligence is no better known to me. When you ask me what is the cause which
determines my will, it is my turn to ask what cause determines my judgment; for
it is plain that these two causes are but one; and if you understand clearly
that man is active in his judgments, that his intelligence is only the power to
compare and judge you will see that his freedom is only a similar power or one
derived from this; he chooses between good and evil as he judges between truth
and falsehood; if his judgment is at fault, he chooses amiss. What then is the
cause that determines his will? It is his judgment. And what is the cause that
deter-mines his judgment? It is his intelligence, his power of judging; the
determining cause is in himself. Beyond that, I understand nothing.
[1007:]
No doubt I am not free not to desire my own welfare, I am not free to desire my
own hurt; but my freedom consists in this very thing, that I can will what is
for my own good, or what I esteem as such, without any external compulsion. Does
it follow that I am not my own master because I cannot be other than myself?
[1008:]
The motive power of all action is In the will of a free creature; we can go no
farther. It is not the word freedom that is meaning-less, but the word
necessity. To suppose some action which is not the effect of an active motive
power is indeed to suppose effects without cause, to reason in a vicious circle.
Either there is no original impulse, or every original impulse has no antecedent
cause, and there is no will properly so-called without freedom. Man is therefore
free to act, and as such he is animated by an immaterial substance; that is the
third article of my creed. From these three you will easily deduce the rest, so
that I need not enumerate them.
[1009:]
If man is at once active and free, he acts of his own accord; what he does
freely is no part of the system marked out by Providence and it cannot be
imputed to Providence. Providence does not will the evil that man does when he
misuses the freedom given to him; neither does Providence prevent him doing it,
either because the wrong done by so feeble a creature is as nothing in its eyes,
or because it could not prevent it without doing a greater wrong and degrading
his nature. Providence has made him free that he may choose the good and refuse
the evil. It has made him capable of till. choice if he uses rightly the
faculties bestowed upon him, but it has so strictly limited his powers that the
misuse of his freedom cannot disturb the general order. The evil that man does
reacts upon himself without affecting the system of the world, without
preventing the preservation of the human species in spite of itself. To complain
that God does not prevent us from doing wrong is to complain because he has made
man of so excellent a nature, that he has endowed his actions with that morality
by which they are ennobled, that he has made virtue man's birthright. Supreme
happiness consists in self-content; that we may gain this self-content we are
placed upon this earth and endowed with freedom, we are tempted by our passions
and restrained by conscience. What more could divine power itself have done on
our behalf? Could it have made our nature a contradiction, and have given the
prize of well-doing to one who was incapable of evil? To prevent a man from
wickedness, should Providence have restricted him to instinct and made him a
fool? Not so, O God of my soul, I will never reproach thee that thou hast
created me in thine own image, that I may be free and good and happy like my
Maker!
[1010:]
It is the abuse of our powers that makes us unhappy and wicked. Our cares, our
sorrows, our sufferings are of our own making. Moral ills are undoubtedly the
work of man, and physical ills would be nothing but for our vices which have
made us liable to them. Has not nature made us feel our needs as a means to our
preservation? Is not bodily suffering a sign that the machine is out of order
and needs attention? Death. . .. Do not the wicked poison their own life and
ours? Who would wish to live for ever? Death is the cure for the evils you bring
upon yourself; nature would not have you suffer perpetually. How few sufferings
are felt by man living in a state of primitive simplicity! His life is almost
entirely free from suffering and from passion; he neither fears nor feels death;
if he feels it, his sufferings make him desire it; henceforth it is no evil in
his eyes. If we were but content to be ourselves we should have no cause to
complain of our lot; but in the search for an imaginary good we find a thousand
real ills. He who cannot bear a little Pam must expect to suffer greatly. If a
man injures his constitution by dissipation, you try to cure him with medicine;
the ill he fears is added to the ill he feels; the thought of death makes it
horrible and hastens its approach; the more we seek to escape from it, the more
we are aware of it; and we go through life in the fear of death, blaming nature
for the evils we have inflicted on ourselves by our neglect of her laws.
[1011:]
O Man! seek no further for the author of evil; thou art he. There is no evil but
the evil you do or the evil you suffer, and both come from yourself. Evil in
general can only spring from disorder, and in the order of the world I find a
never-failing system. Evil in particular cases exists only in the mind of those
who experience it; and this feeling is not the gift of nature, but the work of
man himself. Pain has little power over those who, having thought little, look
neither before nor after. Take away our fatal progress, take away our faults and
our vices, take away man's handiwork, and all is well.
[1012:]
Where all is well, there is no such thing as injustice. Justice and goodness are
inseparable; now goodness is the necessary result of boundless power and of that
self-love which is innate in all sentient beings. The omnipotent projects
himself so to speak, into the being of his creatures. Creation and preservation
are the everlasting work of power; it does not act on that which has no
existence; God is not the God of the dead; he could not harm and destroy without
injury to himself. The omnipotent can only will what is good. Therefore he who
is supremely good, because he is supremely powerful, must also be supremely
just,. otherwise he would contradict himself; for that love of order which
creates order we call goodness and that love of order which preserves order we
call justice.
[1013:]
Men say God owes nothing to his creatures I think he owes them all he promised
when he gave them their being. Now to give them the idea of something good and
to make them feel the need of it, is to promise it to them. The more closely I
study myself, the more carefully I consider, the more plainly do I read these
words, "Be just and you will be happy." It is not so, however, in the present
condition of things, the wicked prospers and the oppression of the righteous
continues. Observe how angry we are when this expectation is disappointed.
Conscience revolts and murmurs against her Creator; she exclaims with cries and
groans, "Thou hast deceived me."
[1014:]
"I have deceived thee, rash soul! Who told thee this? Is thy soul destroyed?
Hast thou ceased to exist? O Brutus! O my son! let there be no stain upon the
close of thy noble life; do not abandon thy hope and thy glory with thy corpse
upon the plains of Philippi. Why dost thou say, 'Virtue is naught,' when thou
art about to enjoy the reward of virtue? Thou art about to die I Nay, thou shalt
live, and thus my promise is fulfilled."
[1015:]
One might judge from the complaints of impatient men that God owes them the
reward before they have deserved it, that he is bound to pay for virtue in
advance. Oh! let us first be good and then we shall be happy. Let us not claim
the prize before we have won it, nor demand our wages before we have finished
our work "It is net in the lists that we crown the victors in the sacred games,"
says Plutarch, "it is when they have finished their course."
[1016:]
If the soul is immaterial, it may survive the body; and if it so survives,
Providence is justified. Had I no other proof of the immaterial nature of the
soul, the triumph of the wicked and the oppression of the righteous in this
world would be enough to convince me. I should seek to resolve so appalling a
discord in the universal harmony. I should say to myself, "All is not over with
life, everything finds its place at death." I should still have to answer the
question, "What becomes of man when all we know of him through our senses has
vanished?" This question no longer presents any difficulty to me when I admit
the two substances. It is easy to understand that what is imperceptible to those
senses escapes me, during my bodily life, when I perceive through my senses
only. When the union of soul and body is destroyed, I think one may be dissolved
and the other may be preserved. Why should the destruction of the one imply the
destruction of the other? On the contrary, so unlike in their nature, they were
during their union in a highly unstable condition, and when this union comes to
an end they both return to their natural state; the active vital substance
regains all the force which it expended to set in motion the passive dead
substance. Alas! my vices make me only too well aware that man is but half alive
during this life; the life of the soul only begins with the death of the body.
[1017:]
But what is that life? Is the soul of man in its nature immortal? I know not. My
finite understanding cannot hold the infinite; what is called eternity eludes my
grasp. What can I assert or deny, how can I reason with regard to what I cannot
conceive? I believe that the soul survives the body for the maintenance of
order; who knows if this is enough to make it eternal? However, I know that the
body is worn out and destroyed by the division of its parts, but I cannot
conceive a similar destruction of the conscious nature, and as I cannot imagine
how it can die, I presume that it does not die. As this assumption is consoling
and in itself not unreasonable, why should I fear to accept it?
[1018:]
I am aware of my soul; it is known to me in feeling and in thought; I know what
it is without knowing its essence; I cannot reason about ideas which are unknown
to me. What I do know is this, that my personal identity depends upon memory,
and that to be indeed the same self I must remember that I have existed, Now
after death I could not recall what I was when alive unless I also remembered
what I felt and therefore what I did; and I have no doubt that this remembrance
will one day form the happiness of the good and the torment of the bad. In this
world our inner conscious-ness is absorbed by the crowd of eager passions which
cheat remorse. The humiliation and disgrace involved in the practice of virtue
do not permit us to realize its charm. But when, freed from the illusions of the
bodily senses, we behold with joy the supreme Being and the eternal truths which
flow from him; when all the powers of our soul are alive to the beauty of order
and we are wholly occupied in comparing what we have done with what we ought to
have done, then it is that the voice of conscience will regain its strength and
sway; then it is that the pure delight which springs from self-content, and the
sharp regret for our own degradation of that self, will decide by means of
overpowering feeling what shall be the fate which each has prepared for himself.
My good friend, do not ask me whether there are other sources of happiness or
suffering; I cannot tell; that which my fancy pictures is enough to console me
in this life and to bid me look for a life to come. I do not say the good will
be rewarded, for what greater good can a truly good being expect than to exist
in accordance with his nature? But I do assert that the good will be happy,
because their maker, the author of all justice, who has made them capable of
feeling, has not made them that they may suffer; moreover, they have not abused
their freedom upon earth and they have not changed their fate through any fault
of their own; yet they have suffered in this life and it will be made up to them
in the life to come. This feeling relies not so much on man's deserts as on the
idea of good which seems to me inseparable from the divine essence. I only
assume that the laws of order are constant and that God is true to himself.
[1019:]
Do not ask me whether the torments of the wicked will endure for ever, whether
the goodness of their creator can condemn them to the eternal suffering; again,
I cannot tell, and I have no empty curiosity for the investigation of useless
problems. How does the fate of the wicked concern me? I take little interest in
it All the same I find it hard to believe that they will be condemned to
everlasting torments. If the supreme justice calls for vengeance, it claims it
in this life. The nations of the world with their errors are its ministers.
Justice uses self-inflicted ills to punish the crimes which have deserved them.
It is in your own insatiable souls, devoured by envy, greed, and ambition, it is
in the midst of your false prosperity, that the avenging passions find the due
reward of your crimes. What need to seek a hell in the future life? It Is in the
breast of the wicked.
[1020:]
When our fleeting needs are over, and our mad desires are at rest' there should
alto be an end of our passions and our crimes. Can pure spirits be capable of
any perversity? Having need of nothing, why should they be wicked? If they are
free from our gross senses, if their happiness consists in the contemplation of
other beings, they can only desire what is good; and he who cease to be bad can
never be miserable. This is what I am inclined to think though I have not been
at the pains to come to any decision. 0 God, merciful and good, whatever thy
decrees may be I adore them; if thou should t commit the wicked to everlasting
punishment, I abandon my feeble reason to thy justice; but if the remorse of
these wretched beings should in the course of time be extinguished, if their
sufferings should come to an end. and if the same peace shall one day be the lot
of all mankind, I give thanks to thee for this. Is not the wicked my brother?
How often have I been tempted to be like him? let him be delivered from his
misery and freed from the spirit of hatred that accompanied it; let him be as
happy as I myself; his happiness, far from arousing my jealousy, will only
increase my own.
[1021:]
Thus it is that, in the contemplation of God in his works, and in the study of
such of his attributes as it concerned me to know, I have slowly grasped and
developed the idea, at first partial and imperfect, which I have formed of this
Infinite Being. But if this idea has become nobler and greater it is also more
suited to the human reason. As I approach in spirit the eternal light, I am
confused and dazzled by its glory, and compelled to abandon all the earthly
notions which helped me to picture it to myself. God is no longer corporeal and
sensible; the supreme mind which rules the world is no longer the world itself;
in vain do I strive to grasp his inconceivable essence. When I think that it is
he that gives life and movement to the living and moving substance which
controls all living bodies; when I hear it said that my soul is spiritual and
that God is a spirit, I revolt against this abasement of the divine essence; as
if God and my soul were of one and the same nature! is if God were not the one
and only absolute being, the only really active, feeling, thinking, willing
being, from whom we derive our thought, feeling, motion, will, our freedom and
our very existence! We are free because he wills our freedom, and his
inexplicable substance is to our souls what our souls are to our bodies. I know
not whether he has created matter, body, soul, the world itself. The idea of
creation confounds me and eludes my grasp; so far as I can conceive of it I
believe it; but I know that he has formed the universe and all that is, that he
has made and ordered all things. No doubt God is eternal; but can my mind grasp
the idea of eternity? Why should I cheat myself with meaningless words? This is
what I do understand; before things were -- God was; he will be when they are no
more, and if all things come to an end he will still endure. That a being beyond
my comprehension should give life to other beings, this is merely difficult and
beyond my understanding; but that Being and Nothing should be convertible terms,
this is indeed a palpable contradiction, an evident absurdity.
[1022:]
God is intelligent, but how? Man is intelligent when he reasons, but the Supreme
Intelligence does not need to reason; there is neither premise nor conclusion
for him, there is not even a proposition. The Supreme Intelligence is wholly
intuitive, it sees what is and what shall be; all truths are one for it, as all
places are but one point and all time but one moment. Man's power makes use of
means, the divine power is self-active. God can because he wills; his will is
his power. God is good; this is certain; but man finds his happiness in the
welfare of his kind, God's happiness consists in the love of order; for it is
through order that he maintains what is, and unites each part in the whole. God
is just; of this I am sure, it is a consequence of his goodness; man's injustice
is not God's work, but his own; that moral justice which seems to the
philosophers a presumption against Providence, is to me a proof of its
existence. But man's justice consists in giving to each his due; God's justice
consists in demanding from each of us an account of that which he has given us.
[1023:]
If I have succeeded in discerning these attributes of which I have no absolute
idea, it is m the form of unavoidable deductions, and by the right use of my
reason; but I affirm them without understanding them, and at bottom that is no
affirmation at all. In vain do I say, God is thus, I feel it, I experience it,
none the more do I understand how God can be thus.
[1024:]
In a word the more I strive to envisage his infinite essence the less do I
comprehend it; but it is, and that is enough for me; the less I understand, the
more I adore. I abase myself, saying, " Being of beings, I am because thou art;
to fix my thoughts on thee is to ascend to the source of my being. The best use
I can make of my reason is to resign it before thee; my mind delights, my
weakness rejoices, to feel myself overwhelmed by thy greatness."
[1025:]
Having thus deduced from the perception of objects of sense and from my inner
consciousness, which leads me to judge of causes by my native reason, the
principal truths which I require to know, I must now seek such principles of
conduct as I can draw from them, and such rules as I must lay down for my
guidance in the fulfillment of my destiny in this world, according to the
purpose of my Maker. Still following the same method, I do not derive these
rules from the principles of the higher philosophy, I find them in the depths of
my heart, traced by nature in characters which nothing can efface. I need only
consult myself with regard to what I wish to do; what I feel to be right is
right, what I feel to be wrong is wrong; conscience is the best casuist; and it
is only when we haggle with conscience that we have recourse to the subtleties
of argument. Our first duty is towards ourself; yet how often does the voice of
others tell us that in seeking our good at the expense of others we are doing
ill? We think we are following the guidance of nature, and we are resisting it;
we listen to what she says to our senses, and we neglect what she says to our
heart; the active being obeys, the passive commands. Conscience is the voice of
the soul, the passions are the voice of the body. It is strange that these
voices often contradict each other? And then to which should we give heed? Too
often does reason deceive us; we have only too good a right to doubt her; but
conscience never deceives us; she is the true guide of man; it is to the soul
what instinct is to the body; he who obeys his conscience is following nature
and he need not fear that he will go astray. This is a matter of great
importance, continued my benefactor, seeing that I was about to interrupt him;
let me atop awhile to explain it more fully.
[1026:]
The morality of our actions consists entirely in the judgments we ourselves form
with regard to them. If good is good, it must be good in the depth of our heart
as well as in our actions; and the first reward of justice is the consciousness
that we are acting justly. If moral goodness is in accordance with our nature,
man can only be healthy in mind and body when he is good. If it is not so, and
if man is by nature evil, he cannot cease to be evil without corrupting his
nature, and goodness in him is a crime against nature. If he is made to do harm
to his fellow-creatures, as the wolf is made to devour his prey, a humane man
would be as depraved a creature as a pitiful wolf; and virtue alone would cause
remorse.
[1027:]
My young friend, let us look within, let us set aside all personal prejudices
and see whither our inclinations lead us. Do we take more pleasure in the sight
of the sufferings of others or their joys? Is it pleasanter to do a kind action
or an unkind action, and which leaves the more delightful memory behind it? Why
do you enjoy the theatre? Do you delight in the crimes you behold? Do you weep
over the punishment which overtakes the criminal? They say we are indifferent to
everything but self-interest; yet we find our consolation in our sufferings in
the charms of friendship and humanity, and even in our pleasures we should be
too lonely and miserable if we had no one to share them 'with us. If there is no
such thing as morality in man's heart, what is the source of his rapturous
admiration of noble deeds, his passionate devotion to great men? What connection
is there between self-interest and this enthusiasm for virtue? Why should I
choose to be Cato dying by his own hand, rather than Caesar in his triumphs?
Take from our hearts this love of what is noble and you rob us of the joy of
life. The mean-spirited man in whom these delicious feelings have been stifled
among vile passions, who by thinking of no one but himself comes at last to love
no one but himself, this man feels no raptures, his cold heart no longer throbs
with joy, and his eyes no longer fill with the sweet tears of sympathy, he
delights in nothing; the wretch has neither life nor feeling, he is already
dead.
[1028:]
There are many bad men in this world, but there are few of these dead souls,
alive only to self-interest, and insensible to all that is right and good. We
only delight in injustice so long as it is to our own advantage; in every other
ease we wish the innocent to be protected. If we see some act of violence or
injustice in town or country, our hearts are at once stirred to their depths by
an instinctive anger and wrath, which bids us go to the help of the oppressed;
but we are restrained by a stronger duty, and the law deprives us of our right
to protect the innocent. On the other hand, if some deed of mercy or generosity
meets our eye, what reverence and love does it inspire! Do we not say to
ourselves, "I should like to have done that myself"? What does it matter to us
that two thousand years ago a man was just or unjust? and yet we take the same
interest in ancient history as if it happened yesterday. What a] e the crimes of
Cataline to me? I shall not be his victim. Why then a have I the same horror of
his crimes as if he were living now? We do not hate the wicked merely because of
the harm they do to ourselves, but because they are wicked. Not only do we wish
to be happy ourselves, we wish others to be happy too, and if this happiness
does not interfere with our own happiness, it increases it. In conclusion,
whether we will or not, we pity the unfortunate; when we see their suffering we
suffer too. Even the most depraved are not wholly without this instinct, and it
often leads them to self-contradiction. The highwayman who robs the traveler,
clothes the nakedness of the poor; the fiercest murderer supports a fainting
man.
[1029:]
Men speak of the voice of remorse, the secret punishment of hidden crimes, by
which such are often brought to light. Alas! who does not know its unwelcome
voice? We speak from experience, and we would gladly stifle this imperious
feeling which causes us such agony. Let us obey the call of nature; we shall see
that her yoke is easy and that when we give heed to her voice we find a joy in
the answer of a good conscience. The wicked fears and flees from her; he
delights to escape from himself; his anxious eyes look around him for some
object of diversion; without bitter satire and rude mockery he would always be
sorrowful; the scornful laugh is his one pleasure. Not so the just man, who
finds his peace within himself; there is joy not malice in his laughter, a joy
which springs from his own heart; he is as cheerful alone as in company, his
satisfaction does not depend on those who approach him; it includes them.
[1030:]
Cast your eyes over every nation of the world; peruse every volume of its
history: in the midst of all these strange and cruel forms of worship, among
this amazing variety of manners and customs, you will everywhere find the same
ideas of right and justice; everywhere the same principles of morality, the same
ideas of good and evil. The old paganism gave birth to abominable gods who would
have been punished as scoundrels here below, gods who merely offered, as a
picture of supreme happiness, crimes to be committed and lust to be gratified.
But in vain did vice descend from the abode of the gods armed with their sacred
authority; the moral instinct refused to admit it into the heart of man. While
the debaucheries of Jupiter were celebrated, the continence of Xenocrates was
revered; the chaste Lucrece adored the shameless Venus; the bold Roman offered
sacrifices to Fear; he invoked the god who mutilated his father, and he died
without a murmur at the hand of his own father. The most unworthy gods were
worshipped by the noblest men. The sacred voice of nature was stronger than the
voice of the gods, and won reverence upon earth; it seemed to relegate guilt and
the guilty alike to heaven.
[1031:]
There is therefore at the bottom of our hearts an innate principle of justice
and virtue, by which, in spite of our maxims, we judge our own actions or those
of others to be good or evil; and it is this principle that I call conscience.
[1032:]
But at this word I hear the murmurs of all the wise men so-called. Childish
errors, prejudices of our upbringing, they exclaim in concert! There is nothing
in the human mind but what it has gained by experience; and we judge everything
solely by means of the ideas we have acquired. They go further; they even
venture to reject the clear and universal agreement of all peoples, and to set
against this striking unanimity in the judgment of mankind, they seek out some
obscure exception known to themselves alone; as if the whole trend of nature
were rendered null by the depravity of a single nation, and as if the existence
of monstrosities made an end of species. But to what purpose does the skeptic
Montaigne strive himself to unearth in some obscure corner of the world a custom
which is contrary to the ideas of justice? To what purpose does he credit the
most untrustworthy traveler, while he refuses to believe the greatest writers? A
few strange and doubtful customs, based on local causes, unknown to us; shall
these destroy a general inference based on the agreement of all the nations of
the earth, differing from each other in all else, but agreed in this? O
Montaigne, you pride yourself on your truth and honesty; be sincere and
truthful, if a philosopher can be so, and tell me if there is any country upon
earth where it is a crime to keep one's plighted word, to be merciful, helpful,
and generous, where the good man is scorned, and the traitor is held in honor.
