登陆注册
15402700000011

第11章

Next to the general passion we have for society,to a choice in which we are directed by the pleasure we have in the object,the particular passion under this head called sympathy has the greatest extent.The nature of this passion is,to put us in the place of another in whatever circumstance he is in,and to affect us in a like manner;so that this passion may,as the occasion requires,turn either on pain or pleasure;but with the modifications mentioned in some cases in sect.II.As to imitation and preference,nothing more need be said.

XIX

The Conclusion I believed that an attempt to range and methodize some of our most leading passions would be a good preparative to such an inquiry as we are going to make in the ensuing discourse.The passions I have mentioned are almost the only ones which it can be necessary to consider in our present design;though the variety of the passions is great,and worthy in every branch of that variety,of an attentive investigation.The more accurately we search into the human mind,the stronger traces we everywhere find of his wisdom who made it.If a discourse on the use of the parts of the body may be considered as an hymn to the Creator;the use of the passions,which are the organs of the mind,cannot be barren of praise to him,nor unproductive to ourselves of that noble and uncommon union of science and admiration,which a contemplation of the works of infinite wisdom alone can afford to a rational mind:whilst,referring to him whatever we find of right or good or fair in ourselves,discovering his strength and wisdom even in our own weakness and imperfection,honouring them where we discover them clearly,and adoring their profundity where we are lost in our search,we may be inquisitive without impertinence,and elevated without pride;we may be admitted,if I may dare to say so,into the counsels of the Almighty by a consideration of his works.The elevation of the mind ought to be the principal end of all our studies;which if they do not in some measure effect,they are of very little service to us.But,beside this great purpose,a consideration of the rationale of our passions seems to me very necessary for all who would affect them upon solid and sure principles.

It is not enough to know them in general:to affect them after a delicate manner,or to judge properly of any work designed to affect them,we should know the exact boundaries of their several jurisdictions;we should pursue them through all their variety of operations,and pierce into the inmost,and what might appear inaccessible,parts of our nature,Quod latet arcand non enarrabile fibra.

Without all this it is possible for a man,after a confused manner,sometimes to satisfy his own mind of the truth of his work;but he can never have a certain determinate rule to go by,nor can he ever make his propositions sufficiently clear to others.Poets,and orators,and painters,and those who cultivate other branches of the liberal arts,have,without this critical knowledge,succeeded well in their several provinces,and will succeed:as among artificers there are many machines made and even invented without any exact knowledge of the principles they are governed by.It is,I own,not uncommon to be wrong in theory,and right in practice;and we are happy that it is so.

Men often act right from their feelings,who afterwards reason but ill on them from principle:but as it is impossible to avoid an attempt at such reasoning,and equally impossible to prevent its having some influence on our practice,surely it is worth taking some pains to have it just,and founded on the basis of sure experience.We might expect that the artists themselves would have been our surest guides;but the artists have been too much occupied in the practice:the philosophers have done little;and what they have done,was mostly with a view to their own schemes and systems:and as for those called critics,they have generally sought the rule of the arts in the wrong place;they sought it among poems,pictures,engravings,statues,and buildings.But art can never give the rules that make an art.This is,I believe,the reason why artists in general,and poets principally,have been confined in so narrow a circle:

they have been rather imitators of one another than of nature;and this with so faithful an uniformity,and to so remote an antiquity,that it is hard to say who gave the first model.Critics follow them,and therefore can do little as guides.

I can judge but poorly of anything,whilst I measure it by no other standard than itself.The true standard of the arts is in every man's power;and an easy observation of the most common,sometimes of the meanest,things in nature,will give the truest lights,where the greatest sagacity and industry,that slights such observation,must leave us in the dark,or,what is worse,amuse and mislead us by false lights.In an inquiry it is almost everything to be once in a right road.I am satisfied I have done but little by these observations considered in themselves;and I never should have taken the pains to digest them,much less should I have ever ventured to publish them,if I was not convinced that nothing tends more to the corruption of science than to suffer it to stagnate.These waters must be troubled,before they can exert their virtues.A man who works beyond the surface of things,though he may be wrong himself,yet he clears the way for others,and may chance to make even his errors subservient to the cause of truth.In the following parts I shall inquire what things they are that cause in us the affections of the sublime and beautiful,as in this I have considered the affections themselves.

