登陆注册
15677000000228

第228章

I make no doubt but that I often happen to speak of things that are much better and more truly handled by those who are masters of the trade. You have here purely an essay of my natural parts, and not of those acquired: and whoever shall catch me tripping in ignorance, will not in any sort get the better of me; for I should be very unwilling to become responsible to another for my writings, who am not so to myself, nor satisfied with them. Whoever goes in quest of knowledge, let him fish for it where it is to be found; there is nothing I so little profess.

These are fancies of my own, by which I do not pretend to discover things but to lay open myself; they may, peradventure, one day be known to me, or have formerly been, according as fortune has been able to bring me in place where they have been explained; but I have utterly forgotten it; and if I am a man of some reading, I am a man of no retention; so that I can promise no certainty, more than to make known to what point the knowledge I now have has risen. Therefore, let none lay stress upon the matter I write, but upon my method in writing it. Let them observe, in what I borrow, if I have known how to choose what is proper to raise or help the invention, which is always my own. For I make others say for me, not before but after me, what, either for want of language or want of sense, I cannot myself so well express. I do not number my borrowings, I weigh them; and had I designed to raise their value by number, I had made them twice as many; they are all, or within a very few, so famed and ancient authors, that they seem, methinks, themselves sufficiently to tell who they are, without giving me the trouble. In reasons, comparisons, and arguments, if I transplant any into my own soil, and confound them amongst my own, I purposely conceal the author, to awe the temerity of those precipitate censors who fall upon all sorts of writings, particularly the late ones, of men yet living; and in the vulgar tongue which puts every one into a capacity of criticising and which seem to convict the conception and design as vulgar also. I will have them give Plutarch a fillip on my nose, and rail against Seneca when they think they rail at me. I must shelter my own weakness under these great reputations. I shall love any one that can unplume me, that is, by clearness of understanding and judgment, and by the sole distinction of the force and beauty of the discourse. For I who, for want of memory, am at every turn at a loss to, pick them out of their national livery, am yet wise enough to know, by the measure of my own abilities, that my soil is incapable of producing any of those rich flowers that I there find growing; and that all the fruits of my own growth are not worth any one of them. For this, indeed, I hold myself responsible; if I get in my own way; if there be any vanity and defect in my writings which I do not of myself perceive nor can discern, when pointed out to me by another; for many faults escape our eye, but the infirmity of judgment consists in not being able to discern them, when by another laid open to us. Knowledge and truth may be in us without judgment, and judgment also without them; but the confession of ignorance is one of the finest and surest testimonies of judgment that I know. I have no other officer to put my writings in rank and file, but only fortune. As things come into my head, I heap them one upon another; sometimes they advance in whole bodies, sometimes in single file. I would that every one should see my natural and ordinary pace, irregular as it is; I suffer myself to jog on at my own rate. Neither are these subjects which a man is not permitted to be ignorant in, or casually and at a venture, to discourse of. I could wish to have a more perfect knowledge of things, but I will not buy it so dear as it costs. My design is to pass over easily, and not laboriously, the remainder of my life; there is nothing that I will cudgel my brains about; no, not even knowledge, of what value soever.

I seek, in the reading of books, only to please myself by an honest diversion; or, if I study, 'tis for no other science than what treats of the knowledge of myself, and instructs me how to die and how to live well.

"Has meus ad metas sudet oportet equus."

["My horse must work according to my step."--Propertius, iv.]

I do not bite my nails about the difficulties I meet with in my reading; after a charge or two, I give them over. Should I insist upon them, I should both lose myself and time; for I have an impatient understanding, that must be satisfied at first: what I do not discern at once is by persistence rendered more obscure. I do nothing without gaiety; continuation and a too obstinate endeavour, darkens, stupefies, and tires my judgment. My sight is confounded and dissipated with poring; I must withdraw it, and refer my discovery to new attempts; just as, to judge rightly of the lustre of scarlet, we are taught to pass the eye lightly over it, and again to run it over at several sudden and reiterated glances. If one book do not please me, I take another; and I never meddle with any, but at such times as I am weary of doing nothing.

I care not much for new ones, because the old seem fuller and stronger; neither do I converse much with Greek authors, because my judgment cannot do its work with imperfect intelligence of the material.

同类推荐
  • 玄都律文

    玄都律文

    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。
  • 绀珠集

    绀珠集

    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。
  • 台湾海防并开山日记

    台湾海防并开山日记

    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。
  • 佛说甘露经陀罗尼咒

    佛说甘露经陀罗尼咒

    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。
  • 演道俗业经

    演道俗业经

    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
  • 世界上下五千年(第十卷)

    世界上下五千年(第十卷)

    历史知识的普及向历史读物的通俗性和趣味性提出了较高的要求,而从目前的情况来看,大部分读物是无法满足这一要求的,其中尤以世界史读物为甚。我们用百万字,千幅图片,翔实地再现了五千年间人类共同的实践经验、创造的文明,为今天提供丰富的借鉴和启迪!在尊重史实的前提下,以生动有趣的语言讲述一个个历史故事,通过一个个妙趣横生的历史故事展现五千年世界风貌,以形象明快的语言描述一个个历史人物,通过一个个栩栩如生的历史事件勾画人类文明发展的踪迹。
  • 中华历史全书(下)

    中华历史全书(下)

    中国是一个有着五千年历史的文明古国,每个中国人无不以此为自豪。
  • 斩苍记

    斩苍记

    “我命由我不有天,天若逆我便封天!”“武道至尊路,只求一战,何惧一死!”“这里......是?”王亿苍望了望这个东西乱丢的房间“怎么,这里不是我的房间吗?”“苍天已死,佞天当道!吾若不死,来日斬天!”木天看向那一望无际而又无比凶险的苍天,又给了钟老一个保证。
  • 超能者之岛

    超能者之岛

    一次精心谋划的实验,一次意料之外的进化。
  • 洞真黄书

    洞真黄书

    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。
  • 柯南之承诺唯一

    柯南之承诺唯一

    从那时开始,命运将我们连在了一起。。希望渺茫,最终的宿命,在何方?……
  • 待到空竹花放时

    待到空竹花放时

    隔世的幻竹林边,刚满百岁的竹妖祁墨与舞姬溪宛儿一见钟情,却因跨界的因素,以及第三个主人公沈廷煜的加入,上演了一次次的错过剧情。因何事,空竹花放?因何事,佳人望斜阳?……
  • 四维村传奇

    四维村传奇

    以重庆四维村罗氏家族四兄弟抗日为线索,以小见大,反映全面抗战的烽火连天。
  • 江山美人我都爱:绝代红颜乱世妃

    江山美人我都爱:绝代红颜乱世妃

    不想做太子妃,离家出走,化成小乞丐,居然遇到泼皮无赖,要她去偷钱,还好,有人相救,为了躲避做太子妃的命运,想要和那人远走天涯,可是为什么一觉醒来,身边多了个丫鬟?(原名打死不做太子妃)敬请继续关注。
  • 辉煌战宠

    辉煌战宠

    热血的大陆,无尽的传奇他,和他的战宠们,一步一个脚印有一天,他们回头此时他们已经站在这个世界的巅峰