[1033:]
Self-interest, so they say, induces each of us to agree for the common good. But
how is it that the good man consents to this to his own hurt? Does a man go to
death from self-interest? No doubt each man acts for his own good, but if there
is no such thing as moral good to be taken into consideration, self-interest
will only enable you to account for the deeds of the wicked; possibly you will
not attempt to do more. A philosophy which could find no place for good deeds
would be too detestable; you would find yourself compelled either to find some
mean purpose, some wicked motive, or to abuse Socrates and slander Regulus. If
such doctrines ever took root among us, the voice of nature, together with the
voice of reason, would constantly protest against them, till no adherent of such
teaching could plead an honest excuse for his partisanship.
[1034:]
It is no part of my scheme to enter at present into metaphysical discussions
which neither you nor I can understand, discussions which really lead nowhere. I
have told you already that I do not wish to philosophize with you, but to help
you to consult your own heart. If all the philosophers in the world should prove
that I am wrong, and you feel that I am right, that is all I ask.
[1035:]
For this purpose it is enough to lead you to distinguish between our acquired
ideas and our natural feelings; for feeling precedes knowledge; and since we do
not learn to seek what is good for us and avoid what is bad for us, but get this
desire from nature, in the same way the love of good and the hatred of evil are
as natural to us as our self-love. The decrees of conscience are not judgments
but feelings. Although all our ideas come from without, the feelings by which
they are weighed are within us, and it is by these feelings alone that we
perceive fitness or unfitness of things in relation to ourselves, which leads us
to seek or shun these things.
[1036:]
To exist is to feel; our feeling is undoubtedly earlier than our intelligence,
and we had feelings before we had ideas. Whatever may be the cause of our being,
it has provided for our preservation by giving us feelings suited to our nature;
and no one can deny that these at least are innate. These feelings, so far as
the individual is concerned, are amour de soi, fear, pain, the dread of death,
the desire for comfort. Again, if, as it is impossible to doubt, man is by
nature sociable, or at least fitted to become sociable, he can only be so by
means of other innate feelings, relative to his kind; for if only physical
well-being were considered. men would certainly be scattered rather than brought
together. But the motive power of conscience is derived from the moral system
formed through this twofold relation to himself and to his fellow-men. To know
good is not to love it; this knowledge is not innate in man; but as soon as his
reason leads him to perceive it, his conscience impels him to love it; it is
this feeling which is innate.
[1037:]
So I do not think, my young friend, that it is impossible to explain the
immediate force of conscience as a result of our own nature, independent of
reason itself. And even should it be impossible, it is unnecessary; for those
who deny this principle, admitted and received by everybody else in the world,
do not prove that there is no such thing; they are content to affirm, and when
we affirm its existence we have quite as good grounds as they, while we have
moreover the witness within us, the voice of conscience, which speaks on its own
behalf. If the first beams of judgment dazzle us and confuse the objects we
behold, let us wait till our feeble sight grows clear and strong, and in the
light of reason we shall soon behold these very objects as nature has already
showed them to us. Or rather let us be simpler and less pretentious; let us be
content with the first feelings we experience in ourselves, since science always
brings us back to these, unless it has led us astray.
[1038:]
Conscience! Conscience! Divine instinct, immortal voice from heaven; sure guide
for a creature ignorant and finite indeed, yet intelligent and free; infallible
judge of good and evil, making man like to God! In thee consists the excellence
of man's nature and the morality of his actions; apart from thee, I find nothing
in myself to raise me above the beasts--nothing but the sad privilege of
wandering from one error to another, by the help of an unbridled understanding
and a reason which knows no principle.
[1039:]
Thank heaven we have now got rid of all that alarming show of philosophy; we may
be men without being scholars; now that we need not spend our life in the study
of morality, we have found a less costly and surer guide through this vast
labyrinth of human thought. But it is not enough to be aware that there is such
a guide; we must know her and follow her. If she speaks to all hearts, how is it
that so few give heed to her voice? She speaks to us in the language of nature,
and everything leads us to forget that tongue. Conscience is timid, she loves
peace and retirement; she is startled by noise and numbers; the prejudices from
which she is said to arise are her worst enemies. She flees before them or she
is silent; their noisy voices drown her words, so that she cannot get a hearing;
fanaticism dares to counterfeit her voice and to inspire crimes in her name. She
is discouraged by ill-treatment; she no longer speaks to us, no longer answers
to our call; when she has been scorned so long, it is as hard to recall her as
it was to banish her.
[1040:]
How often in the course of my inquiries have I grown weary of my own coldness of
heart! How often have grief and weariness poured their poison into my first
meditations and made them hateful to me! My barren heart yielded nothing but a
feeble zeal and a lukewarm love of truth. I said to myself: Why should I strive
to find what does not exist? Moral good is a dream, the pleasures of sense are
the only real good. When once we have lost the taste for the pleasures of the
soul, how hard it is to recover it I How much more difficult to acquire it if we
have never possessed it! If there were any man so wretched as never to have done
anything all his life long which he could remember with pleasure, and which
would make him glad to have lived, that man would be incapable of
self-knowledge, and for want of knowledge of goodness, of which his nature is
capable, he would be constrained to remain in his wickedness and would be for
ever miserable. But do you think there is any one man upon earth so depraved
that he has never yielded to the temptation of well-doing? This temptation is so
natural, so pleasant, that it is impossible always to resist it; and the thought
of the pleasure it has once afforded is enough to recall it constantly to our
memory. Unluckily it is hard at first to find satisfaction for it; we have any
number of reasons for refusing to follow the inclinations of our heart;
prudence, so celled, restricts the heart within the limits of the self; a
thousand efforts are needed to break these bonds. The joy of well-doing is the
prize of having done well, and we must deserve the prize before we win it. There
is nothing sweeter than virtue; but we do not know this till we have tried it.
Like Proteus in the fable, she first assumes a thousand terrible shapes when we
would embrace her, and only shows her true self to those who refuse to let her
go.
[1041:]
Ever at strife between my natural feelings, which spoke of the common weal, and
my reason, which spoke of self, I should have drifted through life in perpetual
uncertainty, hating evil, '6ving good, and always at war with myself, if my
heart had not received further light, if that truth which determined my opinions
had not also settled my conduct, and set me at peace with myself. Reason alone
is not a sufficient foundation for virtue; what solid ground can be found?
Virtue we are told is love of order. But can this love prevail over my love for
my own well-being, and ought it so to prevail? Let them give me clear and
sufficient reason for this preference. Their so-called principle is in truth a
mere p laying with words: for I also say that vice is love of order, differently
understood. Wherever there is feeling and intelligence, there is some sort of
moral order. The difference is this: the good man orders his life with regard to
all men; the wicked orders it for self alone. The latter centers all things
round himself; the other measures his radius and remains on the circumference.
Thus his place depends on the common center, which is God, and on all the
concentric circles which are His creatures. If there is no God, the wicked is
right and the good man is nothing but a fool.
[1042:]
My child! May you one day feel what a burden is removed when, having fathomed
the vanity of human thoughts and tasted the bitterness of passion, you find at
length near at hand the path of wisdom, the prize of this life's labors, the
source of that happiness which you despaired of. Every duty of natural law,
which man's injustice had almost effaced from my heart, is engraven there, for
the second time in the name of that eternal justice which lays these duties upon
me and beholds my fulfillment of them. I feel myself merely the instrument of
the Omnipotent, who wills what is good, who performs it, who will bring about my
own good through the so-operation of my will with his own, and by the right use
of my liberty. I acquiesce in the order he establishes, certain that one day I
shall enjoy that order and find my happiness in it; for what sweeter joy is
there than this, to feel oneself a part of a system where all is good? A prey to
pain, I bear it in patience, remembering that it will soon be over, and that it
results from a body which is not mine. If I do a good deed in secret, I know
that it Is seen, and my conduct in this life is a pledge of the life to come.
When I suffer injustice, I say to myself, the Almighty who does all things well
will reward me: my bodily needs, my poverty, make the idea of death less
intolerable. There will be all the fewer bonds to be broken when my hour comes.
[1043:]
Why is my soul subjected to my senses, and imprisoned in this body by which it
is enslaved and thwarted? I know not; have I entered into the counsels of the
Almighty? But I may, without rashness, venture on a modest conjecture. I say to
myself: If man's soul had remained in a state of freedom and innocence, what
merit would there have been in loving and obeying the order he found
established, an order which it would not have been to his advantage to disturb?
He would be happy, no doubt, but his happiness would not attain to the highest
point, the pride of virtue, and the witness of a good conscience within him; he
would be but as the angels are, and no doubt the good man will be more than
they. Bound to a mortal body, by bonds as strange as they are powerful, his care
for the preservation of this body tempts the soul to think only of self, and
gives it an interest opposed to the general order of things, which it is still
capable of knowing and loving; then it is that the right use of his freedom
becomes at once the merit and the reward; then it is that it prepares for itself
unending happiness, by resisting its earthly passions and following its original
direction.
[1044:]
If even in the lowly position in which we are placed during our present life our
first impulses are always good, if all our vices are of our own making, why
should we complain that they are our masters? Why should we blame the Creator
for the ills we have ourselves created, and the enemies we ourselves have armed
against us? Oh, let us leave man unspoilt; he will always find it easy to be
good and he will always be happy without remorse. The guilty, 'who assert that
they are driven to crime, are liars as well as evil-doers; how is it that they
fail to perceive that the weakness they bewail is of their own making; that
their earliest depravity was the result of their own will; that by dint of
wishing to yield to temptations, they at length yield to them whether they will
or no and make them irresistible? No doubt they can no longer avoid being weak
and wicked, but they need not have become weak and wicked. Oh, how easy would it
be to preserve control of ourselves and of our passions, even in this life, if
with habits still unformed, with a mind beginning to expand, we were able to
keep to such things as we ought to know, in order to value rightly what is
unknown; if we really wished to learn, not that we might shine before the eyes
of others, but that we might be wise and good in accordance with our nature,
that we might be happy in the performance of our duty. This study seems tedious
and painful to us, for we do not attempt it till we are already corrupted by
vice and enslaved by our passions. Our judgments and our standards of worth are
determined before we have the knowledge of good and evil; and then we measure
all things by this false standard, and give nothing its true worth.
[1045:]
There is an age when the heart is still free, but eager, unquiet, greedy of a
happiness which is still unknown, a happiness which it seeks in curiosity and
doubt; deceived by the senses it settles at length upon the empty show of
happiness and thinks it has found it where it is not. In my own case these
illusions endured for a long time. Alas! too late did I become aware of them,
and I have not succeeded in overcoming them altogether; they will last as long
as this mortal body from which they arise. If they lead me astray, I am at least
no longer deceived by them; I know them for what they are, and even when I give
way to them, I despise myself; far from regarding them as the goal of my
happiness, I behold in them an obstacle to it. I long for the time when, freed
from the fetters of the body, I shall be myself, at one with myself, no longer
torn in two, when I myself shall suffice for my own happiness. Meanwhile I am
happy even in this life, for I make small account of all its evils, in which I
regard myself as having little or no part, while all the real good that I can
get out of this life depends on myself alone.
[1046:]
To raise myself so far as may be even now to this state of happiness, strength,
and freedom, I exercise myself in lofty contemplation. I consider the order of
the universe, not to explain it by any futile system, but to revere it without
ceasing, to adore the wise Author who reveals himself in it. I hold intercourse
with him; I immerse all my powers in his divine essence; I am overwhelmed by his
kindness, I bless him and his gifts, but I do not pray to him. What should I ask
of him--to change the order of nature, to work miracles on my behalf? Should I,
who am bound no love above all things the order which he has established in his
wisdom and maintained by his providence, should I desire the disturbance of that
order on my own account? No, that rash prayer would deserve to be punished
rather than to be granted. Neither do I ask of him the power to do right; why
should I ask what he has given me already. Has he not given me conscience that I
may love the right, reason that I may perceive it, and freedom that I may choose
it? If I do evil, I have no excuse; I do it of my own free will; to ask him to
change my will is to ask him to do what he asks of me; it is to want him to do
the work while I get the wages; to be dissatisfied with my lot is to wish to be
no longer a man, to wish to be other than what I am, to wish for disorder and
evil. Thou source of justice and truth, merciful and gracious God, in thee do I
trust, and the desire of my heart is -- Thy will be done. When I unite my will
with thine, I do what thou doest; I have a share in thy goodness; I believe that
I enjoy beforehand the supreme happiness which is the reward of goodness.
[1047:]
In my well-founded self-distrust the only thing that I ask of God, or rather
expect from his justice, is to correct my error if I go astray, if that error is
dangerous to me. To be honest I need not think myself infallible; my opinions,
which seem to me true, may be so many lies; for what man is there who does not
cling to his own beliefs; and how many men are agreed in everything? The
illusion which deceives me may indeed have its source in myself, but it is God
alone who can remove it. I have done all I can to attain to truth; but its
source is beyond my reach; is it my fault if my strength fails me and I can go
no further; it is for Truth to draw near to me.
[1048:]
The good priest had spoken with passion; he and I were overcome with emotion. It
seemed to me as if I were listening to the divine Orpheus when he sang the
earliest hymns and taught men the worship of the gods. I saw any number of
objections which might be raised; yet I raised none, for I perceived that they
were more perplexing than serious, and that my inclination took his part. When
he spoke to me according to his conscience, my own seemed to confirm what he
said.
[1049:]
"The novelty of the sentiments you have made known to me," said I, "strikes me
all the more because of what you confess you do not know, than because of what
you say you believe. They seem to be very like that theism or natural religion,
which Christians profess to confound with atheism or irreligion which is their
exact opposite. But in the present state of my faith I should have to ascend
rather than descend to accept your views, and I find it difficult to remain just
where you are unless I were as wise as you. That I may be at least as honest, I
want time to take counsel with myself. By your own showing, the inner voice must
be my guide, and you have yourself told me that when it has long been silenced
it cannot be recalled in a moment. I take what you have said to heart, and I
must consider it. If after I have thought things out, I am as convinced as you
are, you will be my final teacher, and I will be your disciple till death.
Continue your teaching however; you have only told me half what I must know.
Speak to me of revelation, of the Scriptures, of those difficult doctrines among
which I have strayed ever since I was a child, incapable either of understanding
or believing them, unable to adopt or reject them."
[1050:]
"Yes, my child," said he, embracing me, "I will tell you all I think; I will not
open my heart to you by halves; but the desire you express was necessary before
I could cast aside all reserve. So far I have told you nothing but what I
thought would be of service to you, nothing but what I was quite convinced of.
The inquiry which remains to be made is very difficult. It seems to me full of
perplexity, mystery, and darkness; I bring to it only doubt and distrust. I make
up my mind with trembling, and I tell you my doubts rather than my convictions.
If your own opinions were more settled I should hesitate to show you mine; but
in your present condition, to think like me would be gain. Moreover, give to my
words only the authority of reason; I know not whether I am mistaken. It is
difficult in discussion to avoid assuming sometimes a dogmatic tone; but
remember in this respect that all my assertions are but reasons to doubt me.
Seek truth for yourself, for my own part I only promise you sincerity.
[1051:]
"In my exposition you find nothing but natural religion; strange that we should
need more! How shall I become aware of this need? What guilt can be mine so long
as I serve God according to the knowledge he has given to my mind, and the
feelings he has put into my heart? What purity of morals, what dogma useful to
man and worthy of its author, can I derive from a positive doctrine which cannot
be derived without the aid of this doctrine by the right use of my faculties?
Show me what you can add to the duties of the natural law, for the glory of God,
for the good of mankind, and for my own welfare; and what virtue you will get
from the new form of religion which does not result from mine. The grandest
ideas of the Divine nature come to us from reason only. Behold the spectacle of
nature; listen to the inner voice. Has not God spoken it all to our eyes, to our
conscience, to our reason? What more can man tell us? Their revelations do but
degrade God, by investing him with passions like our own. Far from throwing
light upon the ideas of the Supreme Being, special doctrines seem to me to
confuse these ideas; far from ennobling them, they degrade them; to the
inconceivable mysteries which surround the Almighty. they add absurd
contradictions, they make man proud, intolerant, and cruel; instead of bringing
peace upon earth, they bring fire and sword. I ask myself what is the use of it
all, and I find no answer. I see nothing but the crimes of men and the misery of
mankind.
[1052:]
"They tell me a revelation was required to teach men how God would be served; as
a proof of this they point to the many strange rites which men have instituted,
and they do not perceive that this very diversity springs from the fanciful
nature of the revelation. As soon as the nations took to making God speak, every
one made him speak in his own fashion, and made him say what he himself wanted.
Had they listened only to what God says in the heart of man, there would have
been but one religion upon earth.
[1053:]
"One form of worship was required; just so, but was this a matter of such
importance as to require all the power of the Godhead to establish it? Do not
let us confuse the outward forms of religion with religion itself. The service
God requires is of the heart; and when the heart is sincere that is ever the
same. It is a strange sort of conceit which fancies that God takes such an
interest in the shape of the priest's vestments, the form of words he utters,
the gestures he makes before the altar and all his genuflections. Oh, my friend,
stand upright, you will still be too near the earth. God desires to be
worshipped in spirit and in truth; this duty belongs to every religion, every
country, every individual. As to the form of worship, if order demands
uniformity, that is only a matter of discipline and needs no revelation.
[1054:]
"These thoughts did not come to me to begin with. Carried away by the prejudices
of my education, and by that dangerous vanity which always strives to lift man
out of his proper sphere, when I could not raise my feeble thoughts up to the
great Being, I tried to bring him down to my own level. I tried to reduce the
distance he has placed between his nature and mine. I desired more immediate
relations, more individual instruction; not content to make God in the image of
man that I might be favored above my fellows, I desired supernatural knowledge;
I required a special form of worship; I wanted God to tell me what he had not
told others, or what others had not understood like myself.
[1055:]
"Considering the point 1 had now reached as the common center from which all
believers set out on the quest for a more enlightened form of religion, I merely
found in natural religion the elements of all religion. I beheld the multitude
of diverse sects which hold sway upon earth, each of which accuses the other of
falsehood and error; which of these, I asked, is the right? Every one replied,
'My own;' every one said, 'I alone and those who agree with me think rightly,
all the others are mistaken.' And how do you know that your sect is in the
right? Because God said so. And how do you know God said so? And who told you
that God said it? My pastor, who knows all about it. My pastor tells me what to
believe and I believe it; he assures me that any one who says anything else is
mistaken, and I give no heed to them.
[1056:]
"What! thought I, is not truth one; can that which is true for me be false for
you? If those who follow the right path and those who go astray have the same
method, what merit or what blame can be assigned to one more than to the other?
Their choice is the result of chance; it is unjust to hold them responsible for
it, to reward or punish them for being born in one country or another. To dare
to say that God judges us in this manner is an outrage on his justice.
[1057:]
"Either all religions are good and pleasing to God, or if there is one which he
prescribes for men, if they will be punished for despising it, he will have
distinguished it by plain and certain signs by which it can be known as the only
true religion; these signs are alike in every time and place, equally plain to
all men, great or small, learned or unlearned, Europeans, Indians, Africans,-
savages. If there were but one religion upon earth, and if all beyond its pale
were condemned to eternal punishment, and if there were in any corner of the
world one single honest man who was not convinced by this evidence, the God of
that religion would be the most unjust and cruel of tyrants.
[1058:]
"Let us therefore seek honestly after truth; let us yield nothing to the claims
of birth, to the authority of parents and pastors, but let us summon to the bar
of conscience and of reason all that they have taught us from our childhood. In
vain do they exclaim, 'Submit your reason;' a deceiver might say as much; I must
have reasons for submitting my reason.
[1059:]
"All the theology I can get for myself by observation of the universe and by the
use of my faculties is contained in what I have already told you. To know more
one must have recourse to strange means. These means cannot be the authority of
men, for every man is of the same species as myself, and all that a man knows by
nature I am capable of knowing, and another may be deceived as much as I; when I
believe what he says, it is not because he says it but because he proves its
truth. The witness of man is therefore nothing more than the witness of my own
reason, and it adds nothing to the natural means which God has given me for the
knowledge of truth.
[1060:]
"Apostle of truth, what have you to tell me of which I am not the sole judge?
God himself has spoken; give heed to his revelation. That is another matter. God
has spoken, these are indeed words which demand attention. To whom has he
spoken? He has spoken to men. Why then have I heard nothing? He has instructed
others to make known his words to you. I understand; it is men who come and tell
me what God has said. I would rather have heard the words of God himself; it
would have been as easy for him and I should have been secure from fraud. He
protects you from fraud by showing that his envoys come from him. How does he
show this? By miracles. Where are these miracles? In the books. And who wrote
the books? Men. And who saw the miracles? The men who bear witness to them.
What! Nothing but human testimony! Nothing but men who tell me what others told
them! How many men between God and me! Let us see, however, let us examine,
compare, and verify. Oh! if God had but deigned to free me from all this labor,
I would have served him with all my heart.
[1061:]
"Consider, my friend, the terrible controversy in which I am now engaged; what
vast learning is required to go back to the remotest antiquity, to examine,
weigh, confront prophecies, revelations, facts, all the monuments of faith set
forth throughout the world, to assign their date, place, authorship, and
occasion. What exactness of critical judgment is needed to distinguish genuine
documents from forgeries, to compare objections with their answers, translations
with their originals; to decide as to the impartiality of witnesses, their
common-sense, their knowledge; to make sure that nothing has been omitted,
nothing added, nothing transposed, altered. or falsified; to point out any
remaining contradictions, to determine what weight should be given to the
silence of our adversaries with regard to the charges brought against them; how
far were they aware of those charges; did they think them sufficiently serious
to require an answer; were books sufficiently well known for our books to reach
them; have we been honest enough to allow their books to circulate among
ourselves and to leave their strongest objections unaltered?
[1062:]
"When the authenticity of all these documents Is accepted, we must now pass to
the evidence of their authors' mission; we must know the laws of chance, and
probability, to decide which prophecy cannot be fulfilled without a miracle; we
must know the spirit of the original languages, to distinguish between prophecy
and figures of speech; we must know what facts are in accordance with nature and
what facts are not, so that we may say how far a clever man may deceive the eyes
of the simple and may even astonish the learned; we must discover what are the
characteristics of a prodigy and how its authenticity may be established, not
only so far as to gain credence, hut so that doubt may be deserving of
punishment; we must compare the evidence for true and false miracles, and find
sure tests to distinguish between them; lastly we must say why God chose as a
witness to his words means which themselves require so much evidence on their
behalf, as if he were playing with human credulity, and avoiding of set purpose
the true means of persuasion.
