登陆注册
38541000000059

第59章

Few things can exceed the characters of human beings in variety.

There must be something abstractedly in the nature of mind, which renders it accessible to these varieties. For the present we will call it taste. One man feels his spirits regaled with the sight of those things which constitute wealth, another in meditating the triumphs of Alexander or Caesar, and a third in viewing the galleries of the Louvre. Not one of these thinks in the outset of appropriating these objects to himself; not one of them begins with aspiring to be the possessor of vast opulence, or emulating the triumphs of Caesar, or obtaining in property the pictures and statues the sight of which affords him so exquisite delight. Even the admirer of female beauty, does not at first think of converting this attractive object into a mistress, but on the contrary desires, like Pygmalion, that the figure he beholds might become his solace and companion, because he had previously admired it for itself.

Just so the benevolent man is an individual who finds a peculiar delight in contemplating the contentment, the peace and heart's ease of other men, and sympathises in no ordinary degree with their sufferings. He rejoices in the existence and diffusion of human happiness, though he should not have had the smallest share in giving birth to the thing he loves. It is because such are his tastes, and what above all things he prefers, that he afterwards becomes distinguished by the benevolence of his conduct.

The reflex act of the mind, which these new philosophers put forward as the solution of all human pursuits, rarely presents itself but to the speculative enquirer in his closet. The savage never dreams of it. The active man, engaged in the busy scenes of life, thinks little, and on rare occasions of himself, but much, and in a manner for ever, of the objects of his pursuit.

Some men are uniform in their character, and from the cradle to the grave prefer the same objects that first awakened their partialities. Other men are inconsistent and given to change, are "every thing by starts, and nothing long." Still it is probable that, in most cases, he who performs an act of benevolence, feels for the time that he has a peculiar delight in contemplating the good of his fellow-man.

The doctrine of the modern philosophers on this point, is in many ways imbecil and unsound. It is inauspicious to their creed, that the reflex act of the mind is purely the affair of experience. Why did the liberal-minded man perform his first act of benevolence? The answer of these persons ought to be, because the recollection of a generous deed is a source of the truest delight. But there is an absurdity on the face of this solution.

We do not experimentally know the delight which attends the recollection of a generous deed, till a generous deed has been performed by us. We do not learn these things from books. And least of all is this solution to the purpose, when the business is to find a solution that suits the human mind universally, the unlearned as well as the learned, the savage as well as the sage.

And surely it is inconsistent with all sound reasoning, to represent that as the sole spring of our benevolent actions, which by the very terms will not fit the first benevolent act in which any man engaged.

The advocates of the doctrine of "self-love the source of all our actions," are still more puzzled, when the case set before them is that of the man, who flies, at an instant's warning, to save the life of the child who has fallen into the river, or the unfortunate whom he beholds in the upper story of a house in flames. This man, as might be illustrated in a thousand instances, treats his own existence as unworthy of notice, and exposes it to multiplied risks to effect the object to which he devotes himself.

They are obliged to say, that this man anticipates the joy he will feel in the recollection of a noble act, and the cutting and intolerable pain he will experience in the consciousness that a human being has perished, whom it was in his power to save. It is in vain that we tell them that, without a moment's consideration, he tore off his clothes, or plunged into the stream with his clothes on, or rushed up a flaming stair-case.

Still they tell us, that he recollected what compunctious visitings would be his lot if he remained supine--he felt the sharpest uneasiness at sight of the accident before him, and it was to get rid of that uneasiness, and not for the smallest regard to the unhappy being he has been the means to save, that he entered on the hazardous undertaking.

Uneasiness, the knowledge of what inwardly passes in the mind, is a thing not in the slightest degree adverted to but in an interval of leisure. No; the man here spoken of thinks of nothing but the object immediately before his eyes; he adverts not at all to himself; he acts only with an undeveloped, confused and hurried consciousness that he may be of some use, and may avert the instantly impending calamity. He has scarcely even so much reflection as amounts to this.

The history of man, whether national or individual, and consequently the acts of human creatures which it describes, are cast in another mould than that which the philosophy of self-love sets before us. A topic that from the earliest accounts perpetually presents itself in the records of mankind, is self-sacrifice, parents sacrificing themselves for their children, and children for their parents. Cimon, the Athenian, yet in the flower of his youth, voluntarily became the inmate of a prison, that the body of his father might receive the honours of sepulture. Various and unquestionable are the examples of persons who have exposed themselves to destruction, and even petitioned to die, that so they might save the lives of those, whose lives they held dearer than their own. Life is indeed a thing, that is notoriously set at nothing by generous souls, who have fervently devoted themselves to an overwhelming purpose.

