登陆注册
14326000000071

第71章

As Sophocles and Euripides preceded the historians and moralists of Greece, not only Naevius and Ennius, who wrote the Roman history in verse, but Lucilius, Plautus, Terence, and we may add Lucretius, were prior to Cicero, Sallust, or Caesar.

Dante and Petrarch went before any good prose writer in Italy;Corneille and Racine brought on the fine age of prose compositions in France; and we had in England, not only Chaucer and Spenser, but Shakespear and Milton, while our attempts in history or science were yet in their infancy; and deserve our attention, only for the sake of the matter they treat.

Hillanicus, who is reckoned among the first prose writers in Greece, and who immediately preceded, or was the contemporary of Herodotus, set out with declaring his intention to remove from history the wild representations, and extravagant fictions, with which it had been disgraced by the poets.(23*) The want of records or authorities, relating to any distant transactions, may have hindered him, as it did his immediate successor, from giving truth all the advantage it might have reaped from this transition to prose. There are, however, ages in the progress of society, when such a proposition must be favourably received. When men become occupied on the subjects of policy, or commercial arts, they wish to be informed and instructed, as well as moved. They are interested by what was real in past transactions. They build on this foundation, the reflections and reasonings they apply to present affairs, and wish to receive information on the subject of different pursuits, and of projects in which they begin to be engaged. The manners of men, the practice of ordinary life, and the form of society, furnish their subjects to the moral and political writer. Mere ingenuity, justness of sentiment, and correct representation, though conveyed in ordinary language, are understood to constitute literary merit, and by applying to reason more than to the imagination and passions, meet with a reception that is due to the instruction they bring.

The talents of men come to be employed in a variety of affairs, and their inquiries directed to different subjects.

Knowledge is important in every department of civil society, and requisite to the practice of every art. The science of nature, morals, politics, and history, find their several admirers; and even poetry itself, which retains its former station in the region of warm imagination and enthusiastic passion, appears in a growing variety of forms.

Matters have proceeded so far, without the aid of foreign examples, or the direction of schools. The cart of Thespis was changed into a theatre, not to gratify the learned, but to please the Athenian populace: and the prize of poetical merit was decided by this populace equally before and after the invention of rules. The Greeks were unacquainted with every language but their own; and if they became learned, it was only by studying what they themselves had produced: the childish mythology, which they are said to have copied from Asia, was equally of little avail in promoting their love of arts, or their success in the practice of them.

When the historian is struck with the events he has witnessed, or heard; when he is excited to relate them by his reflections or his passions; when the statesman, who is required to speak in public, is obliged to prepare for every remarkable appearance in studied harangues; when conversation becomes extensive and refined; and when the social feelings and reflections of men are committed to writing, a system of learning may arise from the bustle of an active life. Society itself is the school, and its lessons are delivered in the practice of real affairs. An author writes from observations he has made on his subject, not from the suggestion of books; and every production carries the mark of his character as a man, not of his mere proficiency as a student or scholar. It may be made a question, whether the trouble of seeking for distant models, and of wading for instruction, through dark allusions and languages unknown, might not have quenched his fire, and rendered him a writer of a very inferior class.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 枭雄,英雄

    枭雄,英雄

    古语云,万物有灵,剑亦不例外,持剑者仁德,则剑亦仁德,持剑者霸道,则剑亦霸道,持剑者为圣,则剑亦有圣德。而湛卢剑主则为英雄,不为枭雄,枭雄者,国君也,英雄者,流芳千古也
  • 游龙猎凤

    游龙猎凤

    人间有美女,妖界看美女,魔界商美女,鬼界娶美女。地球上的花花公子唐汉,与第十二任女朋友开房后,终因透支过度而精尽人亡,神奇穿越风灵大陆,带着前世的思想,展开一段轰轰烈烈的游龙猎凤大戏~天地规则之下,不允许至阴至阳的事物存在,而唐汉与他的七个师姐们,却是天地规则不允许存在的异类,故事,便是从这里开始......
  • 小魔女历险记

    小魔女历险记

    赤神殿集万千与宠爱于一身的小公举,莫名其妙的来到地区,神马?找不到回家的路?除了吃你还会干啥?神马?身边跟着一个衷心的灵魂体?曾经那个逗比的灵魂体去哪了?你把他赔给我。“长的有点像我前女友”“前女友是啥”“不重要,你现在是现任女友了”莫名其妙的地球,莫名其妙的男人,莫名其妙的一切,还好那半吊子的魔法还在,看小魔女勇闯神秘地球
  • 叶落已倾心

    叶落已倾心

    风澜叶和顾芸倾的故事要如何说起呢?从校园初识?还是从久别重逢之后?那年,他说:“芸倾,有生之年,认识你何其幸运!”她亦回复:“澜叶,认识你也是我人生中最大的幸事!”那年她们真的以为可以一直这样相守下去,执子之手,与子偕老,一生一世一双人的爱情,谁不羡慕?然而多年以后,久别重逢,她却说:“如果可以选择,我真希望自己永远没遇见过你”他亦说:“既然如此,那么如你所愿,再见便是陌路人。”他们到底经历了什么,错过了什么?很多时候爱情这东西,又有谁能说的清呢?在幻变的生命里,那些得到的、失去的,还会铭记于心吗?
  • 奇思妙想的故事(世界科幻故事精选丛书)

    奇思妙想的故事(世界科幻故事精选丛书)

    科幻故事,主要是描写想象中的科学或技术对社会或个人的影响的虚构性文学作品。科幻故事是西方近代文学的一种新体裁,诞生于19世纪,是欧洲工业文明崛起后特殊的文化现象之一。人类在19世纪,全面进入以科学发明和技术革命为主导的时代后,一切关注人类未来命运的文艺题材,都不可避免地要表现未来的科学技术。
  • 异世科技封神

    异世科技封神

    这是一个天神主宰一切的世界。一切的一切,都和高高在上的天神有关系。这也是一个充满了危机的世界。众多的魔灵,随时都可以毁灭这个世界。只有武力,让能够让这里的人生存下去。带着上一世记忆转世在这里的江枫,身体之内藏着一个神奇的空间。那里有众多的科技物品。他又能否利用这些东西,闯出自己的天神路。
  • 宛秀

    宛秀

    天宝末年,少林小僧行苦独自踏上寻亲之路,伴随安史之乱而行,一路看尽繁华长安的落寞;一路看透马嵬之变的李扬生死之恋;后便拒绝安歌示爱!亦然北上匡复李唐!却不知。。。。。。
  • 异能皇妃倾天下

    异能皇妃倾天下

    她洛千颜,是21世纪现代女,天生带有超强的异能,走在路上掉进下水道奇葩的穿越了!他是离国背负着血海深仇的傀儡太子,世人皆知他是废柴!但是他却有着不为人知的另一个身份!她助他破陈年冤案,为母报仇,他用生命许诺她,为她绾三千青丝!她却不能接受,茫茫人海,一个在逃,一个在步步紧追...最终是否能终成眷属?
  • 黑化和滴血的心

    黑化和滴血的心

    这个一个关于鲲和他主人庄周的故事,占有,破坏,或是……毁灭?
  • 无限之我为楚轩

    无限之我为楚轩

    看到Z大的无限恐怖真的心生感慨,楚轩有着神一般的智慧,但没有了感情,没了感情就不是人了,看在我手下出现一个完美的楚轩,欢迎大家收藏,有推荐票和评价票的别节省了,投给我吧,为了你们的票票,我一定会写书会更给力的,谢谢了大家。