[1063:]
"Assuming that the divine majesty condescends so far as to make a man the
channel of his sacred will, is it reasonable, is it fair, to demand that the
whole of mankind should obey the voice of this minister without making him known
as such? Is it just to give him as his sole credentials certain private signs,
performed in the presence of a few obscure persons, signs which everybody else
can only know by hearsay? If one were to believe all the miracles that the
uneducated and credulous profess to have seen in every country upon earth, every
sect would be in the right; there would be more miracles than ordinary events;
and it would be the greatest miracle if there were no miracles wherever there
were persecuted fanatics. The unchangeable order of nature is the chief witness
to the wise hand that guides it; if there were many exceptions, I should hardly
know what to think; for my own part I have too great a faith in God to believe
in so many miracles which are so little worthy of him.
[1064:]
"Let a man come and say to us: Mortals, I proclaim to you the will of the Most
Highest; accept my words as those of him who has sent me; I bid the sun to
change his course, the stars to range themselves in a fresh order, the high
places to become smooth, the floods to rise up, the earth to change her face. By
these miracles who will not recognize the master of nature? She does not obey
impostors, their miracles are wrought in holes and corners, in deserts, within
closed doors, where they find easy dupes among a small company of spectators
already disposed to believe them. Who will venture to tell me how many
eye-witnesses are required to make a miracle credible? What use are your
miracles, performed if proof of your doctrine, if they themselves require so
much proof? You might as well have let them alone.
[1065:]
"There still remains the most important inquiry of all with regard to the
doctrine proclaimed; for since those who tell us God works miracles in this
world, profess that the devil sometimes imitates them, when we have found the
best attested miracles we have got very little further; and since the magicians
of Pharaoh dared m the presence of Moses to counterfeit the very signs he
wrought at God's command, why should they not, behind his back, claim a like
authority? So when we have proved our doctrine by means of miracles, we must
prove our miracles by means of doctrine, for fear lest we should take the
devil's doings for the handiwork of God. What think you of this dilemma?
[1066:]
"This doctrine, if it comes from God, should bear the sacred stamp of the
godhead; not only should it illumine the troubled thoughts which reason imprints
on our minds, but it should also offer us a form of worship, a morality, and
rules of conduct in accordance with the attributes by means of which we alone
conceive of God's essence. If then it teaches us what is absurd and
unreasonable, if it inspires us with feelings of aversion for our fellows and
terror for ourselves, if it paints us & God, angry, jealous, revengeful,
partial, hating men, a God of war and battles, ever ready to strike and to
destroy, ever speaking of punishment and torment, boasting even of the
punishment of the innocent, my heart would not be drawn towards this terrible
God, I would take good care not to quit the realm of natural religion to embrace
such a religion as that; for you see plainly I must choose between them. Your
God is not ours. He who begins by selecting & chosen people, and proscribing the
rest of mankind, is not our common father; he who consigns to eternal punishment
the greater part of his creatures, is not the merciful and gracious God revealed
to me by my reason.
[1067:]
"Reason tells me that dogmas should be plain, clear, and striking in their
simplicity. If there is something lacking in natural religion, it is with
respect to the obscurity in which it leaves the great truths it teaches;
revelation should teach 'is these truths in a way which the mind of man can
understand; it should bring them within his reach, make him comprehend them, so
that he may believe them. Faith is confirmed and strengthened by understanding;
the best religion is of necessity the simplest. He who hides beneath mysteries
and contradictions the religion that he preaches to me, teaches me at the same
time to distrust that religion. The God whom I adore is not the God of darkness,
he has not given me understanding in order to forbid me to use it; to tell me to
submit my reason is to insult the giver of reason. The minister of truth does
not tyrannize over my reason, he enlightens it.
[1068:]
"We have set aside all human authority, and without it I do not see how any man
can convince another by preaching a doctrine contrary to reason. Let them fight
it out, and let us see what they have to say with that harshness of speech which
is common to both.
[1069:]
"Inspiration: Reason tells you that the whole is greater than the part; but I
tell you, in God's name, that the part is greater than the whole.
"Reason:
And who are you to dare to tell me that God contradicts himself? And which shall
I choose to believe, God who teaches me, through my reason, the eternal truth,
or you who, in his name, proclaim an absurdity?
"Inspiration: Believe me, for my teaching is more positive; and I will prove to
you beyond all manner of doubt that he has sent me.
"Reason:
What! you will convince me that God has sent you to bear witness against himself
l What sort of proofs will you adduce to convince me that God speaks more surely
by your mouth than through the understanding he has given me?
"Inspiration: The understanding he has given you! Petty, conceited creature! As
if you were the first impious person who had been led astray through his reason
corrupted by sin.
"Reason:
Man of God, you would not be the first scoundrel who asserts his arrogance as a
proof of his mission.
"Inspiration: What! do even philosophers call names?
"Reason:
Sometimes, when the saints set them the example.
"Inspiration: Oh, but I have a right to do it, for I am speaking on God's
behalf.
"Reason:
You would do well to show your credentials before you make use of your
privileges.
"Inspiration: My credentials are authentic, earth and heaven will bear witness
on my beh&1L Follow my arguments carefully, if you please.
"Reason:
Your arguments! You forget what you are saying. When you teach me that my reason
this leads me, do you not refute what it might have said on your behalf? He who
denies the right of reason, must convince me without recourse to her aid. For
suppose you have convinced me by reason, how am I to know that it is not my
reason, corrupted by sin, which makes me accept what you say? Besides, what
proof, what demonstration. can you advance, more self-evident than the axiom it
is to destroy? It is more credible that a good syllogism is a lie, than that the
part is greater than the whole.
"Inspiration: What a difference! There is no answer to my evidence; it is of a
supernatural kind.
"Reason:
Supernatural! What do you mean by the word? I do not understand it.
"Inspiration: I mean changes in the order of nature, prophecies, signs, and
wonders of every kind.
"Reason:
Signs and wonders! I have never seen anything of the kind.
"Inspiration: Others have seen them for you. Clouds of witnesses -- the witness
of whole nations. - -
"Reason.: Is the witness of nations supernatural?
"Inspiration: No; but when it is unanimous, it is incontestable.
"Reason:
There is nothing so incontestable as the principles of reason. and one cannot
accept an absurdity on human evidence. Once more, let us see your supernatural
evidence, for the consent of mankind is not supernatural.
"Inspiration: Oh, hardened heart, grace does not speak to you.
"Reason:
That is not my fault; for by your own showing, one must have already received
grace before one is able to ask for it. Begin by speaking to me in its stead.
"Inspiration: But that is just what I am doing, and you will not listen. But
what do you say to prophecy?
"Reason:
In the first place, I say I have no more heard a prophet than I have seen a
miracle. In the next, I say that no prophet could claim authority over me.
"Inspiration: Follower of the devil! Why should not the words of the prophets
have authority over you?
"Reason:
Because three things are required, three things which will never happen:
firstly, I must have heard the prophecy; secondly, I must have seen its
fulfillment; and thirdly, it must be clearly proved that the fulfillment of the
prophecy could not by any possibility have been a mere coincidence; for even if
it was as precise, as plain, and clear as an axiom of geometry, since the
clear-ness of a chance prediction does not make its fulfillment impossible, this
fulfillment when it does take place does not, strictly speaking, prove what was
foretold.
[1070:]
"See what your so-called supernatural proofs, your miracles, your prophecies
come to: believe all this upon the word of another, submit to the authority of
men the authority of God which speaks to my reason. If the eternal truths which
my mind conceives of could suffer any shock. there would be no sort of certainty
for me; and far from being sure that you speak to me on God's behalf, I should
not even be sure that there is a God.
[1071:]
"My child, here are difficulties enough, but these are not all. Among so many
religions, mutually excluding and proscribing each other, one only is true. if
indeed any one of them is true. To recognize the true religion we must inquire
into, not one, but all; and in any question whatsoever we have no right to
condemn unheard. The objections must be compared with the evidence; we must know
what accusation each brings against the other, and what answers they receive.
The plainer any feeling appears to us, the more we must try to discover why so
many other people refuse to accept it. We should be simple, indeed, if we
thought it enough to hear the doctors on our own side, in order to acquaint
ourselves with the arguments of the other. Where can you find theologians who
pride themselves on their honesty? Where are those who, to refute the arguments
of their opponents, do not begin by making out that they are of little
importance? A man may make a good show among his own friends, and be very proud
of his arguments, who would cut & very poor figure with those same arguments
among those who are on the other side. Would you find out for yourself from
books? What learning you will need! What languages you must learn; what
libraries you must ransack; what an amount of reading must be got through! Who
will guide me in such a choice? It will be hard to find the best books on the
opposite side in any one country, and all the harder to find those on all sides;
when found they would be easily answered. The absent are always in the wrong,
and bad arguments boldly asserted easily efface good arguments put forward with
scorn. Besides books are often very misleading, and scarcely express the
opinions of their authors. If you think you can judge the Catholic faith from
the writings of Bossuet, you will find yourself greatly mistaken when you have
lived among us. You will see that the doctrines with which Protestants are
answered are quite different from those of the pulpit. To judge a religion
rightly, you must not study it in the books of its partisans, you must learn it
in their lives; this is quite another matter. Each religion has its own
traditions, meaning, customs, prejudices, which form the spirit of its creed,
and must be taken in connection with it.
[1072:]
"How many great nations neither print books of their own nor read ours! How
shall they judge of our opinions, or we of theirs? We laugh at them, they
despise us; and if our travelers turn them into ridicule, they need only travel
among us to pay us back in our own coin. Are there not, in every country, men of
common-sense, honesty, and good faith, lovers of truth, who only seek to know
what truth is that they may profess it? Yet every one finds truth in his own
religion, and thinks the religion of other nations absurd; no all these foreign
religions are not so absurd as they seem to us, or else the reason we find for
our own proves nothing.
[1073:]
"We have three principal forms of religion in Europe. One accepts one
revelation, another two, and another three. Each hates the others, showers
curses on them, accuses them of blindness, obstinacy, hardness of heart, and
falsehood. What fair-minded man will dare to decide between them without first
carefully weighing their evidence, without listening attentively to their
arguments? That which accepts only one revelation is the oldest and seems the
best established; that which accepts three is the newest and seems the most
consistent; that which accepts two revelations and rejects the third may perhaps
be the best, but prejudice is certainly against it. its inconsistency is
glaring.
[1074:]
"In all three revelations the sacred books are written in languages unknown to
the people who believe in them. The Jews no longer understand 'Hebrew, the
Christians understand neither Hebrew nor Greek; the Turks and Persians do not
understand Arabic, and the Arabs of our time do not speak the language of
Mohammed. Is not it a very foolish way of teaching, to teach people in an
unknown tongue? These books are translated, you say. What an answer! How am I to
know that the translations are correct, or how am I to make sure that such a
thing as a correct translation is possible? If God has gone so far as to speak
to men, why should he require an interpreter?
[1075:]
"I can never believe that every man is obliged to know what is contained in
books, and that he who is out of reach of these books, and of those who
understand them, will be punished for an ignorance which is no fault of his.
Books upon books! What madness! As all Europe is full of books, Europeans regard
them as necessary, forgetting that they are unknown throughout three-quarters of
the globe. Were not all these books written by men? Why then should a man need
them to teach him his duty, and how did he learn his duty before these books
were in existence? Either he must have learnt his duties for himself, or his
ignorance must have been excused.
[1076:]
"Our Catholics talk loudly of the authority of the Church; but what is the use
of it all, if they also need just as great an array of proofs to establish that
authority as the other seeks to establish their doctrine? The Church decides
that the Church has a right to decide. What a well-founded authority! Go beyond
it, and you are back again in our discussions.
[1077:]
"Do you know many Christians who have taken the trouble to inquire what the Jews
allege against them? If any one knows anything at all about it, it is from the
writings of Christians. What a way of ascertaining the arguments of our
adversaries! But what is to be done? If any one dared to publish in our day
books which were openly in favor of the Jewish religion. We should punish the
author, publisher, and bookseller. This regulation is a sure and certain plan
for always being in the right. It is easy to refute those who dare not venture
to speak.
[1078:]
"Those among us who have the opportunity of talking with Jews are little better
off. These unhappy people feel that they are in our power; the tyranny they have
suffered makes them timid; they know that Christian charity thinks nothing of
injustice and cruelty; will they dare to run the risk of an outcry against
blasphemy? Our greed inspires us with zeal, and they are so rich that they must
be in the wrong. The more learned, the more enlightened they are, the more
cautious. You may convert some poor wretch whom you have paid to slander his
religion; you get some wretched old-clothes-man to speak, and he says what you
want; you may triumph over their ignorance and cowardice, while all the time
their men of learning are laughing at your stupidity. But do you think you would
get off so easily in any place where they knew they were safe? At the Sorbonne
it is plain that the Messianic prophecies refer to Jesus Christ. Among the
rabbis of Amsterdam it is just as clear that they have nothing to do with him. I
do not think I have ever heard the arguments of the Jews as to why they should
not have a free state, schools and universities, where they can speak and argue
without danger. Then alone can we know what they have to say.
[1079:]
"At Constantinople the Turks state their arguments, but we dare not give ours;
then it is our turn to cringe. Con we blame the Turks if they require us to show
the same respect for Mohammed, in whom we do not believe, as we demand from the
Jews with regard to Jesus Christ in whom they do not believe? Are we right? On
what grounds of justice can we answer this question?
[1080:]
"Two-thirds of mankind are neither Jews, Mahommedans, nor Christians; and how
many millions of men have never heard the name of Moses, Jesus Christ, or
Mohammed? They deny it; they maintain that our missionaries go everywhere. That
is easily said. But do they go into the heart of Africa, still undiscovered,
where as yet no European has ever ventured? Do they go to Eastern Tartary to
follow on horseback the wandering tribes, whom no stranger approaches, who not
only know nothing of the pope, but have scarcely heard tell of the Grand Lama?
Do they penetrate into the vast continents of America, where there are still
whole nations unaware that the people of another world have set foot on their
shores' Do they go to Japan. where their intrigues have led to their perpetual
banishment, where their predecessors are only known to the rising generation as
skilful plotters who came with feigned zeal to take possession in secret of the
empire? Do they reach the harems of the Asiatic princes to preach the gospel to
those thousands of poor slaves? What have the women of those countries done that
no missionary may preach the faith to them? Will they all go to hell because of
their Reclusion?
[1081:]
"If it were true that the gospel is preached throughout the world, what
advantage would there be? The day before the first missionary set foot in any
country, no doubt somebody died who could not hear him. Now tell me what we
shall do with him? If there were a single soul in the whole world, to whom Jesus
Christ had never been preached, this objection would be as strong for that man
as for a quarter of the human race.
[1082:]
"If the ministers of the gospel have made themselves heard among far-off
nations, what have they told them which might reasonably be accepted on their
word, without further and more exact verification? You preach to me God, born
and dying, two thousand years ago, at the other end of the world, in some small
town I know not where; and you tell me that all who have not believed this
mystery are damned. These are strange things to be believed so quickly on the
authority of an unknown person. Why did your God make these things happen so far
off, if he would compel me to know about them? Is it a crime to be unaware of
what is happening half a world away? Could I guess that in another hemisphere
there was a Hebrew nation and a town called Jerusalem? You might as well expect
me to know what was happening in the moon. You say you have come to teach me;
but why did you not come and teach my father, or why do you consign that good
old man to damnation because he knew nothing of all this? Must he be punished
everlastingly for your laziness, he who was so kind and helpful, he who sought
only for truth? Be honest; put yourself in my place; see if I ought to believe,
on your word alone, all these incredible thing, which you have told me, and
reconcile all this injustice with the just God you proclaim to me. At least
allow me to go and see this distant land where such wonders, unheard of in my
own country, took place; let me go and see why the inhabitants of Jerusalem put
their God to death as a robber. You tell me they did not know he was God. What
then shall I do, I who have only heard of him from your You say they have been
punished, dispersed, oppressed, enslaved; that none of them dare approach that
town. Indeed they richly deserved it; but what do its present inhabitants say of
their crime in slaying their God? They deny him; they too refuse to recognize
God as God. They are no better than the children of the original inhabitants.
[1083:]
"What! In the very town where God was put to death, neither the former nor the
latter inhabitants knew him, and you expect that I should know him, I who was
born two thousand years after his time, and two thousand leagues away? Do you
not see that before I can believe this book which you call sacred, but which I
do not in the least understand, I must know from others than yourself when and
by whom it was written, how it has been preserved, how it came into your
possession, what they say about it in those lands where it is rejected, and what
are their reasons for rejecting it, though they know as well as you what you are
telling me? You perceive I must go to Europe,
Asia,
Palestine, to examine these things for myself; it would be madness to listen to
you before that.
[1084:]
"Not only does this seem reasonable to me, but I maintain that it is what every
wise man ought to say in similar circumstances; that he ought to banish to a
great distance the missionary who wants to instruct and baptize him all of a
sudden before the evidence is verified. Now I maintain that there is no
revelation against which these or similar objections cannot be made, and with
more force than against Christianity. Hence it follows that if there is but one
true religion and if every man is bound to follow it under pain of damnation, he
must spend his whole life in studying, testing, comparing all these religions,
in travelling through the countries in which they are established. No man is
free from a man's first duty; no one has a right to depend on another's
judgment. The artisan who earns his bread by his daily toil, the ploughboy who
cannot read, the delicate and timid maiden, the invalid who can scarcely leave
his hod, all without exception must study, consider, argue, travel over the
whole world; there will be no more fixed and settled nations; the whole earth
will swarm with pilgrims on their way, at great cost of time and trouble, to
verify, compare, and examine for themselves the various religions to be found.
Then farewell to the trades, the arts, the sciences of mankind, farewell to all
peaceful occupations; there can be no study but that of religion, even the
strongest, the most industrious the most intelligent, the oldest, will hardly be
able in his last years to know where he is; and it will be a wonder if he
manages to find out what religion he ought to live by, before the hour of his
death.
[1085:]
Do you want to compromise this method and give at least some weight to the
authority of men? Immediately you will give in to it completely. If the son of a
Christian does well to follow the religion of his father without any profound
and impartial reflection, then why would the son of a Turk do wrong to follow
his father's religion? I defy all the intolerant people of the world to answer
this in a way that would satisfy a sensible man.
[1086:]
"Hard pressed by these arguments, some prefer to make God unjust and to punish
the innocent for the sins of their fathers, rather than to renounce their
barbarous dogmas. Others get out of the difficulty by kindly sending an angel to
instruct all those who in invincible ignorance have lived a righteous life. A
good idea, that angel! Not content to be the slaves of their own inventions they
expect God to make use of them also!
[1087:]
"Behold, my son, the absurdities to which pride and intolerance bring us, when
everybody wants others to think as he does, and everybody fancies that he has an
exclusive claim upon the rest of mankind. I call to witness the God of Peace
whom I adore. and whom I proclaim to you, that my inquires were honestly made;
but when I discovered that they were and always would be unsuccessful, and that
I was embarked upon a boundless ocean, I turned back, and restricted my faith
within the limits of my primitive ideas. I could never convince myself that God
would require such learning of me under pain of hell. So I closed all my books.
There is one book which is open to every one--the book of nature. In this good
and great volume I learn to serve and adore its Author. There is no excuse for
not reading this book, for it speaks to all in a language they can understand.
Suppose I had been born in a desert island, suppose I had never seen any man but
myself, suppose I had never heard what took place in olden days in a remote
corner of the world; yet if I use my reason, if I cultivate it, if I employ
rightly the innate faculties which God bestows upon me, I shall learn by myself
to know and love him, to love his works, to will what he wills, and to fulfil
all my duties upon earth, that I may do his pleasure. What more can all human
learning teach me?
[1088:]
"With regard to revelation, if I were a more accomplished disputant, or a more
learned person, perhaps I should feel its truth, its usefulness for those who
are happy enough to perceive it; but if I find evidence for it which I cannot
combat, I also find objections against it which I cannot overcome. There are so
many weighty reasons for and against that I do not know what to decide, so that
I neither accept nor reject it I only reject all obligation to be convinced of
its truth; for this so-called obligation is incompatible with God's justice, and
far from removing objections in this way it would multiply them, and would make
them insurmountable for the greater part of mankind. In this respect I maintain
an attitude of reverent doubt. I do not presume to think myself infallible;
other men may have been able to make up their minds though the matter seems
doubtful to myself; I am speaking for myself, not for them; I neither blame them
nor follow in their steps; their judgment may be superior to mine, but it is no
fault of mine that my judgment does not agree with it.
[1089:]
"I own also that the holiness of the gospel speaks to my heart, and that this is
an argument which I should be sorry to refute. Consider the books of the
philosophers with all their outward show; how petty they are in comparison! Can
a book at once so grand and so simple be the work of men? Is it possible that he
whose history is contained in this book is no more than man? Is the tone of this
book, the tone of the enthusiast or the ambitious sectary? What gentleness and
purity in his actions, what a touching grace in his teaching, how lofty are his
sayings, how profoundly wise are his sermons, how ready, how discriminating, and
how just are his answers! What man, what sage, can live, suffer, and die without
weakness or ostentation? When Plato describes his imaginary good man,
overwhelmed with the disgrace of crime, and deserving of all the rewards of
virtue, every feature of the portrait is that of Christ; the resemblance is so
striking that it has been noticed by all the Fathers, and there can be no doubt
about it. What prejudices and blindness must there be before we dare to compare
the son of Sophronisca with the son of Mary. How far apart they are! Socrates
dies a painless death, he is not put to open shame, and he plays his part easily
to the last; and if this easy death had not done honor to his life, we might
have doubted whether Socrates, with all his intellect, was more than a mere
sophist. He invented morality, so they say; others before him had practiced it;
he only said what they had done, and made use of their example in his teaching.