I only desire one favour,-that no part of this discourse may be judged of by itself,and independently of the rest;for I am sensible I have not disposed my materials to abide the test of a captious controversy,but of a sober and even forgiving examination,that they are not armed at all points for battle,but dressed to visit those who are willing to give a peaceful entrance to truth.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 刻骨:血

    刻骨:血

    描述我们每个人可能会遇到的或者正经历的刻骨铭心的痛苦.
  • 一遇师弟误终生

    一遇师弟误终生

    “都说一遇师弟误终生,师弟为何你一直不娶妻?"“那师姐你嫁给我好了,就当为天下女子除害了。”天云宗内流传着一句话:一遇师弟误终生。可好巧不巧这个师弟就抓着师姐不放。左一个师姐嫁给我右一句师姐嫁给我。终于,师姐怒:“夏清梵!你再缠着我我就立刻把你赶下山!”某师弟笑咪咪的看着自家暴怒的师姐:"那师姐跟我一起下山成亲去吧。"
  • 家有忠犬

    家有忠犬

    别人家养的都是小猫小狗,为啥她家的……扔出一块红烧排骨,壮硕的汉子欢快地蹦跶上前,低头大口大口吃得有滋有味,酱汁与骨头齐飞,仪态风度神马的都是浮云。秦明月见状不禁叹息,仰望长空喃喃地问:“老天,我干了什么坏事,你让这家伙爬我的床,吃我的肉?!”
  • 白色眷恋

    白色眷恋

    因为不满皇马6比2的比分,中国青年律师沈星怒砸啤酒瓶,结果电光火石间,他穿越成了佛罗伦蒂诺的儿子,且看来自09年的小伙子如何玩转03年的欧洲足坛
  • 樱花树下的契之约

    樱花树下的契之约

    那年,她七岁,她是坐在樱花树下看书的安静少女。那年,他八岁,他是突然闯进她的世界的冷漠少年。他们开始结识,他答应了她第二天来这里见面,她没等到他。后来失恋的她来到了另一个学校,却碰见他,他第一眼就认出了她,她却不知她是谁。“没关系,如果不记得我了,那我们从现在开始重新认识!”他笑着说。后来,她记起了他,他们好不容易在一起了。却发生了一系列的事。“樱花盛开的时节,你我相遇的地方。
  • 君住我心

    君住我心

    女主异世觉醒自我,冷清淡漠。初遇时,他狼狈不堪,濒临生死,却不曾开口求救,他不甘,“但那又如何”,他想。一次相遇,一世独宠。
  • 不坏好意

    不坏好意

    师生,一个有妇之夫对自己学生的贪婪,怎么说呢,女主没骨气,男主占有欲强
  • 微风吹过梨花林

    微风吹过梨花林

    发生在水秀江西的关于四个女生的青春故事,初中到高中的青涩岁月。这个故事并没有那么多华丽的词句,也没有太多奇异的事情会发生。这仅仅是在讲述四个女生的故事,讲述青春……
  • 封天诛神纪

    封天诛神纪

    如果,“天毁了......,地灭了......,而我有未完成的心愿,我该何去何从?在灵界大陆上,不仅存在着可以举手投足间,毁灭天地的修灵师,还有可以使用各种瑰丽魔法异术的阴阳师。但是,只要是修炼者,无不梦想着突破那无上神境。成为神,不仅可以参透那长生之谜,生死之境。更可以掌握整个寰宇。可是,没人知道是否真的有神存在。如果神真的存在?那到底是神创造了天地,还是天道轮回了众生!他,出生在一个王侯之家,却天生无法凝聚灵气修炼。到底是他天生废材,还是另有原因?夹杂着身世之谜,爱恨纠葛。他将会在灵界有什么样的经历?
  • 甜心小呆萌:我的恶魔校草

    甜心小呆萌:我的恶魔校草

    〖全文免费〗一天她遇到了他,他在酒吧里夺走了她的初吻还抓到她的小秘密,让她成为他的女仆宠物陪吃陪玩陪睡,一言不合就强吻!晚上还要同睡一张床“笨猪,快来给本少暖床”“笨猪,除了本少不准跟别的男生来往”“没本少的允许,不能私自离开我半步”“才不要!”小雪抗拒“唔…”又被强吻了霸气高冷的凌御风把小雪宠上天,只对她一个人温柔,她是他的唯一,他是她的最爱曾经的相遇,在薰衣草花海里你偷走了我的心,我想与你谱写余生的篇章。曾经的相遇,你送我粉宝石项链,让我难忘,想在我的余生里再次与你相遇。粉宝石:唯独钟情于你。薰衣草:见证爱情的奇迹。〖宠文,宠到没节操〗