登陆注册
14326000000031

第31章

Of the History of Rude Nations Section IOf the Informations on this subject which are derived from Antiquity The history of mankind is confined within a limited period, and from every quarter brings an intimation that human affairs have had a beginning: Nations, distinguished by the possession of arts, and the felicity of their political establishments, have been derived from a feeble original, and still preserve in their story the indications of a slow and gradual progress, by which this distinction was gained. The antiquities of every people, however diversified, and however disguised, contain the same information on this point.

In sacred history, we find the parents of the species, as yet a single pair, sent forth to inherit the earth, and to force a subsistence for themselves amidst the briers and thorns which were made to abound on its surface. Their race, which was again reduced to a few, had to struggle with the dangers that await a weak and infant species; and after many ages elapsed, the most respectable nations took their rise from one or a few families that had pastured their flocks in the desert.

The Grecians derive their own origin from unsettled tribes, whose frequent migrations are a proof of the rude and infant state of their communities; and whose warlike exploits, so much celebrated in story, only exhibit the struggles with which they disputed for the possession of a country they afterwards, by their talent for fable, by their arts, and their policy, rendered so famous in the history of mankind.

Italy must have been divided into many rude and feeble cantons, when a band of robbers, as we are taught to consider them, found a secure settlement on the banks of the Tiber, and when a people, yet composed only of one sex, sustained the character of a nation. Rome, for many ages, saw, from her walls, on every side, the territory of her enemies, and found as little to check or to stifle the weakness of her infant power, as she did afterwards to restrain the progress of her extended empire.

Like a Tartar or a Scythian horde, which had pitched on a settlement, this nascent community was equal, if not superior, to every tribe in its neighbourhood; and the oak which has covered the field with its shade, was once a feeble plant in the nursery, and not to be distinguished from the weeds by which its early growth was restrained.

The Gauls and the Germans are come to our knowledge with the marks of a similar condition; and the inhabitants of Britain, at the time of the first Roman invasions, resembled, in many things, the present natives of North America: they were ignorant of agriculture; they painted their bodies; and used for cloathing, the skins of beasts.

Such therefore appears to have been the commencement of history with all nations, and in such circumstances are we to look for the original character of mankind. The inquiry refers to a distant period, and every conclusion should build on the facts which are preserved for our use. Our method, notwithstanding, too frequently, is to rest the whole on conjecture; to impute every advantage of our nature to those arts which we ourselves possess;and to imagine, that a mere negation of all our virtues is a sufficient description of man in his original state. We are ourselves the supposed standards of politeness and civilization;and where our own features do not appear, we apprehend, that there is nothing which deserves to be known. But it is probable that here, as in many other cases, we are ill qualified, from our supposed knowledge of causes, to prognosticate effects, or to determine what must have been the properties and operations, even of our own nature, in the absence of those circumstances in which we have seen it engaged. Who would, from mere conjecture, suppose, that the naked savage would be a coxcomb and a gamester?

that he would be proud and vain, without the distinctions of title and fortune? and that his principal care would be to adorn his person, and to find an amusement? Even if it could be supplied that he would thus share in our vices, and, in the midst of his forest, vie with the follies which are practised in the town; yet no one would be so bold as to affirm, that he would likewise, in any instance, excel us in talents and virtues; that he would have a penetration, a force of imagination and elocution, an ardour of mind, an affection and courage, which the arts, the discipline, and the policy of few nations would be able to improve. Yet these particulars are a part in the description which is delivered by those who have had opportunities of seeing mankind in their rudest condition: and beyond the reach of such testimony, we can neither safely take, nor pretend to give, information on the subject.

If conjectures and opinions formed at a distance, have not sufficient authority in the history of mankind, the domestic antiquities of every nation must, for this very reason, be received with caution. They are, for most part, the mere conjectures or the fictions of subsequent ages; and even where at first they contained some resemblance of truth, they still vary with the imagination of those by whom they are transmitted, and in every generation receive a different form. They are made to bear the stamp of the times through which they have passed in the form of tradition, not of the ages to which their pretended descriptions relate. The information they bring, is not like the light reflected from a mirrour, which delineates the object from which it originally came; but, like rays that come broken and dispersed from an opaque or unpolished surface, only give the colours and features of the body from which they were last reflected.