Aristides was just before Socrates defined justice; Leonidas died for his
country before Socrates declared that patriotism was a virtue; Sparta was sober
before Socrates extolled sobriety; there were plenty of virtuous men in Greece
before he defined virtue But among the men of his own time where did Jesus find
that pure and lofty morality of which he is both the teacher and pattern? The
voice of loftiest wisdom arose among the fiercest fanaticism, the simplicity of
the most heroic virtues did honor to the most degraded of nations One could wish
no easier death than that of Socrates, calmly discussing philosophy with his
friends; one could fear nothing worse than that of Jesus, dying in torment,
among the insults, the mockery, the curses of the whole nation. In the midst of
these terrible sufferings, Jesus prays for his cruel murderers. Yes, if the life
and death of Socrates are those of a philosopher, the life and death of Christ
are those of a God. Shall we say that the gospel story is the work of the
imagination? My friend, such things are not imagined; and the doings of
Socrates, which no one doubts, are less well attested than those of Jesus
Christ. At best, you only put the difficulty from you; it would be still more
incredible that several persons should have agreed together to invent such a
book, than that there was one man who supplied its subject matter. The ton6 and
morality of this story are not those of any Jewish authors, and the gospel
indeed contains characters so great, so striking, so entirely inimitable, that
their invention would be more astonishing than their hero. With all this the
same gospel is full of incredible things, things repugnant to reason, things
which no natural man can understand or accept. What can you do among so many
contradictions? You can be modest and wary, my child; respect in silence what
you can neither reject nor understand, and humble yourself in the sight of the
Divine Being who alone knows the truth.
[1090:]
"This is the unwilling skepticism in which I rest; but this skepticism is in no
way painful to me, for it does not extend to matters of practice, and I am well
assured as to the principles underlying all my duties. I serve God in the
simplicity of my heart; I only seek to know what affects my conduct. As to those
dogmas which have no effect upon action or morality, dogmas about which so many
men torment themselves, I give no heed to them. I regard all individual
religions as so many wholesome institutions which prescribe a uniform method by
which each country may do honor to God in public worship; institutions which may
each have its reason m the country, the government, the genius of the people, or
in other local causes which make one preferable to another In a given time or
place. I think them all good alike, when God is served in a fitting manner. True
worship is of the heart. God rejects no homage, however offered, provided it is
sincere. Called to the service of the Church in my own religion, I fulfil as
scrupulously as I can all the duties prescribed to me, and my conscience would
reproach me if I were knowingly wanting with regard to any point. You are aware
that after being suspended for a long time, have, through the influence of M.
Mellarede, obtained permission to resume my priestly duties, as a means of
livelihood. I used to say Mass with the levity that comes from long experience
even of the most serious matters when they are too familiar to us; with my new
principles I now celebrate it with more reverence; I dwell upon the majesty of
the Supreme Being, his presence, the insufficiency of the human mind, which so
little realizes what concerns its Creator. When I consider how I present before
him the prayers of all the people in a form laid down for me, I carry out the
whole ritual exactly; I give heed to what I say, I am careful not to omit the
least word, the least ceremony; when the moment of the consecration approaches,
I collect my powers, that I may do all things as required by the Church and by
the greatness of this sacrament; I strive to annihilate my own reason before the
Supreme Mind; I say to myself, Who art thou to measure infinite power? I
reverently pronounce the sacramental words, and I give to their effect all the
faith I can bestow. Whatever may be this mystery which passes. understanding, I
am not afraid that at the day of judgment I shall be punished for having
profaned it in my heart.
[1091:]
Honored with the sacred ministry, though in its lowest ranks. I will never do or
say anything which may make me unworthy to fulfil these sublime duties. I will
always preach virtue and exhort men to well-doing; and so far as I can I will
set them a good example. It will be my business to make religion attractive.; it
will be my business to strengthen their faith in those doctrines which are
really useful, those which every man must believe; but, please God, I shall
never teach them to hate their neighbor, to say to other men, You will be
damned; to say, No salvation outside the Church. If I were in a more conspicuous
position, this reticence might get me into trouble; but I am too obscure to have
much to fear, and I could hardly sink lower than I am. Come what may, I will
never blaspheme the justice of God, nor lie against the Holy Ghost.
[1092:]
"I have long desired to have a parish of my own; it is still my ambition, but I
no longer hope to attain it. My dear friend, I think there is nothing so
delightful as to be a parish priest. A good clergyman is a minister of mercy, as
a good magistrate is a minister of justice. A clergyman is never called upon to
do evil; if he cannot always do good himself, it is never out of place for him
to beg for others, and he often gets what he asks If he knows how to gain
respect Oh! if I should ever have some poor mountain parish where I might
minister to kindly folk, I should be happy indeed; for it seems to me that I
should make my parishioners happy. I should not bring them riches, but I should
share their poverty; I should remove from them the scorn and opprobrium which
are harder to bear than poverty. I should make them love peace and equality,
which often remove poverty, and always make it tolerable. When they saw that I
was in no way better off than themselves, and that yet I was content with my
lot, they would learn to put up with their fate and to be content like me. In my
sermons I would lay more stress on the spirit of the gospel than on the spirit
of the church; its teaching is simple, its morality sublime; there is little in
it about the practices of religion, but much about works of charity. Before I
teach them what they ought to do, I would try to practice it myself, that they
might see that at least I think what I say. If there were Protestants in the
neighborhood or in my parish, I would make no difference between them and my own
congregation so far as concerns Christian charity; I would get them to love one
another, to consider themselves brethren, to respect all religions, and each to
live peaceably in his own religion. To ask any one to abandon the religion in
which he was born is, I consider, to ask him to do wrong, and therefore to do
wrong oneself. While we await further knowledge, let us respect public order; in
every country let us respect the laws, let us not disturb the form of worship
prescribed by law; let us not lead its citizens into disobedience; for we have
no certain knowledge that it is good for them to abandon their own opinions for
others, and on the other hand we are quite certain that it is a bad thing to
disobey the law.
[1093:]
"My young friend, I have now repeated to you my creed as God reads it in my
heart; you are the first to whom I have told it; perhaps you will be the last.
As long as there is any true faith left among men, we must not trouble quiet
souls, nor scare the faith of the ignorant with problems they cannot solve, with
difficulties which cause them uneasiness, but do not give them any guidance. But
when once everything is shaken, the trunk must be preserved at the cost of the
branches. Consciences, restless, uncertain, and almost quenched like yours,
require to be strengthened and aroused; to set the feet again upon the
foundation of eternal truth, we must remove the trembling supports on which they
think they rest.
[1094:]
"You are at that critical age when the mind is open to conviction, when the
heart receives its form and character, when we decide our own fate for life,
either for good or evil. At a later date, the material has hardened and fresh
impressions leave no trace. Young man, take the stamp of truth upon your heart
which is not yet hardened. If I were more certain of myself, I should have
adopted a more decided and dogmatic tone; but I am a man ignorant and liable to
error; what could I do? I have opened my heart fully to you; and I have told
what I myself hold for certain and sure; I have told you my doubts as doubts, my
opinions as opinions; I have given you my reasons both for faith and doubt. It
is now your turn to judge; you have asked for time; that is a wise precaution
and it makes me think well of you. Begin by bringing your conscience into that
state in which it desires to see clearly; be honest with yourself. Take to
yourself such of my opinions as convince you, reject the rest. You are not yet
so depraved by vice as to run the risk of choosing amiss. I would offer to argue
with you, but as soon as men dispute they lose their temper; pride and obstinacy
come in, and there is an end of honesty My friend, never argue; for by arguing
we gain no light for ourselves or for others. So far as I myself am concerned, I
have only made up my mind after many years of meditation; here I rest, my
conscience is at peace, my heart is satisfied. If I wanted to begin afresh the
examination of my feelings, I should not bring to the task a purer love of
truth; and my mind, which is already less active, would be less able to perceive
the truth. Here I shall rest, lest the love of contemplation, developing step by
step into an idle passion, should make me lukewarm in the performance of my
duties, lest I should fall into my former skepticism without strength to
8truggle out of it. More than half my life is spent; I have barely time to make
good use of what is left, to blot out my faults by my virtues. If I am mistaken,
it is against my will. He who reads my inmost heart knows that I have no love
for my blindness. As my own knowledge is powerless to free me from this
blindness, my only way out of it is by a good life; and if God from the very
stones can raise up children to Abraham, every man has a right to hope that he
may be taught the truth, if he makes himself worthy of it.
[1095:]
"If my reflections lead you to think as I do, if you share my feelings, if we
have the same creed, I give you this advice: Do not continue to expose your life
to the temptations of poverty and despair. nor waste it in degradation and at
the mercy of strangers; no longer eat the shameful bread of charity. Return to
your own country, go back to the religion of your fathers, and follow it in
sincerity of heart, and never forsake it; it is very simple and very holy; I
think there is no other religion upon earth whose morality is purer, no other
more satisfying to the reason. Do not trouble about the cost of the journey,
that will be provided for you. Neither do you fear the false shame of &
humiliating return; we should blush to commit a fault, not to repair it. You are
still at an age when all is forgiven, but when we cannot go on sinning with
impunity. If you desire to listen to your conscience, a thousand empty
objections will disappear at her voice. You will feel that, in our present state
of uncertainty, it is an inexcusable presumption to profess any faith but that
we were born into, while it is treachery not to practice honestly the faith we
profess. If we go astray, we deprive ourselves of a great excuse before the
tribunal of the sovereign judge. Will he not pardon the errors in which we were
brought up, rather than those of our own choosing?
[1096:]
"My son, keep your soul in such a state that you always desire that there should
be a God and you will never doubt it. Moreover, whatever decision you come to,
remember that the real duties of religion are independent of human institutions;
that a righteous heart is the true temple of the Godhead; that in every land, in
every sect, to love God above all things and to love our neighbor as ourself is
the whole law; remember there is no religion which absolves us from our moral
duties; that these alone are really essential, that the service of the heart is
the first of these duties, and that without faith there is no such thing as true
virtue.
[1097:]
"Shun those who, under the pretence of explaining nature, sow destructive
doctrines in the heart of men, those whose apparent skepticism is a hundredfold
more self-assertive and dogmatic than the firm tone of their opponents. Under
the arrogant claim, that they alone are enlightened, true, honest, they subject
us imperiously to their far-reaching decisions, and profess to give us, as the
true principles of all things, the unintelligible systems framed by their
imagination. Moreover, they overthrow, destroy, and trample under foot all that
men reverence; they rob the afflicted of their last consolation in their misery;
they deprive the rich and powerful of the sole bridle of their passions; they
tear from the very depths of man's heart all remorse for crime, and all hope of
virtue; and they boast, moreover, that they are the benefactors of the human
race. Truth, they say, can never do a man harm. I think so too, and to my mind
that is strong evidence that what they teach is not true.
[1098:]
"My good youth, be honest and humble; learn how to be ignorant, then you will
never deceive yourself or others. If ever your talents are so far cultivated as
to enable you to speak to other men, always speak according to your conscience,
without caring for their applause. The abuse of knowledge causes incredulity.
The learned always despise the opinions of the crowd; each of them must have his
own opinion. A haughty philosophy leads to atheism just as blind devotion leads
to fanaticism. Avoid these extremes; keep steadfastly to the path of truth, or
what seems to you truth, in simplicity of heart, and never let yourself be
turned aside by pride or weakness. Dare to confess God before the philosophers;
dare to preach humanity to the intolerant. It may be you will stand alone, but
you will bear within you a witness which will make the witness of men of no
account with you. Let them love or hate, let them read your writings or despise
them; no matter. Speak the truth and do the right; the one thing that really
matters is to do one's duty in this world; and when we forget ourselves we are
really working for ourselves. My chill, self-interest misleads us; the hope of
the just is the only sure guide."
[1099:]
I have transcribed this document not as a rule for the sentiments we should
adopt in matters of religion, but as an example of the way in which we may
reason with our pupil without diverging from the method I have tried to
establish. So long as we yield nothing to human authority, nor to the prejudices
of one's country, the light of reason alone, in a natural institution, can lead
us no further than to natural religion; and this is as far as I should go with
Emile. If he must have any other religion, I have no right to be his guide; he
must choose for himself.
[1100:]
We are working in agreement with nature, and while it is shaping the physical
man, we are striving to shape the moral man. But we do not make the same
progress. The body is already as strong and vigorous as the soul is frail and
delicate, and whatever can be done by human art, the body is always ahead of the
mind. Until now all our care has been devoted to restraining the one and
stimulating the other, so that the man might as far as possible be at one with
himself. By developing what is natural, we have kept his growing sensibilities
in check; we have controlled it by cultivating his reason. Objects of thought
moderate the influence of objects of sense. By going back to the causes of
things, we have drawn him away from the domination of the senses. It was simple
to raise him from the study of nature to the search for the author of nature
[1101:]
When we have reached this point, what a new hold we have over our pupil; what
new ways of speaking to his heart! Then alone does he find a true interest in
being good, in doing what is right when he is far from every human eye, and when
he is not driven to it by law -- to be just before himself and God, to do his
duty, even at the cost of his life, and to bear in his heart virtue, not only
for the love of order which we all subordinate to the love of self, but for the
love of the author of his being, a love which mingles with that same amour de
soi -- so that he may finally enjoy the lasting happiness which the peace of a
good conscience and the contemplation of that supreme being promise him in
another life after he has used this life well. Go beyond this, and I see nothing
but injustice, hypocrisy, and falsehood among men. Private interest, which in
competition necessarily prevails over everything else, teaches all things to
adorn vice with the mask of virtue. Let all other men do what is good for me at
the cost of what is good for themselves; let everything relate to me alone; let
the whole human race perish, if necessary, in suffering and want, to spare me a
moment's pain or hunger. Such is the interior language of every non-believer who
reasons. Yes, I shall always maintain that whoever says in his heart, "There is
no God" but says otherwise out loud, is either a liar or a madman.
[1102:]
Reader, it is all in vain; I perceive that you and I shall never see Emile with
the same eyes. You will always picture him like your own young people -- hasty,
petulent, flighty, wandering from feast to feast, from entertainment, never able
to focus on anything. You smile when I expect to make a thinker, a philosopher,
a young theologian, of an ardent, lively, eager, and fiery young man at the most
impulsive period of youth. This dreamer, you say, is always in pursuing his
dreams; when he gives us a pupil of his own making, he does not merely form him,
he creates him, he makes him up out of his own head; and while believing he is
following the steps of nature, he is getting further and further from her. But
for me, when I compare my pupil with yours, I can scarcely find anything in
common between them. Nurtured so differently, it is almost a miracle if they are
alike in any way. Since his childhood was passed in the freedom they assume in
youth, in his youth he begins to bear the rule they bore as children. This rule
becomes hateful to them, they are sick of it, and they see in it nothing but
their masters' tyranny; when they escape from childhood, they think they must
shake off all constraint, they then make up for the prolonged restraint imposed
upon them, as a prisoner, freed from his fetters, moves and stretches and
flexeshis limbs.
[1103:]
Emile, in contrast, is proud to be a man and to submit to the constraints of his
growing reason. His body, already well formed, no longer needs so much action,
and begins to control itself, while his half-fledged mind tries its wings on
every occasion. Thus the age of reason becomes for the one the age of license;
for the other, the age of reasoning.
[1104:]
Would you know which of the two is nearer to the order of nature? Consider the
differences between those who are more or less removed from it. Observe young
villagers and see if they are as undisciplined as yours. "Savages in their
childhood," says the Sr. Le Beau," are seen always, and ever busy with sports
that keep the body in motion; but scarcely do they reach adolescence than they
become quiet and dreamy; they no longer devote themselves to games of skill or
chance." Having been brought up in full freedom like young peasants and savages,
Emile should behave like them and change as he grows up. The whole difference is
that instead of merely being active in play or to secure food, he has in his
work and in his games learned to think. Having reached this stage, and by this
route, he is quite ready to enter upon the next stage to which I introduce him.
The subjects I suggest arouse his curiosity -- because they are beautiful in
themselves, because they are completely new to him, and because he is in a
condition to understand them. Your young people, on the other hand, are weary
and overdone with your stale lessons, your long sermons, and your eternal
catechisms. Why should they not refuse to devote their minds to what has made
them sad, to the heavy precepts that have been continually piled upon them, to
meditations on the author of their being who has been shown as the enemy of
their pleasures? All this has only inspired in them aversion, disgust;
constraint has set them against it. What means will they use then they begin to
choose for themselves? they need something new to please them; you must not
repeat what they were told as children. It is the same thing with my pupil: when
he is a man I speak to him as a man, and only tell him what is new to him. It is
precisely because they are tedious to your pupils that he will find them to his
taste.
[1105:]
This is how I doubly gain time for him by retarding nature to the advantage of
reason. But have I indeed retarded the progress of nature? No, I have only
prevented the imagination from hastening it. I have employed another sort of
teaching to counterbalance the precocious instruction which the young man
receives from elsewhere. While the torrent of our institutions carries him
along, to draw him towards the opposite direction by different institutions is
not to remove him from his proper place but to keep him in it.
[1106:]
Nature's true time comes at last, as come it must. Since man must die, he must
reproduce himself, so that the species may endure and the order of the world
continue. When by the signs I have spoken of you anticipate this critical
moment, immediately abandon for ever your former tone. He is still your
disciple, but not your pupil. He is your friend, he is a man; treat him as such
from now on.
[1107:]
What! Must I abdicate my authority when most I need it? Must I abandon the adult
to himself at the moment when he least knows how to conduct himself, when he may
fall into the greatest errors? Must I renounce my rights when it it is most
important to him that I should exercise them? Your rights. Who tells you to
renounce them? It is only now that they begin for him. Until now all you have
gained has been won by force or guile; authority, the law of duty, were unknown
to him. You had to constrain or deceive him to make him obey. But now with how
many new chains you surround his heart. Reason, friendship, recognition,
gratitude, a thousand bonds of affection, speak to him in a voice he cannot
misunderstand. His ears are not yet dulled by vice, he is still sensitive only
to the passions of nature. The first of these, which is amour de soi, delivers
him to you; habit confirms it. If a momentary transport tears him from you,
regret leads him back to you in an instant. The sentiment which attaches him to
you is the only permanent sentiment; all the others pass and cancel each other
out. Do not let him become corrupt, and he will always be docile; he will not
begin to rebel till he is already perverted.
[1108:]
I certainly admit that if by confronting head-on his growing desires you go and
stupidly treat as crimes the new needs that are beginning to make themselves
felt in him, you will not be listened to for long. But as soon as you abandon my
method I cannot be answerable for the consequences. Remember that you are
nature's minister; you will never be her enemy.
[1109:]
But what shall we decide to do? You see no alternative but either to favor his
inclinations or to combat them, to be his tyrant or his accomplice; and both of
these may have such dangerous consequences that one must indeed hesitate between
them.
[1110:]
The first way to resolve this difficulty is to marry him off quickly. This is
undoubtedly the safest and most natural expedient. I doubt, however, that it is
either the best or the most useful. I will give my reasons later; meanwhile I
admit that young people should marry when they reach a marriageable age. But
this age comes before the proper time for them. It is we who have made them
precocious; marriage should be postponed to maturity.
[1111:]
If it were merely a case of listening to their wishes and following their lead
it would be an easy matter. But there are so many contradictions between the
rights of nature and the laws of society that to conciliate them we must
continually make mistakes and equivocate. It requires much art to prevent social
man from becoming totally artificial.
[1112:]
For the reasons just stated, I consider that by the means I have indicated and
others like them the ignorance of the desires and purity of the senses can be
extended at least until the age of twenty. This is so true that among the
Germans a young man who lost his virginity before that age was considered
dishonored; and the writers justly attribute the vigor of constitution and the
number of children among the Germans to the continence of these peoples during
youth.
[1113:]
This period may be prolonged still further, and a few centuries ago nothing was
more common even in France. Among other well-known examples, Montaigne's father,
a man no less scrupulous and true than strong and healthy, swore that he was
still a virgin when he married at thirty three after having served served for a
long time in the Italian wars. We may see in the writings of his son what vigor
and gaity were shown by the father when he was over sixty. Certainly the
contrary opinion depends rather on our own morals and our own prejudices than on
the experience of the species as a whole.
[1114:]
I may, therefore, leave to one side the experience of our youth; it proves
nothing for those who have been educated in another fashion. Considering that
nature has fixed no exact limits which cannot be advanced or postponed, I think
one can, without going outside of its law, assume that under my care Emile has
so far remained in his first innocence, and I see that this happy epoch is about
to end. Surrounded by ever-increasing perils, he will escape me whatever I do.
At the first chance, and this chance will not be slow to arrive, he is going to
follow the blind instinct of his senses; one could bet a thousand to one that he
will be lost. I have reflected on the morals of mankind too much not to be aware
of the invincible influence of this first moment on the rest of his life. If I
dissimulate and pretend to see nothing, he will take advantage of my weakness;
believing he can fool me, he will despise me and I become an accomplice to his
fall. If I try to get him back, the time is past; he no longer hears me; I
become bothersome, hateful. intolerable to him; it will take him long to get rid
of me. There is therefore only one reasonable course to take -- that is to make
him accountable for his own actions to himself, to guarantee him at least from
the surprises of error and to show him plainly the dangers that surround him. I
have restrained him so far through his ignorance; now his restraint must be his
own knowledge.
[1115:]
This new instruction is important, and it will be useful to take up things where
we left them. This is the time to present my accounts so to speak, to show him
how his time and mine have been spent, to make known to him what he is and what
I am; what I have done, and what he has done; what we owe to each other, all his
moral relation, all the engagements that he has contracted, all those to which
others have contracted with him; the stage he has reached in the development of
his faculties, the road that remains to he traveled, the difficulties he will
meet, and the way to overcome them; how I can still help him and how he must
henceforward help himself; finally, the critical point where he now is, the new
dangers that surround him, and all the solid reasons which should induce him to
keep a close watch upon himself before listening to his growing desires.
[1116:]
Remember that to guide a grown man you must take the counterpoint of all that
you did to guide the child. Do not hesitate to speak to him of those dangerous
mysteries which you have so carefully hidden from him up until now. Since he
must become aware of them, it is important that he not learn them from another,
nor from himself, but from you alone. Since he must from now on fight against
them, let him know his enemy so that he may not be taken unawares.
[1117:]
Young people who are found to be knowledgeable these matters without our knowing
how they obtained their knowledge, have not obtained it with impunity. This
indiscrete teaching, which can have no honorable object, at least stains the
imagination of those who receive it and disposes them to the vices of their
instructors. This is not all. Servants, by this means, insinuate themselves into
the mind of the child, win his confidence, make him envision his tutor as a
gloomy and stern person; and one of the favorite subjects of their secret
colloquies is to slander him. When the pupil has got to this point, the tutor
should retire; he has nothing good left to do.
