登陆注册
38541000000018

第18章

In the preceding Essay I have endeavoured to establish the proposition, that every human creature, idiots and extraordinary cases excepted, is endowed with talents, which, if rightly directed, would shew him to be apt, adroit, intelligent and acute, in the walk for which his organisation especially fitted him.

There is however a sort of phenomenon, by no means of rare occurrence, which tends to place the human species under a less favourable point of view. Many men, as has already appeared, are forced into situations and pursuits ill assorted to their talents, and by that means are exhibited to their contemporaries in a light both despicable and ludicrous.

But this is not all. Men are not only placed, by the absurd choice of their parents, or an imperious concurrence of circumstances, in destinations and employments in which they can never appear to advantage: they frequently, without any external compulsion, select for themselves objects of their industry, glaringly unadapted to their powers, and in which all their efforts must necessarily terminate in miscarriage.

I remember a young man, who had been bred a hair-dresser, but who experienced, as he believed, the secret visitations of the Muse, and became inspired. "With sad civility, and aching head," I perused no fewer than six comedies from the pen of this aspiring genius, in no page of which I could discern any glimmering of poetry or wit, or in reality could form a guess what it was that the writer intended in his elaborate effusions. Such are the persons enumerated by Pope in the Prologue to his Satires, a parson, much bemused in beer, A maudlin poetess, a rhyming peer, A clerk, foredoomed his father's sou to cross, Who pens a stanza, when he should engross.

Every manager of a theatre, and every publishing bookseller of eminence, can produce you in each revolving season whole reams, almost cartloads, of blurred paper, testifying the frequent recurrence of this phenomenon.

The cause however of this painful mistake does not lie in the circumstance, that each man has not from the hand of nature an appropriate destination, a sphere assigned him, in which, if life should be prolonged to him, he might be secure of the respect of his neighbours, and might write upon his tomb, "I have filled an honourable career; I have finished my course."

One of the most glaring infirmities of our nature is discontent.

One of the most unquestionable characteristics of the human mind is the love of novelty. Omne ignotum pro magnifico est. We are satiated with those objects which make a part of our business in every day, and are desirous of trying something that is a stranger to us. Whatever we see through a mist, or in the twilight, is apt to be apprehended by us as something admirable, for the single reason that it is seen imperfectly. What we are sure that we can easily and adequately effect, we despise. He that goes into battle with an adversary of more powerful muscle or of greater practice than himself, feels a tingling sensation, not unallied to delight, very different from that which would occur to him, when his victory was easy and secure.

Each man is conscious what it is that he can certainly effect.

This does not therefore present itself to him as an object of ambition. We have many of us internally something of the spirit expressed by the apostle: "Forgetting the things that are behind, we press forward to those that remain." And, so long as this precept is soberly applied, no conduct can be more worthy of praise. Improvement is the appropriate race of man. We cannot stand still. If we do not go forward, we shall inevitably recede. Shakespear, when he wrote his Hamlet, did not know that he could produce Macbeth and Othello.

But the progress of a man of reflection will be, to a considerable degree, in the path he has already entered. If he strikes into a new career, it will not be without deep premeditation. He will attempt nothing wantonly. He will carefully examine his powers, and see for what they are adapted.

Sudet multum. He will be like the man, who first in a frail bark committed himself to the treachery of the waves. He will keep near to the shore; he will tremble for the audaciousness of his enterprise; he will feel that it calls for all his alertness and vigilance. The man of reflection will not begin, till he feels his mind swelling with his purposed theme, till his blood flows fitfully and with full pulses through his veins, till his eyes sparkle with the intenseness of his conceptions, and his "bosom labours with the God."

But the fool dashes in at once. He does not calculate the dangers of his enterprise. He does not study the map of the country he has to traverse. He does not measure the bias of the ground, the rising knolls and the descending slopes that are before him. He obeys a blind and unreflecting impulse.

His case bears a striking resemblance to what is related of Oliver Goldsmith. Goldsmith was a man of the most felicitous endowments. His prose flows with such ease, copiousness and grace, that it resembles the song of the sirens. His verses are among the most spirited, natural and unaffected in the English language. Yet he was not contented. If he saw a consummate dancer, he knew no reason why he should not do as well, and immediately felt disposed to essay his powers. If he heard an accomplished musician, he undertook to enter the lists with him.

His conduct was of a piece with that of the countryman, who, cheapening spectacles, and ****** experiment of them for ever in vain upon the book before him, was at length asked, "Could you ever read without spectacles?" to which he was obliged to answer, "I do not know; I never tried." The vanity of Goldsmith was infinite; and his failure in such attempts must necessarily have been ludicrous.

The splendour of the thing presented to our observation, awakens the spirit within us. The applause and admiration excited by certain achievements and accomplishments infects us with desire.

