登陆注册
26231000000003

第3章 NOTE FOR WOMEN(2)

Horace combats this prejudice with as much finesse as force in his beautiful Epistle to Augustus (Epist.I.liv.ii.)."Must our poems, then," he says, "be like our wines, of which the oldest are always preferred?"The learned and ingenious Fontenelle expresses himself on this subject as follows:"The whole question of the pre-eminence between the ancients and the moderns, once it is well understood, is reduced to knowing whether the trees which formerly were in our countryside were bigger than those of to-day.In the event that they were, Homer, Plato, Demosthenes cannot be equalled in these latter centuries."Let us throw light on this paradox.If the ancients had more intellect than us, it is that the brains of those times were better ordered, formed of firmer or more delicate fibres, filled with more animal spirits; but in virtue of what were the brains of those times better ordered? The trees also would have been bigger and more beautiful; for if nature was then younger and more vigorous, the trees, as well as men's brains, would have been conscious of this vigour and this youth." ("Digression on the Ancients and the Moderns," vol.4, 1742 edition.)With the illustrious academician's permission, that is not at all the state of the question.It is not a matter of knowing whether nature has been able to produce in our day as great geniuses and as good works as those of Greek and Latin antiquity; but to know whether we have them in fact.Without a doubt it is not impossible for there to be as big oaks in the forest of Chantilli as in the forest of Dodona; but supposing that the oaks of Dodona had spoken, it would be quite clear that they had a great advantage over ours, which in all probability will never speak.

Nature is not bizarre; but it is possible that she gave the Athenians a country and a sky more suitable than Westphalia and the Limousin for forming certain geniuses.Further, it is possible that the government of Athens, by seconding the climate, put into Demosthenes' head something that the air of Clamart and La Grenouillere and the government of Cardinal de Richelieu did not put into the heads of Omer Talon and Jerome Bignon.

This dispute is therefore a question of fact.Was antiquity more fecund in great monuments of all kinds, up to the time of Plutarch, than modern centuries have been from the century of the Medicis up to Louis XIV.inclusive?

The Chinese, more than two hundred years before our era, constructed that great wall which was not able to save them from the invasion of the Tartars.The Egyptians, three thousand years before, had overloaded the earth with their astonishing pyramids, which had a base of about ninety thousand square feet.Nobody doubts that, if one wished to undertake to-day these useless works, one could easily succeed by a lavish expenditure of money.The great wall of China is a monument to fear; the pyramids are monuments to vanity and superstition.Both bear witness to a great patience in the peoples, but to no superior genius.Neither the Chinese nor the Egyptians would have been able to make even a statue such as those which our sculptors form to-day.

The chevalier Temple, who has made it his business to disparage all the moderns, claims that in architecture they have nothing comparable to the temples of Greece and Rome: but, for all that he is English, he must agree that the Church of St.Peter is incomparably more beautiful than the Capitol was.

It is curious with what assurance he maintains that there is nothing new in our astronomy, nothing in the knowledge of the human body, unless perhaps, he says, the circulation of the blood.Love of his own opinion, founded on his vast self-esteem, makes him forget the discovery of the satellites of Jupiter, of the five moons and the ring of Saturn, of the rotation of the sun on its axis, of the calculated position of three thousand stars, of the laws given by Kepler and Newton for the heavenly orbs, of the causes of the precession of the equinoxes, and of a hundred other pieces of knowledge of which the ancients did not suspect even the possibility.

The discoveries in anatomy are as great in number.A new universe in little, discovered by the microscope, was counted for nothing by the chevalier Temple; he closed his eyes to the marvels of his contemporaries, and opened them only to admire ancient ignorance.

He goes so far as to pity us for having nothing left of the magic of the Indians, the Chaldeans, the Egyptians; and by this magic he understands a profound knowledge of nature, whereby they produced miracles: but he does not cite one miracle, because in fact there never were any."What has become," he asks, "of the charms of that music which so often enchanted man and beast, the fishes, the birds, the snakes, and changed their nature?"This enemy of his century really believes the fable of Orpheus, and has not apparently heard either the beautiful music of Italy, or even that of France, which in truth does not charm snakes, but does charm the ears of connoisseurs.

What is still more strange is that, having all his life cultivated belles-lettres, he does not reason better about our good authors than about our philosophers.

He looks on Rabelais as a great man.He cites the "Amours des Gaules" as one of our best works.He was, however, a scholar, a courtier, a man of much wit, an ambassador, a man who had reflected profoundly on all he had seen.He possessed great knowledge: a prejudice sufficed to spoil all this merit.

There are beauties in Euripides, and in Sophocles still more; but they have many more defects.One dares say that the beautiful scenes of Corneille and the touching tragedies of Racine surpass the tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides as much as these two Greeks surpass Thespis.Racine was quite conscious of his great superiority over Euripides; but he praised the Greek poet in order to humiliate Perrault.

Moliere, in his good pieces, is as superior to the pure but cold Terence, and to the droll Aristophanes, as to Dancourt the buffoon.