[1118:]
But why does the child choose special confidants? Because of the tyranny of
those who control him. Why should he hide himself from them if he were not
driven to it? Why should he complain if he had nothing to complain of? Naturally
those who control him are his first confidants; you can see from his eagerness
to tell them what he thinks that he feels he has only half thought till he has
told his thoughts to them. You may be sure that when the child fears neither
neither sermons nor reprimands from you, he will always tell you everything; and
that no one will dare to tell him anything he must conceal from you, for they
will know very well that he will tell you everything.
[1119:]
What makes me most confident in my method is that when I follow its consequences
as rigorously as possible, I find no situation in the life of my pupil that does
not leave me some pleasing memory of him. Even when he is carried away by his
ardent temperament or when he revolts against the hand that guides him, when he
struggles and is on the point of escaping from me, I still find his original
simplicity in his agitation and his anger. His heart as pure as his body. He has
no more knowledge of pretence than of vice. Reproach and scorn have not made a
coward of him; base fears have never taught him the art of concealment. He has
all the indiscretion of innocence: he is absolutely out-spoken; he does not even
know the use of deceit. Every impulse of his heart is betrayed either by word or
look, and I often know what he is feeling before he is aware of it himself.
[1120:]
So long as his heart is thus freely opened to me, so long as he delights to tell
me what he feels, I have nothing to fear; the danger is not yet at hand. But if
he becomes more timid, more reserved, if I perceive in his conversation the
first signs of confusion and shame, then his instincts are beginning to develop;
he is beginning to connect the idea of evil with these instincts. There is not a
moment to lose, and if I do not hasten to instruct him, he will learn in spite
of me.
[1121:]
Some of my readers, even of those who agree with me, will think that it is only
a question of a conversation with the young man at any time. Oh, but this is not
the way the human heart is governed! What we say has no meaning unless we have
prepared the moment for saying it. Before we sow we must till the ground. The
seed of virtue is hard to grow, and a long period of preparation is required
before it will take root. One reason why sermons have so little effect is that
they are offered to everybody alike, without discrimination or choice. How can
anyone imagine that the same sermon could be suitable for so many hearers, with
their different dispositions, so unlike in mind, temper, age, sex, station, and
opinion. There are perhaps not even two of them to whom what is addressed to
everyone is really suitable; and all our affections are so transitory that
perhaps there are not even two occasions in the life of any man when the same
speech would have the same effect on him. Judge for yourself whether the time
when the eager senses disturb the understanding and tyrannize over the will is
the time to listen to the solemn lessons of wisdom. Therefore never reason with
young men, even when they have reached the age of reason, unless you have first
prepared the way. Most lectures miss their mark more through the master's fault
than the disciple's. The pedant and the teacher say much the same; but the
former says it at random, and the latter only when he is sure of its effect.
[1122:]
As a somnambulist, wandering in his sleep, walks along the edge of a precipice,
over which be would fall if he were awake, so my Emile, in the sleep of
ignorance, escapes the perils which he does not see. Were I to wake him with a
start, he might fall. Let us first try to withdraw him from the edge of the
precipice, and then we will awake him to show him it from a distance.
[1123:]
Reading, solitude, idleness. a soft and sedentary life, intercourse with women
and young people, these are perilous paths for a young man, and these lead him
constantly into danger. I divert his senses by other objects of sense. I trace
another course for his spirits by which I distract them from the course they
would have taken. It is by bodily exercise and hard work that I check the
activity of the imagination, which was leading him astray. When the arms are
hard at work, the imagination is quiet; when the body is very weary, the
passions are not easily inflamed. The quickest and easiest precaution is to
remove him from immediate danger. I first take him away from towns, away from
things which might lead him into temptation. But that is not enough. In what
desert, in what wilds, shall he escape from the thoughts which pursue him? It is
not enough to remove dangerous objects; if I fail to remove the memory of them,
if I fail to find a way to detach him from everything, if I fail to distract him
from himself, I might as well have left him where he was.
[1124:]
Emile has learned a trade, but this trade is not our main resource. He is fond
of farming and understands it, but farming is not enough. The occupations he is
acquainted with degenerate into routine; when he is engaged in them he is not
really occupied; he is thinking of other things; head and hand are at work on
different subjects. He must have some new occupation that has the interest of
novelty -- an occupation that keeps him breathless, that pleases him, that
provides exercise and hard work, an occupation that he may become passionate
about, one to which he will devote himself entirely. Now the only one which
seems to possess all these characteristics is hunting. If hunting is ever an
innocent pleasure, if it is ever worthy of a man, it is now that one should have
recourse to it. Emile is well-fitted to succeed in it. He is strong, skilful,
patient, indefatigable. He is sure to acquire a taste for this sport. He will
bring to it all the ardor of youth; in it he will lose, at least for a time, the
dangerous inclinations which spring from softness. The hunt hardens the heart as
well as the body; it accustoms one to the eight of blood and to cruelty. Diana
is represented as the enemy of love, and the allegory is right. The languors of
love are born of soft repose, and tender feelings are stifled by violent
exercise. In the woods and fields, the lover and the sportsman are so diversely
affected that they receive very different impressions from the same objects. The
fresh shade, the green groves, the pleasant resting-places of the one are to the
other but feeding grounds, or places where the quarry will hide or turn to bay.
Where the lover hears the flute and the nightingale, the hunter hears the horn
and the hounds. One pictures to himself the nymphs and dryads, the other sees
the horses, the huntsman, and the pack. Take a country walk with one or other of
these men; their different conversation will soon show you that the earth
doesn't have a similar appeal for them, and that the turn of their ideas is as
diverse as the choice of their pleasures.
[1125:]
I understand how these tastes may be combined, and that at last men find time
for both. But the passions of youth cannot be divided in this way. Give the
youth a single occupation which he loves, and the rest will soon be forgotten.
Varied desires come with varied knowledge, and the first pleasures we know are
the only ones we desire for long enough. I would not want the Emile's whole
youth spent killing animals, and I do not even profess to justify this
ferociouos passion; it is enough for me that it serves to delay a more dangerous
passion, so that he may listen to me calmly when I speak of it and give me time
to describe it without stimulating it.
[1126:]
There are moments in human life which can never be forgotten. Such is the time
when Emile receives the instruction of which I am about to speak; it should
influence him for the rest of his days. Let us try to engrave it on his memory
so that it may never be erased. One of the faults of our age is to rely too much
on bare reason, as if men were made of nothing but mind. By neglecting the
language of signs which speak to the imagination we have lost the most energetic
of languages. The influence of the spoken word is always weak, and we
communicate to the heart through the eyes much more than through the ears. In
wanting to give everything over to reason we have reduced our precepts to words;
we have put nothing into actions. Reason alone is not active. Occasionally it
restrains, more rarely it stimulates, and never has it done anything great. To
always be reasoning is the mania of small minds. Strong souls have a very
different language, and it is by this language that one cn persuade them and
make them act.
[1127:]
I observe that in modem times men only get a hold over others by force or
self-interest, while the ancients did more by persuasion, by the affections of
the soul, because they did not neglect the language of signs. All agreements
were drawn up with solemnity in order to make them more inviolable. Before the
reign of force, the gods were the magistrates of mankind. In their presence
individuals made their treaties and alliances and pledged themselves to perform
their promises. The book in which their archives were preserved consisted of the
whole face of the earth. The pages of this book were the rocks, trees, piles of
stones made sacred by these transactions and regarded with reverence by
barbarous men and forever open to all their eyes. The well of the oath, the well
of the living and seeing one; the ancient oak of Mamre, the stones of witness --
such were the simple but stately monuments of the sanctity of contracts. None
dared to lay a sacrilegious hand on these monuments, and man's faith was more
secure under the warrant of these dumb witnesses than it is to-day upon all the
rigor of the laws.
[1128:]
In government the august apparatus of royal power overawed its subjects. The
symbols of dignity -- a throne, a scepter, a purple robe, a crown, a headdress
-- these were sacred in the peoples sight. These respected signs made venerable
to them the man whom they saw adorned with them. Without soldiers and without
threats, he spoke and was obeyed. Now that we affect to abolish these signs,
what will the consequences of this contempt be? That the royal majesty is erased
from all hearts, that kings can only gain obedience by the force of troops, and
that the respect of their subjects is based only on the fear of punishment.
Kings are spared the trouble of wearing their crowns, and our nobles escape from
the outward signs of their status, but they must have a hundred thousand men at
their command if their orders are to be obeyed. Though this may seem a finer
thing, it is easy to see that in the long run they will gain nothing.
[1129:]
What the ancients accomplished by means of eloquence is prodigious. But this
eloquence did not merely consist in fine speeches carefully arranged; and it was
most effective when the orator said least. The most startling speeches were
expressed not in words but in signs; they were not uttered but shown. A thing
beheld by the eyes kindles the imagination, stirs the curiosity, and keeps the
mind on the alert for what we are about to say, and often enough the thing tells
the whole story. Thrasybulus and Tarquin cutting off the heads of the poppies,
Alexander placing his seal on the lips of his favorite, Diogenes marching before
Zeno -- do not these speak more plainly than if they had uttered long orations?
What flow of words could have expressed the ideas as clearly? Darius, in the
course of the Scythian war, received from the king of the Scythians a bird, a
frog, a mouse, and five arrows. The ambassador deposited this gift and retired
without a word. In our days he would have been taken for a madman. This terrible
speech was understood, and Darius withdrew to his own country with what speed he
could. Substitute a letter for these symbols and the more threatening it was the
less terror it would inspire; it would have been merely a piece of bluff, to
which Darius would have paid no attention.
[1130:]
What close attention the Romans gave to the language of signs! Different ages
and different ranks had their appropriate garments, toga, tunic, patrician
robes, fringes and borders, seats of honor, lictors, rods and axes, crowns of
gold, crowns of leaves, crowns of flowers, ovations, triumphs. Everything had
its pomp, its observances, its ceremonial, and all these spoke to the heart of
the citizens. The state regarded it as a matter of importance that the populace
should assemble in one place rather than another, that they should or should not
behold the Capitol, that they should or should not turn towards the Senate, that
this day or that should be chosen for their deliberations. The accused wore a
special dress, so did the candidates for election. Warriors did not boast of
their exploits; they showed their scars. I can imagine one of our orators at the
death of Caesar exhausting all the commonplaces of rhetoric to give a pathetic
description of his wounds, his blood, his dead body. Anthony was an orator, but
he said none of this; he showed the murdered Caesar. What rhetoric that was!
[1131:]
But this digression, like many others, is drawing me unawares away from my
subject; and my digressions are too frequent to be borne with patience. I
therefore return to the point.
[1132:]
Do not reason drily with youth. Clothe your reason with a body, if you want to
make it felt. Make the language of the mind pass through the language of the
heart so that it may be understood. I say again: cold arguments can influence
our opinions but not our actions. They set us thinking, not doing. They show us
what we ought to think, not what we ought to do. If this is true of men, it is
all the truer of young people who are still enwrapped in their senses and cannot
think otherwise than they imagine.
[1133:]
Even after the preparations of which I have spoken, I shall take good care not
to go all of a sudden to Emile's room and preach a long and heavy sermon on the
subject in which he is to be instructed. I shall begin by rousing his
imagination. I shall choose the time, place. and surroundings most favorable to
the impression I wish to make. I shall, so to speak, summon all nature as
witness to our conversations. I shall call upon the eternal Being, the Creator
of nature, to bear witness to the truth of my discourse. I will put him as a
judge between Emile and myself. I will make the rocks, the woods, the mountains
round about us, the monuments of his promises and mine. I will put into my eyes,
voice, and gesture the enthusiasm and the ardor I wish to inspire in him. Then I
will speak and he will listen, and I will be tender towards him and he will be
moved. By concentrating on the sanctity of my dities I will make his more
respectable. I will animate the force of reason with images and figures. I will
not be long-winded and discursive with speeches or cold precepts but will be
abundant with feelings. My reason shall be grave and serious, but my heart will
never have said enough. It is then in showing him everything I have done for him
that I will show him what he has done for me; he will see in my tender affection
the reason of all my care. What a surprise and what agitation am I going to give
him by changing so suddenly my language! Instead of shriveling up his soul by
always talking of his own interests, I will from now on speak of my own and he
will be all the more more touched by this. I will kindle in his young heart all
the sentiments of friendship, generosity, and gratitude which I have already
called into being and that are so sweet to cultivate. I will press him to my
breast and let fall on him tears of tenderness. I will say to him: "You are my
treasure, my child, my work. My happiness depends on yours. If you frustrate my
hopes you rob me of twenty years of my life and you become the sorrow of my old
age." This is the way to make oneself heard and to engrave in the depths of his
heart the memory of what one tells him.
[1134:]
Until now I have tried to give examples of the way in which a tutor should
instruct his pupil in cases of difficulty. I have tried to do so in this case;
but after many attempts I have abandoned the task, convinced that the French
language is too precious to permit in print the plainness of speech required for
the first lessons in certain subjects.
[1135:]
They say that the French language is the most pure of languages. For my own part
I think it the most obscene. For it seems to me that the purity of a language
does not consist in carefully avoiding indecent expressions but m having none.
Indeed, if we are to avoid them, they must be in our thoughts, and there is no
language in which it is so difficult to speak with purity on every subject than
French. The reader is always quicker to detect than the author to avoid a gross
meaning, and he is shocked and startled by everything. How can what is heard by
impure ears avoid coarseness? On the other hand, a nation whose morals are pure
has fit terms for everything, and these terms are always right because they are
rightly used. One could not imagine more modest language than that of the Bible,
just because of its plainness of speech. The same things translated into French
would become immodest. What I ought to say to Emile will sound pure and
honorable to him; but to make the same impression in print would demand a like
purity of heart in the reader.
[1136:]
I should even think that reflections on true purity of discourse and the false
delicacy of vice might find a useful place in the conversations about morality
that this subject brings us to. For by learning the language of plain-spoken
goodness he must also learn the language of decency, and he must know why the
two are so different. However this may be, I maintain that if instead of the
empty precepts which are prematurely dinned into the ears of children, only to
be scoffed at when the time comes when they might prove useful, if instead of
this we wait, if we prepare the moment to make oneself heard, if we then expose
him to the laws of nature in all their truth, if we show him the sanction of
these same laws in the physical and moral ills that their infraction brings down
upon the guilty, if while we speak to him of this inconceivable mystery of
generation, we join to the idea of the pleasure which the Author of nature has
given to this act the idea of the exclusive affection which makes it delicious,
the idea of the duties of faithfulness, of the modesty which surrounds it and
redoubles its charm while fulfilling its purpose; if we paint to him marriage,
not only as the sweetest form of society but also as the most inviolable and
sacred of contracts; if we tell him forcefully all the reasons which make such a
sacred tie respectable to all men and cover with hatred and curses upon him who
ever dares to dishonor it; if we give him a striking and true picture of the
horrors of debauch, of its stupid brutality, of the gradual decline by which a
first act of disorder leads to all the rest and at last drags to his ruin anyone
who falls into it; if, I say, we give him proofs that on a desire for chastity
depends health, strength, courage, the virtues, even love itself and all that is
truly good for man -- I maintain that this chastity will be so dear and so
desirable in his eyes that his mind will be ready to receive our teaching as to
the way to preserve it. For so long as we are chaste we respect chastity; it is
only when we have lost it that we scorn it.
[1137:]
It is not true that the inclination to evil is beyond our control, and that we
cannot overcome it until we have acquired the habit of yielding to it. Aurelius
Victor says that many men were mad enough to purchase a night with Cleopatra at
the price of their life, and this is not incredible in the madness of passion.
But let us suppose the maddest of men, the man who has his senses least under
control. Let him see the preparations for his death, let him realize that he
will certainly die in torment a quarter of an hour later; not only would that
man, from that time forward, become able to resist temptation, he would even
find it easy to do so. The terrible picture with which they are associated will
soon distract his attention from these temptations, and when they are
continually put aside they will cease to recur. It is only our lukewarm will
that causes our weakness, and we always have strength to perform what we
strongly desire. "Volenti nihil difficile!" Oh! if only we hated vice as much as
we love life, we would abstain as easily from a pleasant crime as from a deadly
poison in a delicious dish.
[1138:]
How is it that you fail to perceive that if all the lessons given to a young man
on this subject have no effect, it is because they are not adapted to his age,
and that it is important at every age to dress reason in forms that make him
love it? Speak to him seriously if necessary, but make sure that what you say to
him always have an attraction that forces him to listen. Do not oppose his
wishes drily; do not stifle his imagination but guide it so as to avoid creating
perversities. Speak to him of love, of women, of pleasure; let him find in your
conversation a charm that flatters his young heart; spare nothing in order to
become his confidant. Under this name alone will you really be his master. Then
you need not fear he will find your conversation boring; he will make you talk
more than you want.
[1139:]
If I have managed to take all the requisite precautions in accordance with these
maxims and have said the right things to Emile at the age he has now reached, I
am quite convinced that he will come of his own accord to the point to which I
would lead him and will eagerly confide himself to my care. When he sees the
dangers by which he is surrounded, he will say to me with all the ardor of
youth, "Oh, my friend, my protector, my master! Take back the authority you
would like to lay aside at the very time when I most need it. Until now you had
this power because of my weakness. Now you have it by my own will, and it will
be all the more sacred to me. Protect me from the enemies that beseige me, and
above all from those that I carry within me and which can betray me, Watch over
your work, that it may still be worthy of you. I wish to obey your laws -- I
wish to always; that is my constant will. If I ever disobey you, it will be in
spite of myself. Make me free by protecting me against the passions which do me
violence. Prevent me from being their slave and force me to be my own master by
obeying not my senses but my reason."
[1140:]
When you have led your pupil this point (and if you do not get this far it will
be your own fault), beware of taking him too readily at his word, in case your
rule should seem too strict to him and in case he should think he has a right to
escape from it by accusing you of taking him by surprise. This is the time for
reserve and seriousness; and this attitude will have all the more effect upon
him seeing that it is the first time you have adopted it towards him.
[1141:]
Accordingly you may say to him: "Young man, you take painful engagements
lightly; you must understand what they mean before you have a right to make
them. You do not know with what furor the senses drag those like you into the
abyss of vice masquerading as pleasure. You do not have a base soul, that I
know; and you will never break your faith. But how often will you repent of
having given it! How often will you curse your friend, when, in order to guard
you from the ills which threaten you, he finds himself forced to tear your
heart! Like Ulysses who, hearing the song of the Sirens, cried aloud to his
rowers to unchain him, when you are seduced by the attractions of pleasure you
will want to break the chains that bind you; you will trouble me with your
complaints, you will reproach me as a tyrant when I have your welfare most at
heart. When I am trying to make you happy, I shall incur your hatred. Oh my
Emile, I can never bear to be hateful to you; this is too heavy a price to pay
even for your happiness. My good young man, do you not see that when you oblige
to obey me, you oblige me to be your guide, to forget myself in my devotion to
you, to refuse to listen to your murmurs and complaints, to combat unceasingly
your wishes and my own? You impose a heavier burden on me than on yourself.
Before either of us undertakes such a task, let us count our resources. Take
your time, give me time to consider, and be sure that the slower we are to
promise, the more faithfully will our promises be kept."
[1142:]
You may be sure that the more difficulty he finds in getting your promise the
easier you will find it to carry it out. It is important that the young man feel
that he is promising much, and that you are promising still more. When the
moment has come, when he has, so to say, signed the contract, then change your
tone, and make your rule as gentle as you said it would be severe. Say to him,
"My young friend, it is experience that you lack; but I have taken care that you
do not lack reason. You are ready to see the motives of my conduct in every
respect; to do this you need only wait till you are free from excitement. Always
obey me first, and then ask the reasons for my commands. I am always ready to
give my reasons so soon as you are ready to listen to them, and I shall never be
afraid to make you the judge between us. You promise to be docile, and I promise
only to use this docility only to make you the happiest of men. For proof of
this I have the life you have lived until now. Find me any one of your age who
has led as sweet a life as yours, and I promise you nothing more."
[1143:]
When my authority is firmly established, my first care will be to avoid the
necessity of using it. I will spare no pains to become more and more firmly
established in his confidence, to make myself the confidant of his heart and the
arbiter of his pleasures. Far from combating the inclinations of his age, I will
consult them that I may be their master. I will look at things from his point of
view in order to direct him. I will not seek a remote distant good at the cost
of his present happiness. I do not want him to be happy just once but always, if
that is possible.
[1144:]
Those who desire to guide young people rightly and to preserve them from the
snares of sense give them a disgust for love and would willingly make the very
thought of it a crime, as if love were made for old people. All these mistaken
lessons that the heart gives the lie to will fail to have the desired effect.
The young man, guided by a surer instinct, secretely laughs to himself over the
gloomy maxims that he pretends to accept and only awaits the chance of
disregarding them. All of that goes against nature. By following the opposite
route I reach more surely at the same goal. I will not be afraid to flatter the
sweet sentiment for which he is so eager. I will paint it as the supreme joy of
life, because in effect it is. When I picture it to him, I desire that he shall
give himself up to it. By making him feel the charm which the union of hearts
adds to the delights of sense, I will inspire him with a disgust for
libertinism; I will make him wise by making him amorous.
[1145:]
How narrow-minded to see nothing in the rising desires of a young heart but
obstacles to the teaching of reason! I see in them the right means to make him
obedient to that very teaching. One can gain a hold on the passions only through
passion. It is by taking them over that one can combat their tyranny, and it is
always from nature itself that one can draw the right instruments for regulating
nature.
[1146:]
Emile is not made to remain always solitary. As a member of society he must
fulfil his duties as such. Made to live with men he must get to know them. He
knows mankind in general; it remains for him to know individuals. He knows what
goes on in the world; he has now to learn how men live in the world. It is time
to show him the front of that vast stage of which he already knows the hidden
workings. He will not bring to it the foolish admiration of a thoughtless youth
but the discernment of an upright and exact mind. His passions could mislead him
no doubt; when do they not mislead those who give into them? But at least he
will not be deceived by the passions of others. If he sees them, he will regard
them with the eye of a wise man without being led away by their example nor
seduced by their prejudices.