同类推荐
  • Doctor Thorne

    Doctor Thorne

    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。
  • 国秀集

    国秀集

    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。
  • 小菜单

    小菜单

    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。
  • 鉴诫录

    鉴诫录

    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。
  • 吴郡图经续记

    吴郡图经续记

    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
  • 传达到你的耳畔

    传达到你的耳畔

    少女澹台绘玲一觉醒来脑海里竟然多出了她未来20年的记忆!甚至自己二十年后将会病逝于家里?!为了安抚自己受惊的小心脏打开收音机,突然想起未来的自己曾经有一个梦想,从此决定成为一名中外闻名的“亚洲第一声”。本该正常向着梦想前进的她,自从某一次的错拨电话之后就被某人莫名的惦记上了……不想成为声优的中二病不是一个合格的中二病!1v1男女主双洁!男主不是乞丐!男主不是乞丐!男主不是乞丐!【重要的事情要说三遍!】他只是在观察人类罢了w
  • 驱魔警探

    驱魔警探

    根据真实故事改编,剧情刺激恐怖环环相扣...................
  • 剑出锋芒

    剑出锋芒

    一觉醒来,原本住在海边的少年睿驰,本应听着哗哗浪声,却听到了玉笛与古筝的声音.....王府之中明争暗斗,唯有他直言,不笼络他人地位之争,被迫出外浪荡生活神伯遇助,执剑而起,从此剑不离身。十年过去..偶遇旧时兄弟,被冷漠,被唾骂……他竟如何忍受与对待?请君收藏,看我写[笑哭]感谢大家支持我会认真参考大家建议哦
  • 黑魔导士

    黑魔导士

    世界上本没有光,自从有了暗,光才有了意义。世界上本没有对,自从有了错,对才有了意义。世界上本没有神,自从有了人,神才有了意义。一场延续数万年的仇恨,一个被逼上复仇之路的人……一个他和他的朋友与敌人同样可怕的,背负着无尽宿命的人……——推荐一本仙侠搞笑神作《随身带着系统修仙》
  • 远山有棠

    远山有棠

    他是盛世下的锦衣卫,身为侯府长子却硬要靠一身本事拼出自己的前路,但前路依旧茫然。她是罪臣之女,侥幸逃脱灭门之祸,多年辗转,重回京城成为了一名首饰匠人。她有一颗安稳度日的心,却偏偏不得安稳。盛世之下,前尘牵扯,眼前风起云涌。终是携手并进,也抵不过命途多舛。她坠下悬崖,尸骨无存。他等了数年,再未娶亲。那日黄昏,却在漫不经心间等来日思夜想的那人,一身与他同样的官服,骑着骏马踏着黄沙而来,下马动作利落,笑容也是同当年一样的明艳,“金陵锦衣卫巾帼司隋棠奉命前来报道,参见指挥使大人!”
  • 缥缈寻

    缥缈寻

    生死离恨,阴谋诡计,无法逃脱的宿命,萦绕不散的死气,无穷无尽的追寻,何时才会是尽头。灿烂的友谊,看不透的爱情,终点,又是怎样。关于主角:颜西早,“老子是淑女!”蜉,“……”这货是面瘫,语言障碍,还是?胡扬,你就算把他搁牛粪里,他也能给你开出花来!
  • 三年五载

    三年五载

    在渭川中学度过的两年,于陆冉和方承和而言,即使时光漫漫,也早已是刻入生命无法消磨的记忆。你是否也曾爱一个人如生命,甘愿用离开换他完满;你是否也曾为一个人改变,原则、习惯统统抛之脑后;你是否也曾鼓起勇气介入他的生命,却又在他的未来面前败下阵来…当年的她步步紧逼才使他举手投降;而如今换他步步为营,追寻属于他们的幸福。他微笑:我愿穷尽一生,换一个结果。结果好,一切都好。
  • 吃鸡之噩梦玩家系统

    吃鸡之噩梦玩家系统

    叶朗穿越到平行世界,获得绝地求生之噩梦玩家系统,让他成为了吃鸡游戏中所有玩家的噩梦。并且在游戏中淘汰其他玩家和完成系统任务还可以获得噩梦值以及其它特殊奖励。“叮,获得噩梦值+555”“叮,获得狙击枪精通技能”“叮,获得兰博基尼跑车”....除了游戏领域,娱乐圈,武术界,金融圈,都有着叶朗的传说。叶朗:“虽然我什么都会,但是最大的优点还是长得帅啊!”
  • 做人的无比智慧

    做人的无比智慧

    他传播西方音乐,所创作的《送别歌》传唱几十年,经久不衰,成为经典名曲;他在日本主演《茶花女》,轰动东瀛,开中国人演话剧之先河;他执教各所名校长达十年,成为在国内传播西洋画的先驱,培养艺术人才无数;“朴拙圆满,浑若天成”,他将中国古代的书法艺术推向了另一高峰……他将所有家当和艺术收藏悉数与人,皈依佛门,过起了一领衲衣、一根藜杖的苦行生活;他潜心研究佛经,使失传多年的佛教南山律宗再度兴起;他苦心向佛,精研律学,弘扬佛法,普度众生出苦海,被佛门弟子奉为律宗第十一代世祖……
  • 陪你一起星辰大海

    陪你一起星辰大海

    顾若澜五年以后和欧浩辰意外重逢,谁知还有一个意外存在的儿子,五年前突然失踪,五年后却意外重逢......