同类推荐
  • 续佐治药言

    续佐治药言

    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。
  • 般泥洹经卷上

    般泥洹经卷上

    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。
  • 教观纲宗

    教观纲宗

    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。
  • 亡题

    亡题

    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。
  • 佛说乐想经

    佛说乐想经

    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
  • 青梅萌萌哒,竹马大大快走开

    青梅萌萌哒,竹马大大快走开

    “南官糖!”“墨哥哥咋啦?”萌萌哒的南官糖天天给墨寂然带来惊喜。场景一:墨哥哥我要和你睡,墨寂然:拒绝。小糖糖:好嘛好嘛,来啵一个!啵!墨寂然老脸一红。场景二:墨哥哥,我们班有人给我写情书了哦!墨寂然:哦?给我看看。小糖糖听话的递过去。墨寂然:这写的是什么啊!回头我写一封给你。【本文天天发糖,小可耐们快入坑】
  • 异世凰女杠上冰冷邪尊

    异世凰女杠上冰冷邪尊

    她是王者,冷傲、腹黑、霸道(只对男主一人)!他是妖孽,冷酷无情、残忍!她是穿越而来的尊者,从天而降,落入他的怀中。他是睥睨天下的邪尊,也是东璃国师。初相见,定终身!却发现某人已忘。没关系!重新来过!当穿越女尊者对上腹黑伪国师,究竟谁能更胜一筹。到底是谁迷了谁的眼,是谁乱了谁的心!(1v1,绝宠,女强男更强)
  • 500字类型文

    500字类型文

    每天500字的故事,为练笔之作,内容比较杂,笔力浅薄,水平大概是年少时在市级晚报杂文的退化版,人到中年重拾文学梦,相信量变也会引起质变。
  • 决战双月城

    决战双月城

    按照爱情公寓第三季第14级中决战紫禁之巅改写的,毕竟,这情节太燃了有木有?不喜勿喷啊,前面的剧情你们可以去不补课,我就不在提了(手动滑稽)
  • 都市绝品魔少

    都市绝品魔少

    三年前,家族的覆灭,未婚妻的背叛,令他流离失所,遍体鳞伤!三年后,他化身为魔,带着百万魔兵冷血归来!“我若成佛,谁敢成魔;我若入魔,我要这天下血流成河!”——江流!!!
  • 我在仙门当偶像

    我在仙门当偶像

    南果刚拿到小金人就穿越了。她这一辈子除了娱乐圈的事儿什么都不会,除了做偶像她想不到可以怎么快速偿还新身体的巨额债务。于是,仙门爱豆开始营业啦。
  • 有一种策略叫定位

    有一种策略叫定位

    世界太精彩,世界上值得你追求的事业又太多,然而生命有限,时间有限,精力有限,世界于你而言又有些许无奈。充满欲望的世界,人们又太浮躁,世界上有梦想的人太多太多,而世功产现梦想的人又太少太秒。很多人终其一生空怀梦想一辈子都游离在现实与梦幻之间摇摆不定,他人在举棋不定中求索失败,又在浮光惊影的无情意争中错失良机。原因何在?
  • 红绸巾

    红绸巾

    话说未满七岁的小孩有天眼,能见到牛鬼蛇神、看到碧落黄泉......神秘家族后人李革新,以诅咒之身,走进鬼物世界...
  • 神道兵王

    神道兵王

    他是华夏最强利刃!他是世界最匪夷所思的超级兵王行动高手!他是前无古人后无来者的战神!精通古传承阵法,机关术和武术的君耀下山做史上最牛逼的华夏神道兵王!
  • 莫道已惘然

    莫道已惘然

    往事如风,却因夹带着过多的苦痛,吹不走,原地徘徊;记忆如潮,却因承载着过多凄楚,流不逝,旧地流转。他是上天精心雕琢的一块美玉,她却是严严寒冬里一弯即将冻结的冰泉。生命入冬之时,他无意识在她心里投下涟漪,于是她的冬天少了寒冷,多了他温柔的呵护。只是天不悲悯,苦捉弄人,也是经历了春暖花开,她才真正体会到,寒冬萧瑟竟让人不敢再度期待,人生里何时再迎来下一个春暖花开?