[1147:]
As there is a fitting age for the study of the sciences, so there is a fitting
age for the study of social skills. Whoever learns these too soon follows them
throughout life, without choice, without reflection, and although they follow
them competently, they never really know what they are about. But he who studies
them and sees the reason for them, follows them with more insight and therefore
more exactly and gracefully. Give me a child of twelve who knows nothing at all;
at fifteen I will give him back to you as knowledgeable as those whom you have
instructed from infancy -- with the difference that your student's knowledge
will only be in his memory while mine will be in his judgment. In the same way
introduce a young man of twenty into society; under good guidance in a year's
time he will be more likeable and more judiciously polished than one brought up
in society from childhood. For the former is able to perceive the reasons for
all the proceedings relating to age, position, and sex, on which social skills
depend and can reduce them to general principles and apply them to unforeseen
circumstances; while the latter, who has only habit to guide him, is embarrassed
as soon as he departs from it..
[1148:]
Young French ladies are all brought up in convents till they are married. Do
they seem to find any difficulty in acquiring the manners which are so new to
them, and is it possible to accuse the ladies of Paris of awkward and
embarrassed manners or of ignorance of the ways of society, because they have
not acquired them in infancy? This prejudice comes from the men of the world,
who know nothing of more importance than this petty science, and wrongly imagine
that you cannot begin to acquire it too soon.
[1149:]
It is quite true, however, that we must not wait too long. Any one who has spent
the whole of his youth far from high society is all his life long awkward,
constrained, out of place; his manners will be heavy and clumsy, no amount of
practice will get rid of this, and he will only make himself more ridiculous by
trying to do so. There is a time for every kind of teaching and we ought to
recognize it, and each has its own dangers to be avoided. At this age there are
more dangers than at any other; but neither do I expose my pupil to them without
safeguards.
[1150:]
When my method succeeds completely in attaining one object, and when in avoiding
one difficulty it also provides against another, I then consider that it is a
good method and that I am on the true path. This seems to be the case with
regard to the expedient suggested by me in the present case. If I wish to be
austere and dry with my pupil, I will lose his confidence, and he will soon
conceal himself from me. If I wish to be easy and complaisant, to shut my eyes,
what good does it do him to be under my care? I would only authorise his
disorderly life and relieve his conscience at the expense of my own. If I
introduce him into society with no object but to teach him, he will learn more
than I want. If I keep him apart from society, what will he have learnt from me?
Everything perhaps, except the one art absolutely necessary to man and to
citizen, which is to know how to live with one's fellow human beings. If these
efforts are seen to have only a distant utility, they will be like nothing for
him. He is only concerned with the present. If I am content to provide him with
entertainment, what good will that do? He will get soft and will learn nothing.
[1151:]
We will have none of this. My plan provides for everything. Your heart, I say to
the young man, needs a companion. Let us go in search of one who suits you. We
will not find her easily perhaps; true merit is always rare. But we will be in
no hurry, nor will we be easily discouraged. No doubt there is such a one, and
we will in the end find her, or at least one who ressembles her the most. With a
project so flattering to himself I introduce him into society. What more need I
say? Do not you see that I have done everything?
[1152:]
By describing to him the mistress who is destined for him, you may imagine
whether I will make myself heard, whether I will succeed in making the qualities
he ought to love pleasing and dear to him, whether I will sway his feelings to
seek or shun what is good or bad for him. I would be the stupidest of men if I
fail to make him in love before knowing whom he is in love with. It does not
matter that the person I describe is imaginary; it is enough to disgust him with
those who could tempt him. It is enough if he is continually finding comparisons
that make him prefer his fantasy to the real objects he sees; and is not true
love itself a fantasy, a falsehood, an illusion? We are far more in love with
the image that we make than with the object it is applied to. If we saw what one
loves exactly as it is, there would be no such thing as love on earth. When we
cease to love, the person we used to love remains the same as before, but we no
longer see with the same eyes. The magic veil falls and love disappears. But
when I supply the imaginary object I have control over comparisons, and I can
easily to prevent illusion with regard to realities.
[1153:]
For all that, I would not want to mislead a young man by describing a model of
perfection that could never exist. But I would so choose the faults of his
mistress that they will suit him, that he will be pleased by them, and they may
serve to correct his own. Neither would I lie to him and affirm that there
really is such a person. But if he is pleased with the image, he will soon
desire to find the original. From wish to supposition the trajectory is easy; it
is a matter of a few skilful descriptions, which under more perceptible features
will give to this imaginary object an air of greater verity. I would go so far
as to give her a name. I would say, laughing, Let us call your future mistress
Sophy. Sophy is a name of good omen. If she whom you choose does not have that
name, at least she will be worthy of it; we may honor her with it meanwhile. If
after all these details, without affirming or denying, we excuse ourselves from
more evasions, his suspicions will become certainty. He will think that his
destined spouse is purposely concealed from him, and that he will see her when
it is the right time. If once he has arrived at this conclusion and if the
characteristics to be shown to him have been well chosen, the rest is easy;
there will be little risk in exposing him to the world. Protect him from his
senses, and his heart is safe.
[1154:]
But whether or not he personifies the model I have contrived to make so likeable
to him, this model, if well done, will attach him none the less to everything
that resembles it and will distance him from all that is unlike it as much as if
it had a real object. What a means to preserve his heart from the dangers to
which his appearance would expose him, to repress his senses by means of his
imagination, to rescue him from the hands of those women who profess to educate
young men, and make them pay so high a price for their teaching, and only teach
a young man manners by making him utterly shameless. Sophy is so modest! With
what eyes will he see their advances? Sophy is so simple! How will he like their
affectations? They are too far from his thoughts and his observations to be
dangerous.
[1155:]
All those who speak of the governance of children follow the name prejudices and
the same maxims, for their observation is at fault, and their reflection still
more so. A young man is led astray in the first place neither by temperament nor
by the senses but by popular opinion. If we were dealing with boys brought up in
boarding schools or girls in convents, I would show that this is true even to
them. For the first lessons they learn from each other, the only lessons that
bear fruit, are those of vice; and it is not nature that corrupts them but
example. But let us leave the boarders in schools and convents to their bad
morals; they will always be without cure. I am speaking only of domestic
education. Take a young man raised wisely in his father's country house, and
examine him when he reaches
Paris or makes his entrance into society. You will find him
thinking clearly about honest matters and possessing a will as wholesome as his
reason. You will find scorn for vice and horror for debauchery; at the very
mention of a prostitute you will see in his eyes his innocence being
scandalized. I maintain that there isn't one of them could make up his mind to
enter the depressing houses of these unfortunates by himself, even if he were
aware of their purpose and felt their necessity.
[1156:]
Six months later consider this same young man once again. You will not recognize
him. From his free-wheeling conversation, his haughty assertions, his superior
airs, you would take him for another man, if his jokes about his former
simplicity and his shame when any one recalls it did not show that it is he
indeed and that he is ashamed of himself. How transformed he is in so short a
time! What has brought about so sudden and complete a change? A change in his
constitution? Would not that have taken place in his father's house? And
certainly he would not have acquired these maxims and this tone at home. The
first pleasures of the sense? On the contrary; those who are beginning to
abandon themselves to these pleasures are timid and anxious, they shun the light
and noise. The first pleasures are always mysterious; modesty gives them their
savor and hides them; the first mistress does not make a man bold but timid.
Wholly absorbed in a situation so novel to him, the young man retires into
himself to enjoy it, and trembles for fear it should escape him. If he is noisy
he is neither voluptuous nor tender; however he may boast, he has not enjoyed.
[1157:]
Other ways of thinking alone have produced these differences. His heart is the
same, but his opinions have changed. His feelings, which change more slowly,
will finally be changed by his opinions, and it is then that he will be indeed
corrupted. He has scarcely made his entrance into society before he receives a
second education completely opposed the first, which teaches him to despise what
he esteemed and esteem what he despised. He learns to consider the teaching of
his parents and masters as the jargon of pedants, and the duties they have
instilled into him as a childish morality, to be scorned now that he is grown
up. He thinks he is bound in honor to change his conduct; he becomes forward
without desire, and he talks foolishly from false shame. He rails against
morality before he has any taste for vice, and prides himself on debauchery
without knowing how to set about it. I shall never forget the confession of a
young officer in the Swiss Guards, who was utterly sick of the noisy pleasures
of his comrades but dared not refuse to take part in them lest he should be
laughed at. "I am getting used to it," he said, "as I am getting used to
tobacco. The taste will come with practice; it will not do to be a child for
ever."
[1158:]
Thus it is far less from sensuality than from vanity that one must preserve a
young man as he enters society. He succumbs more to the tastes of others than to
his own, and amour-propre is responsible for more libertines than love is.
[1159:]
This being granted, I ask you, is there any one on earth better armed than my
pupil against all that may attack his morals, his sentiments, his principles? Is
there any one more able to resist the flood? What seduction is there against
which he is not forearmed? If his desires attract him towards women, he fails to
find what he seeks, and his heart, already occupied, holds him back. If he is
disturbed and urged onward by his senses, where will he find satisfaction? His
horror of adultery and debauchery keeps him at a distance from prostitutes and
married women, and the disorders of youth may always be traced to one or other
of these. A young woman of marriagable age may be a coquette, but she will not
be shameless, she will not fling herself at the head of a young man who would
marry her if he found her wise; besides she is always under supervision. Emile,
too, will not be left entirely to himself; both of them will be under the
guardianship of fear and shame, the constant companions of a first passion. They
will not proceed at once to ultimate intimacies, and they will not have time to
come to them gradually without hindrance. If he behaves otherwise, he must have
taken lessons from his friends; he must have learned from them to despise his
self-control and to imitate their boldness. But there is no one in the whole
world so little given to imitation as Emile. What man is there who is so little
influenced by mockery as one who has no prejudices himself and yields nothing to
the prejudices of others? I have worked twenty years to arm him against mockery;
they will not make him their dupe in a day. For in his eyes ridicule is the
argument of fools, and nothing makes one less susceptible to raillery than to be
beyond the influence of prejudice. Instead of jests he must have arguments, and
while he is in this frame of mind, I am not afraid that he will be carried away
by young fools. Conscience and truth are on my side. If prejudice is to enter
into the matter at all, an affection of twenty years' standing counts for
something. No one will ever convince him that I have wearied him with vain
lessons; and in a heart so upright and so sensitive the voice of a tried and
trusted friend will soon erase the shouts of twenty libertines. As it is
therefore merely a question of showing him that he is deceived, that while they
pretend to treat him as a man they are really treating him as a child, I shall
choose to be always simple but serious and plain in my arguments, so that he may
feel that I do indeed treat him as a man. I will say to him, "You will see that
your welfare, in which my own is bound up, compels me to speak; I can do nothing
else. But why do these young men want to persuade you? Because they desire to
seduce you; they do not care for you, they take no real interest in you; their
only motive is a secret spite because they see you are better than they; they
want to drag you down to their own level, and they only reproach you with
submitting to control that they may themselves control you. Do you think you
have anything to gain by this? Are they so much wiser than I, is the affection
of a day stronger than mine? To give any weight to their jests they must give
weight to their authority; and by what experience do they support their maxims
above ours? They have only followed the example of other silly young men, as
they would have you follow theirs. To escape from the so-called prejudices of
their fathers, they yield to those of their comrades. I cannot see that they are
any the better off; but I see that they lose two things of value -- the
affection of their parents, whose advice is that of tenderness and truth, and
the wisdom of experience which teaches us to judge by what we know. For their
fathers have once been young, but the young men have never been fathers.
[1160:]
"But you think they are at least sincere in their foolish precepts? Not even
that, dear Emile. They deceive themselves in order to deceive you. They are not
in agreement with themselves; their heart continually revolts, and their very
words often contradict themselves. This man who mocks at everything good would
be in despair if his wife held the same views. Another extends his indifference
to good morals even to his future wife, or he sinks to such depths of infamy as
to be indifferent to his wife's conduct; but go a step further; speak to him of
his mother. Is he willing to be treated as the child of an adulteress and the
son of a woman of bad character, is he ready to assume the name of a family, to
steal the patrimony of the true heir, in a word will he bear being treated as a
bastard? Which of them will permit his daughter to be dishonored as he dishonors
the daughter of another? There is not one of them who would not kill you if you
adopted in your conduct towards him all the principles he tries to teach you.
Thus they prove their inconsistency, and we know they do not believe what they
say. Here are reasons, dear Emile; weigh their arguments if they have any, and
compare them with mine. If I wished to have recourse like them to scorn and
mockery, you would see that they lend themselves to ridicule as much or more
than myself. But I am not afraid of serious inquiry. The triumph of mockers is
soon over; truth endures, and their foolish laughter dies away."
[1161:]
You do not think that Emile, at twenty, can possibly be docile? How differently
we think! I cannot understand how he could be docile at ten, for what hold have
I on him at that age? It took me fifteen years of careful preparation to secure
that hold. I was not educating him, but preparing him for education. He is now
sufficiently educated to be docile; he recognizes the voice of friendship and he
knows how to obey reason. I let him have, it is true, the appearance of
independence, but never was he more subjected to me, for he is because he wants
to be. So long as I could not get the mastery over his will, I had it through
his person; l never left him for a moment. Now I sometimes leave him to himself
because I govern him always. When I leave him I embrace him and I say with
confidence: Emile, I trust you to my friend, I leave you to his honest heart; it
is hewho will take my place for you.
[1162:]
To corrupt healthy affections which have not been previously depraved, to efface
principles which are directly derived from our own reasoning, is not the work of
a moment. If any change takes place during my absence, that absence will not be
long, he will never be able to conceal himself from me, so that I shall perceive
the danger before any harm comes of it, and I shall be in time to provide a
remedy. Since we do not become depraved all at once, neither do we learn to
deceive all at once; and if ever there was a man unskilled in the art of
deception it is Emile, who has never had any occasion for deceit.
[1163:]
By means of these precautions and others like them, I expect to guard him so
completely against strange sights and vulgar precepts that I would rather see
him in the worst company in Paris than alone in his room or in a park left to
all the restlessness of his age. Whatever we may do, a young man's worst enemy
is himself, and this is an enemy we cannot avoid. Yet this is an enemy of our
own making, for, as I have said again and again, it is the imagination which
stirs the senses. Their needs are not actually physical needs; it is not true
that it is a true need at all. If no lascivious object had met our eye, if no
unclean thought had entered our mind, this so-called need might never have made
itself felt in us, and we should have remained chaste, without temptation,
effort, or merit. We do not know how the blood of youth is stirred by certain
situations and certain sights, while the youth himself does not understand the
cause of his uneasiness -- an uneasiness difficult to subdue and certain to
recur. For my own part, the more I consider this serious crisis and its causes,
immediate and remote, the more convinced I am that a solitary being brought up
in some desert, apart from books, teaching, and women, would die a virgin,
however long he lived.
[1164:]
But we are not concerned with a savage of this sort. When we educate a man among
his fellow men and for social life, we cannot, and indeed we ought not to, bring
him up in this wholesome ignorance, and half knowledge is worse than none. The
memory of things we have observed, the ideas we have acquired, follow us into
retirement and people it, against our will, with images more seductive than the
things themselves, and these make solitude as fatal to those who bring such
ideas with them as it is wholesome for those who have never left it.
[1165:]
Therefore, watch carefully over the young man; he can protect himself from all
other foes, but it is for you to protect him against himself. Never leave him
night or day, or at least share his room; never let him go to bed till he is
sleepy, and let him rise as soon as he wakes. Distrust instinct as soon as you
cease to rely altogether upon it. Instinct was good while he acted under its
guidance only; now that he is in the midst of human institutions, instinct is
not to be trusted. It must not be destroyed, it must be controlled, which is
perhaps a more difficult matter. It would be very dangerous if instinct taught
your pupil to divert these senses and to supplement the occasions for satisfying
them. If once he acquires this dangerous supplement he is lost. From then on,
body and soul will be enervated; he will carry to the grave the sad effects of
this habit, the most fatal habit which a young man can be subjected to. Without
doubt it would be better still . . . If the furors of an ardent temperament
become invinciple, my dear Emile, I pity you; but I shall not hesitate for a
moment. I will not permit the purposes of nature to be evaded. If a tyrant must
subjugate you, I prefer to surrender you to a tyrant from whom I may deliver
you. Whatever happens, I can free you more easily from the slavery of women than
from yourself.
[1166:]
Up to the age of twenty, the body is still growing and requires all its
strength. Until that age continence is the law of nature, and this law is rarely
violated without injury to the constitution. After twenty, continence is a moral
duty; it is an important duty, for it teaches us to control ourselves, to be
masters of our own appetites. But moral duties have their modifications, their
exceptions, their rules. When human weakness makes an alternative inevitable, of
two evils choose the least; in any case it is better to commit a misdeed than to
contract a vicious habit.
[1167:]
Remember, I am not talking of my pupil now, but of yours. His passions, to which
you have given way, are your master; yield to them openly and without concealing
his victory. If you are able to show him it in its true light, he will be
ashamed rather than proud of it, and you will secure the right to guide him in
his wanderings, at least so as to avoid precipices. The disciple must do
nothing, not even evil, without the knowledge and consent of his master. It is a
hundredfold better that the tutor should approve of a misdeed than that he
should deceive himself or be deceived by his pupil, and the wrong should be done
without his knowledge. He who thinks he must shut his eyes to one thing, must
soon shut them altogether. The first abuse which is permitted leads to others,
and this chain of consequences only ends in the complete overthrow of all order
and contempt for every law.
[1168:]
There is another mistake which I have already dealt with, a mistake continually
made by narrow-minded persons; they constantly affect the dignity of a
master,and wish to be regarded by their disciples as perfect. This method is
just the contrary of what should be done. How is it that they fail to perceive
that when they try to strengthen their authority they are really destroying it;
that to gain a hearing one must put oneself in the place of our hearers, and
that to speak to the human heart, one must be a man. All these perfect people
neither touch nor persuade. People always say, "It is easy for them to fight
against passions they do not feel." Show your pupil your own weaknesses if you
want to cure his; let him see in you struggles like his own; let him learn by
your example to master himself and let him not say like other young men, "These
old people, who are vexed because they are no longer young, want to treat all
young people as if they were old; and they make a crime of our passions because
their own passions are dead."
[1169:]
Montaigne tells us that he once asked Seigneur de Langey how often, in his
negotiations with Germany, he had got drunk in his king's service. I would
willingly ask the tutor of a certain young man how often he has entered a house
of ill-fame for his pupil's sake. How often? I am wrong. If the first time has
not cured the young libertine of all desire to go there again, if he does not
return penitent and ashamed, if he does not shed torrents of tears upon your
bosom, leave him on the spot; either he is a monster or you are a fool; you will
never do him any good. But let us have done with these last expedients, which
are as distressing as they are dangerous. Our kind of education has no need of
them.
[1170:]
What precautions we must take with a well-born young man before exposing him to
the scandalous manners of our age! These precautions are painful but necessary;
negligence in this matter is the ruin of all our young men; degeneracy is the
result of youthful excesses, and it is these excesses which make men what they
are. Old and base in their vices, their hearts are shriveled because their
worn-out bodies were corrupted at an early age. They have scarcely strength to
stir. The subtlety of their thoughts betrays a mind lacking in substance; they
are incapable of any great or noble feeling, they have neither simplicity nor
vigor; altogether abject and meanly wicked, they are merely frivolous,
deceitful, and false; they have not even courage enough to be distinguished
criminals. Such are the despicable men produced by early debauchery. If there
were but one among them who knew how to be sober and temperate, to guard his
heart, his body, his morals from the contagion of bad example, at the age of
thirty he would crush all these insects, and would become their master with far
less trouble than it cost him to become master of himself.
[1171:]
However little Emile owes to birth and fortune, he might be this man if he. But
he despises such people too much to condescend to make them his slaves. Let us
now watch him in their midst as he enters into society, not to claim the first
place, but to acquaint himself with it and to seek a companion worthy of
himself.
[1172:]
Whatever his rank or birth, whatever the society into which he is introduced,
his entrance into that society will be simple and unaffected. God forbit that he
be unlucky enough to shine in society. The qualities which make a good
impression at the first glance are not his; he neither possesses them, nor
desires to possess them. He cares too little for the opinions of other people to
value their prejudices, and he is indifferent whether people esteem him or not
until they know him. His manner of presenting himself is neither shy nor
conceited but natural and sincere. He knows nothing of constraint or
concealment. and he is just the same among a group of people as he is when he is
alone. Will this make him rude, scornful, and careless of others? On the
contrary; if he were not heedless of others when he lived alone, why should he
be heedless of them now that he is living among them? He does not prefer them to
himself in his manners, because he does not prefer them to himself in his heart;
but neither does he show them an indifference which he is far from feeling. If
he is unacquainted with the forms of politeness, he is not unacquainted with the
attentions dictated by humanity. He cannot bear to see any one suffer; he will
not give up his place to another from mere external politeness, but he will
willingly yield it to him out of kindness if he sees that he is being neglected
and that this neglect hurts him. For it will be less disagreeable to Emile to
remain standing of his own accord than to see another compelled to stand.
[1173:]
Although Emile has no very high opinion of people in general, he does not show
any scorn of them because he pities them and is sorry for them. Since he cannot
give them a taste for what is truly good, he leaves them the imaginary good with
which they are satisfied, lest by robbing them of this he should leave them
worse off than before. So he neither argues nor contradicts; neither does he
flatter nor agree. He states his opinion without arguing with others because he
loves liberty above all things, and freedom is one of the fairest gifts of
liberty.
[1174:]
He says little, for he is not anxious to attract attention. For the same reason
he only says what is to the point; who could induce him to speak otherwise?
Emile is too well informed to be a chatter-box. A great flow of words comes
either from a pretentious spirit, of which I shall speak presently, or from the
value laid upon trivial things that we foolishly think to be as important in the
eyes of others as in our own. He who knows enough of things to value them at
their true worth never says too much; for he can also judge of the attention
paid to him and the interest aroused by what he says. People who know little are
usually great talkers, while men who know much say little. It is plain that an
ignorant person thinks everything he does know important, and he tells it to
everybody. But a well educated man is not so ready to display his learning. He
would have too much to say, and he sees that there is much more to be said, so
he holds his peace.
[1175:]
Far from confronting the manners of others, Emile conforms to them fairly
willingly; not that he may appear to know all about them, nor yet to affect the
airs of a man of fashion, but on the contrary for fear that he might attract
attention, and in order to pass unnoticed. He is most at his ease when no one
pays any attention to him.
