登陆注册
15677000000217

第217章

To Madame D'Estissac.

MADAM, if the strangeness and novelty of my subject, which are wont to give value to things, do not save me, I shall never come off with honour from this foolish attempt: but 'tis so fantastic, and carries a face so unlike the common use, that this, peradventure, may make it pass. 'Tis a melancholic humour, and consequently a humour very much an enemy to my natural complexion, engendered by the pensiveness of the solitude into which for some years past I have retired myself, that first put into my head this idle fancy of writing. Wherein, finding myself totally unprovided and empty of other matter, I presented myself to myself for argument and subject. 'Tis the only book in the world of its kind, and of a wild and extravagant design. There is nothing worth remark in this affair but that extravagancy: for in a subject so vain and frivolous, the best workman in the world could not have given it a form fit to recommend it to any manner of esteem.

Now, madam, having to draw my own picture to the life, I had omitted one important feature, had I not therein represented the honour I have ever had for you and your merits; which I have purposely chosen to say in the beginning of this chapter, by reason that amongst the many other excellent qualities you are mistress of, that of the tender love you have manifested to your children, is seated in one of the highest places.

Whoever knows at what age Monsieur D'Estissac, your husband, left you a widow, the great and honourable matches that have since been offered to you, as many as to any lady of your condition in France, the constancy and steadiness wherewith, for so many years, you have sustained so many sharp difficulties, the burden and conduct of affairs, which have persecuted you in every corner of the kingdom, and are not yet weary of tormenting you, and the happy direction you have given to all these, by your sole prudence or good fortune, will easily conclude with me that we have not so vivid an example as yours of maternal affection in our times.

I praise God, madam, that it has been so well employed; for the great hopes Monsieur D'Estissac, your son, gives of himself, render sufficient assurance that when he comes of age you will reap from him all the obedience and gratitude of a very good man. But, forasmuch as by reason of his tender years, he has not been capable of taking notice of those offices of extremest value he has in so great number received from you, I will, if these papers shall one day happen to fall into his hands, when I shall neither have mouth nor speech left to deliver it to him, that he shall receive from me a true account of those things, which shall be more effectually manifested to him by their own effects, by which he will understand that there is not a gentleman in France who stands more indebted to a mother's care; and that he cannot, in the future, give a better nor more certain testimony of his own worth and virtue than by acknowledging you for that excellent mother you are.

If there be any law truly natural, that is to say, any instinct that is seen universally and perpetually imprinted in both beasts and men (which is not without controversy), I can say, that in my opinion, next to the care every animal has of its own preservation, and to avoid that which may hurt him, the affection that the begetter bears to his offspring holds the second place in this rank. And seeing that nature appears to have recommended it to us, having regard to the extension and progression of the successive pieces of this machine of hers, 'tis no wonder if, on the contrary, that of children towards their parents is not so great.

To which we may add this other Aristotelian consideration, that he who confers a benefit on any one, loves him better than he is beloved by him again: that he to whom is owing, loves better than he who owes; and that every artificer is fonder of his work, than, if that work had sense, it would be of him; by reason that it is dear to us to be, and to be consists in movement and action; therefore every one has in some sort a being in his work. He who confers a benefit exercises a fine and honest action; he who receives it exercises the useful only. Now the useful is much less lovable than the honest; the honest is stable and permanent, supplying him who has done it with a continual gratification. The useful loses itself, easily slides away, and the memory of it is neither so fresh nor so pleasing. Those things are dearest to us that have cost us most, and giving is more chargeable than receiving.

