贝壳电子书 > 英文原著电子书 > letters to his son, 1752 >

第23章

letters to his son, 1752-第23章

小说: letters to his son, 1752 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



no means give up any point to a competitor; yet I would pique myself upon showing him rather more civility than to another man。  In the first place; this 'procede' infallibly makes all 'les rieurs' of your side; which is a considerable party; and in the next place; it certainly pleases the object of the competition; be it either man or woman; who never fail to say; upon such an occasion; that THEY MUST OWN YOU HAVE BEHAVED YOURSELF VERY; HANDSOMELY IN THE WHOLE AFFAIR。  The world judges from the appearances of things; and not from the reality; which few are able; and still fewer are inclined to fathom: and a man; who will take care always to be in the right in those things; may afford to be sometimes a little in the wrong in more essential ones: there is a willingness; a desire to excuse him。  With nine people in ten; good… breeding passes for good…nature; and they take attentions for good offices。  At courts there will be always coldnesses; dislikes; jealousies; and hatred; the harvest being but small in proportion to the number of laborers; but then; as they arise often; they die soon; unless they are perpetuated by the manner in which they have been carried on; more than by the matter which occasioned them。  The turns and vicissitudes of courts frequently make friends of enemies; and enemies of friends; you must labor; therefore; to acquire that great and uncommon talent of hating with good…breeding and loving with prudence; to make no quarrel irreconcilable by silly and unnecessary indications of anger; and no friendship dangerous; in case it breaks; by a wanton; indiscreet; and unreserved confidence。


Few ; (especially young) people know how to love; or how to hate; their love is an unbounded weakness; fatal to the person they love; their hate is a hot; rash; and imprudent violence; always fatal to themselves。

Nineteen fathers in twenty; and every mother; who had loved you half as well as I do; would have ruined you; whereas I always made you feel the weight of my authority; that you might one day know the force of my love。 Now; I both hope and believe; my advice will have the same weight with you from choice that my authority had from necessity。  My advice is just eight…and…twenty years older than your own; and consequently; I believe you think; rather better。  As for your tender and pleasurable passions; manage them yourself; but let me have the direction of all the others。 Your ambition; your figure; and your fortune; will; for some time at least; be rather safer in my keeping than in your own。  Adieu。




LETTER CLXXX

BATH; October 4; 1752

MY DEAR FRIEND:  I consider you now as at the court of Augustus; where; if ever the desire of pleasing animated you; it must make you exert all the means of doing it。  You will see there; full as well; I dare say; as Horace did at Rome; how states are defended by arms; adorned by manners; and improved by laws。  Nay; you have an Horace there as well as an Augustus; I need not name Voltaire; 'qui nil molitur inept'?; as Horace himself said of another poet。  I have lately read over all his works that are published; though I had read them more than once before。  I was induced to this by his 'Siecle de Louis XIV'; which I have yet read but four times。  In reading over all his works; with more attention I suppose than before; my former admiration of him is; I own; turned into astonishment。  There is no one kind of writing in which he has not excelled。  You are so severe a classic that I question whether you will allow me to call his 'Henriade' an epic poem; for want of the proper number of gods; devils; witches and other absurdities; requisite for the machinery; which machinery is; it seems; necessary to constitute the 'epopee'。  But whether you do or not; I will declare (though possibly to my own shame) that I never read any epic poem with near so much pleasure。 I am grown old; and have possibly lost a great deal of that fire which formerly made me love fire in others at any rate; and however attended with smoke; but now I must have all sense; and cannot; for the sake of five righteous lines; forgive a thousand absurd ones。

In this disposition of mind; judge whether I can read all Homer through 'tout de suite'。  I admire its beauties; but; to tell you the truth; when he slumbers; I sleep。  Virgil; I confess; is all sense; and therefore I like him better than his model; but he is often languid; especially in his five or six last books; during which I am obliged to take a good deal of snuff。  Besides; I profess myself an ally of Turnus against the pious AEneas; who; like many 'soi…disant' pious people; does the most flagrant injustice and violence in order to execute what they impudently call the will of Heaven。  But what will you say; when I tell you truly; that I cannot possibly read our countryman Milton through?  I acknowledge him to have some most sublime passages; some prodigious flashes of light; but then you must acknowledge that light is often followed by darkness visible; to use his own expression。  Besides; not having the honor to be acquainted with any of the parties in this poem; except the Man and the Woman; the characters and speeches of a dozen or two of angels and of as many devils; are as much above my reach as my entertainment。  Keep this secret for me: for if it should be known; I should be abused by every tasteless pedant; and every solid divine in England。

'Whatever I have said to the disadvantage of these three poems; holds much stronger against Tasso's 'Gierusalemme': it is true he has very fine and glaring rays of poetry; but then they are only meteors; they dazzle; then disappear; and are succeeded by false thoughts; poor 'concetti'; and absurd impossibilities; witness the Fish and the Parrot; extravagancies unworthy of an heroic poem; and would much better have become Ariosto; who professes 'le coglionerie'。

I have never read the 〃Lusiade of Camoens;〃 except in prose translation; consequently I have never read it at all; so shall say nothing of it; but the Henriade is all sense from the beginning to the end; often adorned by the justest and liveliest reflections; the most beautiful descriptions; the noblest images; and the sublimest sentiments; not to mention the harmony of the verse; in which Voltaire undoubtedly exceeds all the French poets: should you insist upon an exception in favor of Racine; I must insist; on my part; that he at least equals him。  What hero ever interested more than Henry the Fourth; who; according to the rules of epic poetry; carries on one great and long action; and succeeds in it at last?  What descriptions ever excited more horror than those; first of the Massacre; and then of the Famine at Paris?  Was love ever painted with more truth and 'morbidezza' than in the ninth book?  Not better; in my mind; even in the fourth of Virgil。  Upon the whole; with all your classical rigor; if you will but suppose St。 Louis a god; a devil; or a witch; and that he appears in person; and not in a dream; the Henriade will be an epic poem; according to the strictest statute laws of the 'epopee'; but in my court of equity it is one as it is。

I could expatiate as much upon all his different works; but that I should exceed the bounds of a letter and run into a dissertation。 How delightful is his history of that northern brute; the King of Sweden; for I cannot call him a man; and I should be sorry to have him pass for a hero; out of regard to those true heroes; such as Julius Caesar; Titus; Trajan; and the present King of Prussia; who cultivated and encouraged arts and sciences; whose animal courage was accompanied by the tender and social sentiments of humanity; and who had more pleasure in improving; than in destroying their fellow…creatures。  What can be more touching; or more interestingwhat more nobly thought; or more happily expressed; than all his dramatic pieces?  What can be more clear and rational than all his philosophical letters? and whatever was so graceful; and gentle; as all his little poetical trifles?  You are fortunately 'a porte' of verifying; by your knowledge of the man; all that I have said of his works。

Monsieur de Maupertius (whom I hope you will get acquainted with) is; what one rarely meets with; deep in p

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的