[1176:]
Although when he makes his entrance into society he knows nothing of its
customs, this does not make him shy or timid. If he keeps in the background, it
is not because he is embarrassed but because if you want to see, you must not be
seen. For he scarcely troubles himself at all about what people think of him,
and he is not the least afraid of ridicule. Hence he is always quiet and
self-possessed and is not troubled with shyness. All he has to do is done as
well as he knows how to do it, whether people are looking at him or not. And as
he is always on the alert to observe other people, he acquires their ways with
an ease impossible to the slaves of other people's opinions. We might say that
he acquires the ways of society precisely because he cares so little about them.
[1177:]
But do not make any mistake as to his bearing; it is not to be compared with
that of your agreeable young men. He is firm and self-sufficient; his manners
are free and not arrogant. An insolent look is the mark of a slave; there is
nothing affected about independence. I never saw a man who had pride in his soul
show it in his bearing. This affectation is more suited to vile and vain souls
who have no other means of asserting themselves. I read somewhere that a
foreigner appeared one day in the presence of the famous Marcel, who asked him
what country he came from. "I am an Englishman," replied the, stranger. "You are
an Englishman?" replied the dancer, "You come from that island where the
citizens have a share in the government, and form part of the sovereign power?
No, sir, your lowered brow, your timid glance, your hesitating manner, announce
only a slave who has the title of an elector."
[1178:]
I cannot say whether this saying shows much knowledge of the true relation
between a man's character and his appearance. I have not the honor of being a
dancing master, and I should have thought just the opposite. I should have said,
"This Englishman is no courtier; I never heard that courtiers have a timid
bearing and a hesitating manner. A man whose appearance is timid in the presence
of a dancer might not be timid in the House of Commons." Surely this M. Marcel
must take his fellow-countrymen for so many Romans.
[1179:]
When one loves one wants to be loved. Emile loves men; he wants therefore to
please them. Even more does he wish to please the women. His age, his character,
the object he has in view, all increase this desire. I say his character, for
this has a great effect. Men of good character are those who really adore women.
They do not have the mocking jargon of gallantry like the rest, but their
eagerness is more genuinely tender because it comes from the heart. In the
presence of a young woman, I could pick out a young man of character and
self-control from among a hundred thousand libertines. Consider what Emile must
be, with all the eagerness of early youth and so many reasons for resistance!
For in the presence of women I think he will sometimes be shy and timid; but
this shyness will certainly not be displeasing, and the least foolish of them
will only too often find a way to enjoy it and augment it. Moreover, his
eagerness will take a different shape according to those he has to do with. He
will be more modest and respectful to married women, more eager and tender
towards young girls. He never loses sight of his purpose, and it is always those
who most recall it to him who receive the greater share of his attentions.
[1180:]
No one could be more attentive to every consideration based upon the laws of
nature, and even on the laws of good society. But the former are always
preferred before the latter, and Emile will show more respect to an elderly
person in private life than to a young magistrate of his own age. As he is
generally one of the youngest in the company, he will always be one of the most
modest, not from the vanity which apes humility, but from a natural feeling
founded upon reason. He will not have the effrontery of the young snob who
speaks louder than the wise and interrupts the old in order to amuse the
company. He will never give any cause for the reply given to Louis XV by an old
gentleman who was asked whether he preferred this century or the last: "Sire, I
spent my youth in reverence towards the old; I find myself compelled to spend my
old age in reverence towards the young."
[1181:]
Having a heart that is tender and sensitive but caring nothing for the weight of
popular opinion, although he loves to give pleasure to others he will care
little about being considered a person of importance. Hence he will be
affectionate rather than polite, he will never be pompous or affected,. and he
will be always more touched by a caress than by much praise. For the same
reasons he will never be careless of his manners or his clothes; perhaps he will
be rather particular about his dress, not that he may show himself a man of
taste, but to make his appearance more pleasing. He will never require a gilt
frame, and he will never spoil his style by a display of wealth.
[1182:]
It is clear that all this does not require extensive precepts from me; it is all
the result of his early education. People make a great mystery of the ways of
society, as if, at the age when these ways are acquired, we did not take to them
quite naturally, and as if the first laws of politeness were not to be found in
a kindly heart. True politeness consists in showing our goodwill towards men;
when one has it it reveals itself without any difficulty. Only those who lack
this goodwill are compelled to reduce the outward signs of it to an art.
[1183:]
"The worst effect of artificial politeness is that it teaches us how to dispense
with the virtues it imitates. If our education were to teach us kindness and
humanity, we would be polite, or we would have no need of politeness.
[1184:]
"If we do not have those qualities that manifest themselves through the social
graces, we will have those that proclaim the honest man and the citizen; we will
have no need for falsehood.
[1185:]
"Instead of seeking to please by artificiality, it will suffice that we are
good; instead of flattering the weaknesses of others by falsehood, it will
suffice to tolerate them.
[1186:]
"Those whom we relate to will neither be puffed up nor corrupted by such
intercourse; they will only be grateful and will be informed by it."
[1187:]
It seems to me that if any education is calculated to produce the sort of
politeness required by M. Duclos in this passage, it is the education I have
already described.
[1188:]
Yet I admit that with such different teaching Emile will not be just like
everybody else, and God preserve him from ever being so. But where he is unlike
other people, he will be neither irritating nor absurd; the difference will be
perceptible but not unpleasant. Emile will be, if you like, an agreeable
foreigner. At first his peculiarities will be excused with the phrase, "He will
learn." After a time people will get used to his ways, and seeing that he does
not change they will still make excuses for him and say, "He is made that way."
[1189:]
He will not be fêted as a charming man, but every one will like him without
knowing why. No one will praise his intellect, but every one will be ready to
make him the judge between men of intellect. His own intelligence will be clear
and limited, his mind will be accurate, and his judgment sane. Since he never
runs after new ideas, he cannot pride himself on his wit. I have convinced him
that all wholesome ideas, ideas which are really useful to mankind, were among
the earliest known, that in all times they have formed the true bonds of
society, and that there is nothing left for ambitious minds but to seek
distinction for themselves by means of ideas which are injurious and fatal to
mankind. This way of winning admiration scarcely appeals to him; he knows how he
ought to seek his own happiness in life, and how he can contribute to the
happiness of others. The sphere of his knowledge is restricted to what is
profitable. His path is narrow and clearly defined; as he has no temptation to
leave it, he is lost in the crowd; he will neither distinguish himself nor will
he lose his way. Emile is a man of common sense and he has no desire to be
anything more. You may try in vain to insult him by applying this phrase to him;
he will always consider it a title of honor.
[1190:]
Although from his wish to please he is no longer wholly indifferent to the
opinion of others, he only considers that opinion so far as he himself is
directly concerned, without troubling himself about arbitrary values, which are
subject to no law but that of fashion or conventionality He will have pride
enough to wish to do well in everything that he undertakes, and even to wish to
do it better than others; he will want to be the swiftest runner, the strongest
wrestler, the cleverest workman, the readiest in games of skill. But he will not
seek advantages which are not in themselves clear gain, that need to be
supported by the opinion of others, such as to be thought wittier than another,
a better speaker, more learned, etc.. Still less will he trouble himself with
those which have nothing to do with the man himself, such as higher birth, a
greater reputation for wealth, credit, or public estimation, or the impression
created by a showy exterior.
[1191:]
Since he loves men because they are like himself, he will prefer those who are
the most like himself, because he will feel himself good. And judging this
resemblance by similarity of taste in morals, by all that belongs to a good
character, he will be delighted to win approval. He will not say to himself in
so many words, "I am delighted to gain approval," but "I am delighted because
they say I have done right; I am delighted because the men who honor me are
worthy of honor. While they judge so wisely, it is a fine thing to win their
respect."
[1192:]
As he studies men in their conduct in society, just as he formerly studied them
through their passions in history, he will often have occasion to consider what
it is that pleases or offends the human heart. He is now busy with the
philosophy of the principles of taste, and this is the most suitable subject for
his present study.
[1193:]
The further we seek our definitions of taste, the further we go astray. Taste is
merely the power of judging what is pleasing or displeasing to most people. Go
beyond this, and you cannot say what taste is. It does not follow that the men
of taste are in the majority; for though the majority judges wisely with regard
to each individual thing, there are few men who follow the judgment of the
majority in everything; and though the most general agreement in taste
constitutes good taste, there are few men of good taste just as there are few
beautiful people, although beauty consists in the sum of the most usual
features.
[1194:]
It must be observed that we are not here concerned with what we like because it
is serviceable, or hate because it is harmful to us. Taste deals only with
things that are indifferent to us, or that affect at most our amusements, not
those which relate to our needs. Taste is not required to judge of these;
appetite alone is sufficient. It is this which makes mere decisions of taste so
difficult and as it seems so arbitrary. For beyond the instinct they follow
there appears to be no reason whatever for them. We must also make a distinction
between the laws of good taste in morals and its laws in physical matters. In
the latter the laws of taste appear to be absolutely inexplicable. But it must
be observed that there is a moral element in everything which involves
imitation. This is the explanation of forms of beauty that seem to be physical,
but are not so in reality. I may add that taste has local rules which make it
dependent in many respects on the country we are in, its manners, government,
institutions; it has other rules which depend upon age, sex, and character, and
it is in this sense that we must not dispute over matters of taste.
[1195:]
Taste is natural to men; but all do not possess it in the same degree. It is not
developed to the same extent in every one; and in every one it is liable to be
modified by a variety of causes. Such taste as we may possess depends on our
native sensibility; its cultivation and its form depend upon the society in
which we have lived. In the first place we must live in societies of many
different kinds so as to compare much. In the next place, there must be
societies for amusement and idleness, for in business relations, interest, not
pleasure, is our rule. Lastly, there must be societies in which people are
fairly equal, where the tyranny of public opinion may be moderate, where
pleasure rather than vanity is queen. Where this is not so, fashion stifles
taste, and we seek what gives distinction rather than delight.
[1196:]
In the latter case it is no longer true that good taste is the taste of the
majority. Why is this? Because the purpose is different. Then the crowd has no
longer any opinion of its own, it only follows the judgment of those who are
supposed to know more about it. Its approval is bestowed not on what is good,
but on what they have already approved. At any time let every man have his own
opinion, and what is most pleasing in itself will always secure most votes.
[1197:]
Every beauty that is to be found in the works of man is imitated. All the true
models of taste are to be found in nature. The further we get from the master,
the worse are our pictures. Then it is that we find our models in what we
ourselves like, and the beauty of fancy, subject to caprice and to authority, is
nothing but what is pleasing to our leaders.
[1198:]
Those leaders are the artists, the wealthy, and the great, and they themselves
follow the lead of self-interest or pride. Some to display their wealth, others
to profit by it, they seek eagerly for new ways of spending it. This is how
luxury acquires its power and makes us love what is rare and costly; this
so-called beauty consists, not in following nature, but in disobeying her. Hence
luxury and bad taste are inseparable. Wherever taste is lavish, it is bad.
[1199:]
Taste, good or bad, takes its shape especially in the intercourse between the
two sexes. The cultivation of taste is a necessary consequence of this form of
society. But when enjoyment is easily obtained, and the desire to please becomes
lukewarm, taste must degenerate; and this is, in my opinion, one of the best
reasons why good taste implies good morals.
[1200:]
Consult the women's opinions in bodily matters, in all that concerns the senses.
Consult the men in matters of morality and all that concerns the understanding.
When women are what they ought to be, they will limit themselves to things
within their competence and will always judge well. But since they have set
themselves up as arbiters of literature, since they have begun to criticize
books and to put their forces into making them, they are no longer good judges
of anything. Authors who take the advice of lady scholars will always be ill
advised; suitors who consult them about their clothes will always be absurdly
dressed. I will soon have an opportunity of speaking of the real talents of the
female sex, the way to cultivate these talents, and the matters in regard to
which their decisions should receive attention.
[1201:]
These are the elementary considerations which I shall lay down as principles
when I discuss with Emile this matter which is by no means indifferent to him in
his present inquiries. And to whom should it be a matter of indifference? To
know what people may find pleasant or unpleasant is not only necessary to any
one who requires their help, it is still more necessary to any one who would
help them. You must please them if you would do them service; and the art of
writing is no idle pursuit if it is used to make men hear the truth.
[1202:]
If in order to cultivate my pupil's taste I were compelled to choose between a
country where this form of culture has not yet arisen and those in which it has
already degenerated, I would progress backwards. I would begin his survey with
the latter and end with the former. My reason for this choice is that taste
becomes corrupted through excessive delicacy, which makes it sensitive to things
which most men do not perceive. This delicacy leads to a spirit of discussion,
for the more subtle is our discrimination of things the more things there are
for us. This subtlety increases the delicacy and decreases the uniformity of our
touch. So there are as many tastes as there are people. In disputes as to our
preferences, philosophy and knowledge are enlarged, and thus we learn to think.
It is only men accustomed to plenty of society who are capable of very delicate
observations, for these observations do not occur to us till the last, and
people who are unused to all sorts of society exhaust their attention in the
consideration of the more conspicuous features . There is perhaps no civilized
place upon earth where the common taste is so bad as in Paris. Yet it is in this
capital that good taste is cultivated, and it seems that few books make any
impression in Europe whose authors have not studied in Paris. Those who think it
is enough to read our books are mistaken; there is more to be learnt from the
conversation of authors than from their books; and it is not from the authors
that we learn most It is the spirit of social life which develops a thinking
mind and carries the eye as far as it can reach. If you have a spark of genius,
go and spend a year in Paris. You will soon be all that you are capable of
becoming, or you will never be good for anything at all.
[1203:]
One may learn to think in places where bad taste rules supreme. But we must not
think like those whose taste is bad, and it is very difficult to avoid this if
we spend much time among them. We must use their efforts to perfect the
machinery of judgment, but we must be careful not to make the same use of it. I
will take care not to polish Emile's judgment so far as to transform it, and
when he has acquired discernment enough to feel and compare the varied tastes of
men, I will lead him to fix his own taste upon simpler matters.
[1204:]
I will go still further in order to keep his taste pure and wholesome. In the
tumult of dissipation I shall find opportunities for useful conversation with
him. And while these conversations are always about things in which he takes a
delight, I will take care to make them as amusing as they are instructive. Now
is the time to read pleasant books; now is the time to teach him to analyze
speech and to appreciate all the beauties of eloquence and diction. It is a
small matter to learn languages; they are less useful than people think, but the
study of languages leads us on to that of grammar in general. We must learn
Latin if we would have a thorough knowledge of French. These two languages must
be studied and compared if we would understand the rules of the art of speaking.
[1205:]
There is, moreover. a certain simplicity of taste which goes straight to the
heart; and this is only to be found in the classics. In oratory, poetry, and
every kind of literature, Emile will find the classical authors as he found them
in history, full of matter and sober in their judgment. The authors of our own
time, on the contrary, say little and talk much. To take their judgment as our
constant law is not the way to form our own judgment. These differences of taste
make themselves felt in all that is left of classical times and even on their
tombs. Our monuments are covered with praises, theirs recorded facts.
"Sta,
viator; heroem calcas."
[1206:]
If I had found this epitaph on an ancient monument, I should at once have
guessed it was modern. For there is nothing so common among us as heroes, but
among the ancients they were rare. Instead of saying a man was a hero, they
would have said what he had done to gain that name. With the epitaph of this
hero compare that of the effeminate Sardanapalus:
"Tarsus
and Anchiales I built in a day, and now I am dead."
[1207:]
Which do you think says most? Our inflated monumental style is only fit to
trumpet forth the praises of pygmies. The ancients showed men as they were, and
it was plain that they were men indeed. Xenophon did honor to the memory of some
warriors who were slain by treason during the retreat of the Ten Thousand. "They
died," said he, "without stain in war and in love." That is all, but think how
full was the heart of the author of this short and simple elegy. Woe to him who
fails to perceive its charm.
[1208:]
The following words were engraved on a tomb at Thermopylæ
"Go,
Traveler, tell Sparta that here we fell in obedience to her laws"
[1209:]
It is pretty clear that this was not the work of the Academy of Inscriptions.
[1210:]
If I am not mistaken, the attention of my pupil, who sets so small a value upon
words, will be directed in the first place to these differences, and they will
affect his choice in his reading. He will be carried away by the manly eloquence
of Demosthenes, and will say, "This is an orator;" but when he reads Cicero, he
will say, "This is a lawyer."
[1211:]
In general Emile will have more taste for the books of the ancients than for our
own, just because they were the first, and therefore the ancients are nearer to
nature and their genius is more distinct. Whatever La Motte and the Abbé
Terrasson may say, there is no real advance in human reason, for what we gain in
one direction we lose in another. For all minds start from the same point, and
as the time spent in learning what others have thought is so much time lost in
learning to think for ourselves, we have more acquired knowledge and less vigor
of mind. Our minds like our arms are accustomed to use tools for everything and
to do nothing for themselves. Fontenelle used to say that all these disputes as
to the ancients and the moderns could be reduced to whether the trees in former
times were taller than they are now. If agriculture had changed, it would be
worth our while to ask this question.
[1212:]
After I have led Emile to the sources of pure literature, I will also show him
the channels into the reservoirs of modern compilers -- journals, translations,
dictionaries. He will cast a glance at them all, and then leave them for ever.
To amuse him he will hear the chatter of the academies. I will draw his
attention to the fact that every member of them is worth more by himself than he
is as a member of the society; he will then draw his own conclusions as to the
utility of these fine institutions.
[1213:]
I take him to the theatre to study taste, not morals; for in the theatre above
all taste is revealed to those who can think. Lay aside precepts and morality, I
should say; this is not the place to study them. The stage is not made for
truth; its object is to flatter and amuse. There is no place where one can learn
so completely the art of pleasing and of interesting the human heart. The study
of plays leads to the study of poetry; both have the same end in view. If he has
the least glimmering of taste for poetry, how eagerly will he study the
languages of the poets, Greek, Latin, and Italian! These studies will afford him
unlimited amusement and will be none the less valuable. They will be a delight
to him at an age and in circumstances when the heart finds so great a charm in
every kind of beauty which affects it. Picture to yourself on the one hand
Emile, on the other some young rascal from college, reading the fourth book of
the Æneid or Tibullus, or the Banquet of Plato: what a difference between them!
What stirs the heart of Emile to its depths, makes not the least impression on
the other! Oh, good youth, stay, make a pause in your reading, you are too
deeply moved. I want you to find pleasure in the language of love, but I do not
wnt you to be carried away by it. Be a wise man, but be a good man too. If you
are only one of these, you are nothing. After this let him win fame or not in
dead languages, in literature, in poetry, I care little. He will be none the
worse if he knows nothing of them, and his education is not concerned with these
mere words.
[1214:]
My main object in teaching him to feel and love beauty of every kind is to fix
his affections and his taste on these, to prevent the corruption of his natural
appetites, in case he should have to seek some day in the midst of his wealth
for the means of happiness which should be found close at hand. I have said
elsewhere that taste is only the art of being a connoisseur in matters of little
importance, and this is quite true. But since the charm of life depends on a
tissue of these matters of little importance, such efforts are no small thing;
through their means we learn how to fill our life with the good things within
our reach, with as much truth as they may hold for us. I do not refer to the
morally good which depends on a good disposition of the heart, but only to that
which depends on the body, on real delight, apart from the prejudices of public
opinion.
[1215:]
The better to unfold my idea, allow me for a moment to leave Emile, whose pure
and wholesome heart cannot be taken as a rule for others, and to seek in my own
memory for an illustration better suited to the reader and more in accordance
with his own manners.
[1216:]
There are professions which seem to change a man's nature, to recast, either for
better or worse, the men who adopt them. A coward becomes a brave man in the
regiment of Navarre. It is not only in the army that esprit de corps is
acquired, and its effects are not always for good. I have thought again and
again with terror that if I had the misfortune to fill a certain post I am
thinking of in a certain country, before to-morrow I should certainly be a
tyrant, an extortioner, a destroyer of the people, harmful to my king, and a
professed enemy of mankind, a foe to justice and every kind of virtue.
[1217:]
In the same way, if I were rich, I should have done all that is required to gain
riches; I should therefore be insolent and degraded, sensitive and feeling only
on my own behalf, harsh and pitiless to all besides, a scornful spectator of the
sufferings of the masses -- for that is what I would call the poor -- to make
people forget that I was once poor myself. Lastly I would make my fortune a
means to my own pleasures with which I should be wholly occupied; and so far I
should be just like other people.
[1218:]
But in one respect I would be very unlike them; I would be sensual and
voluptuous rather than proud and vain, and I should give myself up to the luxury
of comfort rather than to that of ostentation. I would even be somewhat ashamed
to make too great a show of my wealth, and if I overwhelmed the envious with my
pomp I would always fancy I heard him saying, "Here is a rascal who is greatly
afraid that we should take him for anything but what he is."
[1219:]
In the vast profusion of good things upon this earth I would seek what I like
best, and what I can best appropriate to myself. To this end, the first use I
should make of my wealth would be to purchase leisure and freedom, to which I
would add health, if it were to be purchased; but health can only be bought by
temperance, and as there is no real pleasure without health, I would be
temperate from sensual motives.
[1220:]
I would also keep as close as possible to nature, to gratify the senses given me
by nature, being quite convinced that, the greater her share in my pleasures the
more real I will find them. In the choice of models for imitation I will always
choose nature as my pattern; in my appetites I will give her the preference; in
my tastes she will always be consulted; in my food I will always choose what
most owes its charm to her, and what has passed through the fewest possible
hands on its way to table. I will be on my guard against fraudulent shams; I
will go out to meet pleasure. No cook will grow rich on my gross and foolish
greediness; he will not poison me with fish which cost its weight in gold, my
table will not be decked with fetid splendor or putrid flesh from far-off lands.
I will take any amount of trouble to gratify my sensibility, since this trouble
has a pleasure of its own, a pleasure more than we expect. If I wished to taste
a food from the ends of the earth, I would go, like Apicius, in search of it,
rather than send for it; for the daintiest dishes always lack a charm which
cannot be brought along with them, a flavor which no cook can give them-the air
of the country where they are produced.
[1221:]
For the same reason I would not follow the example of those who are never well
off where they are, but are always contradicting the seasons and confusing
countries and their seasons; those who seek winter in summer and summer in
winter, and go to Italy to be cold and to the north to be warm without
considering that when they think they are escaping from the severity of the
seasons, they are going to meet that severity in places where people are not
prepared for it. I will stay in one place, or I will adopt just the opposite
course; I should like to get all possible enjoyment out of one season to
discover what is peculiar to any given country. I would have a variety of
pleasures, and habits quite unlike one another, but each according to nature; I
would spend the summer at
Naples and the winter in
St. Petersburg. Sometimes I
would breathe the soft zephyr lying in the cool grottoes of Tarentum, and again
I would enjoy the illuminations of an ice palace, breathless and wearied with
the pleasures of the dance.