Since it has pleased God to endue us with some capacity of reason, to the end we may not, like brutes, be servilely subject and enslaved to the laws common to both, but that we should by judgment and a voluntary liberty apply ourselves to them, we ought, indeed, something to yield to the simple authority of nature, but not suffer ourselves to be tyrannically hurried away and transported by her; reason alone should have the conduct of our inclinations. I, for my part, have a strange disgust for those propensions that are started in us without the mediation and direction of the judgment, as, upon the subject I am speaking of, I cannot entertain that passion of dandling and caressing infants scarcely born, having as yet neither motion of soul nor shape of body distinguishable, by which they can render themselves amiable, and have not willingly suffered them to be nursed near me. A true and regular affection ought to spring and increase with the knowledge they give us of themselves, and then, if they are worthy of it, the natural propension walking hand in hand with reason, to cherish them with a truly paternal love; and so to judge, also, if they be otherwise, still rendering ourselves to reason, notwithstanding the inclination of nature.

同类推荐
  • 广百论本

    广百论本

    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。
  • Eugene Pickering

    Eugene Pickering

    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。
  • 般若波罗蜜多心经幽赞

    般若波罗蜜多心经幽赞

    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。
  • 中边分别论

    中边分别论

    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。
  • 庄子翼

    庄子翼

    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
  • 爱就爱了,何必那么难

    爱就爱了,何必那么难

    他是豪门公子,她是个孤女,姻缘巧合,他们竟成为一对,他认为她贪图权财,她却是因为几年前的一面之缘,他不顾她的感受强占了她,她却因为爱他心甘情愿,他为曾经的一段情而变得暴戾,冰冷,她好不容易用尽所有温暖了他.当两人彼此深爱对方,却说他们是兄妹,---------
  • 晨夕是我最美的等待

    晨夕是我最美的等待

    多年前的一次巧合他看到了,记住了她,多年后的又一次巧合遇到了她。。。。。。。。
  • 暗涌之夜

    暗涌之夜

    白天的背后是黑夜,静谧的背后是惊天动地的一次爆发。这个世界上真正令人恐惧的并非你所看到的,一切已知的事物已经失去了它令人惊悚战栗的能力。世上还有令你深感不安的东西,它便藏身于背后的未知之中,就像你在大街上看到眼前的行人纷纷倒在飞行的刀下,然而你担心的却是自己的背后会有什么。未知的又并不是鬼怪妖魔,那不过是人们因恐惧而杜撰的,真实的未知就是人自己,人的心是这个世界上最难以猜测、最神秘也最为恐怖的存在了。我想给你一面镜子,让你看看自己背后可怕的人心。
  • 轮流说爱你

    轮流说爱你

    她是呆萌傻白甜穆流星,他是高冷腹黑的伦逸。他像是天上的星星,让她看得见却够不着,当她跨过种种困难想要表达自己的心意时,“嘿,冰山面瘫脸,我相信我一定能融化你的!”“见到你的第一刻,我的世界就已经变暖了。”但是一波一波的变故让她措不及防,狼狈不堪……
  • 做个英雄也容易

    做个英雄也容易

    平凡但聪明的女子,幸运地踏入了梦想的校园,出乎意料的吸引着王子的目光;幻想的英雄梦,不知不觉中实现,一觉醒来什么都变了,有了超凡的能力,所以不得不担负着责任,能不能分清现实与理想,该不该向他坦白,一切还能回得到从前吗?
  • 校园废柴格斗王

    校园废柴格斗王

    昨日校园废柴,今天格斗高手,看我快意恩仇,看我花丛遨游!
  • tfboys许我十年伴我一生

    tfboys许我十年伴我一生

    年少轻狂的我只为你一人证明胜者为王。待我凯旋,伴我别走。他们说错过是最美的遇见,但我怕错过了你就不会再见。你可知我初心不变只为守候那个青梅竹马的你。
  • 终是梦,心悦君兮君不知

    终是梦,心悦君兮君不知

    到头来,兜兜转转,只道是:心悦君兮君不知……
  • 虚实世界交界处

    虚实世界交界处

    传说的故事是否真实,记录的史书暗藏悬疑被封印的神兽,五步的青铜刃,降下福音的古老远洋船正午时分擦肩而过无数的人之中,有几位会与自己再次相遇打开包裹的那一刻,在虚与实的边缘,故事全面展开
  • 是斋百一选方

    是斋百一选方

    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。