同类推荐
  • 帝鉴图说

    帝鉴图说

    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。
  • 杀子报

    杀子报

    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。
  • Alcestis

    Alcestis

    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。
  • 金莲正宗记

    金莲正宗记

    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。
  • 词径

    词径

    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
  • 万般皆下品

    万般皆下品

    [花雨授权]他施家“墨香坊”顶顶有名,印的书绝对雅俗共赏。可这新来的抄书师……自打捉着她的手瞧了那么一阵,他就灾祸连连,印坊被烧,官差也跑来凑热闹说他印假宝钞。他以为她多么……但她的字一点一钩,勾得他好心痒啊……
  • 驭蛇狂妃

    驭蛇狂妃

    凤家嫡女凤千魅,丑傻花痴脑残废,大婚之夜被丈夫一剑刺穿腹,一把大火毁尸迹,却换来了21世纪最高军机处的首席特工。再次醒来,她不再是她,神蛇为宠,群蛇为伍,狂妄天下。他,本是一个命不久矣的废太子,傻王爷,却因为她的出现,有了活下去的欲望,报复所有害过她的人。情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 九星神王

    九星神王

    神星大陆,天才辈出,群雄并起,实力为尊。星师沟通九大星云,觉醒星魂,获得本命星辰,成就星辰武道。兵王傲天,魂穿异世,太阳系八星同往,逆天改命,八方名动。这一世,他要把命运掌握在自己手中......人负则杀,神负则灭,天负则诛,傲世傲天,吾为九星神王!-------------------喜欢的书友可以关注新浪微博:【雷语者很有爱】书友企鹅群【九星部落:235044163】
  • 不正经的圣堂骑士

    不正经的圣堂骑士

    传说中的圣骑士回归圣堂,却在干着以导师的身份去带坏弟子的行为。
  • 异世墨莲:神迹轻狂

    异世墨莲:神迹轻狂

    前世为世界最强杀手,没人想到却遭至亲之人暗算,无奈跳崖。今生既然成为最不起眼的人,那就要闯荡出自己的人生,不败轻狂!
  • 妃自商丘,妾不侍候

    妃自商丘,妾不侍候

    那一世,他是魔,她是神,他们从一出生便注定不能在一起,最终,玉石俱焚。这一世,他是万人之帝,她只是从异世来的一抹孤魂,红线再一次的将他们无情的绑在一起,这一次的结果又会是什么?十里青峰,百里桃花,死不过是一种解脱,在天之灵,不过是慰藉未亡人的心灵。亿年前一句无意的话,让亿年后所有人的惨痛付出代价,是阴谋还是天意让她来到这个一千年以前的上古时期。两亿五百年的等待,奈何桥畔是谁哭碎了他的心,手腕上的牙印又是为谁而留,无数次的轮回,无数次的想起,无数次的忘却。心,一个在逃一个在追。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 学渣别惹我

    学渣别惹我

    骄傲校花学霸顾桉晴和中二病校草学渣程羽辉天生就是一对冤家。他们非常相似,外表冰冷,内心暴躁,占有欲极强。唯一的不同就是成绩。”你别来烦我!“”你也别来烦我!""明明是你先来烦我的好吗?““胡说八道什么?””行了不理你了。“”我也不理你了。“”你这个人!“”我怎么了?““......”
  • 旷世灵帝

    旷世灵帝

    石暮,意外穿越到灵海诸域,自此开始传奇之旅。神挡杀神,佛阻灭佛,一路厮杀,谁也无法阻挡他的成帝之路。诸域中强者如林,高手无数,在尸山血海中石暮走出一条属于自己的大道。
  • 中华民族传统美德故事文库三、名言警句卷——成熟自信

    中华民族传统美德故事文库三、名言警句卷——成熟自信

    本丛书筛选内容主要遵循以下原则要求:(1)坚持批判继承思想,取其精华、去其糟粕。既不全盘肯定,也不全盘否定。坚持抽象继承、演绎发展、立足当代、为我所用。(2)坚持系统整体的原则。注意各历史时期分布;注意各民族的进步人物;注意各层面人物;注意人物各侧面。做到:竖看历史五千年,纵向成条线;横看美德重实践,横向不漏面。(3)坚持古为今用,为我所用原则。在发掘美德资源时,特别挖掘古代人物故事、言论,注重寻找挖掘各阶层、各民族的传统公德、通德、同德;注重人民性、民主性、进步性、发展性、普遍性、抽象性,不求全古代,不求全个体。
  • 盗笔之天降魂狐

    盗笔之天降魂狐

    世界一分为二,生存在正面世界一无所知的人族,而反面世界的龙族、天族、灵族与傀族却是暗流涌动。灵族大陆一出生便被安上“未来族长”头衔的“魂狐一族”吴族长子——吴邪。年幼无知的他,却被卷入各种势力斗争,灵族大陆与魂狐一族为保他周全,竟选择将一无所知的他丢入完全陌生的正面世界。传送过程中,本就年幼的吴邪意外幼化,退化成为婴儿,不知身在何处、尚在襁褓中的他与一直陪伴他的灵猫“镜子”被一个小小年纪却穿着粉色衬衫的“漂亮哥哥”捡回了家,与一个爱戴大墨镜的痞子哥哥和一脸面瘫的冰山哥哥开始了漫长的养成之旅。身为灵族骄子的他在人类世界又会发生什么呢?