[1222:]
In the service of my table and the adornment of my dwelling I would imitate in
the simplest ornaments the variety of the seasons and draw from each its charm
without anticipating its successor. There is no taste but only difficulty to be
found in thus disturbing the order of nature. To snatch from her unwilling
gifts, which she yields regretfully, with her curse upon them; gifts which have
neither strength nor flavor, which can neither nourish the body nor tickle the
palate. Nothing is more insipid than forced fruits. A wealthy man in Paris, with
all his stoves and hot-houses, only succeeds in getting all the year round poor
fruit and poor vegetables for his table at a very high price. If I had cherries
in frost, and golden melons in the depths of winter, what pleasure should I find
in them when my palate did not need moisture or refreshment? Would the heavy
chestnut be very pleasant in the heat of the dog-days; would I prefer to have it
hot from the stove, rather than the gooseberry, the strawberry, the refreshing
fruits which the earth takes care to provide for me? A mantelpiece covered in
January with forced vegetation, with pale and scentless flowers, is not winter
adorned, but spring robbed of its beauty. we deprive ourselves of the pleasure
of seeking the first violet in the woods, of noting the earliest buds, and
exclaiming in a rapture of delight, "Mortals, you are not forsaken, nature is
living still."
[1223:]
To be well served I would have few servants; this has been said before, but it
is worth saying again. A tradesman gets more real service from his one man than
a duke from the ten gentlemen round about him. It has often struck me when I am
sitting at table with my glass beside me that I can drink whenever I please;
whereas, if I were dining in state, twenty men would have to call for "Wine"
before I could quench my thirst. You may be sure that whatever is done for you
by other people is ill done. I would not send to the shops, I would go myself; I
would go so that my servants should not make their own terms with the
shopkeepers, and to get a better choice and cheaper prices; I would go for the
sake of pleasant exercise and to get a glimpse of what was going on out of
doors. This is amusing and sometimes instructive. Lastly I would go for the sake
of the walk; there is always something in that. A sedentary life is the source
of tedium; when we walk a good deal we are never dull. A porter and footmen are
poor interpreters; I should never wish to have such people between the world and
myself, nor would I travel with all the fuss of a coach, as if I were afraid
people would speak to me. The horses of a man who uses his legs are always
ready; if they are tired or ill, their owner is the first to know it; he need
not be afraid of being kept at home while his coachman is on the spree; on the
road he will not have to submit to all sorts of delays, nor will he be consumed
with impatience, nor compelled to stay in one place a moment longer than he
chooses. Lastly, since no one serves us so well as we serve ourselves, had we
the power of Alexander and the wealth of Crœsus we should accept no services
from others, except those we cannot perform for ourselves.
[1224:]
I would not live in a palace; for even in a palace I whould only occupy one
room. Every room which is common property belongs to nobody, and the rooms of
each of my servants would be as strange to me as my neighbor's. The Orientals,
although very voluptuous, are lodged in plain and simply furnished dwellings.
They consider life as a journey, and their house as an inn. This reason scarcely
appeals to us rich people who propose to live for ever; but I should find
another reason which would have the same effect. It would seem to me that if I
settled myself in one place in the midst of such splendor, I should banish
myself from every other place, and imprison myself, so to speak, in my palace.
The world is a palace fair enough for any one; and is not everything at the
disposal of the rich man when he seeks enjoyment? "Ubi bene, ibi patria," that
is his motto; his home is anywhere where money will carry him, his country is
anywhere where there is room for his strong-box, as Philip considered as his own
any place where a mule laden with silver could enter. Why then should we shut
ourselves up within walls and gates as if we never meant to leave them? If
pestilence, war, or rebellion drive me from one place, I go to another, and I
find my hotel there before me. Why should I build a mansion for myself when the
world is already at my disposal? Why should I be in such a hurry to live, to
bring from afar delights which I can find on the spot? It is impossible to make
a pleasant life for oneself when one is always at war with oneself. Thus
Empodocles reproached the men of Agrigentum with heaping up pleasures as if they
had but one day to live, and building as if they would live forever.
[1225:]
And what use have I for so large a dwelling, as I have so few people to live in
it, and still fewer goods to fill it? My furniture would be as simple as my
tastes; I would have neither picture-gallery nor library, especially if I was
fond of reading and knew something about pictures. I should then know that such
collections are never complete, and that the lack of that which is wanting
causes more annoyance than if one had nothing at all. In. this respect abundance
is the cause of want, as every collector knows to his cost. If you are an
expert, do not make a collection; if you know how to use your cabinets, you will
not have any to show.
[1226:]
Gambling is no sport for the rich, it is the resource of those who have nothing
to do. I shall be so busy with my pleasures that I shall have no time to waste.
I am poor and lonely and I never play, unless it is a game of chess now and
then, and that is more than enough. If I were rich I would play even less,, and
for very low stakes, so that I should not be disappointed myself, nor see the
disappointment of others. The wealthy man has no motive for play, and the love
of play will not degenerate into the passion for gambling unless the disposition
is evil. The rich man is always more keenly aware of his losses than his gains,
and as in games where the stakes are not high the winnings are generally
exhausted in the long run, he will usually lose more than he gains, so that if
we reason rightly we shall scarcely take a great fancy to games where the odds
are against us. He who flatters his vanity so far as to believe that Fortune
favors him can seek her favor in more exciting ways; and her favors are just as
clearly shown when the stakes are low as when they are high. The taste for play,
the result of greed and dullness, only lays hold of empty hearts and heads; and
I think I should have enough feeling and knowledge to dispense with its help.
Thinkers are seldom gamblers; gambling interrupts the habit of thought and turns
it towards barren combinations; thus one good result, perhaps the only good
result of the taste for science, is that it deadens to some extent this vulgar
passion. People will prefer to try to discover the uses of play rather than to
devote themselves to it. I should argue with the gamblers against gambling, and
I should find more delight in scoffing at their losses than in winning their
money.
[1227:]
I should be the same in private life as in my social intercourse. I should wish
my fortune to bring comfort in its train, and never to make people conscious of
inequalities of wealth. Showy dress is inconvenient in many ways. To preserve as
much freedom as possible among other men, I should like to be dressed in such a
way that 1 should not seem out of place among all classes, and should not
attract attention in any; so that without affectation or change I might mingle
with the crowd at the inn or with the nobility at the Palais Royal. In this way
I should be more than ever my own master, and should be free to enjoy the
pleasures of all sorts and conditions of men. There are women, so they say,
whose doors are closed to embroidered cuffs, women who will only receive guests
who wear lace ruffles. I should spend my days elsewhere; though if these women
were young and pretty I might sometimes put on lace ruffles to spend an evening
or so in their company.
[1228:]
Mutual affection, similarity of tastes, suitability of character -- these are
the only bonds between my companions and myself. Among them I would be a man,
not a person of wealth; the charm of their society should never be embittered by
self-seeking. If my wealth had not robbed me of all humanity, I would scatter my
benefits and my services broadcast, but I should want companions about me, not
courtiers, friends, not protégés. I should wish my friends to regard me as their
host, not their patron. Independence and equality would leave to my relations
with my friends the sincerity of goodwill; while duty and self-seeking would
have no place among us. and we should know no law but that of pleasure and
friendship.
[1229:]
Neither a friend nor a mistress can be bought. Women may be got for money, but
that road will never lead to love. Love is not only not for sale; money strikes
it dead. If a man pays, were he indeed the most lovable of men, the mere fact of
payment would prevent any lasting affection. He will soon be paying for some one
else, or rather some one else will get his money; and in this double connection
based on self-seeking and debauchery, without love, honour, or true pleasure,
the woman is grasping, faithless, and unhappy, and she is treated by the wretch
to whom she gives her money as she treats the fool who gives his money to her;
she has no love for either. It would be sweet to be generous towards one we
love, if that did not make a bargain of love. I know only one way of gratifying
this desire with the woman one loves without embittering love; it is to bestow
our all upon her and to live at her expense. It remains to be seen whether there
is any woman with regard to whom such conduct would not be unwise.
[1230:]
He who said, "Laïs is mine, but I am not hers," was talking nonsense. Possession
which is not mutual is nothing at all; at most it is the possession of the sex
not of the individual. But where there is no morality in love, why make such ado
about the rest? Nothing is so easy to find. A muleteer is in this respect as
near to happiness as a millionaire.
[1231:]
Oh, if we could thus trace out the unreasonableness of vice, how often should we
find that when it has attained its object, it discovers it is not what it
seemed! Why is there this cruel haste to corrupt innocence, to make a victim of
a young creature whom we ought to protect, one who is dragged by this first
false step into a gulf of misery from which only death can release her?
Brutality, vanity, folly, error, and nothing more. This pleasure itself is
unnatural; it rests on popular opinion, and popular opinion at its worst, since
it depends on scorn of self. He who knows he is the basest of men fears
comparison with others, and would be the first that he may be less hateful. See
if those who are most greedy in pursuit of such fancied pleasures are ever
attractive young men -- men worthy of pleasing, men who might have some excuse
if they were hard to please. Not so; any one with good looks, merit, and feeling
has little fear of his mistress' experience; with well-placed confidence he says
to her, "You know what pleasure is, what is that to me? my heart assures me that
this is not so."
[1232:]
But an aged satyr, worn out with debauchery, with no charm, no consideration, no
thought for any but himself, with no shred of honour, incapable and unworthy of
finding favor in the eyes of any woman who knows anything of men deserving of
love, expects to make up for all this with an innocent girl by trading on her
inexperience and stirring her emotions for the first time. His last hope is to
find favor as a novelty; no doubt this is the secret motive of this desire; but
he is mistaken. The horror he excites is just as natural as the desires he
wishes to arouse. He is also mistaken in his foolish attempt; that very nature
takes care to assert her rights. Every girl who sells herself is no longer a
maid; she has given herself to the man of her choice, and she is making the very
comparison he dreads. The pleasure purchased is imaginary, but none the less
hateful.
[1233:]
For my own part, however riches may change me, there is one matter in which I
shall never change. If I have neither morals nor virtue, I shall not be wholly
without taste, without sense, without delicacy; and this will prevent me from
spending my fortune in the pursuit of empty dreams, from wasting my money and my
strength in teaching children to betray me and mock me. If I were young, I would
seek the pleasures of youth; and since I would have them at their best I would
not seek them in the guise of a rich man. If I were at my present age, it would
be another matter; I would wisely confine myself to the pleasures of my age; I
would form tastes that I could enjoy, and I would stifle those which could only
cause suffering. I would not go and offer my gray beard to the scornful jests of
young girls; I could never bear to sicken them with my disgusting caresses, to
furnish them at my expense with the most absurd stories, to imagine them
describing the vile pleasures of the old monkey so as to avenge. themselves for
what they had endured. But if unresisted habits had changed my former desires
into needs, I would perhaps satisfy those needs, but only with shame and
blushes. I would distinguish between passion and necessity; I would find a
suitable mistress and would stick to her. I would not make a business of my
weakness, and above all I would only have one person aware of it. Life has other
pleasures when these fail us; by hastening in vain after those that fly from us
we deprive ourselves of those that remain. Let our tastes change with our years,
let us no more meddle with age than with the seasons. We should be ourselves at
all times instead of struggling against nature; such vain attempts exhaust our
strength and prevent the right use of life.
[1234:]
The lower classes are seldom dull, their life is full of activity. If there is
little variety in their amusements they do not recur frequently; many days of
labor teach them to enjoy their rare holidays. Short intervals of leisure
between long periods of labor give a spice to the pleasures of their station.
The chief curse of the rich is dullness; in the midst of costly amusements,
among so many men striving to give them pleasure, they are devoured and slain by
dullness; their life is spent in fleeing from it and in being overtaken by it.
They are overwhelmed by the intolerable burden. Women more especially, who do
not know how to work or play, are a prey to tedium under the name of the vapors.
With them it takes the shape of a dreadful disease that robs them of their
reason and even of their life. For my own part I know no more terrible fate than
that of a pretty woman in Paris, unless it is that of the pretty dandy who
devotes himself to her, who becomes idle and effeminate like her, and so
deprives himself twice over of his manhood while he prides himself on his
successes, and for their sake endures the longest and dullest days which human
being ever put up with.
[1235:]
Proprieties, fashions, customs which depend on luxury and breeding, confine the
course of life within the limits of the most miserable uniformity. The pleasure
we desire in display to others is a pleasure lost; we neither enjoy it
ourselves, nor do others enjoy it. Ridicule, which public opinion dreads more
than anything, is always at hand to tyrannize and punish. It is only ceremony
that makes us ridiculous; if we can vary our place and our pleasures, to-day's
impressions can efface those of yesterday; in the mind of men they are as if
they had never been. But we enjoy ourselves for we throw ourselves into every
hour and everything. My only set rule would be this: wherever I was I would pay
no heed to anything else. I would take each day as it came, as if there were
neither yesterday nor to-morrow. As I would be a man of the people, with the
populace, I would be a countryman in the fields; and if I spoke of farming, the
peasant should not laugh at my expense. I would not go and build a town in the
country nor erect the Tuileries at the door of my lodgings. On some pleasant
shady hill-side I would have a little cottage, a white house with green
shutters, and though a thatched roof is the best all the year round, I would be
grand enough to have, not those gloomy slates, but tiles, because they look
brighter and more cheerful than thatch, and the houses in my own country are
always roofed with them, and so they would recall to me something of the happy
days of my youth. For my courtyard I would have a poultry-yard, and for my
stables a cowshed for the sake of the milk which I love. My garden would be a
kitchen-garden, and my park an orchard, like the one described further on. The
fruit would be free to those who walked in the orchard, my gardener would
neither count it nor gather it; I would not, with greedy show, display before
your eyes superb espaliers which one scarcely dare touch. But this small
extravagance would not be costly, for I would choose my abode in some remote
province where silver is scarce and food plentiful, where plenty and poverty
have their seat.
[1236:]
There I would gather round me a company, select rather than numerous, a band of
friends who know what pleasure is, and how to enjoy it, women who can leave
their arm-chairs and betake themselves to outdoor sports, women who can exchange
the shuttle or the cards for the fishing line or the bird-trap, the gleaner's
rake or grape-gatherer's basket. There all the pretensions of the town will be
forgotten, and we will be villagers in a village; we wall find all sorts of
different sports and we will hardly know how to choose the morrow's occupation.
Exercise and an active life will improve our digestion and modify our tastes.
Every meal will be a feast, where plenty will be more pleasing than any
delicacies. There are no such cooks in the world as mirth, rural pursuits, and
merry games; and the finest made dishes are quite ridiculous in the eyes of
people who have been on foot since early dawn. Our meals will be served without
regard to order or elegance; we will make our dining-room anywhere, in the
garden, on a boat, beneath a tree; sometimes at a distance from the house on the
banks of a running stream, on the fresh green grass, among the clumps of willow
and hazel; a long procession of guests will carry the material for the feast
with laughter and singing; the turf will be our chairs and table, the banks of
the stream our side-board, and our dessert is hanging on the trees. The dishes
will be served in any order; appetite needs no ceremony. Each one of us, openly
putting himself first, would gladly see every one else do the same. From this
warmhearted and temperate familiarity there would arise, without coarseness,
pretence, or constraint, a laughing conflict a hundredfold more delightful than
politeness, and more likely to cement our friend-ship. No tedious flunkeys to
listen to our words, to whisper criticisms on our behavior, to count every
mouthful with greedy eyes, to amuse themselves by keeping us waiting for our
wine, to complain of the length of our dinner. We will be our own servants in
order to be our own masters. Time will fly unheeded, our meal will be an
interval of rest during the heat of the day. If some peasant comes our way,
returning from his work with his tools over his shoulder, I will cheer his heart
with kindly words and a glass or two of good wine, which will help him to bear
his poverty more cheerfully; and I too will have the joy of feeling my heart
stirred within me, and I would say to myself -- I too am a man.
[1237:]
If the inhabitants of the district assembled for some rustic feast, I and my
friends would be there among the first; if there were marriages, more blessed
than those of towns, celebrated near my home, every one would know how I love to
see people happy, and I should be invited. I would take these good folks some
gift as simple as themselves, a gift which would be my share of the feast; and
in exchange I would obtain gifts beyond price, gifts so little known among my
equals, the gifts of freedom and true pleasure. I would sup gaily at the head of
their long table; I would join in the chorus of some rustic song and I would
dance in the barn more merrily than at a ball in the Opera House.
[1238:]
"This is all very well so far," you will say, "but what about the shooting? One
must have some sport in the country." Just so; I only wanted a farm, but I was
wrong. I assume I am rich, I must keep my pleasures to myself, I must be free to
kill something. This is quite another matter. I must have estates, woods,
keepers, rents, seignorial rights, particularly incense and holy water.
[1239:]
Well and good. But such an estate would have neighbors who are jealous of their
rights and anxious to encroach on those of others; our keepers will quarrel, and
possibly their masters will quarrel too. This means altercations, disputes,
ill-will, or law-suits at the least; this in itself is not very pleasant. My
tenants will not enjoy finding my hares at work upon their corn, or my wild
boars among their beans. Since they dare not kill the enemy, every one of them
will try to drive him from their fields; when the day has been spent in
cultivating the ground, they will be compelled to sit up all night to watch it;
they will have watch-dogs, drums, horns, and bells; my sleep will be disturbed
by their racket. Do what I will, I cannot help thinking of the misery of these
poor people, and I cannot help blaming myself for it. If I had the honour of
being a prince, this would make little impression on me; but as I am a self-made
man who has only just come into his property, I am still rather vulgar at heart.
[1240:]
That is not all; abundance of game attracts trespassers. I would soon have
poachers to punish; I would require prisons, gaolers, guards, and galleys; all
this strikes me as cruel. The wives of those miserable creatures will besiege my
door and disturb me with their crying; they must either be driven away or
roughly handled. The poor people who are not poachers, whose harvest has been
destroyed by my game, will come next with their complaints. Some people will be
put to death for killing the game, the rest will be punished for having spared
it; what a choice of evils! On every side I shall find nothing but misery and
hear nothing but groans. So far as I can see this must greatly disturb the
pleasure of massacring at one's ease flocks of partridges and hares which are
tame enough to run about one's feet.
[1241:]
Would you like to separate out the pleasures from thesw pains? Get rid of all
exclusion; the more you leave it free to everybody, the purer will be your own
enjoyment. Therefore I would not do what I have just described, but without
change of tastes I would follow those which seem likely to cause me least pain.
I would fix my rustic abode in a district where game is not preserved, and where
I can have my sport without hindrance. Game will be less plentiful, but there
will be more skill in finding it, and more pleasure in securing it. I remember
the start of delight with which my father watched the rise of his first
partridge and the rapture with which he found the hare he had sought all day
long. Yes, I assure you that alone with his dog, carrying his own gun,
cartridges, and game bag together with his hare, he came home at nightfall, worn
out with fatigue and torn to pieces by brambles, but better pleased with his
day's sport than all your ordinary sportsmen, who on a good horse, with twenty
guns ready for them, merely take one gun after another, and shoot and kill
everything that comes their way, without skill, without glory, and almost
without exercise. The pleasure is noy less, and the difficulties are removed;
there is no estate to be preserved, no poacher to be punished, and no wretches
to be tormented. Here are solid grounds for preference. Whatever you do, you
cannot torment men for ever without experiencing some amount of discomfort; and
sooner or later the muttered curses of the people will spoil the flavor of your
game.
[1242:]
Again, monopoly destroys pleasure. Real pleasures are those which we share with
the crowd; we lose what we try to keep to ourselves alone. If the walls I build
round my park transform it into a gloomy prison, I have only deprived myself, at
great expense, of the pleasure of a walk; I must now seek that pleasure at a
distance. The demon of property spoils everything he lays hands upon. A rich man
wants to be master everywhere, and he is never happy where he is; he is
continually driven to flee from himself. I shall therefore continue to do in my
prosperity what I did in my poverty. Henceforward, richer in the wealth of
others than I ever shall be in my own wealth, I will take possession of
everything in my neighborhood that takes my fancy; no conqueror is so determined
as I. I even usurp the rights of princes; I take possession of every open place
that pleases me, I give them names; this is my park, that is my terrace, and I
am their owner. Henceforward I wander among them at will. I often return to
maintain my proprietary rights; I make what use I choose of the ground to walk
upon, and you will never convince me that the nominal owner of the property
which I have appropriated gets better value out of the money it yields him than
I do out of his land. No matter if I am interrupted by hedges and ditches; I
take my park on my back, and I carry it elsewhere. There will be space enough
for it near at hand, and I may plunder my neighbors long enough before I outstay
my welcome.
[1243:]
This is an attempt to show what is meant by good taste in the choice of pleasant
occupations for our leisure hours. This is the spirit of enjoyment. All else is
illusion, fancy, and foolish pride. He who disobeys these rules, however rich he
may be, will devour his gold on a dung-hill, and will never know what it is to
live.
[1244:]
You will say, no doubt, that such amusements lie within the reach of all, that
we need not be rich to enjoy them. That is the very point I was coming to.
Pleasure is ours when we want it; it is only social prejudice which makes
everything hard to obtain, and drives pleasure before us. To be happy is a
hundredfold easier than it seems. If he really desires to enjoy himself the man
of taste has no need of riches; all he wants is to be free and to be his own
master. With health and daily bread we are rich enough, if we will but get rid
of our prejudices; this is the "Golden Mean" of Horace. You folks with your
strong-boxes may find some other use for your wealth, for it cannot buy you
pleasure. Emile knows this as well as I, but his heart is purer and more
healthy, so he will feel it more strongly, and all that he has beheld in society
will only serve to confirm him in this opinion.
[1245:]
While our time is thus employed, we are ever on the lookout for Sophy, and we
have not yet found her. It was not desirable that she should be found too
easily, and I have taken care to look for her where I knew we should not find
her.
[1246:]
The time is come; we must now seek her in earnest, in case Emile should mistake
some one else for Sophy and only discover his error when it is too late. Then
farewell Paris, far-famed Paris, with all your noise and smoke and dirt, where
the women have ceased to believe in honour and the men in virtue. We are in
search of love, happiness, innocence; the further we go from Paris the better.