When traditionary fables are rehearsed by the vulgar, they bear the marks of a national character; and though mixed with absurdities, often raise the imagination, and move the heart:

同类推荐
  • 送傅管记赴蜀军

    送傅管记赴蜀军

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • In the Carquinez Woods

    In the Carquinez Woods

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 答王无功九日

    答王无功九日

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 玄牝之门赋注释

    玄牝之门赋注释

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 伊犁略志

    伊犁略志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 终极血脉

    终极血脉

    人们总是圈养着各种动物用来填饱自己的胃口,却很少有人想过,如果有一天,人类发现,自己也不过是被圈养的食物,将会出现怎么样的结果?当世界变成一座沙城,当灾难不断的毁灭着未来,他带着古老的龙之血脉,踏上了一条充满荆棘的道路。为了追寻自由,不仅是自己的,同样是整个人类的----自由。
  • 天穹王座

    天穹王座

    这里是星魂的世界,相传每个人在九天之上都拥有一颗本命星辰,天有九重,差距极大,夏白天生双星魂,握神器,拥神兽,搅帝都,闯中土,威震罪恶之地,脚踩无上天域,不辜兄弟,不负红颜,凭借一颗九死不悔的心,涅槃成圣,终登王座。
  • 断魂者

    断魂者

    “我们为什么要被别人唾弃。”一个孩童望向天空说道。“因为我们是断魂人,是断了魂的人。”在那天际上传来一阵阵声音。
  • 百变魔王

    百变魔王

    一个一直追求着探险,对一切新奇的、未知的事物抱有极强的好奇心的少年,和他的伙伴一起,在波澜壮阔的苍黎大世界发生的一幕幕惊险、刺激、热血、欢乐的故事。
  • 漂亮女同事的贴身保镖

    漂亮女同事的贴身保镖

    一个年轻人被单位开除下岗后,看到馆长不堪的一幕,想以此要挟回单位上班,没想到却阴差阳错的来到了远古神秘王朝,在意外地得到一本幻血神功之后,又回到了现实世界。此刻,他已经拥有了一双能看透世间任何物体的透视眼和神奇异能,接着主人公的命运发生了巨大的改变,艳遇连连,官运亨通,不断的搞定身边的美女同事,智斗黑道高手,赌石暴富,纵横官场和古代王朝,搞定国安警花,智擒绝色仙子,智斗日本间谍川岛芳子,击毙日军山本大将,本书集都市官场、盗墓、仙侠科幻,枪战为一体,各位看官且听我慢慢道来...
  • 永恒之陆

    永恒之陆

    诸神陨落,但关于诸神的历史却随之被抹去。多年后,这片土地又开始了腥风血雨。看一位为复仇的少年在这片土地上闯荡,为此开始一场旅程,从而揭露出被尘封已久的历史。
  • 修炼供应商

    修炼供应商

    方元有一颗玄幻梦!还有一颗修真心!但是他不能修炼也不能修真,所以方元开起了修炼供应商,帮人提升武力,帮人提升等级,还帮人渡天劫,哦买噶!方元未来的梦想是把分店开满全部星球。《这将是一部4000万字的小说》
  • 末世幸运王

    末世幸运王

    世界幸存者大会,马飞星老神在在的坐在龙椅上。记者甲问:“尊敬的幸运王,您如此幸运的走到今天,请问您对此有什么感想?”马飞星愤怒的拍案而起道:“我靠,幸运你妹啊。我付出多少的努力、汗水、鲜血,无数的磨难,以及匪夷所思的恐怖事件,一步步活到今天,我容易么我,什么幸运的走到今天,坑爹啊!”记者乙:“据说您总能比别人发现更多的东西,据说您的幸运无与伦比,您是不是不好坦白对我们讲。”马飞星激动的说:“你们以为我的幸运,就是真正幸运吗,有时候幸运是一种灾难。哥的伤痛,你们不懂。”记者丙:“我完全不理解您说的话,幸运为什么是一种灾难。”马飞星奸笑道:“想知道就交了门票进来看。”记者丁“……草泥马,放丧尸!”
  • 穿越之君心千年

    穿越之君心千年

    从什么时候开始呢?也许从她第一次救他开始,也许从她站在自己面前说着保护自己的话,连他自己也不知道,不知不觉,爱已入骨。
  • 纨绔百两世子

    纨绔百两世子

    “你叫绝无情?“”正是在下。“云起挺起胸膛,目露寒意。”真巧,本尊也叫绝无情。“什么碰上正版了,怎么办,一个字,逃。传闻某世子风流成性,烂泥一堆,乃废材之体,传闻某宫主冷血无情,传闻,传闻可信嚒?